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Institution

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

FacilityOxford, United Kingdom
About: Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics is a facility organization based out in Oxford, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Genome-wide association study. The organization has 2122 authors who have published 4269 publications receiving 433899 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
28 Jul 2016-Nature
TL;DR: The results clarify the structural mechanism by which the activity of a GPCR is controlled by ligand-regulated interactions between its extracellular and transmembrane domains.
Abstract: Developmental signals of the Hedgehog (Hh) and Wnt families are transduced across the membrane by Frizzledclass G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) composed of both a heptahelical transmembrane domain (TMD) and an extracellular cysteine-rich domain (CRD). How the large extracellular domains of GPCRs regulate signalling by the TMD is unknown. We present crystal structures of the Hh signal transducer and oncoprotein Smoothened, a GPCR that contains two distinct ligand-binding sites: one in its TMD and one in the CRD. The CRD is stacked a top the TMD, separated by an intervening wedge-like linker domain. Structure-guided mutations show that the interface between the CRD, linker domain and TMD stabilizes the inactive state of Smoothened. Unexpectedly, we find a cholesterol molecule bound to Smoothened in the CRD binding site. Mutations predicted to prevent cholesterol binding impair the ability of Smoothened to transmit native Hh signals. Binding of a clinically used antagonist, vismodegib, to the TMD induces a conformational change that is propagated to the CRD, resulting in loss of cholesterol from the CRD-linker domain-TMD interface. Our results clarify the structural mechanism by which the activity of a GPCR is controlled by ligand-regulated interactions between its extracellular and transmembrane domains.

291 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The “glycosylation problem” can be solved by expressing glycoproteins transiently in mammalian cells in the presence of the N-glyCosylation processing inhibitors, kifunensine or swainsonine, and this approach should relieve one of the major bottlenecks in structural genomic analysis.

290 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
29 Mar 2013-Science
TL;DR: Findings indicate that ancient balancing selection has shaped human variation and point to genes involved in host-pathogen interactions as common targets.
Abstract: Instances in which natural selection maintains genetic variation in a population over millions of years are thought to be extremely rare. We conducted a genome-wide scan for long-lived balancing selection by looking for combinations of SNPs shared between humans and chimpanzees. In addition to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), we identified 125 regions in which the same haplotypes are segregating in the two species, all but two of which are non-coding. In six cases, there is evidence for an ancestral polymorphism that persisted to the present in humans and chimpanzees. Regions with shared haplotypes are significantly enriched for membrane glycoproteins, and a similar trend is seen among shared coding polymorphisms. These findings indicate that ancient balancing selection has shaped human variation and point to genes involved in host-pathogen interactions as common targets.

289 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The genetic data suggest a recessive model of inheritance, and ex vivo lipopolysaccharide-stimulated whole-blood TNF production to be higher in healthy TNF(-857C) homozygotes, and it is shown the transcription factor OCT1 binds TNF (-857T) but not TNF(8 57C), and interacts in vitro and in vivo with the pro-inflammatory NF(-kappa)B transcription factor p65 subunit at an adjacent binding site
Abstract: Tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) expression is increased in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and TNF maps to the IBD3 susceptibility locus. Transmission disequilibrium and case-control analyses, in two independent Caucasian cohorts, showed a novel association of the TNF(-857C) promoter polymorphism with IBD (overall P=0.001 in 587 IBD families). Further genetic associations of TNF(-857C) with IBD sub-phenotypes were seen for ulcerative colitis and for Crohn's disease, but only in patients not carrying common NOD2 mutations. The genetic data suggest a recessive model of inheritance, and we observed ex vivo lipopolysaccharide-stimulated whole-blood TNF production to be higher in healthy TNF(-857C) homozygotes. We show the transcription factor OCT1 binds TNF(-857T) but not TNF(-857C), and interacts in vitro and in vivo with the pro-inflammatory NF(-kappa)B transcription factor p65 subunit at an adjacent binding site. Detailed functional analyses of these interactions in gut macrophages, in addition to further genetic mapping of this gene-dense region, will be critical to understand the significance of the observed association of TNF(-857C) with IBD.

288 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
13 Apr 2012-Science
TL;DR: A fine-scale genetic map of the Western chimpanzee is constructed from high-throughput sequence data and shows that chimpanzee recombination is dominated by hotspots, which show no overlap with those of humans even though rates are similarly elevated around CpG islands and decreased within genes.
Abstract: To study the evolution of recombination rates in apes, we developed methodology to construct a fine-scale genetic map from high-throughput sequence data from 10 Western chimpanzees, Pan troglodytes verus. Compared to the human genetic map, broad-scale recombination rates tend to be conserved, but with exceptions, particularly in regions of chromosomal rearrangements and around the site of ancestral fusion in human chromosome 2. At fine scales, chimpanzee recombination is dominated by hotspots, which show no overlap with those of humans even though rates are similarly elevated around CpG islands and decreased within genes. The hotspot-specifying protein PRDM9 shows extensive variation among Western chimpanzees, and there is little evidence that any sequence motifs are enriched in hotspots. The contrasting locations of hotspots provide a natural experiment, which demonstrates the impact of recombination on base composition.

288 citations


Authors

Showing all 2127 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mark I. McCarthy2001028187898
John P. A. Ioannidis1851311193612
Gonçalo R. Abecasis179595230323
Simon I. Hay165557153307
Robert Plomin151110488588
Ashok Kumar1515654164086
Julian Parkhill149759104736
James F. Wilson146677101883
Jeremy K. Nicholson14177380275
Hugh Watkins12852491317
Erik Ingelsson12453885407
Claudia Langenberg12445267326
Adrian V. S. Hill12258964613
John A. Todd12151567413
Elaine Holmes11956058975
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202221
202183
202074
2019134
2018182
2017323