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result(s) for
"Mackay, Deborah J G"
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The effect of early, comprehensive genomic testing on clinical care in neonatal diabetes: an international cohort study
by
Mackay, Deborah JG
,
Temple, I Karen
,
Houghton, Jayne AL
in
Adenosine triphosphatase
,
Diabetes
,
Diabetes Mellitus - classification
2015
Traditional genetic testing focusses on analysis of one or a few genes according to clinical features; this approach is changing as improved sequencing methods enable simultaneous analysis of several genes. Neonatal diabetes is the presenting feature of many discrete clinical phenotypes defined by different genetic causes. Genetic subtype defines treatment, with improved glycaemic control on sulfonylurea treatment for most patients with potassium channel mutations. We investigated the effect of early, comprehensive testing of all known genetic causes of neonatal diabetes.
In this large, international, cohort study, we studied patients with neonatal diabetes diagnosed with diabetes before 6 months of age who were referred from 79 countries. We identified mutations by comprehensive genetic testing including Sanger sequencing, 6q24 methylation analysis, and targeted next-generation sequencing of all known neonatal diabetes genes.
Between January, 2000, and August, 2013, genetic testing was done in 1020 patients (571 boys, 449 girls). Mutations in the potassium channel genes were the most common cause (n=390) of neonatal diabetes, but were identified less frequently in consanguineous families (12% in consanguineous families vs 46% in non-consanguineous families; p<0·0001). Median duration of diabetes at the time of genetic testing decreased from more than 4 years before 2005 to less than 3 months after 2012. Earlier referral for genetic testing affected the clinical phenotype. In patients with genetically diagnosed Wolcott-Rallison syndrome, 23 (88%) of 26 patients tested within 3 months from diagnosis had isolated diabetes, compared with three (17%) of 18 patients referred later (>4 years; p<0·0001), in whom skeletal and liver involvement was common. Similarly, for patients with genetically diagnosed transient neonatal diabetes, the diabetes had remitted in only ten (10%) of 101 patients tested early (<3 months) compared with 60 (100%) of the 60 later referrals (p<0·0001).
Patients are now referred for genetic testing closer to their presentation with neonatal diabetes. Comprehensive testing of all causes identified causal mutations in more than 80% of cases. The genetic result predicts the best diabetes treatment and development of related features. This model represents a new framework for clinical care with genetic diagnosis preceding development of clinical features and guiding clinical management.
Wellcome Trust and Diabetes UK.
Journal Article
Genomic imprinting disorders: lessons on how genome, epigenome and environment interact
by
Monk, David
,
Riccio, Andrea
,
Mackay, Deborah J
in
Embryos
,
Environmental factors
,
Epigenetics
2019
Genomic imprinting, the monoallelic and parent-of-origin-dependent expression of a subset of genes, is required for normal development, and its disruption leads to human disease. Imprinting defects can involve isolated or multilocus epigenetic changes that may have no evident genetic cause, or imprinting disruption can be traced back to alterations of cis-acting elements or trans-acting factors that control the establishment, maintenance and erasure of germline epigenetic imprints. Recent insights into the dynamics of the epigenome, including the effect of environmental factors, suggest that the developmental outcomes and heritability of imprinting disorders are influenced by interactions between the genome, the epigenome and the environment in germ cells and early embryos.Disruption of genomic imprinting can lead to disease. Recent studies suggest that interactions between the genome, the epigenome and the environment in germ cells and early embryos have an impact on developmental outcomes and on the heritability of imprinting disorders.
Journal Article
Hypomethylation at multiple maternally methylated imprinted regions including PLAGL1 and GNAS loci in Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome
by
Callaway, Jonathan
,
Cubellis, Maria Vittoria
,
Maas, Saskia M
in
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome
,
Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome - genetics
,
Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome - pathology
2009
Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic phenomenon restricting gene expression in a manner dependent on parent of origin. Imprinted gene products are critical regulators of growth and development, and imprinting disorders are associated with both genetic and epigenetic mutations, including disruption of DNA methylation within the imprinting control regions (ICRs) of these genes. It was recently reported that some patients with imprinting disorders have a more generalised imprinting defect, with hypomethylation at a range of maternally methylated ICRs. We report a cohort of 149 patients with a clinical diagnosis of Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), including 81 with maternal hypomethylation of the
KCNQ1OT1
ICR. Methylation analysis of 11 ICRs in these patients showed that hypomethylation affecting multiple imprinted loci was restricted to 17 patients with hypomethylation of the
KCNQ1OT1
ICR, and involved only maternally methylated loci. Both partial and complete hypomethylation was demonstrated in these cases, suggesting a possible postzygotic origin of a mosaic imprinting error. Some ICRs, including the
PLAGL1
and
GNAS/NESPAS
ICRs implicated in the aetiology of transient neonatal diabetes and pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1b, respectively, were more frequently affected than others. Although we did not find any evidence for mutation of the candidate gene
DNMT3L
, these results support the hypotheses that trans-acting factors affect the somatic maintenance of imprinting at multiple maternally methylated loci and that the clinical presentation of these complex cases may reflect the loci and tissues affected with the epigenetic abnormalities.
Journal Article
Whole-genome analysis as a diagnostic tool for patients referred for diagnosis of Silver-Russell syndrome: a real-world study
by
McKee, Shane
,
Temple, I Karen
,
Davies, Justin H
in
Data analysis
,
Differential diagnosis
,
Epigenetics
2022
BackgroundSilver-Russell syndrome (SRS) is an imprinting disorder characterised by prenatal and postnatal growth restriction, but its clinical features are non-specific and its differential diagnosis is broad. Known molecular causes of SRS include imprinting disturbance, single nucleotide variant (SNV), CNV or UPD affecting several genes; however, up to 40% of individuals with a clinical diagnosis of SRS currently receive no positive molecular diagnosis.MethodsTo determine whether whole-genome sequencing (WGS) could uncover pathogenic variants missed by current molecular testing, we analysed data of 72 participants recruited to the 100,000 Genomes Project within the clinical category of SRS.ResultsIn 20 participants (27% of the cohort) we identified genetic variants plausibly accounting for SRS. Coding SNVs were identified in genes including CDKN1C, IGF2, IGF1R and ORC1. Maternal-effect variants were found in mothers of five participants, including two participants with imprinting disturbance and one with multilocus imprinting disorder. Two regions of homozygosity were suggestive of UPD involving imprinted regions implicated in SRS and Temple syndrome, and three plausibly pathogenic CNVs were found, including a paternal deletion of PLAGL1. In 48 participants with no plausible pathogenic variant, unbiased analysis of SNVs detected a potential association with STX4.ConclusionWGS analysis can detect UPD, CNV and SNV and is potentially a valuable addition to diagnosis of SRS and related growth-restricting disorders.
Journal Article
Imprinting disorders: a group of congenital disorders with overlapping patterns of molecular changes affecting imprinted loci
by
Monk, David
,
Grønskov, Karen
,
Riccio, Andrea
in
Aging
,
Analysis
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2015
Congenital imprinting disorders (IDs) are characterised by molecular changes affecting imprinted chromosomal regions and genes, i.e. genes that are expressed in a parent-of-origin specific manner. Recent years have seen a great expansion in the range of alterations in regulation, dosage or DNA sequence shown to disturb imprinted gene expression, and the correspondingly broad range of resultant clinical syndromes. At the same time, however, it has become clear that this diversity of IDs has common underlying principles, not only in shared molecular mechanisms, but also in interrelated clinical impacts upon growth, development and metabolism. Thus, detailed and systematic analysis of IDs can not only identify unifying principles of molecular epigenetics in health and disease, but also support personalisation of diagnosis and management for individual patients and families.
Journal Article
Hypomethylation of multiple imprinted loci in individuals with transient neonatal diabetes is associated with mutations in ZFP57
by
Callaway, Jonathan L A
,
Temple, I Karen
,
Haemers, Andreas P
in
Agriculture
,
Amino acids
,
Analysis
2008
Deborah Mackay and colleagues identify mutations in
ZFP57
, encoding a zinc-finger transcription factor, in families with transient neonatal diabetes and additional clinical features. Affected individuals have a variable pattern of DNA hypomethylation at multiple imprinted loci.
We have previously described individuals presenting with transient neonatal diabetes and showing a variable pattern of DNA hypomethylation at imprinted loci throughout the genome. We now report mutations in
ZFP57
, which encodes a zinc-finger transcription factor expressed in early development, in seven pedigrees with a shared pattern of mosaic hypomethylation and a conserved range of clinical features. This is the first description of a heritable global imprinting disorder that is compatible with life.
Journal Article
Insights Into the Molecular Mechanism for Type 2 Diabetes Susceptibility at the KCNQ1 Locus From Temporal Changes in Imprinting Status in Human Islets
by
Berry, Andrew
,
Lindgren, Cecilia M.
,
Groop, Leif C.
in
Adult
,
Alleles
,
Biological and medical sciences
2013
The molecular basis of type 2 diabetes predisposition at most established susceptibility loci remains poorly understood. KCNQ1 maps within the 11p15.5 imprinted domain, a region with an established role in congenital growth phenotypes. Variants intronic to KCNQ1 influence diabetes susceptibility when maternally inherited. By use of quantitative PCR and pyrosequencing of human adult islet and fetal pancreas samples, we investigated the imprinting status of regional transcripts and aimed to determine whether type 2 diabetes risk alleles influence regional DNA methylation and gene expression. The results demonstrate that gene expression patterns differ by developmental stage. CDKN1C showed monoallelic expression in both adult and fetal tissue, whereas PHLDA2, SLC22A18, and SLC22A18AS were biallelically expressed in both tissues. Temporal changes in imprinting were observed for KCNQ1 and KCNQ1OT1, with monoallelic expression in fetal tissues and biallelic expression in adult samples. Genotype at the type 2 diabetes risk variant rs2237895 influenced methylation levels of regulatory sequence in fetal pancreas but without demonstrable effects on gene expression. We demonstrate that CDKN1C, KCNQ1, and KCNQ1OT1 are most likely to mediate diabetes susceptibility at the KCNQ1 locus and identify temporal differences in imprinting status and methylation effects, suggesting that diabetes risk effects may be mediated in early development.
Journal Article
Phenotype of genetically confirmed Silver-Russell syndrome beyond childhood
2020
BackgroundSilver-Russell syndrome is an imprinting disorder that restricts growth, resulting in short adult stature that may be ameliorated by treatment. Approximately 50% of patients have loss of methylation of the imprinting control region (H19/IGF2:IG-DMR) on 11p15.5 and 5%–10% have maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 7. Most published research focuses on the childhood phenotype. Our aim was to describe the phenotypic characteristics of older patients with SRS.MethodsA retrospective cohort of 33 individuals with a confirmed molecular diagnosis of SRS aged 13 years or above were carefully phenotyped.ResultsThe median age of the cohort was 29.6 years; 60.6% had a height SD score (SDS) ≤−2 SDS despite 70% having received growth hormone treatment. Relative macrocephaly, feeding difficulties and a facial appearance typical of children with SRS were no longer discriminatory diagnostic features. In those aged ≥18 years, impaired glucose tolerance in 25%, hypertension in 33% and hypercholesterolaemia in 52% were noted. While 9/33 accessed special education support, university degrees were completed in 40.0% (>21 years). There was no significant correlation between quality of life and height SDS. 9/25 were parents and none of the 17 offsprings had SRS.ConclusionHistorical treatment regimens for SRS were not sufficient for normal adult growth and further research to optimise treatment is justified. Clinical childhood diagnostic scoring systems are not applicable to patients presenting in adulthood and SRS diagnosis requires molecular confirmation. Metabolic ill-health warrants further investigation but SRS is compatible with a normal quality of life including normal fertility in many cases.
Journal Article
Very small deletions within the NESP55 gene in pseudohypoparathyroidism type 1b
2015
Pseudohypoparathyroidism (PHP) is caused by reduced expression of genes within the GNAS cluster, resulting in parathormone resistance. The cluster contains multiple imprinted transcripts, including the stimulatory G protein α subunit (Gs-α) and NESP55 transcript preferentially expressed from the maternal allele, and the paternally expressed XLas, A/B and antisense transcripts. PHP1b can be caused by loss of imprinting affecting GNAS A/B alone (associated with STX16 deletion), or the entire GNAS cluster (associated with deletions of NESP55 in a minority of cases). We performed targeted genomic next-generation sequencing (NGS) of the GNAS cluster to seek variants and indels underlying PHP1b. Seven patients were sequenced by hybridisation-based capture and fourteen more by long-range PCR and transposon-mediated insertion and sequencing. A bioinformatic pipeline was developed for variant and indel detection. In one family with two affected siblings, and in a second family with a single affected individual, we detected maternally inherited deletions of 40 and 33 bp, respectively, within the deletion previously reported in rare families with PHP1b. All three affected individuals presented with atypically severe PHP1b; interestingly, the unaffected mother in one family had the detected deletion on her maternally inherited allele. Targeted NGS can reveal sequence changes undetectable by current diagnostic methods. Identification of genetic mutations underlying epigenetic changes can facilitate accurate diagnosis and counselling, and potentially highlight genetic elements critical for normal imprint setting.
Journal Article
Mutations in ATP-Sensitive K+ Channel Genes Cause Transient Neonatal Diabetes and Permanent Diabetes in Childhood or Adulthood
by
Deborah J.G. Mackay
,
Karen Temple
,
David Robinson
in
Adenosine Triphosphate
,
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters - genetics
,
Biological and medical sciences
2007
Mutations in ATP-Sensitive K + Channel Genes Cause Transient Neonatal Diabetes and Permanent Diabetes in Childhood or Adulthood
Sarah E. Flanagan 1 ,
Ann-Marie Patch 1 ,
Deborah J.G. Mackay 2 3 ,
Emma L. Edghill 1 ,
Anna L. Gloyn 1 4 ,
David Robinson 2 ,
Julian P.H. Shield 5 ,
Karen Temple 3 6 ,
Sian Ellard 1 and
Andrew T. Hattersley 1
1 Institute of Biomedical and Clinical Science, Peninsula Medical School, Exeter, U.K
2 Wessex Regional Genetics Laboratories, Salisbury District Hospital, Salisbury, U.K
3 Division of Human Genetics, Southampton University, Southampton, U.K
4 Diabetes Research Laboratories, Oxford Centre for Diabetes Endocrinology and Metabolism, University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K
5 The Royal Hospital for Children, Bristol, U.K
6 Wessex Clinical Genetics Service, National Health Service Trust, Southampton, U.K
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Professor Andrew T. Hattersley, Peninsula Medical School, Barrack Road, Exeter,
EX2 5DW, U.K. E-mail: a.t.hattersley{at}exeter.ac.uk
Abstract
Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus (TNDM) is diagnosed in the first 6 months of life, with remission in infancy or early
childhood. For ∼50% of patients, their diabetes will relapse in later life. The majority of cases result from anomalies of
the imprinted region on chromosome 6q24, and 14 patients with ATP-sensitive K + channel (K ATP channel) gene mutations have been reported. We determined the 6q24 status in 97 patients with TNDM. In patients in whom no
abnormality was identified, the KCNJ11 gene and/or ABCC8 gene, which encode the Kir6.2 and SUR1 subunits of the pancreatic β-cell K ATP channel, were sequenced. K ATP channel mutations were found in 25 of 97 (26%) TNDM probands (12 KCNJ11 and 13 ABCC8 ), while 69 of 97 (71%) had chromosome 6q24 abnormalities. The phenotype associated with KCNJ11 and ABCC8 mutations was similar but markedly different from 6q24 patients who had a lower birth weight and who were diagnosed and remitted
earlier (all P < 0.001). K ATP channel mutations were identified in 26 additional family members, 17 of whom had diabetes. Of 42 diabetic patients, 91%
diagnosed before 6 months remitted, but those diagnosed after 6 months had permanent diabetes ( P < 0.0001). K ATP channel mutations account for 89% of patients with non-6q24 TNDM and result in a discrete clinical subtype that includes
biphasic diabetes that can be treated with sulfonylureas. Remitting neonatal diabetes was observed in two of three mutation
carriers, and permanent diabetes occurred after 6 months of age in subjects without an initial diagnosis of neonatal diabetes.
KATP channel, ATP-sensitive K+ channel
PNDM, permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus
TNDM, transient neonatal diabetes mellitus
Footnotes
Published ahead of print at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org on 19 April 2007. DOI: 10.2337/db07-0043.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore
be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Accepted April 6, 2007.
Received January 15, 2007.
DIABETES
Journal Article