Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
230
result(s) for
"Alkuraya, Fowzan S"
Sort by:
Homozygosity mapping: a game-changer for autosomal recessive diseases
2022
In this Journal Club article, Fowzan Alkuraya describes how a paper outlining the mathematical foundations of homozygosity mapping provided a route to disease gene identification that still benefits his patients in clinical practice today.
Journal Article
DALRD3 encodes a protein mutated in epileptic encephalopathy that targets arginine tRNAs for 3-methylcytosine modification
2020
In mammals, a subset of arginine tRNA isoacceptors are methylated in the anticodon loop by the METTL2 methyltransferase to form the 3-methylcytosine (m3C) modification. However, the mechanism by which METTL2 identifies specific tRNA arginine species for m3C formation as well as the biological role of m3C in mammals is unknown. Here, we show that human METTL2 forms a complex with DALR anticodon binding domain containing 3 (DALRD3) protein to recognize particular arginine tRNAs destined for m3C modification. DALRD3-deficient human cells exhibit nearly complete loss of the m3C modification in tRNA-Arg species. Notably, we identify a homozygous nonsense mutation in the
DALRD3
gene that impairs m3C formation in human patients exhibiting developmental delay and early-onset epileptic encephalopathy. These findings uncover an unexpected function for the DALRD3 protein in the targeting of distinct arginine tRNAs for m3C modification and suggest a crucial biological role for DALRD3-dependent tRNA modification in proper neurological development.
METTL2 methyltransferase is responsible for 3-methylcytosine modification of arginine tRNAs in mammals. Here the authors show that DALR anticodon binding domain containing 3 (DALRD3) forms a complex with METTL2 to recognize specific arginine tRNAs and find DALRD3 mutations in patients with developmental delay and early-onset epileptic encephalopathy.
Journal Article
Genetic heterogeneity and evolutionary history of high-grade ovarian carcinoma and matched distant metastases
by
Parvathareddy, Sandeep K.
,
Siraj, Sarah
,
AlHusaini, Hamed
in
631/67/1517/1709
,
631/67/69
,
Adult
2020
Background
High-grade serous ovarian carcinoma (HGSOC) is the most frequent type of ovarian carcinoma, associated with poor clinical outcome and metastatic disease. Although metastatic processes are becoming more understandable, the genomic landscape and metastatic progression in HGSOC has not been elucidated.
Methods
Multi-region whole-exome sequencing was performed on HGSOC primary tumours and their metastases (
n
= 33 tumour regions) from six patients. The resulting somatic variants were analysed to delineate tumour evolution and metastatic dissemination, and to compare the repertoire of events between primary HGSOC and metastasis.
Results
All cases presented branching evolution patterns in primary HGSOC, with three cases further showing parallel evolution in which different mutations on separate branches of a phylogenetic tree converge on the same gene. Furthermore, linear metastatic progression was observed in 67% of cases with late dissemination, in which the metastatic tumour mostly acquires the same mutational process active in primary tumour, and parallel metastatic progression, with early dissemination in the remaining 33.3% of cases. Metastatic-specific SNVs were further confirmed as late dissemination events. We also found the involvement of metastatic-specific driver events in the Wnt/β-catenin pathway, and identified potential clinically actionable events in individual patients of the metastatic HGSOC cohort.
Conclusions
This study provides deeper insights into clonal evolution and mutational processes that can pave the way to new therapeutic targets.
Journal Article
A homozygous truncating mutation in PUS3 expands the role of tRNA modification in normal cognition
by
Shaheen, Ranad
,
Alkuraya, Fowzan S.
,
Han, Lu
in
Adolescent
,
Analysis
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2016
Intellectual disability is a common and highly heterogeneous disorder etiologically. In a multiplex consanguineous family, we applied autozygosity mapping and exome sequencing and identified a novel homozygous truncating mutation in
PUS3
that fully segregates with the intellectual disability phenotype. Consistent with the known role of Pus3 in isomerizing uracil to pseudouridine at positions 38 and 39 in tRNA, we found a significant reduction in this post-transcriptional modification of tRNA in patient cells. Our finding adds to a growing list of intellectual disability disorders that are caused by perturbation of various tRNA modifications, which highlights the sensitivity of the brain to these highly conserved processes.
Journal Article
Population structure of indigenous inhabitants of Arabia
by
Alkuraya, Fowzan S.
,
Goto, Kosuke
,
Mineta, Katsuhiko
in
Africa - epidemiology
,
Arabia - epidemiology
,
Arabs - genetics
2021
Modern day Saudi Arabia occupies the majority of historical Arabia, which may have contributed to ancient waves of migration out of Africa. This ancient history has left a lasting imprint in the genetics of the region, including the diverse set of tribes that call Saudi Arabia their home. How these tribes relate to each other and to the world’s major populations remains an unanswered question. In an attempt to improve our understanding of the population structure of Saudi Arabia, we conducted genomic profiling of 957 unrelated individuals who self-identify with 28 large tribes in Saudi Arabia. Consistent with the tradition of intra-tribal unions, the subjects showed strong clustering along tribal lines with the distance between clusters correlating with their geographical proximities in Arabia. However, these individuals form a unique cluster when compared to the world’s major populations. The ancient origin of these tribal affiliations is supported by analyses that revealed little evidence of ancestral origin from within the 28 tribes. Our results disclose a granular map of population structure and have important implications for future genetic studies into Mendelian and common diseases in the region.
Journal Article
A human ciliopathy reveals essential functions for NEK10 in airway mucociliary clearance
by
Montoro, Daniel T.
,
Frenkel, Evgeni M.
,
Omran, Heymut
in
631/208/1516
,
631/80/304
,
Adolescent
2020
Mucociliary clearance, the physiological process by which mammalian conducting airways expel pathogens and unwanted surface materials from the respiratory tract, depends on the coordinated function of multiple specialized cell types, including basal stem cells, mucus-secreting goblet cells, motile ciliated cells, cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)-rich ionocytes, and immune cells
1
,
2
. Bronchiectasis, a syndrome of pathological airway dilation associated with impaired mucociliary clearance, may occur sporadically or as a consequence of Mendelian inheritance, for example in cystic fibrosis, primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), and select immunodeficiencies
3
. Previous studies have identified mutations that affect ciliary structure and nucleation in PCD
4
, but the regulation of mucociliary transport remains incompletely understood, and therapeutic targets for its modulation are lacking. Here we identify a bronchiectasis syndrome caused by mutations that inactivate NIMA-related kinase 10 (NEK10), a protein kinase with previously unknown in vivo functions in mammals. Genetically modified primary human airway cultures establish NEK10 as a ciliated-cell-specific kinase whose activity regulates the motile ciliary proteome to promote ciliary length and mucociliary transport but which is dispensable for normal ciliary number, radial structure, and beat frequency. Together, these data identify a novel and likely targetable signaling axis that controls motile ciliary function in humans and has potential implications for other respiratory disorders that are characterized by impaired mucociliary clearance.
Inactivating mutations in a protein kinase, NEK10, cause a genetic bronchiectasis syndrome in humans that is characterized by short motile cilia and impaired mucociliary transport.
Journal Article
A genomics approach to females with infertility and recurrent pregnancy loss
2020
Infertility affects 10% of reproductive-age women and is extremely heterogeneous in etiology. The genetic contribution to female infertility is incompletely understood, and involves chromosomal and single-gene defects. Our aim in this study is to decipher single-gene causes in infertile women in whom endocrinological, anatomical, and chromosomal causes have been excluded. Our cohort comprises women with recurrent pregnancy loss and no offspring from spontaneous pregnancies (RPL, n = 61) and those who never achieved clinical pregnancy and were referred for in vitro fertilization [primary infertility (PI), n = 14]. Whole-exome sequencing revealed candidate variants in 14, which represents 43% of those with PI and 13% of those with RPL. These include variants in previously established female infertility-related genes (TLE6, NLRP7, FSHR, and ZP1) as well as genes with only tentative links in the literature (NLRP5). Candidate variants in genes linked to primary ciliary dyskinesia (DNAH11 and CCNO) were identified in individuals with and without systemic features of the disease. We also identified variants in genes not previously linked to female infertility. These include one homozygous variant each in CCDC68, CBX3, CENPH, PABPC1L, PIF1, PLK1, and REXO4, which we propose as candidate genes for infertility based on their established biology or compatible animal models. Our study expands the contribution of single genes to the etiology of PI and RPL, improves the precision of disease classification at the molecular level, and offers the potential for future treatment and development of human genetics-inspired fertility regulators.
Journal Article
Treatment of retinitis pigmentosa due to MERTK mutations by ocular subretinal injection of adeno-associated virus gene vector: results of a phase I trial
by
Almaghamsi, Abdulrahman
,
Colak, Dilek
,
Wang, Wenqiu
in
Adeno-associated virus
,
Adolescent
,
Adult
2016
MERTK is an essential component of the signaling network that controls phagocytosis in retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), the loss of which results in photoreceptor degeneration. Previous proof-of-concept studies have demonstrated the efficacy of gene therapy using human
MERTK
(hMERTK) packaged into adeno-associated virus (AAV2) in treating RCS rats and mice with MERTK deficiency. The purpose of this study was to assess the safety of gene transfer via subretinal administration of rAAV2-VMD2-hMERTK in subjects with
MERTK
-associated retinitis pigmentosa (RP). After a preclinical phase confirming the safety of the study vector in monkeys, six patients (aged 14 to 54, mean 33.3 years) with
MERTK
-related RP and baseline visual acuity (VA) ranging from 20/50 to <20/6400 were entered in a phase I open-label, dose-escalation trial. One eye of each patient (the worse-seeing eye in five subjects) received a submacular injection of the viral vector, first at a dose of 150 µl (5.96 × 10
10
vg; 2 patients) and then 450 µl (17.88 × 10
10
vg; 4 patients). Patients were followed daily for 10 days at 30, 60, 90, 180, 270, 365, 540, and 730 days post-injection. Collected data included (1) full ophthalmologic examination including best-corrected VA, intraocular pressure, color fundus photographs, macular spectral domain optical coherence tomography and full-field stimulus threshold test (FST) in both the study and fellow eyes; (2) systemic safety data including CBC, liver and kidney function tests, coagulation profiles, urine analysis, AAV antibody titers, peripheral blood PCR and ASR measurement; and (3) listing of ophthalmological or systemic adverse effects. All patients completed the 2-year follow-up. Subretinal injection of rAAV2-VMD2-hMERTK was associated with acceptable ocular and systemic safety profiles based on 2-year follow-up. None of the patients developed complications that could be attributed to the gene vector with certainty. Postoperatively, one patient developed filamentary keratitis, and two patients developed progressive cataract. Of these two patients, one also developed transient subfoveal fluid after the injection as well as monocular oscillopsia. Two patients developed a rise in AAV antibodies, but neither patient was positive for rAAV vector genomes via PCR. Three patients also displayed measurable improved visual acuity in the treated eye following surgery, although the improvement was lost by 2 years in two of these patients. Gene therapy for
MERTK
-related RP using careful subretinal injection of rAAV2-VMD2-hMERTK is not associated with major side effects and may result in clinical improvement in a subset of patients.
Journal Article
Expanding the genetic heterogeneity of intellectual disability
by
Alfadhel, Majid
,
Al Tassan, Nada
,
Monies, Dorota
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
,
Brain
2017
Intellectual disability (ID) is a common morbid condition with a wide range of etiologies. The list of monogenic forms of ID has increased rapidly in recent years thanks to the implementation of genomic sequencing techniques. In this study, we describe the phenotypic and genetic findings of 68 families (105 patients) all with novel ID-related variants. In addition to established ID genes, including ones for which we describe unusual mutational mechanism, some of these variants represent the first confirmatory disease–gene links following previous reports (
TRAK1
,
GTF3C3
,
SPTBN4
and
NKX6
-
2
), some of which were based on single families. Furthermore, we describe novel variants in 14 genes that we propose as novel candidates (
ANKHD1
,
ASTN2
,
ATP13A1
,
FMO4
,
MADD
,
MFSD11
,
NCKAP1
,
NFASC
,
PCDHGA10
,
PPP1R21
,
SLC12A2
,
SLK
,
STK32C
and
ZFAT
). We highlight
MADD
and
PCDHGA10
as particularly compelling candidates in which we identified biallelic likely deleterious variants in two independent ID families each. We also highlight
NCKAP1
as another compelling candidate in a large family with autosomal dominant mild intellectual disability that fully segregates with a heterozygous truncating variant. The candidacy of
NCKAP1
is further supported by its biological function, and our demonstration of relevant expression in human brain. Our study expands the locus and allelic heterogeneity of ID and demonstrates the power of positional mapping to reveal unusual mutational mechanisms.
Journal Article
ASTL is mutated in female infertility
2022
Female infertility is a relatively common phenotype with a growing number of single gene causes although these account for only a minority of cases. Here, we report a consanguineous family in which adult females who are homozygous for a truncating variant in ASTL display markedly reduced fertility in a pattern strikingly similar to Astl−/− female mice. ASTL encodes ovastacin, which is known to trigger zona pellucida hardening (ZPH) as part of the cortical reaction upon fertilization. ZPH is required for normal early embryonic development and its absence can be caused by pathogenic variants in other zona pellucida proteins that result in a similar infertility phenotype in humans and mouse. This is the first report of ASTL-related infertility in humans and suggests that the inclusion of ASTL in female infertility gene panels is warranted.
Journal Article