👤 J M Grimes

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5
Articles
4
Name variants
Also published as: Adrian C Grimes, H Leighton Grimes, Susan M Grimes
articles
Robert J Huang, Ignacio A Wichmann, Andrew Su +11 more · 2023 · bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology · Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory · added 2026-04-24
Gastric intestinal metaplasia ( This study was based on clinical and genomic data from four cohorts: 1) GAPS, a GIM cohort with detailed OLGIM severity scoring (N=303 samples); 2) the Cancer Genome At Show more
Gastric intestinal metaplasia ( This study was based on clinical and genomic data from four cohorts: 1) GAPS, a GIM cohort with detailed OLGIM severity scoring (N=303 samples); 2) the Cancer Genome Atlas (N=198); 3) a collation of in-house and publicly available scRNA-seq data (N=40), and 4) a spatial validation cohort (N=5) consisting of annotated histology slides of patients with either GC or advanced GIM. We used a multi-omics pipeline to identify, validate and sequentially parse a highly-refined signature of 26 genes which characterize high-risk GIM. Using standard RNA-seq, we analyzed two separate, non-overlapping discovery (N=88) and validation (N=215) sets of GIM. In the discovery phase, we identified 105 upregulated genes specific for high-risk GIM (defined as OLGIM III-IV), of which 100 genes were independently confirmed in the validation set. Spatial transcriptomic profiling revealed 36 of these 100 genes to be expressed in metaplastic foci in GIM. Comparison with bulk GC sequencing data revealed 26 of these genes to be expressed in intestinal-type GC. Single-cell profiling resolved the 26-gene signature to both mature intestinal lineages (goblet cells, enterocytes) and immature intestinal lineages (stem-like cells). A subset of these genes was further validated using single-molecule multiplex fluorescence using an integrated multi-omics approach, we identified a novel 26-gene expression signature for high-OLGIM precursors at increased risk for GC. We found this signature localizes to aberrant intestinal stem-like cells within the metaplastic microenvironment. These findings hold important translational significance for future prevention and early detection efforts. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1101/2023.09.20.558462
CPS1
Meenu Kesarwani, Zachary Kincaid, Mohammad Azhar +8 more · 2023 · Leukemia · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Despite significant advances in developing selective JAK2 inhibitors, JAK2 kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy is ineffective in suppressing the disease. Reactivation of compensatory MEK-ERK and PI3K survi Show more
Despite significant advances in developing selective JAK2 inhibitors, JAK2 kinase inhibitor (TKI) therapy is ineffective in suppressing the disease. Reactivation of compensatory MEK-ERK and PI3K survival pathways sustained by inflammatory cytokine signaling causes treatment failure. Concomitant inhibition of MAPK pathway and JAK2 signaling showed improved in vivo efficacy compared to JAK2 inhibition alone but lacked clonal selectivity. We hypothesized that cytokine signaling in JAK2 Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41375-023-01959-0
DUSP6
Emily Farrell, Annie E Armstrong, Adrian C Grimes +3 more · 2018 · Frontiers in physiology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
no PDF DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.01442
MYBPC3
Emily T Farrell, Adrian C Grimes, Willem J De Lange +2 more · 2017 · Frontiers in physiology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
no PDF DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2017.00414
MYBPC3
M J Fogg, P Alzari, M Bahar +30 more · 2006 · Acta crystallographica. Section D, Biological crystallography · added 2026-04-24
The Structural Proteomics In Europe (SPINE) programme is aimed at the development and implementation of high-throughput technologies for the efficient structure determination of proteins of biomedical Show more
The Structural Proteomics In Europe (SPINE) programme is aimed at the development and implementation of high-throughput technologies for the efficient structure determination of proteins of biomedical importance, such as those of bacterial and viral pathogens linked to human health. Despite the challenging nature of some of these targets, 175 novel pathogen protein structures (approximately 220 including complexes) have been determined to date. Here the impact of several technologies on the structural determination of proteins from human pathogens is illustrated with selected examples, including the parallel expression of multiple constructs, the use of standardized refolding protocols and optimized crystallization screens. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1107/S0907444906030915
DYM