5 research outputs found
An infant with cholestasis, acholic stool and high GGT levels
WOS: 000444619800018PubMed ID: 3026078
Structural Characteristics in the gamma Chain Variants Associated with Fibrinogen Storage Disease Suggest the Underlying Pathogenic Mechanism
Particular fibrinogen gamma chain mutations occurring in the
gamma-module induce changes that hamper gamma-gamma dimerization and
provoke intracellular aggregation of the mutant fibrinogen, defective
export and plasma deficiency. The hepatic storage predisposes to the
development of liver disease. This condition has been termed hereditary
hypofibrinogenemia with hepatic storage (HHHS). So far, seven of such
mutations in the fibrinogen gamma chain have been detected. We are
reporting on an additional mutation occurring in a 3.5-year-old Turkish
child undergoing a needle liver biopsy because of the concomitance of
transaminase elevation of unknown origin and low plasma fibrinogen
level. The liver biopsy showed an intra-hepatocytic storage of
fibrinogen. The molecular analysis of the three fibrinogen genes
revealed a mutation (Fibrinogen Trabzon Thr371Ile) at exon 9 of the
gamma chain in the child and his father, while the mother and the
brother were normal. Fibrinogen Trabzon represents a new fibrinogen
gamma chain mutation fulfilling the criteria for HHHS. Its occurrence in
a Turkish child confirms that HHHS can present in early childhood and
provides relevant epidemiological information on the worldwide
distribution of the fibrinogen gamma chain mutations causing this
disease. By analyzing fibrinogen crystal structures and calculating the
folding free energy change (Delta Delta G) to infer how the variants can
affect the conformation and function, we propose a mechanism for the
intracellular aggregation of Fibrinogen Trabzon and other gamma-module
mutations causing HHHS
Genes That Affect Brain Structure And Function Identified By Rare Variant Analyses Of Mendelian Neurologic Disease
Development of the human nervous system involves complex interactions among fundamental cellular processes and requires a multitude of genes, many of which remain to be associated with human disease. We applied whole exome sequencing to 128 mostly consanguineous families with neurogenetic disorders that often included brain malformations. Rare variant analyses for both single nucleotide variant (SNV) and copy number variant (CNV) alleles allowed for identification of 45 novel variants in 43 known disease genes, 41 candidate genes, and CNVs in 10 families, with an overall potential molecular cause identified in >85% of families studied. Among the candidate genes identified, we found PRUNE, VARS, and DHX37 in multiple families and homozygous loss-of-function variants in AGBL2, SLC18A2, SMARCA1, UBQLN1, and CPLX1. Neuroimaging and in silico analysis of functional and expression proximity between candidate and known disease genes allowed for further understanding of genetic networks underlying specific types of brain malformations.WoSScopu
Genes that Affect Brain Structure and Function Identified by Rare Variant Analyses of Mendelian Neurologic Disease
Development of the human nervous system involves complex interactions among fundamental cellular processes and requires a multitude of genes, many of which remain to be associated with human disease. We applied whole exome sequencing to 128 mostly consanguineous families with neurogenetic disorders that often included brain malformations. Rare variant analyses for both single nucleotide variant (SNV) and copy number variant (CNV) alleles allowed for identification of 45 novel variants in 43 known disease genes, 41 candidate genes, and CNVs in 10 families, with an overall potential molecular cause identified in >85% of families studied. Among the candidate genes identified, we found PRUNE, VARS, and DHX37 in multiple families and homozygous loss-of-function variants in AGBL2, SLC18A2, SMARCA1, UBQLN1, and CPLX1. Neuroimaging and in silico analysis of functional and expression proximity between candidate and known disease genes allowed for further understanding of genetic networks underlying specific types of brain malformations. VIDEO ABSTRACT.publisher: Elsevier
articletitle: Genes that Affect Brain Structure and Function Identified by Rare Variant Analyses of Mendelian Neurologic Disease
journaltitle: Neuron
articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2015.09.048
content_type: article
copyright: Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.status: publishe