scholarly journals Biallelic mutation of FBXL7 suggests a novel form of Hennekam syndrome

2019 ◽  
Vol 182 (1) ◽  
pp. 189-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip M. Boone ◽  
Scott Paterson ◽  
Kiana Mohajeri ◽  
Wenmiao Zhu ◽  
Casie A. Genetti ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
pp. 109352662110511
Author(s):  
Mukul Vij ◽  
Srinivas Sankaranarayanan

Whole-exome sequencing studies have recently identified novel genes implicated in normal- or low-GGT pediatric cholestasis including ubiquitin-specific peptidase 53 ( USP53). We identified novel biallelic mutations in the USP53 gene in a 7-month-old infant with pruritus and progressive intrahepatic cholestasis. His liver biopsy showed portal and perivenular fibrosis with bland bilirubinostasis. His parents were asymptomatic heterozygous for the same mutation. He is currently on vitamin supplements and cholestyramine and his family has also been counseled for liver transplantation. Our report confirms that patients with biallelic mutation in USP53 develop cholestatic liver disease.


2018 ◽  
Vol 159 (49) ◽  
pp. 2057-2064
Author(s):  
Zoltán Liptai

Abstract: The number of primary immune deficiencies exceeds 350, approximately a quarter of them having neurological implications. Severe central nervous system infections may occur in an even higher proportion. Beyond listing in a table of all diseases with a neurological impact, the author gives detailed analysis of one typical disorder. Ataxia telangiectasia is caused by biallelic mutation of the ATM gene resulting in genomic instability, increased cancer risk, immune deficiency and a predominantly cerebellar neurodegeneration. The most common classic form is characterized by gait and limb ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, choreoathetosis, disturbance of speech and swallowing, less often by other movement disorders. There is no remarkable cognitive deficit. Telangiectasia of the conjunctivae and skin usually appears after 6 years of age. Frequent, especially severe sino-pulmonary infections may indicate the immune deficiency present in 60 to 80% of patients, who are also prone to malignancies. The clinical course is sometimes atypical or has a late onset which results in diagnostic difficulties. Serum alpha-fetoprotein level is elevated in nearly all patients. Brain MRI shows progressive cerebellar atrophy starting at the age of 7–8 years. DNA testing of the ATM gene is necessary for the diagnosis. The detected biallelic pathogenic variants provide help for family planning and for possible gene therapies in the future. Ataxia telangiectasia has to be differentiated from a number of other disorders, some of which also belong to primary immune deficiencies. The disorder has no causal treatment at present, the patients live until their young adult ages. Orv Hetil. 2018; 159(49): 2057–2064.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoen Huang ◽  
Nian Wang

Sweet orange (Citrus sinensis) is the most economically important species for the citrus industry. However, it is susceptible to many diseases including citrus bacterial canker caused by Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri (Xcc) that triggers devastating effects on citrus production. Conventional breeding has not met the challenge to improve disease resistance of sweet orange due to the long juvenility and other limitations. CRISPR-mediated genome editing has shown promising potentials for genetic improvements of plants. Generation of biallelic/homozygous mutants remains difficult for sweet orange due to low transformation rate, existence of heterozygous alleles for target genes and low biallelic editing efficacy using the CRISPR technology. Here, we report improvements in the CRISPR/Cas9 system for citrus gene editing. Based on the improvements we made previously (dicot codon optimized Cas9, tRNA for multiplexing, a modified sgRNA scaffold with high efficiency, CsU6 to drive sgRNA expression), we further improved our CRISPR/Cas9 system by choosing superior promoters (CmYLCV or CsUbi promoter) to drive Cas9 and optimizing culture temperature. This system was able to generate a biallelic mutation rate of up to 89% for Carrizo citrange and 79% for Hamlin sweet orange. Consequently, this system was used to generate canker resistant Hamlin sweet orange by mutating the effector binding element (EBE) of canker susceptibility gene CsLOB1, which is required for causing canker symptoms by Xcc. Six biallelic Hamlin sweet orange mutant lines in the EBE were generated. The biallelic mutants are resistant to Xcc. Biallelic mutation of the EBE region abolishes the induction of CsLOB1 by Xcc. This study represents a significant improvement in sweet orange gene editing efficacy and generating disease resistant varieties via CRISPR-mediated genome editing. This improvement in citrus genome editing makes genetic studies and manipulations of sweet orange more feasible.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroshi Shiraishi ◽  
Nobuyuki Shimizu ◽  
Mika Tsumori ◽  
Kyoko Kiyota ◽  
Miwako Maeda ◽  
...  

Abstract Leucyl-tRNA synthetase (LARS) is an enzyme that catalyses the ligation of leucine with leucine tRNA. LARS is also essential to sensitize the intracellular leucine concentration to the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) activation. Biallelic mutation in the LARS gene causes infantile liver failure syndrome type 1 (ILFS1), which is characterized by acute liver failure, anaemia, and neurological disorders, including microcephaly and seizures. However, the molecular mechanism underlying ILFS1 under LARS deficiency has been elusive. Here, we generated Lars deficient (larsb-/-) zebrafish that showed progressive liver failure and anaemia, resulting in early lethality within 12 days post fertilization. The atg5-morpholino knockdown and bafilomycin treatment partially improved the size of the liver and survival rate in larsb-/- zebrafish. These findings indicate the involvement of autophagy in the pathogenesis of larsb-/- zebrafish. Indeed, excessive autophagy activation was observed in larsb-/- zebrafish. Therefore, our data clarify a mechanistic link between LARS and autophagy in vivo. Furthermore, autophagy regulation by LARS could lead to development of new therapeutics for IFLS1.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 12-13
Author(s):  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Fang Wang ◽  
Xue Chen ◽  
Hong Liu ◽  
Xiaoliang Wang ◽  
...  

DDX41 is thought to be a tumor suppressor gene involved in pre-mRNA splicing, innate immunity and rRNA processing. Myeloid neoplasms with germline DDX41 mutations have been included as a new diagnostic category in the 2016 WHO classification. However, there are limited studies describing the mutation profile of myeloid neoplasms and acute leukemias associated with DDX41 mutation. We analyzed the prevalence and characteristics of DDX41 mutations in an unselected cohort of 1764 patients with myeloid neoplasms and acute leukemias, including 720 subjects with AML, 91 with MDS, 41 with MPN, 16 with MDS/MPN, 760 with ALL, and 42 with MPAL. Next-generation sequencing was performed on 86 genes closely related to hematologic neoplasms. The fingernail specimens or blood samples in remission were taken as control samples to verify the mutation from possible germline sources. We identified 21 different DDX41 mutations in 16 unrelated patients (6 MDS/AML, 1 CMML, 9 ALL) that were classified as causal (n=17) and uncertain significance (n=4) variants. The acquisition of a somatic DDX41 mutation was also considered as a very strong criterion for causality, the uncertain significance variants were excluded. Nine causal variants have not been reported. 53% of variants were located on the DEAD domain and 24% on the Helicase C domain, the rest were located upstream of the DEAD domain. Ten variants were germline that the majority (80%) were located upstream of the Helicase C domain, 7 variants were somatic and were scattered. In 6 patients with MDS/AML and DDX41 mutations, the median age was 49 years (range, 28-78y) and 57% were male. None of the patients had del 5/5q. Five (83%) patients had personal history of cytopenia prior to MDS/AML diagnosis, while only one patient had a family history of anemia and one patient's aunt died of leukemia. Four (67%) patients harbor DDX41 germline/somatic biallelic mutation, two with typical biallelic mutation (N-terminal germline nonsense and C-terminal somatic missense), the other two with atypical biallelic mutation (N-terminal germline missense and C-terminal somatic missense). The average age of patients with DDX41 atypical biallelic mutation (48y) seems lower than that with typical biallelic mutation (74y). The rest two patients harbor single germline mutations and one of them concomitant with SF3B1 mutation, which is a component of spliceosome complex also involving in mRNA splicing. DDX41 mutations were identified in 7 patients with B-ALL and one with T-ALL. The median age was 9 years (range, 4-2 y) and 56% were male. None of the patients had a family history of hematological malignancy and del 5/5q. Unlike in myeloid neoplasms, no DDX41 biallelic mutations were identified that 5 patients had single somatic mutation (3 missenses, 1 nonsense) and 4 had single germline mutation (all are missenses). Among MDS/AML patients with DDX41 biallelic mutation, only one received treatment who relapsed after HSCT and received second HSCT, the time of overall survival (OS) was 74 months, the other 3 quite after diagnosed. In patients with MDS/AML and DDX41 single germline mutation, one received 4 courses of treatment with decitabine and half-dose CAG regimen, then transformed to AML and abandoned, the other one received 10 courses of chemotherapy and showed continuous no remission. The time of OS was 17 and 31 months, respectively. Among ALL patients with DDX41 single somatic mutation, 80% (4/5) received HSCT, 80% (4/5) were in complete remission (CR), one died of post-transplant infection, the median OS was 25 months. Among ALL patients with DDX41 single germline mutation, all the three patients received HSCT and were in CR, the median OS was 37 months. The genotype-phenotype correlations regarding germline DDX41 mutations should be clarified more specifically, the most prevalent loss of function mutations, predisposes to myeloid disease at the same age as sporadic disease, whereas point mutations in the DEAD domain (this study) or helicase C domain (previous report) were speculated to cause earlier onset disease. Moreover, this study reported for the first time that DDX41 mutations have also been found in ALL, which expanded its phenotypic spectrum. The characteristics of DDX41 mutation in ALL are different from myeloid neoplasm, the age of onset is young, and no germline/somatic biallelic mutation have been observed, suggesting that it might be involved in different pathogenesis mechanisms. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 159 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prabakaran Paulraj ◽  
Michelle Bosworth ◽  
Maria Longhurst ◽  
Callie Hornbuckle ◽  
Garrett Gotway ◽  
...  

The role of autosomal recessive (AR) variants in clinically heterogeneous conditions such as intellectual disability and developmental delay (ID/DD) has been difficult to uncover. Implication of causative pathogenic AR variants often requires investigation within large and consanguineous families, and/or identifying rare biallelic variants in affected individuals. Furthermore, detection of homozygous gene-level copy number variants during first-line genomic microarray testing in the pediatric population is a rare finding. We describe a 6.7-year-old male patient with ID/DD and a novel homozygous deletion involving the FRY gene identified by genomic SNP microarray. This deletion was observed within a large region of homozygosity on the long arm of chromosome 13 and in a background of increased low-level (2.6%) autosomal homozygosity, consistent with a reported common ancestry in the family. FRY encodes a protein that regulates cell cytoskeletal dynamics, functions in chromosomal alignment in mitosis in vitro, and has been shown to function in the nervous system in vivo. Homozygous mutation of FRY has been previously reported in 2 consanguineous families from studies of autosomal recessive ID in Middle Eastern and Northern African populations. This report provides additional supportive evidence that deleterious biallelic mutation of FRY is associated with ID/DD and illustrates the utility of genomic SNP microarray detection of low-level homozygosity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 336-339
Author(s):  
Carmen Bonanno ◽  
Carmelo Rodolico ◽  
Ana Töpf ◽  
Francesca Maria Foti ◽  
Wei-Wei Liu ◽  
...  

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