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Shannon E Duke Becker


seduke@ncsu.edu

Journal articles

2011
Shannon E Duke Becker, Rachael Thomas, Vladimir A Trifonov, Robert K Wayne, Alexander S Graphodatsky, Matthew Breen (2011)  Anchoring the dog to its relatives reveals new evolutionary breakpoints across 11 species of the Canidae and provides new clues for the role of B chromosomes.   Chromosome Research 19: 6. 685-708  
Abstract: The emergence of genome-integrated molecular cytogenetic resources allows for comprehensive comparative analysis of gross karyotype architecture across related species. The identification of evolutionarily conserved chromosome segment (ECCS) boundaries provides deeper insight into the process of chromosome evolution associated with speciation. We evaluated the genome-wide distribution and relative orientation of ECCSs in three wild canid species with diverse karyotypes (Red Fox, Chinese Raccoon Dog and Grey Fox). Chromosome specific panels of dog genome integrated bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones spaced at ~10Mb intervals were used in fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis to construct integrated physical genome maps of these three species. Conserved evolutionary breakpoint regions (EBRs) shared between their karyotypes were refined across these and eight additional wild canid species using targeted BAC panels spaced at ~1Mb intervals. Our findings suggest that the EBRs associated with speciation in the Canidae are compatible with recent phylogenetic groupings and provide evidence that these breakpoints are also recurrently associated with spontaneous canine cancers. We identified several regions of domestic dog sequence that share homology with canid B chromosomes, including additional cancer associated genes, suggesting that these supernumerary elements may represent more than inert passengers within the cell. We propose that the complex karyotype rearrangements associated with speciation of the Canidae reflect unstable chromosome regions described by the Fragile Breakage Model.
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2009
Rachael Thomas, Shannon E Duke, Huixia J Wang, Tessa E Breen, Robert J Higgins, Keith E Linder, Peter Ellis, Cordelia F Langford, Peter J Dickinson, Natasha J Olby, Matthew Breen (2009)  â€˜Putting our heads together’: insights into genomic conservation between human and canine intracranial tumors   Journal of Neurooncology 94: 3. 333-349 September  
Abstract: Numerous attributes render the domestic dog a highly pertinent model for cancer-associated gene discovery. We performed microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization analysis of 60 spontaneous canine intracranial tumors to examine the degree to which dog and human patients exhibit aberrations of ancestrally related chromosome regions, consistent with a shared pathogenesis. Canine gliomas and meningiomas both demonstrated chromosome copy number aberrations (CNAs) that share evolutionarily conserved synteny with those previously reported in their human counterpart. Interestingly, however, genomic imbalances orthologous to some of the hallmark aberrations of human intracranial tumors, including chromosome 22/NF2 deletions in meningiomas and chromosome 1p/19q deletions in oligodendrogliomas, were not major events in the dog. Furthermore, and perhaps most significantly, we identified highly recurrent CNAs in canine intracranial tumors for which the human orthologue has been reported previously at low frequency but which have not, thus far, been associated intimately with the pathogenesis of the tumor. The presence of orthologous CNAs in canine and human intracranial cancers is strongly suggestive of their biological significance in tumor development and/or progression. Moreover, the limited genetic heterogenity within purebred dog populations, coupled with the contrasting organization of the dog and human karyotypes, offers tremendous opportunities for refining evolutionarily conserved regions of tumor-associated genomic imbalance that may harbor novel candidate genes involved in their pathogenesis. A comparative approach to the study of canine and human intracranial tumors may therefore provide new insights into their genetic etiology, towards development of more sophisticated molecular subclassification and tailored therapies in both species.
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2008
Rachael Thomas, Shannon E Duke, E K Karlsson, A Evans, P Ellis, K Lindblad-Toh, C F Langford, M Breen (2008)  A genome assembly-integrated dog 1 Mb BAC microarray: a cytogenetic resource for canine cancer studies and comparative genomic analysis   Cytogenetic and Genome Research 122: 2. 110-121  
Abstract: Molecular cytogenetic studies have been instrumental in defining the nature of numerical and structural chromosome changes in human cancers, but their significance remains to be fully understood. The emergence of high quality genome assemblies for several model organisms provides exciting opportunities to develop novel genome-integrated molecular cytogenetic resources that now permit a comparative approach to evaluating the relevance of tumor-associated chromosome aberrations, both within and between species. We have used the dog genome sequence assembly to identify a framework panel of 2,097 bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones, selected at intervals of approximately one megabase. Each clone has been evaluated by multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to confirm its unique cytogenetic location in concordance with its reported position in the genome assembly, providing new information on the organization of the dog genome. This panel of BAC clones also represents a powerful cytogenetic resource with numerous potential applications. We have used the clone set to develop a genome-wide microarray for comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) analysis, and demonstrate its application in detection of tumor-associated DNA copy number aberrations (CNAs) including single copy deletions and amplifications, regional aneuploidy and whole chromosome aneuploidy. We also show how individual clones selected from the BAC panel can be used as FISH probes in direct evaluation of tumor karyotypes, to verify and explore CNAs detected using aCGH analysis. This cytogenetically validated, genome integrated BAC clone panel has enormous potential for aiding gene discovery through a comparative approach to molecular oncology.
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2007
Lance S Davidow, Matthew Breen, Shannon E Duke, Paul B Samollow, John R Mccarrey, Jeannie T Lee (2007)  The search for a marsupial XIC reveals a break with vertebrate synteny.   Chromosome Research 15: 2. 137-146  
Abstract: X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) evolved in mammals to deal with X-chromosome dosage imbalance between the XX female and the XY male. In eutherian mammals, random XCI of the soma requires a master regulatory locus known as the 'X-inactivation center' (XIC/Xic), wherein lies the noncoding XIST/Xist silencer RNA and its regulatory antisense Tsix gene. By contrast, marsupial XCI is imprinted to occur on the paternal X chromosome. To determine whether marsupials and eutherians share the XIC-driven mechanism, we search for the sequence equivalents in the genome of the South American opossum, Monodelphis domestica. Positional cloning and bioinformatic analysis reveal several interesting findings. First, protein-coding genes that flank the eutherian XIC are well-conserved in M. domestica, as well as in chicken, frog, and pufferfish. However, in M. domestica we fail to identify any recognizable XIST or TSIX equivalents. Moreover, cytogenetic mapping shows a surprising break in synteny with eutherian mammals and other vertebrates. Therefore, during the evolution of the marsupial X chromosome, one or more rearrangements broke up an otherwise evolutionarily conserved block of vertebrate genes. The failure to find XIST/TSIX in M. domestica may suggest that the ancestral XIC is too divergent to allow for detection by current methods. Alternatively, the XIC may have arisen relatively late in mammalian evolution, possibly in eutherians with the emergence of random XCI. The latter argues that marsupial XCI does not require XIST and opens the search for alternative mechanisms of dosage compensation.
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Shannon E Duke, Paul B Samollow, Evan Mauceli, Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, Matthew Breen (2007)  Integrated cytogenetic BAC map of the genome of the gray, short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis domestica   Chromosome Research 15: 3. 361-370  
Abstract: The generation of high-quality genome assemblies for numerous species is advancing at a rapid pace. As the number of genome assemblies increases, so does our ability to investigate genome relationships and their contributions to unraveling complex biological, evolutionary, and biomedical processes. A key process in the generation of a genome assembly is to determine and verify the precise physical location and order of the large sequence blocks (scaffolds) that result from the assembly. For organisms of relatively recent common ancestry this process may be achieved largely through comparative sequence alignment. However, as the evolutionary distance between species lengthens, the use of comparative sequence alignment becomes increasingly less reliable. Simultaneous cytogenetic mapping, using multicolor fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) analysis, offers an alternative means to define the cytogenetic location and relative order of DNA sequences, thereby anchoring the genome sequence to the karyotype. In this article we report the molecular cytogenetic locations of 415 bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones that served to anchor sequence scaffolds of the gray, short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica) to its karyotype, which enabled accurate integration of these regions into the genome assembly.
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W Kisseberth, M Nadella, Matthew Breen, Rachael Thomas, Shannon E Duke, S Murahari, C Kosarek, W Vernau, A Avery, M Burkhard (2007)  A novel canine lymphoma cell line: a translational and comparative model for lymphoma research   Leukemia Research 31: 12. 1709-1720  
Abstract: A novel canine lymphoma cell line, OSW, was established from the malignant pleural effusion of a dog with peripheral T-cell lymphoma. The immunoprofile as determined by flow cytometry was as follows: positive for CD45, CD49d, CD18, CD11a; weakly positive for CD11b, CD11c, CD11d; and negative for CD45RA, CD1a, CD1c, CD3, TCRalphabeta, TCRgammadelta, CD4, CD5, CD8a, CD8b, CD90(Thy1), CD21, MHCII, CD14(TUK4), CD34, and MPO. Immunocytochemistry of cytospin preparations was negative for cytoplasmic CD3, CD79a, and MPO, but was positive for CD20. The cell line had an oligoclonal T-cell receptor gamma (TCRgamma) gene rearrangement. Array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) and single locus probe (SLP) analysis showed that there were copy number increases of loci on dog chromosome 13 (CFA 13), and copy number decreases were evident for regions of CFA 11, 22, 26, 30 and 32, which include several of the more common chromosomal aberrations reported previously in canine lymphoma. The OSW cell line grows rapidly in vitro and is tumorigenic as a xenograft in SCID/NOD mice. OSW represents one of only a few reported canine lymphoma cell lines and is the most thoroughly characterized. This cell line and xenograft represent significant in vitro and in vivo models, respectively, for comparative and translational lymphoma research.
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Rachael Thomas, Shannon E Duke, S K Bloom, Tessa Breen, Andrea C Young, E Feiste, E L Seiser, P -C Tsai, Cordelia F Langford, P Ellis, Elinor K Karlsson, Kerstin Lindblad-Toh, Matthew Breen (2007)  A Cytogenetically Characterized, Genome-Anchored 10-Mb BAC Set and CGH Array for the Domestic Dog   Journal of Heredity 98: 5. 474-484  
Abstract: The generation of a 7.5x dog genome assembly provides exciting new opportunities to interpret tumor-associated chromosome aberrations at the biological level. We present a genomic microarray for array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) analysis in the dog, comprising 275 bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones spaced at intervals of approximately 10 Mb. Each clone has been positioned accurately within the genome assembly and assigned to a unique chromosome location by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis, both individually and as chromosome-specific BAC pools. The microarray also contains clones representing the dog orthologues of 31 genes implicated in human cancers. FISH analysis of the 10-Mb BAC clone set indicated excellent coverage of each dog chromosome by the genome assembly. The order of clones was consistent with the assembly, but the cytogenetic intervals between clones were variable. We demonstrate the application of the BAC array for aCGH analysis to identify both whole and partial chromosome imbalances using a canine histiocytic sarcoma case. Using BAC clones selected from the array as probes, multicolor FISH analysis was used to further characterize these imbalances, revealing numerous structural chromosome rearrangements. We outline the value of a combined aCGH/FISH approach, together with a well-annotated dog genome assembly, in canine and comparative cancer studies.
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Tarjei S Mikkelsen, Matthew J Wakefield, Bronwen Aken, Chris T Amemiya, Jean L Chang, Shannon E Duke, Manuel Garber, Andrew J Gentles, Leo Goodstadt, Andreas Heger, Jerzy Jurka, Michael Kamal, Evan Mauceli, Stephen M J Searle, Theodore Sharpe, Michelle L Baker, Mark A Batzer, Panayiotis V Benos, Katherine Belov, Michele Clamp, April Cook, James Cuff, Radhika Das, Lance S Davidow, Janine E Deakin, Melissa J Fazzari, Jacob L Glass, Manfred Grabherr, John M Greally, Wanjun Gu, Timothy A Hore, Gavin A Huttley, Michael Kleber, Randy L Jirtle, Edda Koina, Jeannie T Lee, Shaun Mahony, Marco A Marra, Robert D Miller, Robert D Nicholls, Mayumi Oda, Anthony T Papenfuss, Zuly E Parra, David D Pollock, David A Ray, Jacqueline E Schein, Terence P Speed, Katherine Thompson, John L Vandeberg, Claire M Wade, Jerilyn A Walker, Paul D Waters, Caleb Webber, Jennifer R Weidman, Xiaohui Xie, Michael C Zody, Jennifer Baldwin, Amr Abdouelleil, Jamal Abdulkadir, Adal Abebe, Brikti Abera, Justin Abreu, St Christophe Acer, Lynne Aftuck, Allen Alexander, Peter An, Erica Anderson, Scott Anderson, Harindra Arachchi, Marc Azer, Pasang Bachantsang, Andrew Barry, Tashi Bayul, Aaron Berlin, Daniel Bessette, Toby Bloom, Jason Blye, Leonid Boguslavskiy, Claude Bonnet, Boris Boukhgalter, Imane Bourzgui, Adam Brown, Patrick Cahill, Sheridon Channer, Yama Cheshatsang, Lisa Chuda, Mieke Citroen, Alville Collymore, Patrick Cooke, Maura Costello, Katie D'aco, Riza Daza, Georgius De Haan, Stuart Degray, Christina Demaso, Norbu Dhargay, Kimberly Dooley, Erin Dooley, Missole Doricent, Passang Dorje, Kunsang Dorjee, Alan Dupes, Richard Elong, Jill Falk, Abderrahim Farina, Susan Faro, Diallo Ferguson, Sheila Fisher, Chelsea D Foley, Alicia Franke, Dennis Friedrich, Loryn Gadbois, Gary Gearin, Christina R Gearin, Georgia Giannoukos, Tina Goode, Joseph Graham, Edward Grandbois, Sharleen Grewal, Kunsang Gyaltsen, Nabil Hafez, Birhane Hagos, Jennifer Hall, Charlotte Henson, Andrew Hollinger, Tracey Honan, Monika D Huard, Leanne Hughes, Brian Hurhula, M Erii Husby, Asha Kamat, Ben Kanga, Seva Kashin, Dmitry Khazanovich, Peter Kisner, Krista Lance, Marcia Lara, William Lee, Niall Lennon, Frances Letendre, Rosie Levine, Alex Lipovsky, Xiaohong Liu, Jinlei Liu, Shangtao Liu, Tashi Lokyitsang, Yeshi Lokyitsang, Rakela Lubonja, Annie Lui, Pen Macdonald, Vasilia Magnisalis, Kebede Maru, Charles Matthews, William Mccusker, Susan Mcdonough, Teena Mehta, James Meldrim, Louis Meneus, Oana Mihai, Atanas Mihalev, Tanya Mihova, Rachel Mittelman, Valentine Mlenga, Anna Montmayeur, Leonidas Mulrain, Adam Navidi, Jerome Naylor, Tamrat Negash, Thu Nguyen, Nga Nguyen, Robert Nicol, Choe Norbu, Nyima Norbu, Nathaniel Novod, Barry O'neill, Sahal Osman, Eva Markiewicz, Otero L Oyono, Christopher Patti, Pema Phunkhang, Fritz Pierre, Margaret Priest, Sujaa Raghuraman, Filip Rege, Rebecca Reyes, Cecil Rise, Peter Rogov, Keenan Ross, Elizabeth Ryan, Sampath Settipalli, Terrance Shea, Ngawang Sherpa, Lu Shi, Diana Shih, Todd Sparrow, Jessica Spaulding, John Stalker, Nicole Stange-Thomann, Sharon Stavropoulos, Catherine Stone, Christopher Strader, Senait Tesfaye, Talene Thomson, Yama Thoulutsang, Dawa Thoulutsang, Kerri Topham, Ira Topping, Tsamla Tsamla, Helen Vassiliev, Andy Vo, Tsering Wangchuk, Tsering Wangdi, Michael Weiand, Jane Wilkinson, Adam Wilson, Shailendra Yadav, Geneva Young, Qing Yu, Lisa Zembek, Danni Zhong, Andrew Zimmer, Zac Zwirko, David B Jaffe, Pablo Alvarez, William Brockman, Jonathan Butler, Chee-Wye Chin, Sante Gnerre, Iain Maccallum, Jennifer A Marshall Graves, Chris P Ponting, Matthew Breen, Paul B Samollow, Eric S Lander, Kerstin Lindblad-Toh (2007)  Genome of the marsupial Monodelphis domestica reveals innovation in non-coding sequences   Nature 447: 7141. 167-177  
Abstract: We report a high-quality draft of the genome sequence of the grey, short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica). As the first metatherian (‘marsupial’) species to be sequenced, the opossum provides a unique perspective on the organization and evolution of mammalian genomes. Distinctive features of the opossum chromosomes provide support for recent theories about genome evolution and function, including a strong influence of biased gene conversion on nucleotide sequence composition, and a relationship between chromosomal characteristics and X chromosome inactivation. Comparison of opossum and eutherian genomes also reveals a sharp difference in evolutionary innovation between protein-coding and non-coding functional elements. True innovation in protein-coding genes seems to be relatively rare, with lineage-specific differences being largely due to diversification and rapid turnover in gene families involved in environmental interactions. In contrast, about 20% of eutherian conserved non-coding elements (CNEs) are recent inventions that postdate the divergence of Eutheria and Metatheria. A substantial proportion of these eutherian-specific CNEs arose from sequence inserted by transposable elements, pointing to transposons as a major creative force in the evolution of mammalian gene regulation.
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