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Michael A. Dyer

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

ORCID: 0000-0003-4027-4850

Publishes on Neuroblastoma Research and Treatments, Retinal Development and Disorders, Ocular Oncology and Treatments. 413 papers and 18.9k citations.

413Publications
18.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A single-cell and single-nucleus RNA-Seq toolbox for fresh and frozen human tumors
Michal Slyper, Caroline Porter, Orr Ashenberg et al.|Nature Medicine|2020
Cited by 791Open Access

Single-cell genomics is essential to chart tumor ecosystems. Although single-cell RNA-Seq (scRNA-Seq) profiles RNA from cells dissociated from fresh tumors, single-nucleus RNA-Seq (snRNA-Seq) is needed to profile frozen or hard-to-dissociate tumors. Each requires customization to different tissue and tumor types, posing a barrier to adoption. Here, we have developed a systematic toolbox for profiling fresh and frozen clinical tumor samples using scRNA-Seq and snRNA-Seq, respectively. We analyzed 216,490 cells and nuclei from 40 samples across 23 specimens spanning eight tumor types of varying tissue and sample characteristics. We evaluated protocols by cell and nucleus quality, recovery rate and cellular composition. scRNA-Seq and snRNA-Seq from matched samples recovered the same cell types, but at different proportions. Our work provides guidance for studies in a broad range of tumors, including criteria for testing and selecting methods from the toolbox for other tumors, thus paving the way for charting tumor atlases.

Recurrent Somatic Structural Variations Contribute to Tumorigenesis in Pediatric Osteosarcoma
Xiang Chen, Armita Bahrami, Alberto S. Pappo et al.|Cell Reports|2014
Cited by 756Open Access

Pediatric osteosarcoma is characterized by multiple somatic chromosomal lesions, including structural variations (SVs) and copy number alterations (CNAs). To define the landscape of somatic mutations in pediatric osteosarcoma, we performed whole-genome sequencing of DNA from 20 osteosarcoma tumor samples and matched normal tissue in a discovery cohort, as well as 14 samples in a validation cohort. Single-nucleotide variations (SNVs) exhibited a pattern of localized hypermutation called kataegis in 50% of the tumors. We identified p53 pathway lesions in all tumors in the discovery cohort, nine of which were translocations in the first intron of the TP53 gene. Beyond TP53, the RB1, ATRX, and DLG2 genes showed recurrent somatic alterations in 29%-53% of the tumors. These data highlight the power of whole-genome sequencing for identifying recurrent somatic alterations in cancer genomes that may be missed using other methods.