Aaron J. Deutsch

ORCID: 0000-0001-6750-5335
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Diabetes and associated disorders
  • Pancreatic function and diabetes
  • Genetic Associations and Epidemiology
  • Diabetes Management and Research
  • Gestational Diabetes Research and Management
  • Diabetes Treatment and Management
  • Immune Cell Function and Interaction
  • T-cell and B-cell Immunology
  • Maternal and fetal healthcare
  • Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes
  • Bioinformatics and Genomic Networks
  • Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies
  • Adrenal Hormones and Disorders
  • RNA Research and Splicing
  • Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
  • Cancer Immunotherapy and Biomarkers
  • Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins
  • Maternal and Perinatal Health Interventions
  • Nutrition, Genetics, and Disease
  • Nuclear Structure and Function
  • Birth, Development, and Health
  • Hormonal Regulation and Hypertension
  • RNA modifications and cancer
  • Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting Issues
  • Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease

Broad Institute
2015-2025

Massachusetts General Hospital
2017-2025

Harvard University
2011-2025

University of Pennsylvania
2023

Brigham and Women's Hospital
2015-2020

Harvard–MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology
2017

George Mason University
2014-2016

Boston Children's Hospital
2011-2014

Princeton University
2011

University of South Florida
2005-2010

A simple biochemical method to isolate mRNAs pulled down with a transfected, biotinylated microRNA was used identify direct target genes of miR-34a, tumor suppressor gene. The reidentified most the known miR-34a regulated expressed in K562 and HCT116 cancer cell lines. Transcripts for 982 were enriched pull-down both Despite this large number, validation experiments suggested that ∼90% identified lines can be directly by miR-34a. Thus is capable regulating hundreds genes. transcripts highly...

10.1371/journal.pgen.1002363 article EN cc-by PLoS Genetics 2011-11-10
Lauren A. Eberly Aaron Richterman Anne G. Beckett Bram Wispelwey Regan H. Marsh and 95 more Emily Cleveland Cindy Y. Chang Robert J. Glynn Katherine Brooks Robert Boxer Rose M. Kakoza Jennifer Goldsmith Joseph Loscalzo Michelle Morse Eldrin F. Lewis Samantha Abel Ayrenne Adams Joseph Anaya Erik Andrews Benjamin Atkinson Viswatej Avutu Alexandra E. Bachorik Omar Badri Mariel Bailey Katie Baird Dellara F. Terry Denis Balaban Kenneth Barshop Emily Baumrin Omar Bayomy Julia Beamesderfer Nora V. Becker David D. Berg Berman Adam N. Steven M. Blum Alexander P. Boardman Kaeleen A. Boden Robert A. Bonacci Sarah Brown Kirsti Campbell Siobhan M. Case Emily Cetrone Alexandra Charrow David J. Chiang Devin Clark Aarón Cohen A. Feder Cooper Tomas Cordova C. Nicholas Cuneo Alsina Alejandro de Feria Karen Deffenbacher Ersilia M. DeFilippis Geneva DeGregorio Aaron J. Deutsch Bradford Diephuis Sanjay Divakaran Peter B. Dorschner Nicholas S. Downing Caitlin Drescher Kristin M. D’Silva Peter J. Dunbar David Duong Sarah E. Earp Christine Eckhardt Scott A. Elman Ross England Kay Everett Natalie O. Fedotova Tamara Feingold-Link Mark Ferreira H. Russell Fisher Patricia K. Foo Michael B. Foote Idalid Franco Thomas Gilliland Jacqueline Greb Katherine J. Greco Sungat K. Grewal Benjamin Grin Matthew E. Growdon Brendan J. Guercio Cynthia K. Hahn Brian W. Hasselfeld Erika J Haydu Zachary Hermes Gordon J. Hildick-Smith Zachary E. Holcomb Kathryn B. Holroyd Laura Horton George T.‐J. Huang Stanley Jablonski Douglas Jacobs Nina Jain Sohan Japa Richard Joseph Mariya Kalashnikova Neil Kalwani Daniel G. Kang Abraar Karan Joel T. Katz

Background: Racial inequities for patients with heart failure (HF) have been widely documented. HF who receive cardiology care during a hospital admission better outcomes. It is unknown whether there are differences in to or general medicine service by race. This study examined the relationship between race and service, its effect on 30-day readmission mortality Methods: We performed retrospective cohort from September 2008 November 2017 at single large urban academic referral center of all...

10.1161/circheartfailure.119.006214 article EN Circulation Heart Failure 2019-10-29

Significance A proportion of the variation in HIV-1 viral load infected population is influenced by host genetics. Using a large sample individuals ( n = 6,315) with genome-wide genotype data, we sought to map genomic regions that influence HIV and quantify their impact. We identified amino acid positions located binding groove class I HLA proteins (HLA-A -B) SNPs chemokine (C-C motif) receptor 5 gene region together explain 14.5% observed load. Controlling for these signals, estimated an...

10.1073/pnas.1514867112 article EN Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2015-11-09

How students manage their time is critical for academic performance and an important component of self-regulated learning. The purpose the present study was to examine relationships among first-year college students’ ( N = 589) use, self-regulation, target actual grade point average (GPA) at three points. Findings showed that planned spent less on academics than socializing work obligations in first semester. Students generally spend more second Academic use (planned hours) related higher...

10.1177/1932202x16676860 article EN Journal of Advanced Academics 2016-11-08

Importance Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have revolutionized cancer care; however, accompanying immune-related adverse events (irAEs) confer substantial morbidity and occasional mortality. Life-threatening irAEs may require permanent cessation of ICI, even in patients with positive tumor response. Therefore, it is imperative to comprehensively define the spectrum aid individualized decision-making around initiation ICI therapy. Objective To incidence, risk factors, clinical an...

10.1001/jamaoncol.2024.3104 article EN JAMA Oncology 2024-08-29

Abstract Type 1 diabetes (T1D) polygenic risk scores (PRS) are effective tools for discriminating T1D from other types and predicting risk, with applications in screening intervention trials. A previously published Genetic Risk Score 2 (GRS2) is widely adopted, but challenges standardization accessibility have hindered broader clinical research utility. To address this, we introduce GRS2x, a standardized cross- compatible method accurate PRS calculation, demonstrating genotyping reference...

10.1101/2025.01.16.25320691 preprint EN cc-by-nc medRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) 2025-01-17
Coming Soon ...