Maureen A Sartor

Maureen A Sartor
University of Michigan | U-M · Department of Computational Medicine and Bioinformatics

PhD

About

242
Publications
30,550
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
10,179
Citations
Additional affiliations
January 2012 - August 2015
University of Michigan
Position
  • Professor (Assistant)
January 2007 - present
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
January 2008 - December 2012
University of Michigan

Publications

Publications (242)
Article
Full-text available
Lead (Pb) is a neurotoxicant with early life exposure linked to long-term health effects. Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that associate with PIWIL proteins to induce DNA methylation. It remains unknown whether Pb exposure influences piRNA expression. This study evaluated how perinatal Pb exposure (32 ppm in drinking water)...
Article
Full-text available
Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is linked to ageing and genetic and environmental risk factors, yet underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. We aimed to evaluate epigenetic age acceleration (EAA), i.e., DNA methylation (DNAm) age acceleration, and its association with ALS case status and survival. Methods In this study, we...
Preprint
Full-text available
Importance Molecular subtypes of HPV-associated Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma (HNSCC), named IMU (immune strong) and KRT (highly keratinized), are well-recognized and have been shown to have distinct mechanisms of carcinogenesis, clinical outcomes, and potentially differing optimal treatment strategies. Currently, no standardized method exi...
Article
Background: Maternal exposure to environmental chemicals can cause adverse health effects in offspring. Mounting evidence supports that these effects are influenced, at least in part, by epigenetic modifications. It is unknown whether epigenetic changes in surrogate tissues such as the blood are reflective of similar changes in target tissues such...
Preprint
Background: Global and site-specific changes in DNA methylation and gene expression are associated with cardiovascular aging and disease, but how toxicant exposures during early development influence the normal trajectory of these age-related molecular changes, and whether there are sex differences, has not yet been investigated. Objectives: We use...
Preprint
Mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (mIDH1; IDH1 R132H ) exhibits a gain of function mutation enabling 2-hydroxyglutarate (2HG) production. 2HG inhibits DNA and histone demethylases, inducing epigenetic reprogramming and corresponding changes to the transcriptome. We previously demonstrated 2HG-mediated epigenetic reprogramming enhances DNA-damage re...
Article
Full-text available
PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) are a class of small non-coding RNAs that are highly expressed and extensively studied from the germline. piRNAs associate with PIWI proteins to maintain DNA methylation for transposon silencing and transcriptional gene regulation for genomic stability. Mature germline piRNAs have distinct characteristics including a...
Article
Full-text available
Background Oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) is associated with oral microbial dysbiosis. In this unique study, we compared pre- to post-treatment salivary microbiome in patients with SCC by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and examined how microbiome changes correlated with the expression of an anti-microbial protein. Results Treatment of SCC was associ...
Article
Background: Oral cavity squamous cell carcinoma (OCSCC) has an unpredictable response to immunotherapy, and standard biomarkers evaluating the tumor immune microenvironment (TIME) lack widespread translational applicability. Defining the TIME is critical to understanding mechanisms and allows the development of reproducible and accurate prognostic...
Article
Full-text available
The incidence of human papillomavirus-positive (HPV+) oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (OPSCC) is rising rapidly and has exceeded cervical cancer to become the most common HPV-induced cancer in developed countries. Since patients with HPV + OPSCC respond very favorably to standard aggressive treatment, the emphasis has changed to reducing trea...
Article
Full-text available
DNA methylation is a vital early step in carcinogenesis. Most findings of aberrant DNA methylation in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC) are array based with limited coverage and resolution, and mainly explored by human papillomavirus (HPV) status, ignoring the high heterogeneity of this disease. In this study, we performed whole-genome...
Preprint
Full-text available
Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGGs) are diffuse and highly aggressive CNS tumors which remain incurable, with a 5-year overall survival of less than 20%. Within glioma, mutations in the genes encoding the histones H3.1 and H3.3 have been discovered to be age-restricted and specific of pHGGs. This work focuses on the study of pHGGs harboring the H3...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction: The developing epigenome changes rapidly, potentially making it more sensitive to toxicant exposures. DNA modifications, including methylation and hydroxymethylation, are important parts of the epigenome that may be affected by environmental exposures. However, most studies do not differentiate between these two DNA modifications, pos...
Article
6057 Background: Human Papillomavirus (HPV) integration in the human genome occurs in a majority of HPV(+) head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCC), with direct and indirect effects on host gene expression and tumorigenesis. Although previous studies showed that HPV integration in HNSCC is overrepresented in genes often somatically mutated in...
Article
6061 Background: The tumor microenvironment provides important insights into cancer behavior and its response to treatment. In particular, the cellular composition and spatial arrangement of tumor immune infiltrates are associated with patient prognosis and survival. We optimized and employed a novel method using readily available hematoxylin and e...
Article
Full-text available
Motivation: Single-cell sequencing (SCS) enables exploring the pathways and processes of cells, and cell populations. However, there is a paucity of pathway enrichment methods designed to tolerate the high noise and low gene coverage of this technology. When gene expression data are noisy and signals are sparse, testing pathway enrichment based on...
Article
Full-text available
Simple Summary The impact of the oral microbiome on head and neck cancer is poorly understood. Better characterization of its impact may improve our understanding of the development of the disease and management of disease outcomes. This case–control study seeks to identify differences in the oral microbiome between patients who have head and neck...
Article
Purpose: Mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (mIDH1) alters the epigenetic regulation of chromatin, leading to a hypermethylation phenotype in adult glioma. This work focuses on identifying gene targets epigenetically dysregulated by mIDH1 to confer therapeutic resistance to ionizing radiation (IR). Experimental design: We evaluated changes in the...
Article
Full-text available
Environmental contaminants such as the metal lead (Pb) are associated with cardiovascular disease, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. In particular, little is known about how exposure to Pb during early development impacts the cardiac epigenome at any point across the life course and potential differences between sexes....
Article
PD-L1 testing guides therapeutic decision-making for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). We sought to understand whether chemoradiation therapy (CRT) influences the PD-L1 combined positive score (CPS) and other biomarkers of response to immunotherapy. PD-L1 expression was assessed using immunohistochemistry, and bulk RNA sequencing was p...
Preprint
Human exposure to toxic chemicals presents a huge health burden and disease risk. Key to understanding chemical toxicity is knowledge of the molecular target(s) of the chemicals. Because a comprehensive safety assessment for all chemicals is infeasible due to limited resources, a robust computational method for discovering targets of environmental...
Preprint
Mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (mIDH1) alters the epigenetic regulation of chromatin, leading to a hypermethylation phenotype in adult glioma. Establishment of glioma-specific methylation patterns by mIDH1 reprogramming drives oncogenic features of cancer metabolism, stemness and therapeutic resistance. This work focuses on identifying gene targ...
Article
Full-text available
Background Revealing the gene targets of distal regulatory elements is challenging yet critical for interpreting regulome data. Experiment-derived enhancer-gene links are restricted to a small set of enhancers and/or cell types, while the accuracy of genome-wide approaches remains elusive due to the lack of a systematic evaluation. We combined mult...
Article
Full-text available
ATRX, a chromatin remodeler protein, is recurrently mutated in H3F3A-mutant pediatric glioblastoma (GBM) and isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-mutant grade 2/3 adult glioma. Previous work has shown that ATRX-deficient GBM cells show enhanced sensitivity to irradiation, but the etiology remains unclear. We find that ATRX binds the regulatory elements o...
Article
Full-text available
Simple Summary Human papillomavirus (HPV) infections are responsible for a continually growing number of head and neck cancer (HNC) cases, with the incident rate overtaking that of HPV-related cervical cancers in the United States. Most HPV-related HNC cases arise in the oropharynx, and although they have a better 5-year survival rate than non-HPV-...
Preprint
Until recently, research on the molecular signatures of HPV-associated head and neck cancers mainly focused on their differences with respect to HPV-negative HNSCCs. However, given the continuing high incidence level of HPV-related HNSCC, the time is ripe to characterize the heterogeneity that exists within these cancers. Here, we review research t...
Article
Full-text available
Exposure to particulate matter (PM) from ambient air pollution is a well-known risk factor for many lung diseases, but the mechanism(s) for this is not completely understood. Bronchial epithelial cells, which line the airway of the respiratory tract, undergo genome-wide level changes in gene expression and DNA methylation particularly when exposed...
Article
Full-text available
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP) is a type of phthalate plasticizer found in a variety of consumer products and poses a public health concern due to its metabolic and endocrine disruption activities. Dysregulation of epigenetic modifications, including DNA methylation, has been shown to be an important mechanism for the pathogenic effects of prena...
Article
Full-text available
Environmental factors play an important role in the etiology of cardiovascular diseases. Cardiovascular diseases exhibit marked sexual dimorphism; however, the sex-specific effects of environmental exposures on cardiac health are incompletely understood. Perinatal and adult exposures to the metal lead (Pb) are linked to several adverse cardiovascul...
Article
Full-text available
Phthalates have been demonstrated to interfere with metabolism, presumably by interacting with peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs). However, mechanisms linking developmental phthalate exposures to long-term metabolic effects have not yet been elucidated. We investigated the hypothesis that developmental phthalate exposure has long-l...
Article
Full-text available
Background Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) is the sixth most prevalent cancer worldwide, with human papillomavirus (HPV)-related HNSCC rising to concerning levels. Extensive clinical, genetic and epigenetic differences exist between HPV-associated HNSCC and HPV-negative HNSCC, which is often linked to tobacco use. However, 5-hydroxyme...
Article
Early developmental environment can influence long-term health through reprogramming of the epigenome. Human environmental epigenetics studies rely on surrogate tissues, such as blood, to assess the effects of environment on disease-relevant but inaccessible target tissues. However, the extent to which environment-induced epigenetic changes are con...
Preprint
Full-text available
Revealing the gene targets of distal regulatory elements is challenging yet critical for interpreting regulome data. Experiment-derived enhancer-gene links are restricted to a small set of enhancers and/or cell types, while the accuracy of genome-wide approaches remains elusive due to the lack of a systematic evaluation. We combined multiple spatia...
Article
Full-text available
Lead (Pb) is a well-known toxicant that interferes with the development of a child’s nervous and metabolic systems and increases the risk of developing diseases later in life. Although studies have investigated epigenetic effects associated with Pb exposure, knowledge of genome-wide changes with in vivo low dose perinatal Pb exposure in multiple ti...
Article
Full-text available
Phthalate plasticizers are ubiquitous chemicals linked to several cardiovascular diseases in animal models and humans. Despite this, the mechanisms by which phthalate exposures cause adverse cardiac health outcomes are unclear. In particular, whether phthalate exposures during pregnancy interfere with normal developmental programming of the cardiov...
Article
Background: Lead (Pb) exposure is ubiquitous with permanent neurodevelopmental effects. The hippocampus brain region is involved in learning and memory with heterogeneous cellular composition. The hippocampus cell type-specific responses to Pb are unknown. Objective: Examine perinatal Pb treatment effects on adult hippocampus gene expression, at...
Article
Full-text available
Background Human papillomavirus (HPV) oncogenes E6, E7, and shorter isoforms of E6 (E6*) are known carcinogenic factors in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Little is known regarding E6* functions. Methods We analyzed RNA‐seq data from 68 HNSCC HPV type 16‐positive tumors to determine host genes and pathways associated with E6+E7 expr...
Article
Full-text available
Anaplastic thyroid cancer (ATC) is one of the most aggressive human malignancies, with an average life expectancy of ~6 months from the time of diagnosis. The genetic and epigenetic changes that underlie this malignancy are incompletely understood. We found that ASH1-like histone lysine methyltransferase (ASH1L) is over-expressed in ATC relative to...
Article
Full-text available
Overexpression of centromeric proteins has been identified in a number of human malignancies, but the functional and mechanistic contributions of these proteins to disease progression have not been characterized. The centromeric histone H3 variant centromere protein A (CENPA) is an epigenetic mark that determines centromere identity. Here, using an...
Article
Full-text available
Large sets of genomic regions are generated by the initial analysis of various genome-wide sequencing data, such as ChIP-seq and ATAC-seq experiments. Gene set enrichment (GSE) methods are commonly employed to determine the pathways associated with them. Given the pathways and other gene sets (e.g., GO terms) of significance, it is of great interes...
Article
Full-text available
Gene set enrichment (GSE) testing enhances the biological interpretation of ChIP-seq data and other large sets of genomic regions. Our group has previously introduced two GSE methods for genomic regions: ChIP-Enrich for narrow regions and Broad-Enrich for broad regions. Here, we introduce Poly-Enrich, which has wider applicability, additional capab...
Article
Identifying new gene functions and pathways underlying diseases and biological processes are major challenges in genomics research. Particularly, most methods for interpreting the pathways characteristic of an experimental gene list defined by genomic data are limited by their dependence on assessing the overlapping genes or their interactome topol...
Article
Full-text available
The nuclear protein DEK is an endogenous DNA-binding chromatin factor regulating hematopoiesis. DEK is one of only 2 known secreted nuclear chromatin factors, but whether and how extracellular DEK regulates hematopoiesis is not known. We demonstrated that extracellular DEK greatly enhanced ex vivo expansion of cytokine-stimulated human and mouse he...
Article
Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that associate with PIWI proteins for transposon silencing via DNA methylation and are highly expressed and extensively studied in the germline. Mature germline piRNAs typically consist of 24-32 nucleotides, with a strong preference for a 5' uridine signature, an adenosine signature at positi...
Article
Aim: Soy isoflavones have been suggested as epigenetic modulating agents with effects that could be important in carcinogenesis. Hypomethylation of LINE-1 has been associated with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) development from oral premalignant lesions and with poor prognosis. To determine if neoadjuvant soy isoflavone supplementati...
Article
Patients with glioma whose tumors carry a mutation in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1 R132H ) are younger at diagnosis and live longer. IDH1 mutations co-occur with other molecular lesions, such as 1p/19q codeletion, inactivating mutations in the tumor suppressor protein 53 (TP53 ) gene, and loss-of-function mutations in alpha thalassemia/mental r...
Chapter
The use of high-throughput, genome-wide assays in toxicoepigenetics is rapidly developing and expanding. With recent advances in experimental technologies, a great amount of multiomics epigenomic data has been generated requiring the development of correspondingly advanced bioinformatics approaches to analyze and interpret such big data. This chapt...
Preprint
Full-text available
Gene set enrichment (GSE) testing enhances the biological interpretation of ChIP-seq data and other large sets of genomic regions. Our group has previously introduced two GSE methods for genomic regions: ChIP-Enrich for narrow regions and Broad-Enrich for broad genomic regions, such as histone modifications. Here, we introduce new methods and exten...
Article
DNA methylation at cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) dinucleotides changes as a function of age in humans and animal models, a process that may contribute to chronic disease development. Recent studies have investigated the role of an oxidized form of DNA methylation – 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) – in the epigenome, but its contribution to age-re...
Article
Full-text available
While whole-exome DNA sequencing is the most common technology to study genetic variants in tumors in known exonic regions, RNA-seq is cheaper, covers most of the same exonic regions, and is often more readily available. In this study, we show the utility of mRNA-seq-based variant analysis combined with targeted gene sequencing performed on both tu...
Article
Background: Epigenetic machinery plays an important role in genomic imprinting, a developmental process that establishes parent-of-origin-specific monoallelic gene expression. Although a number of studies have investigated the role of 5-methylcytosine in imprinting control, the contribution of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5-hmC) to this epigenetic phe...
Article
Developmental cadmium exposure in vivo disrupts mammary gland differentiation, while exposure of breast cell lines to cadmium causes invasion consistent with the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). The effects of cadmium on normal human breast stem cells have not been measured. Here, we quantified the effects of cadmium exposure on reduction m...
Data
Table S3. Comparison of Expression of All Genes between ALDH+ and ALDH−CD44−CD24+ Cells
Data
Table S4. Comparison of Gene Expression between Samples of Bulk RNA, Normalized for Housekeeping Genes, Isolated from ALDH+ Cells that Expressed CD44+/CD24− (Dual) and Did Not Express CD44+/CD24− (ALDH+)
Data
Table S6. Comparison of Single-Cell Gene Expression Levels between ALDH+ Normal Mammary Cells Expressing Detectable Levels of ALDH1A1 (n = 9) Compared with Cells that Did Not (n = 96)
Data
Table S5. Comparison of Single-Cell Gene Expression Levels between the Four Identified Expression Clusters of ALDH+ Normal Mammary Cells
Data
Table S1. Comparison of Expression of All Genes between ALDH+ and ALDH−CD44−CD24+ Cells
Data
Table S2. Most Enriched KEGG Pathways for Genes Differentially Expressed between ALDH+ and ALDH−CD44−CD24+ Cells
Article
Full-text available
During development, the mammary gland undergoes extensive remodeling driven by stem cells. Breast cancers are also hierarchically organized and driven by cancer stem cells characterized by CD44⁺CD24low/− or aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) expression. These markers identify mesenchymal and epithelial populations both capable of tumor initiation. Less...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Developmental cadmium exposure in vivo disrupts mammary gland differentiation, while exposure of breast cell lines to cadmium causes invasion consistent with the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). The effects of cadmium on normal human breast stem cell development have not been measured. Objective The objective of this study was t...
Article
p>DNA methylation (5mC) plays important roles in mammalian development, oncogenesis, treatment response, and responses to the environment. DNA hydroxymethylation (5hmC) is also an informative epigenetic mark with distinct roles in regulation and cancer. Gold-standard, widely used technologies (bisulfite conversion, followed by deep sequencing) cann...
Article
The incidence of human papillomavirus (HPV)–related oropharynx cancer has steadily increased over the past two decades and now represents a majority of oropharyngeal cancer cases. Integration of the HPV genome into the host genome is a common event during carcinogenesis that has clinically relevant effects if the viral early genes are transcribed....
Article
Motivation: Analysis of next-generation sequencing data often results in a list of genomic regions. These may include differentially methylated CpGs/regions, transcription factor binding sites, interacting chromatin regions, or GWAS-associated SNPs, among others. A common analysis step is to annotate such genomic regions to genomic annotations (pr...
Preprint
Full-text available
During development and pregnancy, the human mammary gland undergoes extensive remodeling in processes driven by populations of stem and progenitor cells. We recently reported that breast cancers are also hierarchically organized and driven by distinct populations of cancer stem cells characterized as CD44 ⁺ CD24 low/− or by expression of Aldehyde d...
Preprint
Full-text available
Motivation Analysis of next-generation sequencing data often results in a list of genomic regions. These may include differentially methylated CpGs/regions, transcription factor binding sites, interacting chromatin regions, or GWAS-associated SNPs, among others. A common analysis step is to annotate such genomic regions to genomic annotations (prom...