Exome sequencing data for 1001 DLBCL patients and RNA sequencing data for 775 DLBCL patients
Long read data generated for de novo assembly (PacBio and ONT FASTQ files)
Samples prepared by LCM - 5 cases for pilot study. Bulk DNA not available.
This study contains sequencing DNA and RNA sequencing data for rhabdoid tumors
HLA sequence data and final calls for VaccGene and 1000Gp3 African populations
Exome sequencing data for study of the microenviroment of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma
DATA FILES FOR SJRB
Bam files for 16 meningioma tumor samples; ChIPseq performed on Illumina HiSeq 2000
Uterine fibroids are hormonally-dependent benign tumors of the uterine muscle that develop in premenopausal women. Currently, the primary symptoms (pain and bleeding) are treated, but when those treatments fail, major procedures to remove or shrink the fibroids are frequently the only options for women. Fibroids are the leading indication for hysterectomy in the United States. African-American women develop fibroids an average of 10 years earlier than white women in the U.S., and they are approximately three times more likely to have a hysterectomy for fibroids. The known risk factors for fibroids do not explain this disparity.The goal of the Study of Environment, Lifestyle & Fibroids (SELF) is to identify risk factors for uterine fibroid development. It is the first study to identify incident cases based on ultrasound screening. We enrolled a cohort of 1693 women who self-identified as Black or African American, ages 23-35, from the Detroit, Michigan area. Women with a prior diagnosis of fibroids were not eligible. Participants were screened for fibroids with ultrasound at enrollment, and follow-up ultrasounds occurred approximately every 20 months to identify new fibroids. Fibroids that were detected at enrollment and those that arose during follow up were monitored at subsequent visits for fibroid growth. We collected risk factor and symptom data, physical measurements, as well as blood, urine, and vaginal swab specimens at enrollment and follow-up visits.The study was designed to test three primary hypotheses:Vitamin D deficiency is a risk factor for fibroid incidence and/or growth.Reproductive tract infections can increase risk of fibroid development.Genotypic variation in African ancestry may influence fibroid development directly, or through interaction with life-course risk factors.In addition, we collected extensive information to examine other exposures of interest, and our extra specimens can be used to test new hypotheses in the future.With this first prospective study of fibroid development, we aim to identify new preventative factors that could directly benefit women. We anticipate that the detailed data on fibroid development can be used to help design new interval treatment strategies to limit fibroid growth and thus reduce the need for the invasive treatments that remain the standard of care when first-line treatments fail.
We sequenced two tumor and one normal whole genome libraries for a Sezary syndrome patient and also sequenced RNA libraries for each tumor. We identified a novel, highly expressed CTLA4:CD28 gene fusion that is predicted to results in a leading to stimulatory T-cell signaling in the presence of an inhibitory signal.