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Paul G. Richardson

Bio: Paul G. Richardson is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multiple myeloma & Bortezomib. The author has an hindex of 183, co-authored 1533 publications receiving 155912 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul G. Richardson include Broomfield Hospital & Dartmouth College.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
30 Jul 2009-Blood
TL;DR: Bortezomib is a proteasome inhibitor with remarkable preclinical and clinical antitumor activity in multiple myeloma (MM) patients, but its impact on constitutive NF-κB activity in MM cells has not yet been defined.

332 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Michel Attal, Paul G. Richardson1, S. Vincent Rajkumar2, Jesús F. San-Miguel3, Meral Beksac4, Ivan Spicka5, Xavier Leleu, Fredrik Schjesvold6, Fredrik Schjesvold7, Philippe Moreau, Meletios A. Dimopoulos8, Jeffrey Shang Yi Huang9, Jiri Minarik10, Michele Cavo11, H. Miles Prince12, Sandrine Macé, Kathryn P. Corzo13, Frank Campana13, Solenn Le-Guennec, Franck Dubin, Kenneth C. Anderson1, Vincent Rajkumar2, Simon J. Harrison, Wojt Janowski, Ian Kerridge, Andrew Spencer, Michel Delforge, Karel Fostier, Philip Vlummens, Ka Lung Wu, Richard Leblanc, Michel Pavic, Michael Sebag, Roman Hájek, Vladimir Maisnar, Ludek Pour, Henrik Gregersen, Lotfi Benbouker, Denis Caillot, Martine Escoffre-Barbe, Thierry Facon, Laurent Frenzel, Cyrille Hulin, Lionel Karlin, Brigitte Kolb, Brigitte Pegourie, Aurore Perrot, Mourad Tiab, Laure Vincent, Dietger Niederwieser, Achilles Anagnostopoulos, Sosana Delimpasi, Marie Christine Kyrtsonis, Anargyros Symeonidis, Árpád Illés, Gabor Mikala, Zsolt Nagy, Sara Bringen, Paolo Corradini, Ciceri Fabio, Roberto M. Lemoli, Anna Marina Liberati, Chiara Nozzoli, Renato Zambello, Shinsuke Iida, Takashi Ikeda, Satoshi Iyama, Morio Matsumoto, Chihiro Shimazaki, Kazutaka Sunami, Kenshi Suzuki, Michihiro Uchiyama, Youngil Koh, Ki-Hyun Kim, Jae Hoon Lee, Chang-Ki Min, Hillary Blacklock, Hugh Goodman, AJ Neylon, David Simpson, Sebastian Grosicki, Artur Jurczyszyn, Adam Walter-Croneck, Krzysztof Warzocha, Luis Araujo, Claudia Moreira, Vadim A Doronin, Larisa P. Mendeleeva, Vladimir I. Vorobyev, Andrej Vranovsky, Adrian Alegre, Mercedes Gironella, Marta Sonia Gonzalez Perez, Carmen Montes, Enrique M. Ocio, Paula Rodriguez, Mats Hardling, Birgitta Lauri, Ming Chung Wang, Su Peng Yeh, Mutlu Arat, Fatih Demirkan, Zafer Gulbas, Sevgi Kalayoglu Besisik, Ihsan Karadogan, Tulin Tuglular, Ali Ünal, Filiz Vural, Jonathan Sive, Matthew Streetly, Kwee Yong, Jason Tache 
TL;DR: The aim of this study was to determine the progression-free survival benefit of isatuximab plus pomalidomide and dexamethasone compared with pomidine and dexAMethas one in patients with relapsed and refractory multiple myeloma.

328 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Bortezomib as mentioned in this paper is a proteasome inhibitor developed specifically for use as an antineoplastic agent, which results in disruption of homeostatic mechanisms within the cell that can lead to cell death.
Abstract: VELCADER (bortezomib, Millennium Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Cambridge, MA, and Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development, L.L.C., Raritan, NJ) is a first-in-class proteasome inhibitor developed specifically for use as an antineoplastic agent. Inhibition of the proteasome results in disruption of homeostatic mechanisms within the cell that can lead to cell death. Bortezomib's first indication, for the treatment of relapsed myeloma in patients who have received at least two prior treatments and progressed on their previous treatment, was based in part on the magnitude of activity demonstrated in phase II trials. Bortezomib is currently indicated for patients who have received at least one prior therapy in the United States and European Union, although patients in the European Union must have already undergone bone marrow transplantation or be unsuitable for the procedure. A phase III trial demonstrated the superiority of bortezomib over high-dose dexamethasone in response rate, time to progression, and survival in patients with myeloma who had relapsed after 1-3 prior therapies. Clinical development is ongoing to investigate its activity as monotherapy and in combination regimens for the treatment of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, solid tumors, and earlier presentations of myeloma.

325 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
18 Oct 2005-Blood
TL;DR: It is shown that multiple myeloma (MM), the second most commonly diagnosed hematologic malignancy, is responsive to hsp90 inhibitors in vitro and in a clinically relevant orthotopic in vivo model, suggesting a more general role for hSp90 in chaperoning tumor- or tissue-type-specific constellations of client proteins with critical involvement in proliferative and antiapoptotic cellular responses.

325 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Working Group recommends that the presented criteria for diagnosing clinically significant TAM be adopted in clinical use, especially in scientific trials.
Abstract: Background and Objectives There are no widely accepted criteria for the definition of hematopoietic stem cell transplant-associated microangiopathy (TAM). An International Working Group was formed to develop a consensus formulation of criteria for diagnosing clinically significant TAM.Design and Methods The participants proposed a list of candidate criteria, selected those considered necessary, and ranked those considered optional to identify a core set of criteria. Three obligatory criteria and four optional criteria that ranked highest formed a core set. In an appropriateness panel process, the participants scored the diagnosis of 16 patient profiles as appropriate or not appropriate for TAM. Using the experts’ ratings on the patient profiles as a gold standard, the sensitivity and specificity of 24 candidate definitions of the disorder developed from the core set of criteria were evaluated. A nominal group technique was used to facilitate consensus formation. The definition of TAM with the highest score formed the final proposal.Results The Working Group proposes that the diagnosis of TAM requires fulfilment of all of the following criteria: (i) >4% schistocytes in blood; (ii) de novo, prolonged or progressive thrombocytopenia (platelet count

325 citations


Cited by
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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

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The definition and use of family-specific, manually curated gathering thresholds are explained and some of the features of domains of unknown function (also known as DUFs) are discussed, which constitute a rapidly growing class of families within Pfam.
Abstract: Pfam is a widely used database of protein families and domains. This article describes a set of major updates that we have implemented in the latest release (version 24.0). The most important change is that we now use HMMER3, the latest version of the popular profile hidden Markov model package. This software is approximately 100 times faster than HMMER2 and is more sensitive due to the routine use of the forward algorithm. The move to HMMER3 has necessitated numerous changes to Pfam that are described in detail. Pfam release 24.0 contains 11,912 families, of which a large number have been significantly updated during the past two years. Pfam is available via servers in the UK (http://pfam.sanger.ac.uk/), the USA (http://pfam.janelia.org/) and Sweden (http://pfam.sbc.su.se/).

14,075 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
J. Craig Venter1, Mark Raymond Adams1, Eugene W. Myers1, Peter W. Li1  +269 moreInstitutions (12)
16 Feb 2001-Science
TL;DR: Comparative genomic analysis indicates vertebrate expansions of genes associated with neuronal function, with tissue-specific developmental regulation, and with the hemostasis and immune systems are indicated.
Abstract: A 2.91-billion base pair (bp) consensus sequence of the euchromatic portion of the human genome was generated by the whole-genome shotgun sequencing method. The 14.8-billion bp DNA sequence was generated over 9 months from 27,271,853 high-quality sequence reads (5.11-fold coverage of the genome) from both ends of plasmid clones made from the DNA of five individuals. Two assembly strategies-a whole-genome assembly and a regional chromosome assembly-were used, each combining sequence data from Celera and the publicly funded genome effort. The public data were shredded into 550-bp segments to create a 2.9-fold coverage of those genome regions that had been sequenced, without including biases inherent in the cloning and assembly procedure used by the publicly funded group. This brought the effective coverage in the assemblies to eightfold, reducing the number and size of gaps in the final assembly over what would be obtained with 5.11-fold coverage. The two assembly strategies yielded very similar results that largely agree with independent mapping data. The assemblies effectively cover the euchromatic regions of the human chromosomes. More than 90% of the genome is in scaffold assemblies of 100,000 bp or more, and 25% of the genome is in scaffolds of 10 million bp or larger. Analysis of the genome sequence revealed 26,588 protein-encoding transcripts for which there was strong corroborating evidence and an additional approximately 12,000 computationally derived genes with mouse matches or other weak supporting evidence. Although gene-dense clusters are obvious, almost half the genes are dispersed in low G+C sequence separated by large tracts of apparently noncoding sequence. Only 1.1% of the genome is spanned by exons, whereas 24% is in introns, with 75% of the genome being intergenic DNA. Duplications of segmental blocks, ranging in size up to chromosomal lengths, are abundant throughout the genome and reveal a complex evolutionary history. Comparative genomic analysis indicates vertebrate expansions of genes associated with neuronal function, with tissue-specific developmental regulation, and with the hemostasis and immune systems. DNA sequence comparisons between the consensus sequence and publicly funded genome data provided locations of 2.1 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). A random pair of human haploid genomes differed at a rate of 1 bp per 1250 on average, but there was marked heterogeneity in the level of polymorphism across the genome. Less than 1% of all SNPs resulted in variation in proteins, but the task of determining which SNPs have functional consequences remains an open challenge.

12,098 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
14 Jan 2005-Cell
TL;DR: In a four-genome analysis of 3' UTRs, approximately 13,000 regulatory relationships were detected above the estimate of false-positive predictions, thereby implicating as miRNA targets more than 5300 human genes, which represented 30% of the gene set.

11,624 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mature web tool for rapid and reliable display of any requested portion of the genome at any scale, together with several dozen aligned annotation tracks, is provided at http://genome.ucsc.edu.
Abstract: As vertebrate genome sequences near completion and research refocuses to their analysis, the issue of effective genome annotation display becomes critical. A mature web tool for rapid and reliable display of any requested portion of the genome at any scale, together with several dozen aligned annotation tracks, is provided at http://genome.ucsc.edu. This browser displays assembly contigs and gaps, mRNA and expressed sequence tag alignments, multiple gene predictions, cross-species homologies, single nucleotide polymorphisms, sequence-tagged sites, radiation hybrid data, transposon repeats, and more as a stack of coregistered tracks. Text and sequence-based searches provide quick and precise access to any region of specific interest. Secondary links from individual features lead to sequence details and supplementary off-site databases. One-half of the annotation tracks are computed at the University of California, Santa Cruz from publicly available sequence data; collaborators worldwide provide the rest. Users can stably add their own custom tracks to the browser for educational or research purposes. The conceptual and technical framework of the browser, its underlying MYSQL database, and overall use are described. The web site currently serves over 50,000 pages per day to over 3000 different users.

9,605 citations