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Juhi Pandey

Juhi Pandey

University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine

Active 2004–2024

h-index51
Citations10.1k
Papers18694 last 5y
Funding
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Medicine
  • Genetics
  • Bioinformatics
  • Internal medicine
  • Psychiatry
  • Computational biology
  • Demography

Selected publications

  • Host factors are associated with vaginal microbiome structure in pregnancy in the ECHO Cohort Consortium

    Scientific Reports · 2024 · 8 citations

    • Biology
    • Demography
    • Medicine

    Using pooled vaginal microbiota data from pregnancy cohorts (N = 683 participants) in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program, we analyzed 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequences to identify clinical and demographic host factors that associate with vaginal microbiota structure in pregnancy both within and across diverse cohorts. Using PERMANOVA models, we assessed factors associated with vaginal community structure in pregnancy, examined whether host factors were conserved across populations, and tested the independent and combined effects of host factors on vaginal community state types (CSTs) using multinomial logistic regression models. Demographic and social factors explained a larger amount of variation in the vaginal microbiome in pregnancy than clinical factors. After adjustment, lower education, rather than self-identified race, remained a robust predictor of L. iners dominant (CST III) and diverse (CST IV) (OR = 8.44, 95% CI = 4.06-17.6 and OR = 4.18, 95% CI = 1.88-9.26, respectively). In random forest models, we identified specific taxonomic features of host factors, particularly urogenital pathogens associated with pregnancy complications (Aerococcus christensenii and Gardnerella spp.) among other facultative anaerobes and key markers of community instability (L. iners). Sociodemographic factors were robustly associated with vaginal microbiota structure in pregnancy and should be considered as sources of variation in human microbiome studies.

  • Integrating de novo and inherited variants in 42,607 autism cases identifies mutations in new moderate-risk genes

    Nature Genetics · 2022 · 447 citations

    • Biology
    • Genetics
    • Medicine

    ). Power calculations suggest that much larger numbers of autism cases are needed to identify additional moderate-risk genes.

  • Rare deleterious mutations of HNRNP genes result in shared neurodevelopmental disorders

    Genome Medicine · 2021 · 113 citations

    • Genetics
    • Biology
    • Medicine

    BACKGROUND: With the increasing number of genomic sequencing studies, hundreds of genes have been implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). The rate of gene discovery far outpaces our understanding of genotype-phenotype correlations, with clinical characterization remaining a bottleneck for understanding NDDs. Most disease-associated Mendelian genes are members of gene families, and we hypothesize that those with related molecular function share clinical presentations. METHODS: We tested our hypothesis by considering gene families that have multiple members with an enrichment of de novo variants among NDDs, as determined by previous meta-analyses. One of these gene families is the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs), which has 33 members, five of which have been recently identified as NDD genes (HNRNPK, HNRNPU, HNRNPH1, HNRNPH2, and HNRNPR) and two of which have significant enrichment in our previous meta-analysis of probands with NDDs (HNRNPU and SYNCRIP). Utilizing protein homology, mutation analyses, gene expression analyses, and phenotypic characterization, we provide evidence for variation in 12 HNRNP genes as candidates for NDDs. Seven are potentially novel while the remaining genes in the family likely do not significantly contribute to NDD risk. RESULTS: We report 119 new NDD cases (64 de novo variants) through sequencing and international collaborations and combined with published clinical case reports. We consider 235 cases with gene-disruptive single-nucleotide variants or indels and 15 cases with small copy number variants. Three hnRNP-encoding genes reach nominal or exome-wide significance for de novo variant enrichment, while nine are candidates for pathogenic mutations. Comparison of HNRNP gene expression shows a pattern consistent with a role in cerebral cortical development with enriched expression among radial glial progenitors. Clinical assessment of probands (n = 188-221) expands the phenotypes associated with HNRNP rare variants, and phenotypes associated with variation in the HNRNP genes distinguishes them as a subgroup of NDDs. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, our novel approach of exploiting gene families in NDDs identifies new HNRNP-related disorders, expands the phenotypes of known HNRNP-related disorders, strongly implicates disruption of the hnRNPs as a whole in NDDs, and supports that NDD subtypes likely have shared molecular pathogenesis. To date, this is the first study to identify novel genetic disorders based on the presence of disorders in related genes. We also perform the first phenotypic analyses focusing on related genes. Finally, we show that radial glial expression of these genes is likely critical during neurodevelopment. This is important for diagnostics, as well as developing strategies to best study these genes for the development of therapeutics.

Frequent coauthors

  • Robert T. Schultz

    University of Pennsylvania

    325 shared
  • Annette Estes

    University of Washington

    137 shared
  • Jason J. Wolff

    Minnesota Department of Education

    123 shared
  • Joseph Piven

    University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

    116 shared
  • Heather C. Hazlett

    University of North Carolina Health Care

    115 shared
  • Stephen R. Dager

    Seattle University

    114 shared
  • Kelly N. Botteron

    Washington University in St. Louis

    110 shared
  • Tanya St. John

    92 shared
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