Investigator

J P Torcivia

Bioinformatics Engineer · National Center for Biotechnology Information, Datasets

JPTJ P Torcivia
Papers(1)
Scanning window analy…
Institutions(1)
George Washington Uni…

Papers

Scanning window analysis of non-coding regions within normal-tumor whole-genome sequence samples

Abstract Genomics has benefited from an explosion in affordable high-throughput technology for whole-genome sequencing. The regulatory and functional aspects in non-coding regions may be an important contributor to oncogenesis. Whole-genome tumor-normal paired alignments were used to examine the non-coding regions in five cancer types and two races. Both a sliding window and a binning strategy were introduced to uncover areas of higher than expected variation for additional study. We show that the majority of cancer associated mutations in 154 whole-genome sequences covering breast invasive carcinoma, colon adenocarcinoma, kidney renal papillary cell carcinoma, lung adenocarcinoma and uterine corpus endometrial carcinoma cancers and two races are found outside of the coding region (4 432 885 in non-gene regions versus 1 412 731 in gene regions). A pan-cancer analysis found significantly mutated windows (292 to 3881 in count) demonstrating that there are significant numbers of large mutated regions in the non-coding genome. The 59 significantly mutated windows were found in all studied races and cancers. These offer 16 regions ripe for additional study within 12 different chromosomes—2, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 16, 18, 20, 21 and X. Many of these regions were found in centromeric locations. The X chromosome had the largest set of universal windows that cluster almost exclusively in Xq11.1—an area linked to chromosomal instability and oncogenesis. Large consecutive clusters (super windows) were found (19 to 114 in count) providing further evidence that large mutated regions in the genome are influencing cancer development. We show remarkable similarity in highly mutated non-coding regions across both cancer and race.

15Works
1Papers

Positions

2023–

Bioinformatics Engineer

National Center for Biotechnology Information · Datasets

2019–

Director of AI Deployment

Clarifai

2016–

Senior Software Engineer

Progeny Systems

2013–

ORISE Fellow Bioinformatics

US Food and Drug Administration · CBER

Education

2020

Ph.D. Genomics and Bioinformatics

George Washington University · Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine

2013

M.S.

George Washington University · Biochemistry and Bioinformatics

2011

J.D.

College Of William and Mary Marshall Wythe School of Law · Law

2009

M.A.

Old Dominion University · International Studies

2003

B.A.

Pennsylvania State University · Political Science

Country

US

Links & IDs
0000-0002-9307-5778

Scopus: 57079165900