12 results on '"Vestito, Letizia"'
Search Results
2. Translational profiling of mouse dopaminoceptive neurons reveals region-specific gene expression, exon usage, and striatal prostaglandin E2 modulatory effects
- Author
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Montalban, Enrica, Giralt, Albert, Taing, Lieng, Schut, Evelien H. S., Supiot, Laura F., Castell, Laia, Nakamura, Yuki, de Pins, Benoit, Pelosi, Assunta, Goutebroze, Laurence, Tuduri, Pola, Wang, Wei, Neiburga, Katrina Daila, Vestito, Letizia, Castel, Julien, Luquet, Serge, Nairn, Angus C., Hervé, Denis, Heintz, Nathaniel, Martin, Claire, Greengard, Paul, Valjent, Emmanuel, Meye, Frank J., Gambardella, Nicolas, Roussarie, Jean-Pierre, and Girault, Jean-Antoine
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. De novo and inherited monoallelic variants in TUBA4A cause ataxia and spasticity.
- Author
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Benkirane, Mehdi, Bonhomme, Marion, Morsy, Heba, Safgren, Stephanie L, Marelli, Cecilia, Chaussenot, Annabelle, Smedley, Damian, Cipriani, Valentina, Sainte-Agathe, Jean-Madeleine de, Ding, Can, Larrieu, Lise, Vestito, Letizia, Margot, Henri, Lesca, Gaetan, Ramond, Francis, Castrioto, Anna, Baux, David, Verheijen, Jan, Sansa, Emna, and Giunti, Paola
- Subjects
CEREBELLAR ataxia ,FRIEDREICH'S ataxia ,AMYOTROPHIC lateral sclerosis ,FRONTOTEMPORAL dementia ,MISSENSE mutation - Abstract
Alpha-tubulin 4A encoding gene (TUBA4A) has been associated with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia, based on identification of likely pathogenic variants in patients from distinct amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia cohorts. By screening a multicentric French cohort of 448 unrelated probands presenting with cerebellar ataxia, we identified ultra-rare TUBA4A missense variants, all being absent from public databases and predicted pathogenic by multiple in silico tools. In addition, gene burden analyses in the 100 000 Genomes project (100KGP) showed enrichment of TUBA4A rare variants in the inherited ataxia group compared to controls [odds ratio: 57.0847 (10.2−576.7); P = 4.02 ×10
−7 ]. Taken together, we report 12 patients presenting with spasticity and/or cerebellar ataxia and harbouring a predicted pathogenic TUBA4A missense mutation, including five confirmed de novo cases and a mutation previously reported in a large family presenting with spastic ataxia. Cultured fibroblasts from three patients harbouring distinct TUBA4A missense showed significant alterations in microtubule organization and dynamics, providing insight of TUBA4A variants pathogenicity. Our data confirm the identification of a hereditary spastic ataxia disease gene with variable age of onset, expanding the clinical spectrum of TUBA4A associated phenotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Diverse species-specific phenotypic consequences of loss of function sorting nexin 14 mutations
- Author
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Bryant, Dale, Seda, Marian, Peskett, Emma, Maurer, Constance, Pomeranz, Gideon, Ghosh, Marcus, Hawkins, Thomas A., Cleak, James, Datta, Sanchari, Hariri, Hanaa, Eckert, Kaitlyn M., Jafree, Daniyal J., Walsh, Claire, Demetriou, Charalambos, Ishida, Miho, Alemán-Charlet, Cristina, Vestito, Letizia, Seselgyte, Rimante, McDonald, Jeffrey G., Bitner-Glindzicz, Maria, Hemberger, Myriam, Rihel, Jason, Teboul, Lydia, Henne, W. Mike, Jenkins, Dagan, Moore, Gudrun E., and Stanier, Philip
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Functional genomics provide key insights to improve the diagnostic yield of hereditary ataxia.
- Author
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Chen, Zhongbo, Tucci, Arianna, Cipriani, Valentina, Gustavsson, Emil K, Ibañez, Kristina, Reynolds, Regina H, Zhang, David, Vestito, Letizia, García, Alejandro Cisterna, Sethi, Siddharth, Brenton, Jonathan W, García-Ruiz, Sonia, Fairbrother-Browne, Aine, Gil-Martinez, Ana-Luisa, Consortium, Genomics England Research, Wood, Nick, Hardy, John A, Smedley, Damian, Houlden, Henry, and Botía, Juan
- Subjects
FRIEDREICH'S ataxia ,SPINOCEREBELLAR ataxia ,FUNCTIONAL genomics ,MICROSATELLITE repeats ,GENE expression ,WHOLE genome sequencing - Abstract
Improvements in functional genomic annotation have led to a critical mass of neurogenetic discoveries. This is exemplified in hereditary ataxia, a heterogeneous group of disorders characterised by incoordination from cerebellar dysfunction. Associated pathogenic variants in more than 300 genes have been described, leading to a detailed genetic classification partitioned by age-of-onset. Despite these advances, up to 75% of patients with ataxia remain molecularly undiagnosed even following whole genome sequencing, as exemplified in the 100 000 Genomes Project. This study aimed to understand whether we can improve our knowledge of the genetic architecture of hereditary ataxia by leveraging functional genomic annotations, and as a result, generate insights and strategies that raise the diagnostic yield. To achieve these aims, we used publicly-available multi-omics data to generate 294 genic features, capturing information relating to a gene's structure, genetic variation, tissue-specific, cell-type-specific and temporal expression, as well as protein products of a gene. We studied these features across genes typically causing childhood-onset, adult-onset or both types of disease first individually, then collectively. This led to the generation of testable hypotheses which we investigated using whole genome sequencing data from up to 2182 individuals presenting with ataxia and 6658 non-neurological probands recruited in the 100 000 Genomes Project. Using this approach, we demonstrated a high short tandem repeat (STR) density within childhood-onset genes suggesting that we may be missing pathogenic repeat expansions within this cohort. This was verified in both childhood- and adult-onset ataxia patients from the 100 000 Genomes Project who were unexpectedly found to have a trend for higher repeat sizes even at naturally-occurring STRs within known ataxia genes, implying a role for STRs in pathogenesis. Using unsupervised analysis, we found significant similarities in genomic annotation across the gene panels, which suggested adult- and childhood-onset patients should be screened using a common diagnostic gene set. We tested this within the 100 000 Genomes Project by assessing the burden of pathogenic variants among childhood-onset genes in adult-onset patients and vice versa. This demonstrated a significantly higher burden of rare, potentially pathogenic variants in conventional childhood-onset genes among individuals with adult-onset ataxia. Our analysis has implications for the current clinical practice in genetic testing for hereditary ataxia. We suggest that the diagnostic rate for hereditary ataxia could be increased by removing the age-of-onset partition, and through a modified screening for repeat expansions in naturally-occurring STRs within known ataxia-associated genes, in effect treating these regions as candidate pathogenic loci. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Dimensional reduction of phenotypes from 53 000 mouse models reveals a diverse landscape of gene function.
- Author
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Konopka, Tomasz, Vestito, Letizia, and Smedley, Damian
- Subjects
- *
PHENOTYPES , *PUNCHED card systems , *INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems , *B cells , *VISUAL marketing - Abstract
Animal models have long been used to study gene function and the impact of genetic mutations on phenotype. Through the research efforts of thousands of research groups, systematic curation of published literature and high- throughput phenotyping screens, the collective body of knowledge for the mouse now covers the majority of protein-coding genes. We here collected data for over 53 000 mouse models with mutations in over 15 000 genomic markers and characterized by more than 254 000 annotations using more than 9000 distinct ontology terms. We investigated dimensional reduction and embedding techniques as means to facilitate access to this diverse and high-dimensional information. Our analyses provide the first visual maps of the landscape of mouse phenotypic diversity. We also summarize some of the difficulties in producing and interpreting embeddings of sparse phenotypic data. In particular, we show that data preprocessing, filtering and encoding have as much impact on the final embeddings as the process of dimensional reduction. Nonetheless, techniques developed in the context of dimensional reduction create opportunities for explorative analysis of this large pool of public data, including for searching for mouse models suited to study human diseases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Heterozygous UCHL1 loss-of-function variants cause a neurodegenerative disorder with spasticity, ataxia, neuropathy, and optic atrophy
- Author
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Park, Joohyun, Tucci, Arianna, Cipriani, Valentina, Demidov, German, Rocca, Clarissa, Senderek, Jan, Butryn, Michaela, Velic, Ana, Lam, Tanya, Galanaki, Evangelia, Cali, Elisa, Vestito, Letizia, Maroofian, Reza, Deininger, Natalie, Rautenberg, Maren, Admard, Jakob, Hahn, Gesa-Astrid, Bartels, Claudius, van Os, Nienke J.H., Horvath, Rita, Chinnery, Patrick F., Tiet, May Yung, Hewamadduma, Channa, Hadjivassiliou, Marios, Downes, Susan M., Németh, Andrea H., Tofaris, George K., Wood, Nicholas W., Hayer, Stefanie N., Bender, Friedemann, Menden, Benita, Cordts, Isabell, Klein, Katrin, Nguyen, Huu Phuc, Krauss, Joachim K., Blahak, Christian, Strom, Tim M., Sturm, Marc, van de Warrenburg, Bart, Lerche, Holger, Maček, Boris, Synofzik, Matthis, Ossowski, Stephan, Timmann, Dagmar, Wolf, Marc E., Smedley, Damian, Riess, Olaf, Schöls, Ludger, Houlden, Henry, Haack, Tobias B., and Hengel, Holger
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. De novo and inherited monoallelic variants in TUBA4A cause ataxia and spasticity.
- Author
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Benkirane M, Bonhomme M, Morsy H, Safgren SL, Marelli C, Chaussenot A, Smedley D, Cipriani V, de Sainte-Agathe JM, Ding C, Larrieu L, Vestito L, Margot H, Lesca G, Ramond F, Castrioto A, Baux D, Verheijen J, Sansa E, Giunti P, Haetty A, Bergougnoux A, Pointaux M, Ardouin O, Van Goethem C, Vincent MC, Hadjivassiliou M, Cossée M, Rouaud T, Bartsch O, Freeman WD, Wierenga KJ, Klee EW, Vandrovcova J, Houlden H, Debant A, and Koenig M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, Cerebellar Ataxia genetics, Spinocerebellar Ataxias genetics, Pedigree, Cohort Studies, France, Intellectual Disability, Optic Atrophy, Tubulin genetics, Muscle Spasticity genetics, Mutation, Missense genetics
- Abstract
Alpha-tubulin 4A encoding gene (TUBA4A) has been associated with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia, based on identification of likely pathogenic variants in patients from distinct amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia cohorts. By screening a multicentric French cohort of 448 unrelated probands presenting with cerebellar ataxia, we identified ultra-rare TUBA4A missense variants, all being absent from public databases and predicted pathogenic by multiple in silico tools. In addition, gene burden analyses in the 100 000 Genomes project (100KGP) showed enrichment of TUBA4A rare variants in the inherited ataxia group compared to controls [odds ratio: 57.0847 (10.2-576.7); P = 4.02 ×10-7]. Taken together, we report 12 patients presenting with spasticity and/or cerebellar ataxia and harbouring a predicted pathogenic TUBA4A missense mutation, including five confirmed de novo cases and a mutation previously reported in a large family presenting with spastic ataxia. Cultured fibroblasts from three patients harbouring distinct TUBA4A missense showed significant alterations in microtubule organization and dynamics, providing insight of TUBA4A variants pathogenicity. Our data confirm the identification of a hereditary spastic ataxia disease gene with variable age of onset, expanding the clinical spectrum of TUBA4A associated phenotypes., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Rare disease gene association discovery from burden analysis of the 100,000 Genomes Project data.
- Author
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Cipriani V, Vestito L, Magavern EF, Jacobsen JO, Arno G, Behr ER, Benson KA, Bertoli M, Bockenhauer D, Bowl MR, Burley K, Chan LF, Chinnery P, Conlon P, Costa M, Davidson AE, Dawson SJ, Elhassan E, Flanagan SE, Futema M, Gale DP, García-Ruiz S, Corcia CG, Griffin HR, Hambleton S, Hicks AR, Houlden H, Houlston RS, Howles SA, Kleta R, Lekkerkerker I, Lin S, Liskova P, Mitchison H, Morsy H, Mumford AD, Newman WG, Neatu R, O'Toole EA, Ong AC, Pagnamenta AT, Rahman S, Rajan N, Robinson PN, Ryten M, Sadeghi-Alavijeh O, Sayer JA, Shovlin CL, Taylor JC, Teltsh O, Tomlinson I, Tucci A, Turnbull C, van Eerde AM, Ware JS, Watts LM, Webster AR, Westbury SK, Zheng SL, Caulfield M, and Smedley D
- Abstract
To discover rare disease-gene associations, we developed a gene burden analytical framework and applied it to rare, protein-coding variants from whole genome sequencing of 35,008 cases with rare diseases and their family members recruited to the 100,000 Genomes Project (100KGP). Following in silico triaging of the results, 88 novel associations were identified including 38 with existing experimental evidence. We have published the confirmation of one of these associations, hereditary ataxia with UCHL1 , and independent confirmatory evidence has recently been published for four more. We highlight a further seven compelling associations: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with DYSF and SLC4A3 where both genes show high/specific heart expression and existing associations to skeletal dystrophies or short QT syndrome respectively; monogenic diabetes with UNC13A with a known role in the regulation of β cells and a mouse model with impaired glucose tolerance; epilepsy with KCNQ1 where a mouse model shows seizures and the existing long QT syndrome association may be linked; early onset Parkinson's disease with RYR1 with existing links to tremor pathophysiology and a mouse model with neurological phenotypes; anterior segment ocular abnormalities associated with POMK showing expression in corneal cells and with a zebrafish model with developmental ocular abnormalities; and cystic kidney disease with COL4A3 showing high renal expression and prior evidence for a digenic or modifying role in renal disease. Confirmation of all 88 associations would lead to potential diagnoses in 456 molecularly undiagnosed cases within the 100KGP, as well as other rare disease patients worldwide, highlighting the clinical impact of a large-scale statistical approach to rare disease gene discovery.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Heterozygous UCHL1 loss-of-function variants cause a neurodegenerative disorder with spasticity, ataxia, neuropathy, and optic atrophy.
- Author
-
Park J, Tucci A, Cipriani V, Demidov G, Rocca C, Senderek J, Butryn M, Velic A, Lam T, Galanaki E, Cali E, Vestito L, Maroofian R, Deininger N, Rautenberg M, Admard J, Hahn GA, Bartels C, van Os NJH, Horvath R, Chinnery PF, Tiet MY, Hewamadduma C, Hadjivassiliou M, Downes SM, Németh AH, Tofaris GK, Wood NW, Hayer SN, Bender F, Menden B, Cordts I, Klein K, Nguyen HP, Krauss JK, Blahak C, Strom TM, Sturm M, van de Warrenburg B, Lerche H, Maček B, Synofzik M, Ossowski S, Timmann D, Wolf ME, Smedley D, Riess O, Schöls L, Houlden H, Haack TB, and Hengel H
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Functional genomics provide key insights to improve the diagnostic yield of hereditary ataxia.
- Author
-
Chen Z, Tucci A, Cipriani V, Gustavsson EK, Ibañez K, Reynolds RH, Zhang D, Vestito L, García AC, Sethi S, Brenton JW, García-Ruiz S, Fairbrother-Browne A, Gil-Martinez AL, Wood N, Hardy JA, Smedley D, Houlden H, Botía J, and Ryten M
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Ataxia diagnosis, Ataxia genetics, Genomics, Genetic Testing, Spinocerebellar Degenerations genetics, Cerebellar Ataxia diagnosis, Cerebellar Ataxia genetics
- Abstract
Improvements in functional genomic annotation have led to a critical mass of neurogenetic discoveries. This is exemplified in hereditary ataxia, a heterogeneous group of disorders characterised by incoordination from cerebellar dysfunction. Associated pathogenic variants in more than 300 genes have been described, leading to a detailed genetic classification partitioned by age-of-onset. Despite these advances, up to 75% of patients with ataxia remain molecularly undiagnosed even following whole genome sequencing, as exemplified in the 100 000 Genomes Project. This study aimed to understand whether we can improve our knowledge of the genetic architecture of hereditary ataxia by leveraging functional genomic annotations, and as a result, generate insights and strategies that raise the diagnostic yield. To achieve these aims, we used publicly-available multi-omics data to generate 294 genic features, capturing information relating to a gene's structure, genetic variation, tissue-specific, cell-type-specific and temporal expression, as well as protein products of a gene. We studied these features across genes typically causing childhood-onset, adult-onset or both types of disease first individually, then collectively. This led to the generation of testable hypotheses which we investigated using whole genome sequencing data from up to 2182 individuals presenting with ataxia and 6658 non-neurological probands recruited in the 100 000 Genomes Project. Using this approach, we demonstrated a high short tandem repeat (STR) density within childhood-onset genes suggesting that we may be missing pathogenic repeat expansions within this cohort. This was verified in both childhood- and adult-onset ataxia patients from the 100 000 Genomes Project who were unexpectedly found to have a trend for higher repeat sizes even at naturally-occurring STRs within known ataxia genes, implying a role for STRs in pathogenesis. Using unsupervised analysis, we found significant similarities in genomic annotation across the gene panels, which suggested adult- and childhood-onset patients should be screened using a common diagnostic gene set. We tested this within the 100 000 Genomes Project by assessing the burden of pathogenic variants among childhood-onset genes in adult-onset patients and vice versa. This demonstrated a significantly higher burden of rare, potentially pathogenic variants in conventional childhood-onset genes among individuals with adult-onset ataxia. Our analysis has implications for the current clinical practice in genetic testing for hereditary ataxia. We suggest that the diagnostic rate for hereditary ataxia could be increased by removing the age-of-onset partition, and through a modified screening for repeat expansions in naturally-occurring STRs within known ataxia-associated genes, in effect treating these regions as candidate pathogenic loci., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Heterozygous UCHL1 loss-of-function variants cause a neurodegenerative disorder with spasticity, ataxia, neuropathy, and optic atrophy.
- Author
-
Park J, Tucci A, Cipriani V, Demidov G, Rocca C, Senderek J, Butryn M, Velic A, Lam T, Galanaki E, Cali E, Vestito L, Maroofian R, Deininger N, Rautenberg M, Admard J, Hahn GA, Bartels C, van Os NJH, Horvath R, Chinnery PF, Tiet MY, Hewamadduma C, Hadjivassiliou M, Tofaris GK, Wood NW, Hayer SN, Bender F, Menden B, Cordts I, Klein K, Nguyen HP, Krauss JK, Blahak C, Strom TM, Sturm M, van de Warrenburg B, Lerche H, Maček B, Synofzik M, Ossowski S, Timmann D, Wolf ME, Smedley D, Riess O, Schöls L, Houlden H, Haack TB, and Hengel H
- Subjects
- Ataxia genetics, Humans, Loss of Function Mutation, Muscle Spasticity genetics, Mutation, Pedigree, Cerebellar Ataxia genetics, Optic Atrophy genetics, Spastic Paraplegia, Hereditary genetics, Spinocerebellar Ataxias genetics, Ubiquitin Thiolesterase genetics
- Abstract
Purpose: Biallelic variants in UCHL1 have been associated with a progressive early-onset neurodegenerative disorder, autosomal recessive spastic paraplegia type 79. In this study, we investigated heterozygous UCHL1 variants on the basis of results from cohort-based burden analyses., Methods: Gene-burden analyses were performed on exome and genome data of independent cohorts of patients with hereditary ataxia and spastic paraplegia from Germany and the United Kingdom in a total of 3169 patients and 33,141 controls. Clinical data of affected individuals and additional independent families were collected and evaluated. Patients' fibroblasts were used to perform mass spectrometry-based proteomics., Results: UCHL1 was prioritized in both independent cohorts as a candidate gene for an autosomal dominant disorder. We identified a total of 34 cases from 18 unrelated families, carrying 13 heterozygous loss-of-function variants (15 families) and an inframe insertion (3 families). Affected individuals mainly presented with spasticity (24/31), ataxia (28/31), neuropathy (11/21), and optic atrophy (9/17). The mass spectrometry-based proteomics showed approximately 50% reduction of UCHL1 expression in patients' fibroblasts., Conclusion: Our bioinformatic analysis, in-depth clinical and genetic workup, and functional studies established haploinsufficiency of UCHL1 as a novel disease mechanism in spastic ataxia., Competing Interests: Conflict of Interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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