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Mark Gerstein

Bio: Mark Gerstein is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Gene. The author has an hindex of 168, co-authored 751 publications receiving 149578 citations. Previous affiliations of Mark Gerstein include Rutgers University & Structural Genomics Consortium.
Topics: Genome, Gene, Human genome, Genomics, Pseudogene


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The solution structure of one and two repeats of the 'SPKK' DNA-binding motif is reported on the basis of NMR measurements and a possible structure of the SPKK motif in the complex with DNA is discussed.
Abstract: The solution structure of one and two repeats of the 'SPKK' DNA-binding motif is reported on the basis of NMR measurements. In dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO) the major population (approximately 90%) of peptides, SPRKSPRK(S2) and GSPKKSPRK(S2b), adopts a conformation, which has two trans prolines. The two 'SP(R/K)K' units in these peptides are equivalent and each adopts a turn structure exchanging with an extended structure. This is suggested by an NOE connectivity of the beta-turn type, between the backbone amide protons of residues (i+2) and (i+3) and NOE connectivities of the Asx(sigma)-turn type, between protons of the ith Ser and the backbone amide proton on residue (i+2). This suggests that each SP(R/K)K unit has a structural intermediate between (or a combination of) a beta-turn and an Asx(sigma)-turn. In 90-10% DMSO/H2O at 4 degrees C the two units of S2 are connected more tightly by folding into a short 3(10) helix, broken at the second proline. For another peptide, Thr-Pro-Arg-Lys(T1), the major population (75%) in 100% DMSO comprises a beta-turn in rapid exchange with an extended structure. We did not observe an NOE connectivity of the Asx(sigma) type with the T1 peptide. A possible structure of the SPKK motif in the complex with DNA is discussed.

33 citations

Posted ContentDOI
Sebastian M. Waszak1, Grace Tiao2, Bin Zhu3, Tobias Rausch1, Francesc Muyas4, Bernardo Rodriguez-Martin5, Raquel Rabionet6, Sergei Yakneen1, Geòrgia Escaramís, Yang Li7, Natalie Saini3, Steven A. Roberts8, German Demidov4, Esa Pitkänen1, Olivier Delaneau9, Jose Maria Heredia-Genestar10, Joachim Weischenfeldt11, Suyash Shringarpure12, Jieming Chen13, Hidewaki Nakagawa, Ludmil B. Alexandrov14, Oliver Drechsel4, L. J. Dursi15, Ayellet V. Segrè2, Erik Garrison7, Serap Erkek1, Nina Habermann1, Lara Urban1, Ekta Khurana16, Andy Cafferkey1, Shuto Hayashi17, Seiya Imoto17, Lauri A. Aaltonen18, Eva G. Alvarez5, Adrian Baez-Ortega19, Matthew A. Bailey20, Mattia Bosio4, Alicia L. Bruzos5, Ivo Buchhalter21, Carlos Bustamante12, Claudia Calabrese1, Anthony DiBiase22, Mark Gerstein20, Aliaksei Holik4, Xing Hua3, Kuan-lin Huang23, Ivica Letunic, Leszek J. Klimczak3, Roelof Koster3, Sushant Kumar20, Michael D. McLellan23, R. Jay Mashl23, Lisa Mirabello3, Steven Newhouse1, Aparna Prasad4, Gunnar Rätsch24, Matthias Schlesner21, Roland F. Schwarz21, Pramod Sharma22, Tal Shmaya, Nikos Sidiropoulos11, Lei Song3, Hana Susak4, Tomas Tanskanen18, Marta Tojo5, David C. Wedge25, Mark H. Wright12, Ying Wu, Kai Ye23, Venkata Yellapantula23, Jorge Zamora5, Atul J. Butte13, Gad Getz26, Jared T. Simpson15, Li Ding23, Tomas Marques-Bonet4, Arcadi Navarro4, Alvis Brazma1, Peter J. Campbell27, Stephen J. Chanock3, Nilanjan Chatterjee28, Oliver Stegle21, Reiner Siebert29, Stephan Ossowski4, Olivier Harismendy30, Dmitry A. Gordenin3, Jose M. C. Tubio5, Francisco M. De La Vega12, Douglas F. Easton19, Xavier Estivill, Jan O. Korbel1, Icgc 
01 Nov 2017-bioRxiv
TL;DR: This study highlights the major impact of rare and common germline variants on mutational landscapes in cancer and inferred over a hundred polymorphic L1/LINE elements with somatic retrotransposition activity in cancer.
Abstract: Cancers develop through somatic mutagenesis, however germline genetic variation can markedly contribute to tumorigenesis via diverse mechanisms. We discovered and phased 88 million germline single nucleotide variants, short insertions/deletions, and large structural variants in whole genomes from 2,642 cancer patients, and employed this genomic resource to study genetic determinants of somatic mutagenesis across 39 cancer types. Our analyses implicate damaging germline variants in a variety of cancer predisposition and DNA damage response genes with specific somatic mutation patterns. Mutations in the MBD4 DNA glycosylase gene showed association with elevated C>T mutagenesis at CpG dinucleotides, a ubiquitous mutational process acting across tissues. Analysis of somatic structural variation exposed complex rearrangement patterns, involving cycles of templated insertions and tandem duplications, in BRCA1-deficient tumours. Genome-wide association analysis implicated common genetic variation at the APOBEC3 gene cluster with reduced basal levels of somatic mutagenesis attributable to APOBEC cytidine deaminases across cancer types. We further inferred over a hundred polymorphic L1/LINE elements with somatic retrotransposition activity in cancer. Our study highlights the major impact of rare and common germline variants on mutational landscapes in cancer.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work defines protein-protein interaction broadly as co-complexation, and develops a weighted-voting procedure to predict interactions among yeast helical membrane proteins by optimally combining evidence based on diverse genome-wide information.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This analysis highlights technological divergences between two reproducible somatic variant detection efforts as part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium.
Abstract: The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) and International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) curated consensus somatic mutation calls using whole exome sequencing (WES) and whole genome sequencing (WGS), respectively. Here, as part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium, which aggregated whole genome sequencing data from 2,658 cancers across 38 tumour types, we compare WES and WGS side-by-side from 746 TCGA samples, finding that ~80% of mutations overlap in covered exonic regions. We estimate that low variant allele fraction (VAF < 15%) and clonal heterogeneity contribute up to 68% of private WGS mutations and 71% of private WES mutations. We observe that ~30% of private WGS mutations trace to mutations identified by a single variant caller in WES consensus efforts. WGS captures both ~50% more variation in exonic regions and un-observed mutations in loci with variable GC-content. Together, our analysis highlights technological divergences between two reproducible somatic variant detection efforts.

33 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the small residues glycine and serine contribute more to transmembrane helix–helix interactions in thermophilic organisms, which may result in a tighter packing of the helices allowing more hydrogen bond formation.

32 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new criterion for triggering the extension of word hits, combined with a new heuristic for generating gapped alignments, yields a gapped BLAST program that runs at approximately three times the speed of the original.
Abstract: The BLAST programs are widely used tools for searching protein and DNA databases for sequence similarities. For protein comparisons, a variety of definitional, algorithmic and statistical refinements described here permits the execution time of the BLAST programs to be decreased substantially while enhancing their sensitivity to weak similarities. A new criterion for triggering the extension of word hits, combined with a new heuristic for generating gapped alignments, yields a gapped BLAST program that runs at approximately three times the speed of the original. In addition, a method is introduced for automatically combining statistically significant alignments produced by BLAST into a position-specific score matrix, and searching the database using this matrix. The resulting Position-Specific Iterated BLAST (PSIBLAST) program runs at approximately the same speed per iteration as gapped BLAST, but in many cases is much more sensitive to weak but biologically relevant sequence similarities. PSI-BLAST is used to uncover several new and interesting members of the BRCT superfamily.

70,111 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The goals of the PDB are described, the systems in place for data deposition and access, how to obtain further information and plans for the future development of the resource are described.
Abstract: The Protein Data Bank (PDB; http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/ ) is the single worldwide archive of structural data of biological macromolecules. This paper describes the goals of the PDB, the systems in place for data deposition and access, how to obtain further information, and near-term plans for the future development of the resource.

34,239 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Spliced Transcripts Alignment to a Reference (STAR) software based on a previously undescribed RNA-seq alignment algorithm that uses sequential maximum mappable seed search in uncompressed suffix arrays followed by seed clustering and stitching procedure outperforms other aligners by a factor of >50 in mapping speed.
Abstract: Motivation Accurate alignment of high-throughput RNA-seq data is a challenging and yet unsolved problem because of the non-contiguous transcript structure, relatively short read lengths and constantly increasing throughput of the sequencing technologies. Currently available RNA-seq aligners suffer from high mapping error rates, low mapping speed, read length limitation and mapping biases. Results To align our large (>80 billon reads) ENCODE Transcriptome RNA-seq dataset, we developed the Spliced Transcripts Alignment to a Reference (STAR) software based on a previously undescribed RNA-seq alignment algorithm that uses sequential maximum mappable seed search in uncompressed suffix arrays followed by seed clustering and stitching procedure. STAR outperforms other aligners by a factor of >50 in mapping speed, aligning to the human genome 550 million 2 × 76 bp paired-end reads per hour on a modest 12-core server, while at the same time improving alignment sensitivity and precision. In addition to unbiased de novo detection of canonical junctions, STAR can discover non-canonical splices and chimeric (fusion) transcripts, and is also capable of mapping full-length RNA sequences. Using Roche 454 sequencing of reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction amplicons, we experimentally validated 1960 novel intergenic splice junctions with an 80-90% success rate, corroborating the high precision of the STAR mapping strategy. Availability and implementation STAR is implemented as a standalone C++ code. STAR is free open source software distributed under GPLv3 license and can be downloaded from http://code.google.com/p/rna-star/.

30,684 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Bowtie extends previous Burrows-Wheeler techniques with a novel quality-aware backtracking algorithm that permits mismatches and can be used simultaneously to achieve even greater alignment speeds.
Abstract: Bowtie is an ultrafast, memory-efficient alignment program for aligning short DNA sequence reads to large genomes. For the human genome, Burrows-Wheeler indexing allows Bowtie to align more than 25 million reads per CPU hour with a memory footprint of approximately 1.3 gigabytes. Bowtie extends previous Burrows-Wheeler techniques with a novel quality-aware backtracking algorithm that permits mismatches. Multiple processor cores can be used simultaneously to achieve even greater alignment speeds. Bowtie is open source http://bowtie.cbcb.umd.edu.

20,335 citations

28 Jul 2005
TL;DR: PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、树突状组胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作�ly.
Abstract: 抗原变异可使得多种致病微生物易于逃避宿主免疫应答。表达在感染红细胞表面的恶性疟原虫红细胞表面蛋白1(PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、内皮细胞、树突状细胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作用。每个单倍体基因组var基因家族编码约60种成员,通过启动转录不同的var基因变异体为抗原变异提供了分子基础。

18,940 citations