25 research outputs found

    Expanding phenotype of hereditary fibrosing poikiloderma with tendon contractures, myopathy, and pulmonary fibrosis caused by FAM111B mutations: Report of an additional family raising the question of cancer predisposition and a short review of early-onset poikiloderma.

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    journal article2017 Mar2017 03 19importedHereditary fibrosing poikiloderma with tendon contractures, myopathy, and pulmonary fibrosis (POIKTMP [MIM#615704]) is an extremely rare syndromic form of autosomal dominant poikiloderma. This genetic disorder was first identified in a South African family in 2006.1 To date, 3 families and 9 independent sporadic cases have been reported.2-4 Here we report an additional family of POIKTMP and expand the clinical spectrum. We describe, for the first time to our knowledge, a pancreatic cancer in the clinical course in 1 patient

    Alzheimer's Risk Gene TREM2 Determines Functional Properties of New Type of Human iPSC-Derived Microglia

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    Microglia are key in the homeostatic well-being of the brain and microglial dysfunction has been implicated in neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). Due to the many limitations to study microglia in situ or isolated for large scale drug discovery applications, there is a high need to develop robust and scalable human cellular models of microglia with reliable translatability to the disease. Here, we describe the generation of microglia-like cells from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) with distinct phenotypes for mechanistic studies in AD. We started out from an established differentiation protocol to generate primitive macrophage precursors mimicking the yolk sac ontogeny of microglia. Subsequently, we tested 36 differentiation conditions for the cells in monoculture where we exposed them to various combinations of media, morphogens, and extracellular matrices. The optimized protocol generated robustly ramified cells expressing key microglial markers. Bulk mRNA sequencing expression profiles revealed that compared to cells obtained in co-culture with neurons, microglia-like cells derived from a monoculture condition upregulate mRNA levels for Triggering Receptor Expressed On Myeloid Cells 2 (TREM2), which is reminiscent to the previously described disease-associated microglia. TREM2 is a risk gene for AD and an important regulator of microglia. The regulatory function of TREM2 in these cells was confirmed by comparing wild type with isogenic TREM2 knock-out iPSC microglia. The TREM2-deficient cells presented with stronger increase in free cytosolic calcium upon stimulation with ATP and ADP, as well as stronger migration towards complement C5a, compared to TREM2 expressing cells. The functional differences were associated with gene expression modulation of key regulators of microglia. In conclusion, we have established and validated a work stream to generate functional human iPSC-derived microglia-like cells by applying a directed and neuronal co-culture independent differentiation towards functional phenotypes in the context of AD. These cells can now be applied to study AD-related disease settings and to perform compound screening and testing for drug discoverySG was supported by the Roche Postdoctoral Fellowship (RPF) program and IP by the Roche Internships for Scientific Exchange (RiSE) progra

    SOX10 directly modulates ERBB3 transcription via an intronic neural crest enhancer

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The <it>ERBB3 </it>gene is essential for the proper development of the neural crest (NC) and its derivative populations such as Schwann cells. As with all cell fate decisions, transcriptional regulatory control plays a significant role in the progressive restriction and specification of NC derived lineages during development. However, little is known about the sequences mediating transcriptional regulation of <it>ERBB3 </it>or the factors that bind them.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this study we identified three transcriptional enhancers at the <it>ERBB3 </it>locus and evaluated their regulatory potential <it>in vitro </it>in NC-derived cell types and <it>in vivo </it>in transgenic zebrafish. One enhancer, termed <it>ERBB3</it>_MCS6, which lies within the first intron of <it>ERBB3</it>, directs the highest reporter expression <it>in vitro </it>and also demonstrates epigenetic marks consistent with enhancer activity. We identify a consensus SOX10 binding site within <it>ERBB3</it>_MCS6 and demonstrate, <it>in vitro</it>, its necessity and sufficiency for the activity of this enhancer. Additionally, we demonstrate that transcription from the endogenous <it>Erbb3 </it>locus is dependent on Sox10. Further we demonstrate <it>in vitro </it>that Sox10 physically interacts with that <it>ERBB3</it>_MCS6. Consistent with its <it>in vitro </it>activity, we also show that <it>ERBB3</it>_MCS6 drives reporter expression in NC cells and a subset of its derivative lineages <it>in vivo </it>in zebrafish in a manner consistent with <it>erbb3b </it>expression. We also demonstrate, using morpholino analysis, that Sox10 is necessary for <it>ERBB3</it>_MCS6 expression <it>in vivo </it>in zebrafish.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Taken collectively, our data suggest that <it>ERBB3 </it>may be directly regulated by SOX10, and that this control may in part be facilitated by <it>ERBB3</it>_MCS6.</p

    Evolutionary Analysis Predicts Sensitive Positions of MMP20 and Validates Newly- and Previously-Identified MMP20 Mutations Causing Amelogenesis Imperfecta

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    Amelogenesis imperfecta (AI) designates a group of genetic diseases characterized by a large range of enamel disorders causing important social and health problems. These defects can result from mutations in enamel matrix proteins or protease encoding genes. A range of mutations in the enamel cleavage enzyme matrix metalloproteinase-20 gene (MMP20) produce enamel defects of varying severity. To address how various alterations produce a range of AI phenotypes, we performed a targeted analysis to find MMP20 mutations in French patients diagnosed with non-syndromic AI. Genomic DNA was isolated from saliva and MMP20 exons and exon-intron boundaries sequenced. We identified several homozygous or heterozygous mutations, putatively involved in the AI phenotypes. To validate missense mutations and predict sensitive positions in the MMP20 sequence, we evolutionarily compared 75 sequences extracted from the public databases using the Datamonkey webserver. These sequences were representative of mammalian lineages, covering more than 150 million years of evolution. This analysis allowed us to find 324 sensitive positions (out of the 483 MMP20 residues), pinpoint functionally important domains, and build an evolutionary chart of important conserved MMP20 regions. This is an efficient tool to identify new- and previously-identified mutations. We thus identified six functional MMP20 mutations in unrelated families, finding two novel mutated sites. The genotypes and phenotypes of these six mutations are described and compared. To date, 13 MMP20 mutations causing AI have been reported, making these genotypes and associated hypomature enamel phenotypes the most frequent in AI

    A targeted next-generation sequencing assay for the molecular diagnosis of genetic disorders with orodental involvement.

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    BACKGROUND: Orodental diseases include several clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders that can present in isolation or as part of a genetic syndrome. Due to the vast number of genes implicated in these disorders, establishing a molecular diagnosis can be challenging. We aimed to develop a targeted next-generation sequencing (NGS) assay to diagnose mutations and potentially identify novel genes mutated in this group of disorders. METHODS: We designed an NGS gene panel that targets 585 known and candidate genes in orodental disease. We screened a cohort of 101 unrelated patients without a molecular diagnosis referred to the Reference Centre for Oro-Dental Manifestations of Rare Diseases, Strasbourg, France, for a variety of orodental disorders including isolated and syndromic amelogenesis imperfecta (AI), isolated and syndromic selective tooth agenesis (STHAG), isolated and syndromic dentinogenesis imperfecta, isolated dentin dysplasia, otodental dysplasia and primary failure of tooth eruption. RESULTS: We discovered 21 novel pathogenic variants and identified the causative mutation in 39 unrelated patients in known genes (overall diagnostic rate: 39%). Among the largest subcohorts of patients with isolated AI (50 unrelated patients) and isolated STHAG (21 unrelated patients), we had a definitive diagnosis in 14 (27%) and 15 cases (71%), respectively. Surprisingly, COL17A1 mutations accounted for the majority of autosomal-dominant AI cases. CONCLUSIONS: We have developed a novel targeted NGS assay for the efficient molecular diagnosis of a wide variety of orodental diseases. Furthermore, our panel will contribute to better understanding the contribution of these genes to orodental disease. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBERS: NCT01746121 and NCT02397824.journal articleresearch support, non-u.s. gov't2016 Feb2015 10 26importe

    Pluripotency Redux — Advances in Stem-Cell Research

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    Allele-specific enhancers mediate associations between LCAT and ABCA1 polymorphisms and HDL metabolism.

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    For most complex traits, the majority of SNPs identified through genome-wide association studies (GWAS) reside within noncoding regions that have no known function. However, these regions are enriched for the regulatory enhancers specific to the cells relevant to the specific trait. Indeed, many of the GWAS loci that have been functionally characterized lie within enhancers that regulate expression levels of key genes. In order to identify polymorphisms with potential allele-specific regulatory effects, we developed a bioinformatics pipeline that harnesses epigenetic signatures as well as transcription factor (TF) binding motifs to identify putative enhancers containing a SNP with potential allele-specific TF binding in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with a GWAS-identified SNP. We applied the approach to GWAS findings for blood lipids, revealing 7 putative enhancers harboring associated SNPs, 3 of which lie within the introns of LCAT and ABCA1, genes that play crucial roles in cholesterol biogenesis and lipoprotein metabolism. All 3 enhancers demonstrated allele-specific in vitro regulatory activity in liver-derived cell lines. We demonstrated that these putative enhancers are in close physical proximity to the promoters of their respective genes, in situ, likely through chromatin looping. In addition, the associated alleles altered the likelihood of transcription activator STAT3 binding. Our results demonstrate that through our approach, the LD blocks that contain GWAS signals, often hundreds of kilobases in size with multiple SNPs serving as statistical proxies to the true functional site, can provide an experimentally testable hypothesis for the underlying regulatory mechanism linking genetic variants to complex traits

    Insights into ciliary genes and evolution from multi-level phylogenetic profiling

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    Cilia (flagella) are important eukaryotic organelles, present in the Last Eukaryotic Common Ancestor, and are involved in cell motility and integration of extracellular signals. Ciliary dysfunction causes a class of genetic diseases, known as ciliopathies, however current knowledge of the underlying mechanisms is still limited and a better characterization of genes is needed. As cilia have been lost independently several times during evolution and they are subject to important functional variation between species, ciliary genes can be investigated through comparative genomics. We performed phylogenetic profiling by predicting orthologs of human protein-coding genes in 100 eukaryotic species. The analysis integrated three independent methods to predict a consensus set of 274 ciliary genes, including 87 new promising candidates. A fine-grained analysis of the phylogenetic profiles allowed a partitioning of ciliary genes into modules with distinct evolutionary histories and ciliary functions (assembly, movement, centriole, etc.) and thus propagation of potential annotations to previously undocumented genes. The cilia/basal body localization was experimentally confirmed for five of these previously unannotated proteins (LRRC23, LRRC34, TEX9, WDR27, and BIVM), validating the relevance of our approach. Furthermore, our multi-level analysis sheds light on the core gene sets retained in gamete-only flagellates or Ecdysozoa for instance. By combining gene-centric and species-oriented analyses, this work reveals new ciliary and ciliopathy gene candidates and provides clues about the evolution of ciliary processes in the eukaryotic domain. Additionally, the positive and negative reference gene sets and the phylogenetic profile of human genes constructed during this study can be exploited in future work
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