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"Kivuva, Emma"
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Deletion upstream of MAB21L2 highlights the importance of evolutionarily conserved non-coding sequences for eye development
2024
Anophthalmia, microphthalmia and coloboma (AMC) comprise a spectrum of developmental eye disorders, accounting for approximately 20% of childhood visual impairment. While non-coding regulatory sequences are increasingly recognised as contributing to disease burden, characterising their impact on gene function and phenotype remains challenging. Furthermore, little is known of the nature and extent of their contribution to AMC phenotypes. We report two families with variants in or near
MAB21L2
, a gene where genetic variants are known to cause AMC in humans and animal models. The first proband, presenting with microphthalmia and coloboma, has a likely pathogenic missense variant (c.338 G > C; p.[Trp113Ser]), segregating within the family. The second individual, presenting with microphthalmia, carries an ~ 113.5 kb homozygous deletion 19.38 kb upstream of
MAB21L2
. Modelling of the deletion results in transient small lens and coloboma as well as midbrain anomalies in zebrafish, and microphthalmia and coloboma in
Xenopus tropicalis
. Using conservation analysis, we identify 15 non-coding conserved elements (CEs) within the deleted region, while ChIP-seq data from mouse embryonic stem cells demonstrates that two of these (CE13 and 14) bind Otx2, a protein with an established role in eye development. Targeted disruption of CE14 in
Xenopus tropicalis
recapitulates an ocular coloboma phenotype, supporting its role in eye development. Together, our data provides insights into regulatory mechanisms underlying eye development and highlights the importance of non-coding sequences as a source of genetic diagnoses in AMC.
Coding sequence variants in the
MAB21L2
gene can cause human eye disorders. Here the authors show that a deletion upstream of
MAB21L2
leads to similar eye anomalies in humans, zebrafish and frogs due to the disruption of evolutionarily conserved regulatory elements.
Journal Article
Personalized recurrence risk assessment following the birth of a child with a pathogenic de novo mutation
2023
Following the diagnosis of a paediatric disorder caused by an apparently de novo mutation, a recurrence risk of 1–2% is frequently quoted due to the possibility of parental germline mosaicism; but for any specific couple, this figure is usually incorrect. We present a systematic approach to providing individualized recurrence risk. By combining locus-specific sequencing of multiple tissues to detect occult mosaicism with long-read sequencing to determine the parent-of-origin of the mutation, we show that we can stratify the majority of couples into one of seven discrete categories associated with substantially different risks to future offspring. Among 58 families with a single affected offspring (representing 59 de novo mutations in 49 genes), the recurrence risk for 35 (59%) was decreased below 0.1%, but increased owing to parental mixed mosaicism for 5 (9%)—that could be quantified in semen for paternal cases (recurrence risks of 5.6–12.1%). Implementation of this strategy offers the prospect of driving a major transformation in the practice of genetic counselling.
PREGCARE is a new strategy for families who had a child with a pathogenic de novo mutation, that efficiently identifies couples at higher recurrence risk due to parental mosaicism, while reassuring many others that their recurrence risk is negligible.
Journal Article
The broad phenotypic spectrum of PPP2R1A-related neurodevelopmental disorders correlates with the degree of biochemical dysfunction
by
Kivuva, Emma
,
Gabau, Elisabeth
,
Jain, Vani
in
Binding sites
,
Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2021
Purpose
Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) caused by protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) dysfunction have mainly been associated with de novo variants in
PPP2R5D
and
PPP2CA
, and more rarely in
PPP2R1A
. Here, we aimed to better understand the latter by characterizing 30 individuals with de novo and often recurrent variants in this PP2A scaffolding Aα subunit.
Methods
Most cases were identified through routine clinical diagnostics. Variants were biochemically characterized for phosphatase activity and interaction with other PP2A subunits.
Results
We describe 30 individuals with 16 different variants in
PPP2R1A
, 21 of whom had variants not previously reported. The severity of developmental delay ranged from mild learning problems to severe intellectual disability (ID) with or without epilepsy. Common features were language delay, hypotonia, and hypermobile joints. Macrocephaly was only seen in individuals without B55α subunit-binding deficit, and these patients had less severe ID and no seizures. Biochemically more disruptive variants with impaired B55α but increased striatin binding were associated with profound ID, epilepsy, corpus callosum hypoplasia, and sometimes microcephaly.
Conclusion
We significantly expand the phenotypic spectrum of
PPP2R1A
-related NDD, revealing a broader clinical presentation of the patients and that the functional consequences of the variants are more diverse than previously reported.
Journal Article
HUWE1 variants cause dominant X-linked intellectual disability: a clinical study of 21 patients
by
Kivuva, Emma
,
Martinez, Francisco
,
Benoit, Valerie
in
Cranial sutures
,
Craniosynostosis
,
Females
2018
Whole-gene duplications and missense variants in the HUWE1 gene (NM_031407.6) have been reported in association with intellectual disability (ID). Increased gene dosage has been observed in males with non-syndromic mild to moderate ID with speech delay. Missense variants reported previously appear to be associated with severe ID in males and mild or no ID in obligate carrier females. Here, we report the largest cohort of patients with HUWE1 variants, consisting of 14 females and 7 males, with 15 different missense variants and one splice site variant. Clinical assessment identified common clinical features consisting of moderate to profound ID, delayed or absent speech, short stature with small hands and feet and facial dysmorphism consisting of a broad nasal tip, deep set eyes, epicanthic folds, short palpebral fissures, and a short philtrum. We describe for the first time that females can be severely affected, despite preferential inactivation of the affected X chromosome. Three females with the c.329 G > A p.Arg110Gln variant, present with a phenotype of mild ID, specific facial features, scoliosis and craniosynostosis, as reported previously in a single patient. In these females, the X inactivation pattern appeared skewed in favour of the affected transcript. In summary, HUWE1 missense variants may cause syndromic ID in both males and females.
Journal Article
An oligodendrocyte silencer element underlies the pathogenic impact of lamin B1 structural variants
2025
The role of non-coding regulatory elements and how they might contribute to tissue type specificity of disease phenotypes is poorly understood. Autosomal Dominant Leukodystrophy (ADLD) is a fatal, adult-onset, neurological disorder that is characterized by extensive CNS demyelination. Most cases of ADLD are caused by tandem genomic duplications involving the lamin B1 gene (
LMNB1
) while a small subset are caused by genomic deletions upstream of the gene. Utilizing data from recently identified families that carry
LMNB1
gene duplications but do not exhibit demyelination, ADLD patient tissues, CRISPR edited cell lines and mouse models, we have identified a silencer element that is lost in ADLD patients and that specifically targets expression to oligodendrocytes. This element consists of CTCF binding sites that mediate three-dimensional chromatin looping involving
LMNB1
and the recruitment of the PRC2 transcriptional repressor complex. Loss of the silencer element in ADLD identifies a role for non-coding regulatory elements in tissue specificity and disease causation.
An oligodendrocyte-specific genomic silencer element determines the cell type specificity for a fatal neurological disorder caused by a widely expressed nuclear protein (Lamin B1) and suggests a role for silencer elements in disease causation.
Journal Article
Methylation analysis of 79 patients with growth restriction reveals novel patterns of methylation change at imprinted loci
by
Callaway, Jonathan L A
,
Temple, I Karen
,
Docherty, Louise E
in
631/1647/2210/2213
,
631/208/176/1988
,
692/699/2743/1530
2010
This study was an investigation of 79 patients referred to the Wessex Regional Genetics Laboratory with suspected Russell–Silver Syndrome or unexplained short stature/intra uterine growth restriction, warranting genetic investigation. Methylation status was analysed at target sequences within eleven imprinted loci (
PLAGL1, IGF2R, PEG10, MEST1, GRB10, KCNQ1OT1, H19, IGF2P0, DLK1, PEG3, NESPAS
). Thirty seven percent (37%) (29 of 79) of samples were shown to have a methylation abnormality. The commonest finding was a loss of methylation at
H19
(23 of 29), as previously reported in Russell–Silver Syndrome. In addition, four of these patients had methylation anomalies at other loci, of whom two showed hypomethylation of multiple imprinted loci, and two showed a complete gain of methylation at
IGF2R
. This latter finding was also present in five other patients who did not have demonstrable changes at
H19.
In total, 7 of 79 patients showed a gain of methylation at IGF2R and this was significantly different from a normal control population of 267 individuals (
P
=0.002). This study in patients with growth restriction shows the importance of widening the epigenetic investigation to include multiple imprinted loci and highlights potential involvement of the
IGF2R
locus.
Journal Article
Rapid prenatal diagnosis using targeted exome sequencing: a cohort study to assess feasibility and potential impact on prenatal counseling and pregnancy management
by
Faravelli, Francesca
,
Kivuva, Emma
,
Chitty, Lyn S
in
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
,
Cohort analysis
2018
Purpose
Unexpected fetal abnormalities occur in 2–5% of pregnancies. While traditional cytogenetic and microarray approaches achieve diagnosis in around 40% of cases, lack of diagnosis in others impedes parental counseling, informed decision making, and pregnancy management. Postnatally exome sequencing yields high diagnostic rates, but relies on careful phenotyping to interpret genotype results. Here we used a multidisciplinary approach to explore the utility of rapid fetal exome sequencing for prenatal diagnosis using skeletal dysplasias as an exemplar.
Methods
Parents in pregnancies undergoing invasive testing because of sonographic fetal abnormalities, where multidisciplinary review considered skeletal dysplasia a likely etiology, were consented for exome trio sequencing (both parents and fetus). Variant interpretation focused on a virtual panel of 240 genes known to cause skeletal dysplasias.
Results
Definitive molecular diagnosis was made in 13/16 (81%) cases. In some cases, fetal ultrasound findings alone were of sufficient severity for parents to opt for termination. In others, molecular diagnosis informed accurate prediction of outcome, improved parental counseling, and enabled parents to terminate or continue the pregnancy with certainty.
Conclusion
Trio sequencing with expert multidisciplinary review for case selection and data interpretation yields timely, high diagnostic rates in fetuses presenting with unexpected skeletal abnormalities. This improves parental counseling and pregnancy management.
Journal Article
Evidence for 28 genetic disorders discovered by combining healthcare and research data
2020
De novo mutations in protein-coding genes are a well-established cause of developmental disorders
1
. However, genes known to be associated with developmental disorders account for only a minority of the observed excess of such de novo mutations
1
,
2
. Here, to identify previously undescribed genes associated with developmental disorders, we integrate healthcare and research exome-sequence data from 31,058 parent–offspring trios of individuals with developmental disorders, and develop a simulation-based statistical test to identify gene-specific enrichment of de novo mutations. We identified 285 genes that were significantly associated with developmental disorders, including 28 that had not previously been robustly associated with developmental disorders. Although we detected more genes associated with developmental disorders, much of the excess of de novo mutations in protein-coding genes remains unaccounted for. Modelling suggests that more than 1,000 genes associated with developmental disorders have not yet been described, many of which are likely to be less penetrant than the currently known genes. Research access to clinical diagnostic datasets will be critical for completing the map of genes associated with developmental disorders.
By integrating healthcare and exome-sequencing data from parent–offspring trios of patients with developmental disorders, 28 genes that had not previously been associated with developmental disorders were identified.
Journal Article
Prevalence and architecture of de novo mutations in developmental disorders
2017
The genomes of individuals with severe, undiagnosed developmental disorders are enriched in damaging
de novo
mutations (DNMs) in developmentally important genes. Here we have sequenced the exomes of 4,293 families containing individuals with developmental disorders, and meta-analysed these data with data from another 3,287 individuals with similar disorders. We show that the most important factors influencing the diagnostic yield of DNMs are the sex of the affected individual, the relatedness of their parents, whether close relatives are affected and the parental ages. We identified 94 genes enriched in damaging DNMs, including 14 that previously lacked compelling evidence of involvement in developmental disorders. We have also characterized the phenotypic diversity among these disorders. We estimate that 42% of our cohort carry pathogenic DNMs in coding sequences; approximately half of these DNMs disrupt gene function and the remainder result in altered protein function. We estimate that developmental disorders caused by DNMs have an average prevalence of 1 in 213 to 1 in 448 births, depending on parental age. Given current global demographics, this equates to almost 400,000 children born per year.
Whole-exome analysis of individuals with developmental disorders shows that
de novo
mutations can equally cause loss or altered protein function, but that most mutations causing altered protein function have not yet been described.
De novo
mutations in developmental disorders
Matthew Hurles, Jeremy McRae and colleagues from the Deciphering Developmental Disorders Study report exome sequencing of 4,293 families containing individuals with severe, undiagnosed developmental disorders. They find enrichment of damaging
de novo
mutations in 94 genes, implicating them in developmental disorders. They estimate that 42% of the cohort carry pathogenic
de novo
mutations in coding sequences resulting in disrupted or altered protein function.
Journal Article