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Wesley M. Marin

University of California, San Francisco

ORCID: 0000-0002-2334-0396

Publishes on Immune Cell Function and Interaction, T-cell and B-cell Immunology, Reproductive System and Pregnancy. 25 papers and 682 citations.

25Publications
682Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

A specific amino acid motif of<i>HLA-DRB1</i>mediates risk and interacts with smoking history in Parkinson’s disease
Jill A. Hollenbach, Paul J. Norman, Lisa E. Creary et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2019
Cited by 80Open Access

Significance Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a chronic, progressive neurodegenerative disease with both familial and sporadic forms and a clear genetic component. In addition, underlying immunoregulatory dysfunction and inflammatory processes have been implicated in PD pathogenesis. In this study, deep sequencing of HLA genes, which encode highly variable cell surface immune receptors, reveals specific variants conferring either risk or protection in PD. Because a history of cigarette smoking is known to be protective in PD, we analyzed the interaction of these genetic variants with smoking history in PD patients and healthy controls and found that the genetic effects are modified by history of cigarette smoking. These results provide a molecular model that explains the unique epidemiology of smoking in PD.

Allele-Level KIR Genotyping of More Than a Million Samples: Workflow, Algorithm, and Observations
Ines Wagner, Daniel Schefzyk, Jens Pruschke et al.|Frontiers in Immunology|2018
Cited by 78Open Access

The killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) genes regulate natural killer cell activity, influencing predisposition to immune mediated disease, and affecting hematopoietic stem cell transplantation outcome. Owing to the complexity of the KIR locus, with extensive gene copy number variation and allelic diversity, high-resolution characterization of KIR has so far been applied only to relatively small cohorts. Here, we present a comprehensive high-throughput KIR genotyping approach based on next generation sequencing. Through PCR amplification of specific exons, our approach delivers both copy numbers of the individual genes and allelic information for every KIR gene. Ten-fold replicate analysis of a set of 190 samples revealed a precision of 99.9%. Genotyping of an independent set of 360 samples resulted in an accuracy of more than 99% taking into account consistent copy number prediction. We applied the workflow to genotype 1.8 million stem cell donor registry samples. We report on the observed KIR allele diversity and relative abundance of alleles based on a subset of more than 300,000 samples. Furthermore we identified more than 2,000 previously unreported KIR variants repeatedly in independent samples, underscoring the large diversity of the KIR region that awaits discovery. This cost-efficient high-resolution KIR genotyping approach is now applied to samples of volunteers registering as potential donors for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. This will facilitate the utilization of KIR as additional selection criterion to improve unrelated donor stem cell transplantation outcome. In addition, the approach may serve studies requiring high-resolution KIR genotyping, like population genetics and disease association studies.

High-Resolution Characterization of KIR Genes in a Large North American Cohort Reveals Novel Details of Structural and Sequence Diversity
Cited by 37Open Access

The KIR (killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptor ) region is characterized by structural variation and high sequence similarity among genes, imposing technical difficulties for analysis. We undertook the most comprehensive study to date of KIR genetic diversity in a large population sample, applying next-generation sequencing in 2,130 United States European-descendant individuals. Data were analyzed using our custom bioinformatics pipeline specifically designed to address technical obstacles in determining KIR genotypes. Precise gene copy number determination allowed us to identify a set of uncommon gene-content KIR haplotypes accounting for 5.2% of structural variation. In this cohort, KIR2DL4 is the framework gene that most varies in copy number (6.5% of all individuals). We identified phased high-resolution alleles in large multi-locus insertions and also likely founder haplotypes from which they were deleted. Additionally, we observed 250 alleles at 5-digit resolution, of which 90 have frequencies ≥1%. We found sequence patterns that were consistent with the presence of novel alleles in 398 (18.7%) individuals and contextualized multiple orphan dbSNPs within the KIR complex. We also identified a novel KIR2DL1 variant, Pro151Arg, and demonstrated by molecular dynamics that this substitution is predicted to affect interaction with HLA-C. No previous studies have fully explored the full range of structural and sequence variation of KIR as we present here. We demonstrate that pairing high-throughput sequencing with state-of-art computational tools in a large cohort permits exploration of all aspects of KIR variation including determination of population-level haplotype diversity, improving understanding of the KIR system, and providing an important reference for future studies.