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14
result(s) for
"Bourgeois Valentin"
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Impact of interferon on a triple positive polycythemia vera
by
Campario Hugo
,
Brustel Antoine
,
Mosca Matthieu
in
Interferon
,
Polycythemia
,
Polycythemia vera
2020
Journal Article
OMIXCARE: OMICS technologies solved about 33% of the patients with heterogeneous rare neuro-developmental disorders and negative exome sequencing results and identified 13% additional candidate variants
by
Bourgeois, Valentin
,
Jean-Marçais, Nolwenn
,
Colin, Estelle
in
Cell and Developmental Biology
,
DNA methylation analysis
,
Genetics
2022
Purpose: Patients with rare or ultra-rare genetic diseases, which affect 350 million people worldwide, may experience a diagnostic odyssey. High-throughput sequencing leads to an etiological diagnosis in up to 50% of individuals with heterogeneous neurodevelopmental or malformation disorders. There is a growing interest in additional omics technologies in translational research settings to examine the remaining unsolved cases. Methods: We gathered 30 individuals with malformation syndromes and/or severe neurodevelopmental disorders with negative trio exome sequencing and array comparative genomic hybridization results through a multicenter project. We applied short-read genome sequencing, total RNA sequencing, and DNA methylation analysis, in that order, as complementary translational research tools for a molecular diagnosis. Results: The cohort was mainly composed of pediatric individuals with a median age of 13.7 years (4 years and 6 months to 35 years and 1 month). Genome sequencing alone identified at least one variant with a high level of evidence of pathogenicity in 8/30 individuals (26.7%) and at least a candidate disease-causing variant in 7/30 other individuals (23.3%). RNA-seq data in 23 individuals allowed two additional individuals (8.7%) to be diagnosed, confirming the implication of two pathogenic variants (8.7%), and excluding one candidate variant (4.3%). Finally, DNA methylation analysis confirmed one diagnosis identified by genome sequencing (Kabuki syndrome) and identified an episignature compatible with a BAFopathy in a patient with a clinical diagnosis of Coffin-Siris with negative genome and RNA-seq results in blood. Conclusion: Overall, our integrated genome, transcriptome, and DNA methylation analysis solved 10/30 (33.3%) cases and identified a strong candidate gene in 4/30 (13.3%) of the patients with rare neurodevelopmental disorders and negative exome sequencing results.
Journal Article
Diagnosis of exon 12‐positive polycythemia vera rescued by NGS
by
Bourgeois, Valentin
,
Garrec, Céline
,
Martin, Pauline
in
Blood cancer
,
Case Report
,
Case Reports
2020
A JAK2V617F‐negative polycythemia associated with low serum epo needs to be tested for an exon 12 JAK2 mutation. When negative, due to potential serious complications in PV, a next generation sequencing is necessary to rule out false negative results. A JAK2V617F‐negative polycythemia associated with low serum epo needs to be tested for an exon 12 JAK2 mutation. When negative, due to potential serious complications in PV, a next generation sequencing is necessary to rule out false negative results.
Journal Article
Interest of exome sequencing trio‐like strategy based on pooled parental DNA for diagnosis and translational research in rare diseases
by
Nambot, Sophie
,
Moutton, Sebastien
,
Bourgeois, Valentin
in
cost effectiveness
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
,
Diabetes
2021
Background Exome sequencing (ES) has become the most powerful and cost‐effective molecular tool for deciphering rare diseases with a diagnostic yield approaching 30%–40% in solo‐ES and 50% in trio‐ES. We applied an innovative parental DNA pooling method to reduce the parental sequencing cost while maintaining the diagnostic yield of trio‐ES. Methods We pooled six (Agilent‐CRE‐v2–100X) or five parental DNA (TWIST‐HCE–70X) aiming to detect allelic balance around 8–10% for heterozygous status. The strategies were applied as second‐tier (74 individuals after negative solo‐ES) and first‐tier approaches (324 individuals without previous ES). Results The allelic balance of parental‐pool variants was around 8.97%. Sanger sequencing uncovered false positives in 1.5% of sporadic variants. In the second‐tier approach, we evaluated than two thirds of the Sanger validations performed after solo‐ES (41/59–69%) would have been saved if the parental‐pool segregations had been available from the start. The parental‐pool strategy identified a causative diagnosis in 18/74 individuals (24%) in the second‐tier and in 116/324 individuals (36%) in the first‐tier approaches, including 19 genes newly associated with human disorders. Conclusions Parental‐pooling is an efficient alternative to trio‐ES. It provides rapid segregation and extension to translational research while reducing the cost of parental and Sanger sequencing. We applied an innovative parental DNA pooling method to reduce the parental sequencing cost while maintaining the diagnostic yield of trio‐ES. Parental‐pooling is an efficient alternative to trio‐ES. It provides rapid segregation and extension to translational research while reducing the cost of parental and Sanger sequencing.
Journal Article
PTBP1 variants displaying altered nucleocytoplasmic distribution are responsible for a neurodevelopmental disorder with skeletal dysplasia
by
Cormier-Daire, Valérie
,
Gooch, Catherine
,
Colin, Estelle
in
Alternative splicing
,
Bone dysplasia
,
Cell cycle
2025
Polypyrimidine tract-binding protein 1 (PTBP1) is a heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein primarily known for its alternative splicing activity. It shuttles between the nucleus and cytoplasm via partially overlapping N-terminal nuclear localization (NLS) and export (NES) signals. Despite its fundamental role in cell growth and differentiation, its involvement in human disease remains poorly understood. We identified 27 individuals from 25 families harboring de novo or inherited pathogenic variants - predominantly start-loss (89%) and, to a lesser extent, missense (11%) - affecting NES/NLS motifs. Affected individuals presented with a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder and variable skeletal dysplasia with disproportionate short stature with short limbs. Intellectual functioning ranged from normal to moderately delayed. Start-loss variants led to translation initiation from an alternative downstream in-frame methionine, resulting in loss of the NES and the first half of the bipartite NLS, and increased cytoplasmic stability. Start-loss and missense variants shared a DNA methylation episignature in peripheral blood and altered nucleocytoplasmic distribution in vitro and in vivo with preferential accumulation in processing bodies, causing aberrant gene expression but normal RNA splicing. Transcriptomic analysis of patient-derived fibroblasts revealed dysregulated pathways involved in osteochondrogenesis and neurodevelopment. Overall, our findings highlight a cytoplasmic role for PTBP1in RNA stability and disease pathogenesis.
Journal Article
Chromoblastomycosis in French Guiana: Epidemiology and Practices, 1955–2023
by
Grotta, Geoffrey
,
Blaizot, Romain
,
Couppie, Pierre
in
Biopsy
,
chromoblastomycosis
,
Chromomycosis
2024
Chromoblastomycosis (CBM) is a chronic neglected fungal disease, usually met in tropical areas. French Guiana is a South American territory with limited epidemiological data. This retrospective study concerned all patients with CBM proven by at least one paraclinical examination and diagnosed in French Guiana between 1950 and 2023. In total, 23 patients were included, mostly males (87%) of Creole origin, living in the coastal region (87%) and involved in outdoor occupations (74%). Lesions were mostly observed on the lower limbs (78.3%), with a median time to diagnosis of four years. Laboratory tests included positive direct microscopic examinations (78.3%) and mycological cultures (69.6%), identifying 14 cases of Fonsecaea pedrosoi and one case of Exophiala janselmei. Various treatments were employed, including antifungals, surgery and combinations of both. In conclusion, CBM in French Guiana involves a different population than other subcutaneous mycoses such as Lobomycosis or Paracoccidioidomycosis, mostly found in the forest hinterland. Surgery should be recommended for recent and limited lesions. Itraconazole and terbinafine should systematically be proposed, either in monotherapy or in combination with surgery or cryotherapy.
Journal Article
Human gut microbiota-reactive DP8α Tregs prevent acute graft-versus-host disease in a CD73-dependent manner
by
Chevallier, Patrice
,
Vignes, Caroline
,
Haspot, Fabienne
in
5'-Nucleotidase - immunology
,
5'-Nucleotidase - metabolism
,
Acute Disease
2024
Graft-versus-host disease (GvHD) is a life-threatening complication frequently occurring following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-HSCT). Since gut microbiota and regulatory T cells (Tregs) are believed to play roles in GvHD prevention, we investigated whether DP8α Tregs, which we have previously described to harbor a T cell receptor specificity for the gut commensal Faecalibacterium prausnitzii, could protect against GvHD, thereby linking the microbiota and its effect on GvHD. We observed a decrease in CD73+ DP8α Treg frequency in allo-HSCT patients 1 month after transplantation, which was associated with acute GvHD (aGvHD) development at 1 month after transplantation, as compared with aGvHD-free patients, without being correlated to hematological disease relapse. Importantly, CD73 activity was shown to be critical for DP8α Treg suppressive function. Moreover, the frequency of host-reactive DP8α Tregs was also lower in aGvHD patients, as compared with aGvHD-free patients, which could embody a protective mechanism responsible for the maintenance of this cell subset in GvHD-free patients. We also showed that human DP8α Tregs protected mice against xenogeneic GvHD through limiting deleterious inflammation and preserving gut integrity. Altogether, these results demonstrated that human DP8α Tregs mediate aGvHD prevention in a CD73-dependent manner, likely through host reactivity, advocating for the use of these cells for the development of innovative therapeutic strategies to preclude aGvHD-related inflammation.
Journal Article
Anti‐SARS‐CoV‐2 vaccines in recipient and/or donor before allotransplant
by
Imbert, Berthe‐Marie
,
Chevallier, Patrice
,
Grain, Audrey
in
allogeneic
,
Antibodies
,
CD3 antigen
2022
The impact of pre‐transplant anti‐severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus‐2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) vaccine in 20 recipients of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (Allo‐HSCT) and/or their donors is reported here, showing that the persistence of anti‐SARS‐CoV‐2 antibodies can be detected in almost all patients, whatever the type of vaccine used, and up to 9 months post transplant. Also, an anti‐SARS‐CoV‐2 spike glycoprotein CD3+ T‐cell response could be detected in six (35%) of 17 evaluable patients. This study provides a rationale to consider anti‐SARS‐CoV‐2 vaccination of both recipients and donors before Allo‐HSCT.
Journal Article
Evaluation of two commercial kits and two laboratory-developed qPCR assays compared to LAMP for molecular diagnosis of malaria
by
Zaffaroullah, Rizwana
,
Bailly, Justine
,
Bouzayene, Azza
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
,
Blood
2022
Background
Malaria is an infectious disease considered as one of the biggest causes of mortality in endemic areas. This life-threatening disease needs to be quickly diagnosed and treated. The standard diagnostic tools recommended by the World Health Organization are thick blood smears microscopy and immuno-chromatographic rapid diagnostic tests. However, these methods lack sensitivity especially in cases of low parasitaemia and non-falciparum infections. Therefore, the need for more accurate and reliable diagnostic tools, such as real-time polymerase chain reaction based methods which have proven greater sensitivity particularly in the screening of malaria, is prominent. This study was conducted at the French National Malaria Reference Centre to assess sensitivity and specificity of two commercial malaria qPCR kits and two in-house developed qPCRs compared to LAMP.
Methods
183 blood samples received for expertise at the FNMRC were included in this study and were subjected to four different qPCR methods: the Biosynex Ampliquick
®
Malaria test, the BioEvolution
Plasmodium
Typage test, the in-house HRM and the in-house TaqMan qPCRs. The specificity and sensitivity of each method and their confidence intervals were determined with the LAMP-based assay Alethia® Malaria as the reference for malaria diagnosis. The accuracy of species diagnosis of the Ampliquick
®
Malaria test and the two in-house qPCRs was also evaluated using the BioEvolution
Plasmodium
Typage test as the reference method for species identification.
Results
The main results showed that when compared to LAMP, a test with excellent diagnostic performances, the two in-house developed qPCRs were the most sensitive (sensitivity at 100% for the in-house TaqMan qPCR and 98.1% for the in-house HRM qPCR), followed by the two commercial kits: the Biosynex Ampliquick
®
Malaria test (sensitivity at 97.2%) and the BioEvolution
Plasmodium
Typage (sensitivity at 95.4%). Additionally, with the in-house qPCRs we were able to confirm a
Plasmodium falciparum
infection in microscopically negative samples that were not detected by commercial qPCR kits. This demonstrates that the
var
genes of
P. falciparum
used in these in-house qPCRs are more reliable targets than the 18S sRNA commonly used in most of the developed qPCR methods for malaria diagnosis.
Conclusion
Overall, these results accentuate the role molecular methods could play in the screening of malaria. This may represent a helpful tool for other laboratories looking to implement molecular diagnosis methods in their routine analysis, which could be essential for the detection and treatment of malaria carriers and even for the eradication of this disease.
Journal Article
Assessment of COVID-19 Incidence and Severity Among Recipients of Allogenic Stem Cell Transplant After 1 or 2 mRNA Booster Doses During the Omicron Wave in France
2022
This cohort study assesses the incidence and severity of COVID-19 among vaccinated recipients of allogenic stem cell transplant in a single center after 1 or 2 messenger RNA booster doses during the Omicron wave in France.
Journal Article