👤 Reshma Taneja

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3
Articles
2
Name variants
Also published as: Samir S Taneja
articles
Yu Jiang, Travis J Meyers, Adaeze A Emeka +94 more · 2022 · HGG advances · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Yu Jiang, Travis J Meyers, Adaeze A Emeka, Lauren Folgosa Cooley, Phillip R Cooper, Nicola Lancki, Irene Helenowski, Linda Kachuri, Daniel W Lin, Janet L Stanford, Lisa F Newcomb, Suzanne Kolb, Antonio Finelli, Neil E Fleshner, Maria Komisarenko, James A Eastham, Behfar Ehdaie, Nicole Benfante, Christopher J Logothetis, Justin R Gregg, Cherie A Perez, Sergio Garza, Jeri Kim, Leonard S Marks, Merdie Delfin, Danielle Barsa, Danny Vesprini, Laurence H Klotz, Andrew Loblaw, Alexandre Mamedov, S Larry Goldenberg, Celestia S Higano, Maria Spillane, Eugenia Wu, H Ballentine Carter, Christian P Pavlovich, Mufaddal Mamawala, Tricia Landis, Peter R Carroll, June M Chan, Matthew R Cooperberg, Janet E Cowan, Todd M Morgan, Javed Siddiqui, Rabia Martin, Eric A Klein, Karen Brittain, Paige Gotwald, Daniel A Barocas, Jeremiah R Dallmer, Jennifer B Gordetsky, Pam Steele, Shilajit D Kundu, Jazmine Stockdale, Monique J Roobol, Lionne D F Venderbos, Martin G Sanda, Rebecca Arnold, Dattatraya Patil, Christopher P Evans, Marc A Dall'Era, Anjali Vij, Anthony J Costello, Ken Chow, Niall M Corcoran, Soroush Rais-Bahrami, Courtney Phares, Douglas S Scherr, Thomas Flynn, R Jeffrey Karnes, Michael Koch, Courtney Rose Dhondt, Joel B Nelson, Dawn McBride, Michael S Cookson, Kelly L Stratton, Stephen Farriester, Erin Hemken, Walter M Stadler, Tuula Pera, Deimante Banionyte, Fernando J Bianco, Isabel H Lopez, Stacy Loeb, Samir S Taneja, Nataliya Byrne, Christopher L Amling, Ann Martinez, Luc Boileau, Franklin D Gaylis, Jacqueline Petkewicz, Nicholas Kirwen, Brian T Helfand, Jianfeng Xu, Denise M Scholtens, William J Catalona, John S Witte Show less
Men diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer (PC) are increasingly electing active surveillance (AS) as their initial management strategy. While this may reduce the side effects of treatment for prosta Show more
Men diagnosed with low-risk prostate cancer (PC) are increasingly electing active surveillance (AS) as their initial management strategy. While this may reduce the side effects of treatment for prostate cancer, many men on AS eventually convert to active treatment. PC is one of the most heritable cancers, and genetic factors that predispose to aggressive tumors may help distinguish men who are more likely to discontinue AS. To investigate this, we undertook a multi-institutional genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 5,222 PC patients and 1,139 other patients from replication cohorts, all of whom initially elected AS and were followed over time for the potential outcome of conversion from AS to active treatment. In the GWAS we detected 18 variants associated with conversion, 15 of which were not previously associated with PC risk. With a transcriptome-wide association study (TWAS), we found two genes associated with conversion ( Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.xhgg.2021.100070
MAST3
Paul C Baier, Magdalena M Brzózka, Ali Shahmoradi +8 more · 2014 · PloS one · PLOS · added 2026-04-24
Increasing evidence suggests that clock genes may be implicated in a spectrum of psychiatric diseases, including sleep and mood related disorders as well as schizophrenia. The bHLH transcription facto Show more
Increasing evidence suggests that clock genes may be implicated in a spectrum of psychiatric diseases, including sleep and mood related disorders as well as schizophrenia. The bHLH transcription factors SHARP1/DEC2/BHLHE41 and SHARP2/DEC1/BHLHE40 are modulators of the circadian system and SHARP1/DEC2/BHLHE40 has been shown to regulate homeostatic sleep drive in humans. In this study, we characterized Sharp1 and Sharp2 double mutant mice (S1/2-/-) using online EEG recordings in living animals, behavioral assays and global gene expression profiling. EEG recordings revealed attenuated sleep/wake amplitudes and alterations of theta oscillations. Increased sleep in the dark phase is paralleled by reduced voluntary activity and cortical gene expression signatures reveal associations with psychiatric diseases. S1/2-/- mice display alterations in novelty induced activity, anxiety and curiosity. Moreover, mutant mice exhibit impaired working memory and deficits in prepulse inhibition resembling symptoms of psychiatric diseases. Network modeling indicates a connection between neural plasticity and clock genes, particularly for SHARP1 and PER1. Our findings support the hypothesis that abnormal sleep and certain (endo)phenotypes of psychiatric diseases may be caused by common mechanisms involving components of the molecular clock including SHARP1 and SHARP2. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110310
HEY2
Moritz J Rossner, Henrik Oster, Sven P Wichert +6 more · 2008 · PloS one · PLOS · added 2026-04-24
The circadian system provides the basis to anticipate and cope with daily recurrent challenges to maintain the organisms' homeostasis. De-synchronization of circadian feedback oscillators in humans ca Show more
The circadian system provides the basis to anticipate and cope with daily recurrent challenges to maintain the organisms' homeostasis. De-synchronization of circadian feedback oscillators in humans causes 'jet lag', likely contributes to sleep-, psychiatric-, metabolic disorders and even cancer. However, the molecular mechanisms leading to the disintegration of tissue-specific clocks are complex and not well understood. Based on their circadian expression and cell culture experiments, the basic Helix-Loop-Helix (bHLH) transcription factors SHARP-1(Dec2) and SHARP-2(Stra13/Dec1) were proposed as novel negative regulators of the molecular clock. To address their function in vivo, we generated Sharp-1 and Sharp-2 single and double mutant mice. Our experiments reveal critical roles for both factors in regulating period length, tissue-specific control of clock gene expression and entrainment to external cues. Light-pulse experiments and rapid delays of the light-dark cycle (experimental jet lag) unravel complementary functions for SHARP-1 and SHARP-2 in controlling activity phase resetting kinetics. Moreover, we show that SHARP-1 and 2 can serve dual functions as repressors and co-activators of mammalian clock gene expression in a context-specific manner. This correlates with increased amplitudes of Per2 expression in the cortex and liver and a decrease in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of double mutant mice. The existence of separate mechanisms regulating phase of entrainment, rhythm amplitude and period length has been postulated before. The differential effects of Sharp-deficiency on rhythmicity and behavioral re-entrainment, coupled to tissue-dependent regulatory functions, provide a new mechanistic basis to further understand the complex process of clock synchronizations. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002762
HEY2