L

Leslie H. Sobin

Leidos (United States)

Publishes on Gastrointestinal Tumor Research and Treatment, Sarcoma Diagnosis and Treatment, Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes. 429 papers and 65.3k citations.

429Publications
65.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The GTEx Consortium atlas of genetic regulatory effects across human tissues
Cited by 5.7kOpen Access

The Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project was established to characterize genetic effects on the transcriptome across human tissues and to link these regulatory mechanisms to trait and disease associations. Here, we present analyses of the version 8 data, examining 15,201 RNA-sequencing samples from 49 tissues of 838 postmortem donors. We comprehensively characterize genetic associations for gene expression and splicing in cis and trans, showing that regulatory associations are found for almost all genes, and describe the underlying molecular mechanisms and their contribution to allelic heterogeneity and pleiotropy of complex traits. Leveraging the large diversity of tissues, we provide insights into the tissue specificity of genetic effects and show that cell type composition is a key factor in understanding gene regulatory mechanisms in human tissues.

The Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) pilot analysis: Multitissue gene regulation in humans
Cited by 5.7kOpen Access

Understanding the functional consequences of genetic variation, and how it affects complex human disease and quantitative traits, remains a critical challenge for biomedicine. We present an analysis of RNA sequencing data from 1641 samples across 43 tissues from 175 individuals, generated as part of the pilot phase of the Genotype-Tissue Expression (GTEx) project. We describe the landscape of gene expression across tissues, catalog thousands of tissue-specific and shared regulatory expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) variants, describe complex network relationships, and identify signals from genome-wide association studies explained by eQTLs. These findings provide a systematic understanding of the cellular and biological consequences of human genetic variation and of the heterogeneity of such effects among a diverse set of human tissues.

World Health Organization classification of tumors
Cited by 2.4kOpen Access

The World Health Organization announces a new series entitled World Health Organization Classification of Tumors. This continuation of the International Histological Classification of Tumors project will include information on molecular genetics and will cover all tumor sites within the next 5 years.