48 results on '"Latourelle, Jeanne C"'
Search Results
2. Paraseptal emphysema: Prevalence and distribution on CT and association with interstitial lung abnormalities
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Araki, Tetsuro, Nishino, Mizuki, Zazueta, Oscar E., Gao, Wei, Dupuis, Josée, Okajima, Yuka, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Rosas, Ivan O., Murakami, Takamichi, O’Connor, George T., Washko, George R., Hunninghake, Gary M., and Hatabu, Hiroto
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- 2015
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3. Parkinson-associated risk variant in distal enhancer of α-synuclein modulates target gene expression
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Soldner, Frank, Stelzer, Yonatan, Shivalila, Chikdu S., Abraham, Brian J., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Barrasa, M. Inmaculada, Goldmann, Johanna, Myers, Richard H., Young, Richard A., and Jaenisch, Rudolf
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- 2016
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4. Candidate glutamatergic and dopaminergic pathway gene variants do not influence Huntington’s disease motor onset
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Ramos, Eliana Marisa, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Gillis, Tammy, Mysore, Jayalakshmi S., Squitieri, Ferdinando, Di Pardo, Alba, Di Donato, Stefano, Gellera, Cinzia, Hayden, Michael R., Morrison, Patrick J., Nance, Martha, Ross, Christopher A., Margolis, Russell L., Gomez-Tortosa, Estrella, Ayuso, Carmen, Suchowersky, Oksana, Trent, Ronald J., McCusker, Elizabeth, Novelletto, Andrea, Frontali, Marina, Jones, Randi, Ashizawa, Tetsuo, Frank, Samuel, Saint-Hilaire, Marie-Helene, Hersch, Steven M., Rosas, Herminia D., Lucente, Diane, Harrison, Madaline B., Zanko, Andrea, Abramson, Ruth K., Marder, Karen, Gusella, James F., Lee, Jong-Min, Alonso, Isabel, Sequeiros, Jorge, Myers, Richard H., and MacDonald, Marcy E.
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- 2013
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5. Population stratification may bias analysis of PGC-1α as a modifier of age at Huntington disease motor onset
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Ramos, Eliana Marisa, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Lee, Ji-Hyun, Gillis, Tammy, Mysore, Jayalakshmi S., Squitieri, Ferdinando, Di Pardo, Alba, Di Donato, Stefano, Hayden, Michael R., Morrison, Patrick J., Nance, Martha, Ross, Christopher A., Margolis, Russell L., Gomez-Tortosa, Estrella, Ayuso, Carmen, Suchowersky, Oksana, Trent, Ronald J., McCusker, Elizabeth, Novelletto, Andrea, Frontali, Marina, Jones, Randi, Ashizawa, Tetsuo, Frank, Samuel, Saint-Hilaire, Marie-Helene, Hersch, Steven M., Rosas, Herminia D., Lucente, Diane, Harrison, Madaline B., Zanko, Andrea, Marder, Karen, Gusella, James F., Lee, Jong-Min, Alonso, Isabel, Sequeiros, Jorge, Myers, Richard H., and MacDonald, Marcy E.
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- 2012
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6. Supplement to: MUC5B promoter polymorphism and interstitial lung abnormalities.
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Hunninghake, Gary M., Hatabu, Hiroto, Okajima, Yuka, Gao, Wei, Dupuis, Josée, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Nishino, Mizuki, Araki, Tetsuro, Zazueta, Oscar E., Kurugol, Sila, Ross, James C., José Estépar, Raúl San, Murphy, Elissa, Steele, Mark P., Loyd, James E., Schwarz, Marvin I., Fingerlin, Tasha E., Rosas, Ivan O., Washko, George R., OʼConnor, George T., and Schwartz, David A.
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- 2013
7. Genomewide association study for susceptibility genes contributing to familial Parkinson disease
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Pankratz, Nathan, Wilk, Jemma B., Latourelle, Jeanne C., DeStefano, Anita L., Halter, Cheryl, Pugh, Elizabeth W., Doheny, Kimberly F., Gusella, James F., Nichols, William C., Foroud, Tatiana, Myers, Richard H., and The PSG—PROGENI and GenePD Investigators, Coordinators and Molecular Genetic Laboratories
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- 2009
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8. MUC5B Promoter Polymorphism and Interstitial Lung Abnormalities
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Hunninghake, Gary M., Hatabu, Hiroto, Okajima, Yuka, Gao, Wei, Dupuis, Josée, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Nishino, Mizuki, Araki, Tetsuro, Zazueta, Oscar E., Kurugol, Sila, Ross, James C., San José Estépar, Raúl, Murphy, Elissa, Steele, Mark P., Loyd, James E., Schwarz, Marvin I., Fingerlin, Tasha E., Rosas, Ivan O., Washko, George R., OʼConnor, George T., and Schwartz, David A.
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- 2013
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9. Genome-Wide Association Studies Identify CHRNA5/3 and HTR4 in the Development of Airflow Obstruction
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Wilk, Jemma B., Shrine, Nick R. G., Loehr, Laura R., Zhao, Jing Hua, Manichaikul, Ani, Lopez, Lorna M., Smith, Albert Vernon, Heckbert, Susan R., Smolonska, Joanna, Tang, Wenbo, Loth, Daan W., Curjuric, Ivan, Hui, Jennie, Cho, Michael H., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Henry, Amanda P., Aldrich, Melinda, Bakke, Per, Beaty, Terri H., Bentley, Amy R., Borecki, Ingrid B., Brusselle, Guy G., Burkart, Kristin M., Chen, Ting-hsu, Couper, David, Crapo, James D., Davies, Gail, Dupuis, Josée, Franceschini, Nora, Gulsvik, Amund, Hancock, Dana B., Harris, Tamara B., Hofman, Albert, Imboden, Medea, James, Alan L., Khaw, Kay-Tee, Lahousse, Lies, Launer, Lenore J., Litonjua, Augusto, Liu, Yongmei, Lohman, Kurt K., Lomas, David A., Lumley, Thomas, Marciante, Kristin D., McArdle, Wendy L., Meibohm, Bernd, Morrison, Alanna C., Musk, Arthur W., Myers, Richard H., North, Kari E., Postma, Dirkje S., Psaty, Bruce M., Rich, Stephen S., Rivadeneira, Fernando, Rochat, Thierry, Rotter, Jerome I., Artigas, María Soler, Starr, John M., Uitterlinden, André G., Wareham, Nicholas J., Wijmenga, Cisca, Zanen, Pieter, Province, Michael A., Silverman, Edwin K., Deary, Ian J., Palmer, Lyle J., Cassano, Patricia A., Gudnason, Vilmundur, Barr, Graham R., Loos, Ruth J. F., Strachan, David P., London, Stephanie J., Boezen, Marike H., Probst-Hensch, Nicole, Gharib, Sina A., Hall, Ian P., O’Connor, George T., Tobin, Martin D., and Stricker, Bruno H.
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- 2012
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10. Meta-analysis of Parkinsonʼs Disease:: Identification of a novel locus, RIT2
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Pankratz, Nathan, Beecham, Gary W., DeStefano, Anita L., Dawson, Ted M., Doheny, Kimberly F., Factor, Stewart A., Hamza, Taye H., Hung, Albert Y., Hyman, Bradley T., Ivinson, Adrian J., Krainc, Dmitri, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Clark, Lorraine N., Marder, Karen, Martin, Eden R., Mayeux, Richard, Ross, Owen A., Scherzer, Clemens R., Simon, David K., Tanner, Caroline, Vance, Jeffery M., Wszolek, Zbigniew K., Zabetian, Cyrus P., Myers, Richard H., Payami, Haydeh, Scott, William K., and Foroud, Tatiana
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- 2012
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11. Genomewide linkage study of modifiers of LRRK2-related Parkinsonʼs disease
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Latourelle, Jeanne C., Hendricks, Audrey E., Pankratz, Nathan, Wilk, Jemma B., Halter, Cheryl, Nichols, William C., Gusella, James F., Destefano, Anita L., Myers, Richard H., and Foroud, Tatiana
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- 2011
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12. Cyclin-G-associated kinase modifies α-synuclein expression levels and toxicity in Parkinsonʼs disease: results from the GenePD Study
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Dumitriu, Alexandra, Pacheco, Chris D., Wilk, Jemma B., Strathearn, Katherine E., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Goldwurm, Stefano, Pezzoli, Gianni, Rochet, Jean-Christophe, Lindquist, Susan, and Myers, Richard H.
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- 2011
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13. Huntington CAG repeat size does not modify onset age in familial Parkinsonʼs disease:: TheGenePD study
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McNicoll, Christopher F., Latourelle, Jeanne C., MacDonald, Marcy E., Lew, Mark F., Suchowersky, Oksana, Klein, Christine, Golbe, Lawrence I., Mark, Margery H., Growdon, John H., Wooten, Frederick G., Watts, Ray L., Guttman, Mark, Racette, Brad A., Perlmutter, Joel S., Ahmed, Anwar, Shill, Holly A., Singer, Carlos, Saint-Hilaire, Marie H., Massood, Tiffany, Huskey, Karen W., DeStefano, Anita L., Gillis, Tammy, Mysore, Jayalakshmi, Goldwurm, Stefano, Pezzoli, Gianni, Baker, Kenneth B., Itin, Ilia, Litvan, Irene, Nicholson, Garth, Corbett, Alastair, Nance, Martha, Drasby, Edward, Isaacson, Stuart, Burn, David J., Chinnery, Patrick F., Pramstaller, Peter P., Al-Hinti, Jomana, Moller, Anette T., Ostergaard, Karen, Sherman, Scott J., Roxburgh, Richard, Snow, Barry, Slevin, John T., Cambi, Franca, Gusella, James F., and Myers, Richard H.
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- 2008
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14. Influence of Heterozygosity for Parkin Mutation on Onset Age in Familial Parkinson Disease: The GenePD Study
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Sun, Mei, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Wooten, G. Frederick, Lew, Mark F., Klein, Christine, Shill, Holly A., Golbe, Lawrence I., Mark, Margery H., Racette, Brad A., Perlmutter, Joel S., Parsian, Abbas, Guttman, Mark, Nicholson, Garth, Xu, Gang, Wilk, Jemma B., Saint-Hilaire, Marie H., DeStefano, Anita L., Prakash, Ranjana, Williamson, Sally, Suchowersky, Oksana, Labelle, Nancy, Growdon, John H., Singer, Carlos, Watts, Ray L., Goldwurm, Stefano, Pezzoli, Gianni, Baker, Kenneth B., Pramstaller, Peter P., Burn, David J., Chinnery, Patrick F., Sherman, Scott, Vieregge, Peter, Litvan, Irene, Gillis, Tammy, MacDonald, Marcy E., Myers, Richard H., and Gusella, James F.
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- 2006
15. Risk of Parkinson's disease after tamoxifen treatment
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Destefano Anita L, Dybdahl Merete, Latourelle Jeanne C, Myers Richard H, and Lash Timothy L
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Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Abstract Background Women have a reduced risk of developing Parkinson's disease (PD) compared with age-matched men. Neuro-protective effects of estrogen potentially explain this difference. Tamoxifen, commonly used in breast cancer treatment, may interfere with the protective effects of estrogen and increase risk of PD. We compared the rate of PD in Danish breast cancer patients treated with tamoxifen to the rate among those not treated with tamoxifen. Methods A cohort of 15,419 breast cancer patients identified from the Danish Breast Cancer Collaborative Group database was linked to the National Registry of Patients to identify PD diagnoses. Overall risk and rate of PD following identification into the study was compared between patients treated with tamoxifen as adjuvant hormonal therapy and patients not receiving tamoxifen. Time-dependent effects of tamoxifen treatment on PD rate were examined to estimate the likely induction period for tamoxifen. Results In total, 35 cases of PD were identified among the 15,419 breast cancer patients. No overall effect of tamoxifen on rate of PD was observed (HR = 1.3, 95% CI: 0.64-2.5), but a PD hazard ratio of 5.1 (95% CI: 1.0-25) was seen four to six years following initiation of tamoxifen treatment. Conclusions These results provide evidence that the neuro-protective properties of estrogen against PD occurrence may be disrupted by tamoxifen therapy. Tamoxifen treatments may be associated with an increased rate of PD; however these effects act after four years, are of limited duration, and the adverse effect is overwhelmed by the protection against breast recurrence conferred by tamoxifen therapy.
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- 2010
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16. Genomewide association study for onset age in Parkinson disease
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Halter Cheryl, DeStefano Anita L, Mariani Claudio B, Pezzoli Gianni, Goldwurm Stefano, Wilk Jemma B, Dumitriu Alexandra, Pankratz Nathan, Latourelle Jeanne C, Gusella James F, Nichols William C, Myers Richard H, and Foroud Tatiana
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Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background Age at onset in Parkinson disease (PD) is a highly heritable quantitative trait for which a significant genetic influence is supported by multiple segregation analyses. Because genes associated with onset age may represent invaluable therapeutic targets to delay the disease, we sought to identify such genetic modifiers using a genomewide association study in familial PD. There have been previous genomewide association studies (GWAS) to identify genes influencing PD susceptibility, but this is the first to identify genes contributing to the variation in onset age. Methods Initial analyses were performed using genotypes generated with the Illumina HumanCNV370Duo array in a sample of 857 unrelated, familial PD cases. Subsequently, a meta-analysis of imputed SNPs was performed combining the familial PD data with that from a previous GWAS of 440 idiopathic PD cases. The SNPs from the meta-analysis with the lowest p-values and consistency in the direction of effect for onset age were then genotyped in a replication sample of 747 idiopathic PD cases from the Parkinson Institute Biobank of Milan, Italy. Results Meta-analysis across the three studies detected consistent association (p < 1 × 10-5) with five SNPs, none of which reached genomewide significance. On chromosome 11, the SNP with the lowest p-value (rs10767971; p = 5.4 × 10-7) lies between the genes QSER1 and PRRG4. Near the PARK3 linkage region on chromosome 2p13, association was observed with a SNP (rs7577851; p = 8.7 × 10-6) which lies in an intron of the AAK1 gene. This gene is closely related to GAK, identified as a possible PD susceptibility gene in the GWAS of the familial PD cases. Conclusion Taken together, these results suggest an influence of genes involved in endocytosis and lysosomal sorting in PD pathogenesis.
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- 2009
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17. The Gly2019Ser mutation in LRRK2 is not fully penetrant in familial Parkinson's disease: the GenePD study
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Corbett Alastair, Nicholson Garth, Litvan Irene, Itin Ilia, Baker Kenneth B, DeStefano Anita L, Laramie Jason M, Huskey Karen W, Massood Tiffany, Wilk Jemma B, Nagle Michael W, Williamson Sally, Hendricks Audrey E, Saint-Hilaire Marie H, Zini Michela, Pezzoli Gianni, Goldwurm Stefano, Singer Carlos, Shill Holly A, Ahmed Anwar, Perlmutter Joel S, Guttman Mark, Racette Brad A, Watts Ray L, Wooten G Frederick, Growdon John H, Mark Margery H, Golbe Lawrence I, Klein Christine, Suchowersky Oksana, Lew Mark F, Sun Mei, Latourelle Jeanne C, Nance Martha, Drasby Edward, Isaacson Stuart, Burn David J, Chinnery Patrick F, Pramstaller Peter P, Al-hinti Jomana, Moller Anette T, Ostergaard Karen, Sherman Scott J, Roxburgh Richard, Snow Barry, Slevin John T, Cambi Franca, Gusella James F, and Myers Richard H
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Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background We report age-dependent penetrance estimates for leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2)-related Parkinson's disease (PD) in a large sample of familial PD. The most frequently seen LRRK2 mutation, Gly2019Ser (G2019S), is associated with approximately 5 to 6% of familial PD cases and 1 to 2% of idiopathic cases, making it the most common known genetic cause of PD. Studies of the penetrance of LRRK2 mutations have produced a wide range of estimates, possibly due to differences in study design and recruitment, including in particular differences between samples of familial PD versus sporadic PD. Methods A sample, including 903 affected and 58 unaffected members from 509 families ascertained for having two or more PD-affected members, 126 randomly ascertained PD patients and 197 controls, was screened for five different LRRK2 mutations. Penetrance was estimated in families of LRRK2 carriers with consideration of the inherent bias towards increased penetrance in a familial sample. Results Thirty-one out of 509 families with multiple cases of PD (6.1%) were found to have 58 LRRK2 mutation carriers (6.4%). Twenty-nine of the 31 families had G2019S mutations while two had R1441C mutations. No mutations were identified among controls or unaffected relatives of PD cases. Nine PD-affected relatives of G2019S carriers did not carry the LRRK2 mutation themselves. At the maximum observed age range of 90 to 94 years, the unbiased estimated penetrance was 67% for G2019S families, compared with a baseline PD risk of 17% seen in the non-LRRK2-related PD families. Conclusion Lifetime penetrance of LRRK2 estimated in the unascertained relatives of multiplex PD families is greater than that reported in studies of sporadically ascertained LRRK2 cases, suggesting that inherited susceptibility factors may modify the penetrance of LRRK2 mutations. In addition, the presence of nine PD phenocopies in the LRRK2 families suggests that these susceptibility factors may also increase the risk of non-LRRK2-related PD. No differences in penetrance were found between men and women, suggesting that the factors that influence penetrance for LRRK2 carriers are independent of the factors which increase PD prevalence in men.
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- 2008
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18. Polymorphisms near EXOC4 and LRGUK on chromosome 7q32 are associated with Type 2 Diabetes and fasting glucose; The NHLBI Family Heart Study
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Tobin Jennifer E, Latourelle Jeanne C, Nagle Michael W, Williamson Sally L, Wilk Jemma B, Laramie Jason M, Province Michael A, Borecki Ingrid B, and Myers Richard H
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Internal medicine ,RC31-1245 ,Genetics ,QH426-470 - Abstract
Abstract Background The chromosome 7q32 region is linked to metabolic syndrome and obesity related traits in the Family Heart Study. As part of a fine mapping study of the region, we evaluated the relationship of polymorphisms to fasting glucose levels and Type 2 diabetes. Methods Thirty-nine HapMap defined tag SNPs in a 1.08 Mb region and a novel deletion polymorphism were genotyped in 2,603 participants of the NHLBI Family Heart Study (FHS). Regression modeling, adjusting for BMI, age, sex, smoking and the TCF7L2 polymorphism, was used to evaluate the association of these polymorphisms with T2D and fasting glucoses levels. Results The deletion polymorphism confers a protective effect for T2D, with homozygous deletion carriers having a 53% reduced risk compared to non-deleted carriers. Among non-diabetics, the deletion was significantly associated with lower fasting glucose levels in men (p = 0.038) but not women (p = 0.118). In addition, seven SNPs near the deletion were significantly associated (p < 0.01) to diabetes. Conclusion Chromosome 7q32 contains both SNPs and a deletion that were associated to T2D. Although the deletion region contains several islands of strongly conserved sequence, it is not known to contain a transcribed gene. The closest nearby gene, EXOC4, is involved in insulin-stimulated glucose transport and may be a candidate for this association. Further work is needed to determine if the deletion represents a functional variant or may be in linkage disequilibrium with a functional mutation influencing EXOC4 or another nearby gene.
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- 2008
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19. Exact morphometric modeling of rat lungs for predicting mechanical impedance
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Latourelle, Jeanne C., Gillis, Heather L., and Lutchen, Kenneth R.
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- 2001
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20. MicroRNAs in CSF as prodromal biomarkers for Huntington disease in the PREDICT-HD study.
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Reed, Eric R., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Bockholt, Jeremy H., Bregu, Joli, Smock, Justin, Paulsen, Jane S., Myers, Richard H., and PREDICT-HD CSF ancillary study investigators
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- 2018
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21. Large-scale identification of clinical and genetic predictors of motor progression in patients with newly diagnosed Parkinson's disease: a longitudinal cohort study and validation.
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Latourelle, Jeanne C, Beste, Michael T, Hadzi, Tiffany C, Miller, Robert E, Oppenheim, Jacob N, Valko, Matthew P, Wuest, Diane M, Church, Bruce W, Khalil, Iya G, Hayete, Boris, and Venuto, Charles S
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PARKINSON'S disease diagnosis , *DISEASE management , *BAYESIAN analysis , *COHORT analysis , *SIMULATION methods & models , *LONGITUDINAL method , *PARKINSON'S disease , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Background: Better understanding and prediction of progression of Parkinson's disease could improve disease management and clinical trial design. We aimed to use longitudinal clinical, molecular, and genetic data to develop predictive models, compare potential biomarkers, and identify novel predictors for motor progression in Parkinson's disease. We also sought to assess the use of these models in the design of treatment trials in Parkinson's disease.Methods: A Bayesian multivariate predictive inference platform was applied to data from the Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) study (NCT01141023). We used genetic data and baseline molecular and clinical variables from patients with Parkinson's disease and healthy controls to construct an ensemble of models to predict the annual rate of change in combined scores from the Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS) parts II and III. We tested our overall explanatory power, as assessed by the coefficient of determination (R2), and replicated novel findings in an independent clinical cohort from the Longitudinal and Biomarker Study in Parkinson's disease (LABS-PD; NCT00605163). The potential utility of these models for clinical trial design was quantified by comparing simulated randomised placebo-controlled trials within the out-of-sample LABS-PD cohort.Findings: 117 healthy controls and 312 patients with Parkinson's disease from the PPMI study were available for analysis, and 317 patients with Parkinson's disease from LABS-PD were available for validation. Our model ensemble showed strong performance within the PPMI cohort (five-fold cross-validated R2 41%, 95% CI 35-47) and significant-albeit reduced-performance in the LABS-PD cohort (R2 9%, 95% CI 4-16). Individual predictive features identified from PPMI data were confirmed in the LABS-PD cohort. These included significant replication of higher baseline MDS-UPDRS motor score, male sex, and increased age, as well as a novel Parkinson's disease-specific epistatic interaction, all indicative of faster motor progression. Genetic variation was the most useful predictive marker of motor progression (2·9%, 95% CI 1·5-4·3). CSF biomarkers at baseline showed a more modest (0·3%, 95% CI 0·1-0·5) but still significant effect on prediction of motor progression. The simulations (n=5000) showed that incorporating the predicted rates of motor progression (as assessed by the annual change in MDS-UPDRS score) into the final models of treatment effect reduced the variability in the study outcome, allowing significant differences to be detected at sample sizes up to 20% smaller than in naive trials.Interpretation: Our model ensemble confirmed established and identified novel predictors of Parkinson's disease motor progression. Improvement of existing prognostic models through machine-learning approaches should benefit trial design and evaluation, as well as clinical disease monitoring and treatment.Funding: Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research and National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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22. miR-149 and miR-29c as Candidates for Bipolar Disorder Biomarkers.
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Choi, Jason L., Kao, Patricia F., Itriago, Elena, Zhan, Yougen, Kozubek, James A., Hoss, Andrew G., Banigan, Meredith G., Vanderburg, Charles R., Rezvani, Amir H., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Cabral, Howard, and Delalle, Ivana
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- 2017
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23. Development and Progression of Interstitial Lung Abnormalities in the Framingham Heart Study.
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Araki, Tetsuro, Putman, Rachel K, Hatabu, Hiroto, Gao, Wei, Dupuis, Josée, Latourelle, Jeanne C, Nishino, Mizuki, Zazueta, Oscar E, Kurugol, Sila, Ross, James C, San José Estépar, Raúl, Schwartz, David A, Rosas, Ivan O, Washko, George R, O'Connor, George T, and Hunninghake, Gary M
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LUNG abnormalities ,AGE distribution ,COMPUTED tomography ,GENETIC polymorphisms ,LONGITUDINAL method ,LUNGS ,RESEARCH funding ,PULMONARY function tests ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Rationale: The relationship between the development and/or progression of interstitial lung abnormalities (ILA) and clinical outcomes has not been previously investigated.Objectives: To determine the risk factors for, and the clinical consequences of, having ILA progression in participants from the Framingham Heart Study.Methods: ILA were assessed in 1,867 participants who had serial chest computed tomography (CT) scans approximately 6 years apart. Mixed effect regression (and Cox) models were used to assess the association between ILA progression and pulmonary function decline (and mortality).Measurements and Main Results: During the follow-up period 660 (35%) participants did not have ILA on either CT scan, 37 (2%) had stable to improving ILA, and 118 (6%) had ILA with progression (the remaining participants without ILA were noted to be indeterminate on at least one CT scan). Increasing age and increasing copies of the MUC5B promoter polymorphism were associated with ILA progression. After adjustment for covariates, ILA progression was associated with a greater FVC decline when compared with participants without ILA (20 ml; SE, ±6 ml; P = 0.0005) and with those with ILA without progression (25 ml; SE, ±11 ml; P = 0.03). Over a median follow-up time of approximately 4 years, after adjustment, ILA progression was associated with an increase in the risk of death (hazard ratio, 3.9; 95% confidence interval, 1.3-10.9; P = 0.01) when compared with those without ILA.Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that ILA progression in the Framingham Heart Study is associated with an increased rate of pulmonary function decline and increased risk of death. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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24. The 4p16.3 Parkinson Disease Risk Locus Is Associated with GAK Expression and Genes Involved with the Synaptic Vesicle Membrane.
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Nagle, Michael W., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Labadorf, Adam, Dumitriu, Alexandra, Hadzi, Tiffany C., Beach, Thomas G., and Myers, Richard H.
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DISEASE risk factors , *PARKINSON'S disease , *SYNAPTIC vesicles , *CLATHRIN , *RNA sequencing , *GENE expression , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms - Abstract
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified the GAK/DGKQ/IDUA region on 4p16.3 among the top three risk loci for Parkinson’s disease (PD), but the specific gene and risk mechanism are unclear. Here, we report transcripts containing the 3’ clathrin-binding domain of GAK identified by RNA deep-sequencing in post-mortem human brain tissue as having increased expression in PD. Furthermore, carriers of 4p16.3 PD GWAS risk SNPs show decreased expression of one of these transcripts, GAK25 (Gencode Transcript 009), which correlates with the expression of genes functioning in the synaptic vesicle membrane. Together, these findings provide strong evidence for GAK clathrin-binding- and J-domain transcripts’ influence on PD pathogenicity, and for a role for GAK in regulating synaptic function in PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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25. Galectin-3 Is Associated with Restrictive Lung Disease and Interstitial Lung Abnormalities.
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Ho, Jennifer E., Gao, Wei, Levy, Daniel, Santhanakrishnan, Rajalakshmi, Araki, Tetsuro, Rosas, Ivan O., Hatabu, Hiroto, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Nishino, Mizuki, Dupuis, Josée, Washko, George R., O'Connor, George T., and Hunninghake, Gary M.
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LUNG abnormalities ,COMPUTED tomography ,LUNGS ,PROTEINS ,PULMONARY fibrosis ,RESEARCH funding ,PULMONARY function tests ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
Rationale: Galectin-3 (Gal-3) has been implicated in the development of pulmonary fibrosis in experimental studies, and Gal-3 levels have been found to be elevated in small studies of human pulmonary fibrosis.Objectives: We sought to study whether circulating Gal-3 concentrations are elevated early in the course of pulmonary fibrosis.Methods: We examined 2,596 Framingham Heart Study participants (mean age, 57 yr; 54% women; 14% current smokers) who underwent Gal-3 assessment using plasma samples and pulmonary function testing between 1995 and 1998. Of this sample, 1,148 underwent subsequent volumetric chest computed tomography.Measurements and Main Results: Higher Gal-3 concentrations were associated with lower lung volumes (1.4% decrease in percentage of predicted FEV1 per 1 SD increase in log Gal-3; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.8-2.0%; P < 0.001; 1.2% decrease in percentage of predicted FVC; 95% CI, 0.6-1.8%; P < 0.001) and decreased diffusing capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide (2.1% decrease; 95% CI, 1.3-2.9%; P < 0.001). These associations remained significant after multivariable adjustment (P ≤ 0.008 for all). Compared with the lowest quartile, participants in the highest Gal-3 quartile were more than twice as likely to have interstitial lung abnormalities visualized by computed tomography (multivariable-adjusted odds ratio, 2.67; 95% CI, 1.49-4.76; P < 0.001).Conclusions: Elevated Gal-3 concentrations are associated with interstitial lung abnormalities coupled with a restrictive pattern, including decreased lung volumes and altered gas exchange. These findings suggest a potential role for Gal-3 in early stages of pulmonary fibrosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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26. microRNA Profiles in Parkinson's Disease Prefrontal Cortex.
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Hoss, Andrew G., Labadorf, Adam, Beach, Thomas G., Latourelle, Jeanne C., and Myers, Richard H.
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PREFRONTAL cortex ,MICRORNA ,NON-coding RNA ,NUCLEOTIDE sequence ,HUNTINGTON disease - Abstract
Objective: The goal of this study was to compare the microRNA (miRNA) profile of Parkinson's disease (PD) frontal cortex with normal control brain, allowing for the identification of PD specific signatures as well as study the disease-related phenotypes of onset age and dementia. Methods: Small RNA sequence analysis was performed from prefrontal cortex for 29 PD samples and 33 control samples. After sample QC, normalization and batch correction, linear regression was employed to identify miRNAs altered in PD, and a PD classifier was developed using weighted voting class prediction. The relationship of miRNA levels to onset age and PD with dementia (PDD) was also characterized in case-only analyses. Results: One twenty five miRNAs were differentially expressed in PD at a genome-wide level of significance (FDR q < 0.05). A set of 29 miRNAs classified PD from non-diseased brain (93.9% specificity, 96.6% sensitivity). The majority of differentially expressed miRNAs (105/125) showed an ordinal relationship from control, to PD without dementia (PDN), to PDD. Among PD brains, 36 miRNAs classified PDD from PDN (sensitivity = 81.2%, specificity = 88.9%). Among differentially expressed miRNAs, miR-10b-5p had a positive association with onset age (q = 4.7e-2). Conclusions: Based on cortical miRNA levels, PD brains were accurately classified from non-diseased brains. Additionally, the PDD miRNA profile exhibited a more severe pattern of alteration among those differentially expressed in PD. To evaluate the clinical utility of miRNAs as potential clinical biomarkers, further characterization and testing of brain-related miRNA alterations in peripheral biofluids is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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27. Association Between Interstitial Lung Abnormalities and All-Cause Mortality.
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Putman, Rachel K., Hiroto Hatabu, Tetsuro Araki, Gudmundsson, Gunnar, Wei Gao, Mizuki Nishino, Yuka Okajima, Dupuis, Josée, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Cho, Michael H., El-Chemaly, Souheil, Coxson, Harvey O., Celli, Bartolome R., Fernandez, Isis E., Zazueta, Oscar E., Ross, James C., Harmouche, Rola, José Estépar, Raúl San, Diaz, Alejandro A., and Sigurdsson, Sigurdur
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CORONARY disease ,CAUSES of death ,PULMONARY emphysema ,LONGITUDINAL method ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,SMOKING ,TUMORS ,DISEASE prevalence ,PROPORTIONAL hazards models - Abstract
Importance: Interstitial lung abnormalities have been associated with lower 6-minute walk distance, diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide, and total lung capacity. However, to our knowledge, an association with mortality has not been previously investigated.Objective: To investigate whether interstitial lung abnormalities are associated with increased mortality.Design, Setting, and Population: Prospective cohort studies of 2633 participants from the FHS (Framingham Heart Study; computed tomographic [CT] scans obtained September 2008-March 2011), 5320 from the AGES-Reykjavik Study (Age Gene/Environment Susceptibility; recruited January 2002-February 2006), 2068 from the COPDGene Study (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease; recruited November 2007-April 2010), and 1670 from ECLIPSE (Evaluation of COPD Longitudinally to Identify Predictive Surrogate Endpoints; between December 2005-December 2006).Exposures: Interstitial lung abnormality status as determined by chest CT evaluation.Main Outcomes and Measures: All-cause mortality over an approximate 3- to 9-year median follow-up time. Cause-of-death information was also examined in the AGES-Reykjavik cohort.Results: Interstitial lung abnormalities were present in 177 (7%) of the 2633 participants from FHS, 378 (7%) of 5320 from AGES-Reykjavik, 156 (8%) of 2068 from COPDGene, and in 157 (9%) of 1670 from ECLIPSE. Over median follow-up times of approximately 3 to 9 years, there were more deaths (and a greater absolute rate of mortality) among participants with interstitial lung abnormalities when compared with those who did not have interstitial lung abnormalities in the following cohorts: 7% vs 1% in FHS (6% difference [95% CI, 2% to 10%]), 56% vs 33% in AGES-Reykjavik (23% difference [95% CI, 18% to 28%]), and 11% vs 5% in ECLIPSE (6% difference [95% CI, 1% to 11%]). After adjustment for covariates, interstitial lung abnormalities were associated with a higher risk of death in the FHS (hazard ratio [HR], 2.7 [95% CI, 1.1 to 6.5]; P = .03), AGES-Reykjavik (HR, 1.3 [95% CI, 1.2 to 1.4]; P < .001), COPDGene (HR, 1.8 [95% CI, 1.1 to 2.8]; P = .01), and ECLIPSE (HR, 1.4 [95% CI, 1.1 to 2.0]; P = .02) cohorts. In the AGES-Reykjavik cohort, the higher rate of mortality could be explained by a higher rate of death due to respiratory disease, specifically pulmonary fibrosis.Conclusions and Relevance: In 4 separate research cohorts, interstitial lung abnormalities were associated with a greater risk of all-cause mortality. The clinical implications of this association require further investigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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28. Integrative analyses of proteomics and RNA transcriptomics implicate mitochondrial processes, protein folding pathways and GWAS loci in Parkinson disease.
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Dumitriu, Alexandra, Golji, Javad, Labadorf, Adam T., Gao, Benbo, Beach, Thomas G., Myers, Richard H., Longo, Kenneth A., and Latourelle, Jeanne C.
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PROTEOMICS ,PARKINSON'S disease ,ENVIRONMENTAL risk ,RNA analysis ,NUCLEOTIDE sequence ,RNA sequencing - Abstract
Background: Parkinson disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by the accumulation of alpha-synuclein (SNCA) and other proteins in aggregates termed "Lewy Bodies" within neurons. PD has both genetic and environmental risk factors, and while processes leading to aberrant protein aggregation are unknown, past work points to abnormal levels of SNCA and other proteins. Although several genome-wide studies have been performed for PD, these have focused on DNA sequence variants by genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and on RNA levels (microarray transcriptomics), while genome-wide proteomics analysis has been lacking. Methods: This study employed two state-of-the-art technologies, three-stage Mass Spectrometry Tandem Mass Tag Proteomics (12 PD, 12 controls) and RNA-sequencing transcriptomics (29 PD, 44 controls), evaluated in the context of PD GWAS implicated loci and microarray transcriptomics (19 PD, 24 controls). The technologies applied for this study were performed in a set of overlapping prefrontal cortex (Brodmann area 9) samples obtained from PD patients and sex and age similar neurologically healthy controls. Results: After appropriate filters, proteomics robustly identified 3558 unique proteins, with 283 of these (7.9 %) significantly different between PD and controls (q-value < 0.05). RNA-sequencing identified 17,580 protein-coding genes, with 1095 of these (6.2 %) significantly different (FDR p-value < 0.05); only 166 of the FDR significant protein-coding genes (0.94 %) were present among the 3558 proteins characterized. Of these 166, eight genes (4.8 %) were significant in both studies, with the same direction of effect. Functional enrichment analysis of the proteomics results strongly supports mitochondrial-related pathways, while comparable analysis of the RNA-sequencing results implicates protein folding pathways and metallothioneins. Ten of the implicated genes or proteins co-localized to GWAS loci. Evidence implicating SNCA was stronger in proteomics than in RNA-sequencing analyses. Conclusions: We report the largest analysis of proteomics in PD to date, and the first to combine this technology with RNA-sequencing to investigate GWAS implicated loci. Notably, differentially expressed protein-coding genes were more likely to not be characterized in the proteomics analysis, which lessens the ability to compare across platforms. Combining multiple genome-wide platforms offers novel insights into the pathological processes responsible for this disease by identifying pathways implicated across methodologies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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29. RNA Sequence Analysis of Human Huntington Disease Brain Reveals an Extensive Increase in Inflammatory and Developmental Gene Expression.
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Labadorf, Adam, Hoss, Andrew G., Lagomarsino, Valentina, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Hadzi, Tiffany C., Bregu, Joli, MacDonald, Marcy E., Gusella, James F., Chen, Jiang-Fan, Akbarian, Schahram, Weng, Zhiping, and Myers, Richard H.
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RNA sequencing ,HUNTINGTON disease ,HUNTINGTON'S chorea treatment ,BRAIN physiology ,GENE expression ,MESSENGER RNA ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Huntington’s Disease (HD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder that is caused by an expanded CAG trinucleotide repeat in the Huntingtin (HTT) gene. Transcriptional dysregulation in the human HD brain has been documented but is incompletely understood. Here we present a genome-wide analysis of mRNA expression in human prefrontal cortex from 20 HD and 49 neuropathologically normal controls using next generation high-throughput sequencing. Surprisingly, 19% (5,480) of the 28,087 confidently detected genes are differentially expressed (FDR<0.05) and are predominantly up-regulated. A novel hypothesis-free geneset enrichment method that dissects large gene lists into functionally and transcriptionally related groups discovers that the differentially expressed genes are enriched for immune response, neuroinflammation, and developmental genes. Markers for all major brain cell types are observed, suggesting that HD invokes a systemic response in the brain area studied. Unexpectedly, the most strongly differentially expressed genes are a homeotic gene set (represented by Hox and other homeobox genes), that are almost exclusively expressed in HD, a profile not widely implicated in HD pathogenesis. The significance of transcriptional changes of developmental processes in the HD brain is poorly understood and warrants further investigation. The role of inflammation and the significance of non-neuronal involvement in HD pathogenesis suggest anti-inflammatory therapeutics may offer important opportunities in treating HD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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30. Study of plasma-derived miRNAs mimic differences in Huntington's disease brain.
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Hoss, Andrew G., Lagomarsino, Valentina N., Frank, Samuel, Hadzi, Tiffany C., Myers, Richard H., and Latourelle, Jeanne C.
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BRAIN ,HUNTINGTON disease ,RESEARCH funding ,RNA ,DISEASE progression - Abstract
Background: Biomarkers for Huntington's disease progression could accelerate therapeutic developments and improve patient care. Brain microRNAs relating to clinical features of Huntington's disease may represent a potential Huntington's disease biomarker in blood.Objective: This study was undertaken to examine candidate microRNAs in plasma to determine whether changes observed in HD brains are detectable in peripheral samples.Methods: Four microRNAs from 26 manifest Huntington's disease, four asymptomatic Huntington's disease gene carriers, and eight controls were quantified in plasma using reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Linear regression was used to assess microRNA levels across control, asymptomatic gene carriers, and manifest patients.Results: miR-10b-5p (P = 0.0068) and miR-486-5p (P = 0.044) were elevated in Huntington's disease plasma. miR-10b-5p was decreased in asymptomatic gene carriers as compared with patients with Huntington's disease (P = 0.049), but no difference between asymptomatic gene carriers and healthy controls was observed (P = 0.24).Conclusions: These findings suggest that microRNA changes observed in Huntington's disease brain may be detectable in plasma and have potential clinical utility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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31. A comparison of visual and quantitative methods to identify interstitial lung abnormalities.
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Kliment, Corrine R., Tetsuro Araki, Doyle, Tracy J., Wei Gao, Dupuis, Josée, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Zazueta, Oscar E., Fernandez, Isis E., Mizuki Nishino, Yuka Okajima, Ross, James C., Estépar, Raúl San José, Diaz, Alejandro A., Lederer, David J., Schwartz, David A., Silverman, Edwin K., Rosas, Ivan O., Washko, George R., O'Connor, George T., and Hiroto Hatabu
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LUNG radiography ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COMPUTED tomography ,PULMONARY emphysema ,GENES ,GLYCOPROTEINS ,DIGITAL image processing ,INTERSTITIAL lung diseases ,LONGITUDINAL method ,LUNGS ,OBSTRUCTIVE lung diseases ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,RESPIRATORY measurements ,SPIROMETRY ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,EVALUATION research ,BODY mass index ,VITAL capacity (Respiration) - Abstract
Background: Evidence suggests that individuals with interstitial lung abnormalities (ILA) on a chest computed tomogram (CT) may have an increased risk to develop a clinically significant interstitial lung disease (ILD). Although methods used to identify individuals with ILA on chest CT have included both automated quantitative and qualitative visual inspection methods, there has been not direct comparison between these two methods. To investigate this relationship, we created lung density metrics and compared these to visual assessments of ILA.Methods: To provide a comparison between ILA detection methods based on visual assessment we generated measures of high attenuation areas (HAAs, defined by attenuation values between -600 and -250 Hounsfield Units) in >4500 participants from both the COPDGene and Framingham Heart studies (FHS). Linear and logistic regressions were used for analyses.Results: Increased measures of HAAs (in ≥ 10 % of the lung) were significantly associated with ILA defined by visual inspection in both cohorts (P < 0.0001); however, the positive predictive values were not very high (19 % in COPDGene and 13 % in the FHS). In COPDGene, the association between HAAs and ILA defined by visual assessment were modified by the percentage of emphysema and body mass index. Although increased HAAs were associated with reductions in total lung capacity in both cohorts, there was no evidence for an association between measurement of HAAs and MUC5B promoter genotype in the FHS.Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that increased measures of lung density may be helpful in determining the severity of lung volume reduction, but alone, are not strongly predictive of ILA defined by visual assessment. Moreover, HAAs were not associated with MUC5B promoter genotype. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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32. miR-10b-5p expression in Huntington's disease brain relates to age of onset and the extent of striatal involvement.
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Hoss, Andrew G., Labadorf, Adam, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Kartha, Vinay K., Hadzi, Tiffany C., Gusella, James F., MacDonald, Marcy E., Jiang-Fan Chen, Akbarian, Schahram, Zhiping Weng, Vonsattel, Jean Paul, and Myers, Richard H.
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HUNTINGTON disease ,MICRORNA ,TRINUCLEOTIDE repeats ,PYRAMIDAL neurons ,BRAIN research - Abstract
Background: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that recognize sites of complementarity of target messenger RNAs, resulting in transcriptional regulation and translational repression of target genes. In Huntington's disease (HD), a neurodegenerative disease caused by a trinucleotide repeat expansion, miRNA dyregulation has been reported, which may impact gene expression and modify the progression and severity of HD. Methods: We performed next-generation miRNA sequence analysis in prefrontal cortex (Brodmann Area 9) from 26 HD, 2 HD gene positive, and 36 control brains. Neuropathological information was available for all HD brains, including age at disease onset, CAG-repeat size, Vonsattel grade, and Hadzi-Vonsattel striatal and cortical scores, a continuous measure of the extent of neurodegeneration. Linear models were performed to examine the relationship of miRNA expression to these clinical features, and messenger RNA targets of associated miRNAs were tested for gene ontology term enrichment. Results: We identified 75 miRNAs differentially expressed in HD brain (FDR q-value <0.05). Among the HD brains, nine miRNAs were significantly associated with Vonsattel grade of neuropathological involvement and three of these, miR-10b-5p, miR-10b-3p, and miR-302a-3p, significantly related to the Hadzi-Vonsattel striatal score (a continuous measure of striatal involvement) after adjustment for CAG length. Five miRNAs (miR-10b-5p, miR-196a-5p, miR-196b-5p, miR-10b-3p, and miR-106a-5p) were identified as having a significant relationship to CAG length-adjusted age of onset including miR-10b-5p, the mostly strongly over-expressed miRNA in HD cases. Although prefrontal cortex was the source of tissue profiled in these studies, the relationship of miR-10b-5p expression to striatal involvement in the disease was independent of cortical involvement. Correlation of miRNAs to the clinical features clustered by direction of effect and the gene targets of the observed miRNAs showed association to processes relating to nervous system development and transcriptional regulation. Conclusions: These results demonstrate that miRNA expression in cortical BA9 provides insight into striatal involvement and support a role for these miRNAs, particularly miR-10b-5p, in HD pathogenicity. The miRNAs identified in our studies of postmortem brain tissue may be detectable in peripheral fluids and thus warrant consideration as accessible biomarkers for disease stage, rate of progression, and other important clinical characteristics of HD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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33. MicroRNAs Located in the Hox Gene Clusters Are Implicated in Huntington's Disease Pathogenesis.
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Hoss, Andrew G., Kartha, Vinay K., Dong, Xianjun, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Dumitriu, Alexandra, Hadzi, Tiffany C., MacDonald, Marcy E., Gusella, James F., Akbarian, Schahram, Chen, Jiang-Fan, Weng, Zhiping, and Myers, Richard H.
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MICRORNA ,HOMEOBOX genes ,HUNTINGTON disease ,CELL death ,POLYMERASE chain reaction - Abstract
Transcriptional dysregulation has long been recognized as central to the pathogenesis of Huntington's disease (HD). MicroRNAs (miRNAs) represent a major system of post-transcriptional regulation, by either preventing translational initiation or by targeting transcripts for storage or for degradation. Using next-generation miRNA sequencing in prefrontal cortex (Brodmann Area 9) of twelve HD and nine controls, we identified five miRNAs (miR-10b-5p, miR-196a-5p, miR-196b-5p, miR-615-3p and miR-1247-5p) up-regulated in HD at genome-wide significance (FDR q-value<0.05). Three of these, miR-196a-5p, miR-196b-5p and miR-615-3p, were expressed at near zero levels in control brains. Expression was verified for all five miRNAs using reverse transcription quantitative PCR and all but miR-1247-5p were replicated in an independent sample (8HD/8C). Ectopic miR-10b-5p expression in PC12 HTT-Q73 cells increased survival by MTT assay and cell viability staining suggesting increased expression may be a protective response. All of the miRNAs but miR-1247-5p are located in intergenic regions of Hox clusters. Total mRNA sequencing in the same samples identified fifteen of 55 genes within the Hox cluster gene regions as differentially expressed in HD, and the Hox genes immediately adjacent to the four Hox cluster miRNAs as up-regulated. Pathway analysis of mRNA targets of these miRNAs implicated functions for neuronal differentiation, neurite outgrowth, cell death and survival. In regression models among the HD brains, huntingtin CAG repeat size, onset age and age at death were independently found to be inversely related to miR-10b-5p levels. CAG repeat size and onset age were independently inversely related to miR-196a-5p, onset age was inversely related to miR-196b-5p and age at death was inversely related to miR-615-3p expression. These results suggest these Hox-related miRNAs may be involved in neuroprotective response in HD. Recently, miRNAs have shown promise as biomarkers for human diseases and given their relationship to disease expression, these miRNAs are biomarker candidates in HD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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34. Assessment of cortical and striatal involvement in 523 Huntington disease brains.
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Hadzi TC, Hendricks AE, Latourelle JC, Lunetta KL, Cupples LA, Gillis T, Mysore JS, Gusella JF, MacDonald ME, Myers RH, Vonsattel JP, Hadzi, Tiffany C, Hendricks, Audrey E, Latourelle, Jeanne C, Lunetta, Kathryn L, Cupples, L Adrienne, Gillis, Tammy, Mysore, Jayalakshmi Srinidhi, Gusella, James F, and MacDonald, Marcy E
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- 2012
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35. Evaluation of Parkinson Disease Risk Variants as Expression-QTLs.
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Latourelle, Jeanne C., Dumitriu, Alexandra, Hadzi, Tiffany C., Beach, Thomas G., and Myers, Richard H.
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META-analysis , *LOCUS (Genetics) , *GENE expression , *GENES , *CHROMOSOMES - Abstract
The recent Parkinson Disease GWAS Consortium meta-analysis and replication study reports association at several previously confirmed risk loci SNCA, MAPT, GAK/DGKQ, and HLA and identified a novel risk locus at RIT2. To further explore functional consequences of these associations, we investigated modification of gene expression in prefrontal cortex brain samples of pathologically confirmed PD cases (N = 26) and controls (N = 24) by 67 associated SNPs in these 5 loci. Association between the eSNPs and expression was evaluated using a 2-degrees of freedom test of both association and difference in association between cases and controls, adjusted for relevant covariates. SNPs at each of the 5 loci were tested for cis-acting effects on all probes within 250 kb of each locus. Trans-effects of the SNPs on the 39,122 probes passing all QC on the microarray were also examined. From the analysis of cis-acting SNP effects, several SNPs in the MAPT region show significant association to multiple nearby probes, including two strongly correlated probes targeting the gene LOC644246 and the duplicated genes LRRC37A and LRRC37A2, and a third uncorrelated probe targeting the gene DCAKD. Significant cis-associations were also observed between SNPs and two probes targeting genes in the HLA region on chromosome 6. Expanding the association study to examine trans effects revealed an additional 23 SNP-probe associations reaching statistical significance (p<2.8x10-8) including SNPs from the SNCA, MAPT and RIT2 regions. These findings provide additional context for the interpretation of PD associated SNPs identified in recent GWAS as well as potential insight into the mechanisms underlying the observed SNP associations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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36. Gene Expression Profiles in Parkinson Disease Prefrontal Cortex Implicate FOXO1 and Genes under Its Transcriptional Regulation.
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Dumitriu, Alexandra, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Hadzi, Tiffany C., Pankratz, Nathan, Garza, Dan, Miller, John P., Vance, Jeffery M., Foroud, Tatiana, Beach, Thomas G., and Myers, Richard H.
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GENE expression , *PARKINSON'S disease , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *GENES , *BRAIN diseases - Abstract
Parkinson disease (PD) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder with largely unknown genetic mechanisms. While the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in PD mainly takes place in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SN) region, other brain areas, including the prefrontal cortex, develop Lewy bodies, the neuropathological hallmark of PD. We generated and analyzed expression data from the prefrontal cortex Brodmann Area 9 (BA9) of 27 PD and 26 control samples using the 44K One-Color Agilent 60-mer Whole Human Genome Microarray. All samples were male, without significant Alzheimer disease pathology and with extensive pathological annotation available. 507 of the 39,122 analyzed expression probes were different between PD and control samples at false discovery rate (FDR) of 5%. One of the genes with significantly increased expression in PD was the forkhead box O1 (FOXO1) transcription factor. Notably, genes carrying the FoxO1 binding site were significantly enriched in the FDR--significant group of genes (177 genes covered by 189 probes), suggesting a role for FoxO1 upstream of the observed expression changes. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) selected from a recent meta-analysis of PD genome-wide association studies (GWAS) were successfully genotyped in 50 out of the 53 microarray brains, allowing a targeted expression--SNP (eSNP) analysis for 52 SNPs associated with PD affection at genome-wide significance and the 189 probes from FoxO1 regulated genes. A significant association was observed between a SNP in the cyclin G associated kinase (GAK) gene and a probe in the spermine oxidase (SMOX) gene. Further examination of the FOXO1 region in a meta-analysis of six available GWAS showed two SNPs significantly associated with age at onset of PD. These results implicate FOXO1 as a PD--relevant gene and warrant further functional analyses of its transcriptional regulatory mechanisms [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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37. Postmortem Interval Influences a-Synuclein Expression in Parkinson Disease Brain.
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Dumitriu, Alexandra, Moser, Carlee, Hadzi, Tiffany C., Williamson, Sally L., Pacheco, Christopher D., Hendricks, Audrey E., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Wilk, Jemma B., DeStefano, Anita L., and Myers, Richard H.
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- 2012
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38. Copy Number Variation in Familial Parkinson Disease.
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Pankratz, Nathan, Dumitriu, Alexandra, Hetrick, Kurt N., Mei Sun, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Wilk, Jemma B., Halter, Cheryl, Doheny, Kimberly F., Gusella, James F., Nichols, William C., Myers, Richard H., Foroud, Tatiana, and DeStefano, Anita L.
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PARKINSON'S disease ,GENOMES ,GENETIC mutation ,HETEROZYGOSITY ,LYMPHOBLASTOID cell lines ,GEL electrophoresis ,DISEASE susceptibility ,GENE frequency - Abstract
Copy number variants (CNVs) are known to cause Mendelian forms of Parkinson disease (PD), most notably in SNCA and PARK2. PARK2 has a recessive mode of inheritance; however, recent evidence demonstrates that a single CNV in PARK2 (but not a single missense mutation) may increase risk for PD. We recently performed a genome-wide association study for PD that excluded individuals known to have either a LRRK2 mutation or two PARK2 mutations. Data from the Illumina 370Duo arrays were re-clustered using only white individuals with high quality intensity data, and CNV calls were made using two algorithms, PennCNV and QuantiSNP. After quality assessment, the final sample included 816 cases and 856 controls. Results varied between the two CNV calling algorithms for many regions, including the PARK2 locus (genome-wide p = 0.04 for PennCNV and p = 0.13 for QuantiSNP). However, there was consistent evidence with both algorithms for two novel genes, USP32 and DOCK5 (empirical, genome-wide p-values,0.001). PARK2 CNVs tended to be larger, and all instances that were molecularly tested were validated. In contrast, the CNVs in both novel loci were smaller and failed to replicate using realtime PCR, MLPA, and gel electrophoresis. The DOCK5 variation is more akin to a VNTR than a typical CNV and the association is likely caused by artifact due to DNA source. DNA for all the cases was derived from whole blood, while the DNA for all controls was derived from lymphoblast cell lines. The USP32 locus contains many SNPs with low minor allele frequency leading to a loss of heterozygosity that may have been spuriously interpreted by the CNV calling algorithms as support for a deletion. Thus, only the CNVs within the PARK2 locus could be molecularly validated and associated with PD susceptibility [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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39. Risk of Parkinson's disease after tamoxifen treatment.
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Latourelle, Jeanne C., Dybdahl, Merete, Destefano, Anita L., Myers, Richard H., and Lash, Timothy L.
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PARKINSON'S disease , *TAMOXIFEN , *ESTROGEN , *HORMONE therapy , *BREAST cancer - Abstract
Background: Women have a reduced risk of developing Parkinson's disease (PD) compared with age-matched men. Neuro-protective effects of estrogen potentially explain this difference. Tamoxifen, commonly used in breast cancer treatment, may interfere with the protective effects of estrogen and increase risk of PD. We compared the rate of PD in Danish breast cancer patients treated with tamoxifen to the rate among those not treated with tamoxifen. Methods: A cohort of 15,419 breast cancer patients identified from the Danish Breast Cancer Collaborative Group database was linked to the National Registry of Patients to identify PD diagnoses. Overall risk and rate of PD following identification into the study was compared between patients treated with tamoxifen as adjuvant hormonal therapy and patients not receiving tamoxifen. Time-dependent effects of tamoxifen treatment on PD rate were examined to estimate the likely induction period for tamoxifen. Results: In total, 35 cases of PD were identified among the 15,419 breast cancer patients. No overall effect of tamoxifen on rate of PD was observed (HR = 1.3, 95% CI: 0.64-2.5), but a PD hazard ratio of 5.1 (95% CI: 1.0-25) was seen four to six years following initiation of tamoxifen treatment. Conclusions: These results provide evidence that the neuro-protective properties of estrogen against PD occurrence may be disrupted by tamoxifen therapy. Tamoxifen treatments may be associated with an increased rate of PD; however these effects act after four years, are of limited duration, and the adverse effect is overwhelmed by the protection against breast recurrence conferred by tamoxifen therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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40. Estrogen-related and other disease diagnoses preceding Parkinson's disease.
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Latourelle, Jeanne C., Dybdahl, Merete, Destefano, Anita L., Myers, Richard H., and Lash, Timothy L.
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- 2010
41. Multiple genes influence BMI on chromosome 7q31-34: the NHLBI Family Heart Study.
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Laramie JM, Wilk JB, Williamson SL, Nagle MW, Latourelle JC, Tobin JE, Province MA, Borecki IB, Myers RH, Laramie, Jason M, Wilk, Jemma B, Williamson, Sally L, Nagle, Michael W, Latourelle, Jeanne C, Tobin, Jennifer E, Province, Michael A, Borecki, Ingrid B, and Myers, Richard H
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The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Family Heart Study (FHS) genome-wide linkage scan identified a region of chromosome 7q31-34 with a lod score of 4.9 for BMI at D7S1804 (131.9 Mb). We report the results of linkage and association to BMI in this region for two independent FHS samples. The first sample includes 225 FHS pedigrees with evidence of linkage to 7q31-34, using 1,132 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and 7 microsatellites. The second represents a case-control sample (318 cases; BMI >25 and 325 controls; BMI <25) derived from unrelated FHS participants who were not part of the genome scan. The latter set was genotyped for 606 SNPs, including 37 SNPs with prior evidence for association in the linked families. Although variance components linkage analysis using only SNPs generated a peak lod score that coincided with the original linkage scan at 131.9 Mb, a conditional linkage analysis showed evidence of a second quantitative trait locus (QTL) near 143 cM influencing BMI. Three SNPs (rs161339, rs12673281, and rs1993068) located near the three genes pleiotrophin (PTN), diacylglycerol (DAG) kinase iota (DGK iota), and cholinergic receptor, muscarinic 2 (CHRM2) demonstrated significant association in both linked families (P = 0.0005, 0.002, and 0.03, respectively) and the case-control sample (P = 0.01, 0.0003, and 0.03, respectively), regardless of the genetic model tested. These findings suggest that several genes may be associated with BMI in the 7q31-34 region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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42. Huntington CAG repeat size does not modify onset age in familial Parkinson's disease: The GenePD study.
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McNicoll, Christopher F., Latourelle, Jeanne C., MacDonald, Marcy E., Lew, Mark F., Suchowersky, Oksana, Klein, Christine, Golbe, Lawrence I., Mark, Margery H., Growdon, John H., Wooten, G. Frederick, Watts, Ray L., Guttman, Mark, Racette, Brad A., Perlmutter, Joel S., Ahmed, Anwar, Shill, Holly A., Singer, Carlos, Saint-Hilaire, Marie H., Massood, Tiffany, and Huskey, Karen W.
- Abstract
The ATP/ADP ratio reflects mitochondrial function and has been reported to be influenced by the size of the Huntington disease gene ( HD) repeat. Impaired mitochondrial function has long been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD), and therefore, we evaluated the relationship of the HD CAG repeat size to PD onset age in a large sample of familial PD cases. PD affected siblings (n = 495), with known onset ages from 248 families, were genotyped for the HD CAG repeat. Genotyping failed in 11 cases leaving 484 for analysis, including 35 LRRK2 carriers. All cases had HD CAG repeats (range, 15-34) below the clinical range for HD, although 5.2% of the sample (n = 25) had repeats in the intermediate range (the intermediate range lower limit = 27; upper limit = 35 repeats), suggesting that the prevalence of intermediate allele carriers in the general population is significant. No relation between the HD CAG repeat size and the age at onset for PD was found in this sample of familial PD. © 2008 Movement Disorder Society [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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43. Polymorphisms near EXOC4 and LRGUK on chromosome 7q32 are associated with Type 2 Diabetes and fasting glucose; The NHLBI Family Heart Study.
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Laramie, Jason M., Wilk, Jemma B., Williamson, Sally L., Nagle, Michael W., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Tobin, Jennifer E., Province, Michael A., Borecki, Ingrid B., and Myers, Richard H.
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GENETIC polymorphisms ,CHROMOSOMES ,DIABETES ,ENDOCRINE diseases ,MEDICAL genetics - Abstract
Background: The chromosome 7q32 region is linked to metabolic syndrome and obesity related traits in the Family Heart Study. As part of a fine mapping study of the region, we evaluated the relationship of polymorphisms to fasting glucose levels and Type 2 diabetes. Methods: Thirty-nine HapMap defined tag SNPs in a 1.08 Mb region and a novel deletion polymorphism were genotyped in 2,603 participants of the NHLBI Family Heart Study (FHS). Regression modeling, adjusting for BMI, age, sex, smoking and the TCF7L2 polymorphism, was used to evaluate the association of these polymorphisms with T2D and fasting glucoses levels. Results: The deletion polymorphism confers a protective effect for T2D, with homozygous deletion carriers having a 53% reduced risk compared to non-deleted carriers. Among non-diabetics, the deletion was significantly associated with lower fasting glucose levels in men (p = 0.038) but not women (p = 0.118). In addition, seven SNPs near the deletion were significantly associated (p < 0.01) to diabetes. Conclusion: Chromosome 7q32 contains both SNPs and a deletion that were associated to T2D. Although the deletion region contains several islands of strongly conserved sequence, it is not known to contain a transcribed gene. The closest nearby gene, EXOC4, is involved in insulin-stimulated glucose transport and may be a candidate for this association. Further work is needed to determine if the deletion represents a functional variant or may be in linkage disequilibrium with a functional mutation influencing EXOC4 or another nearby gene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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44. Influence of Heterozygosity for Parkin Mutation on Onset Age in Familial Parkinson Disease.
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Mei Sun, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Wooten, Frederick, Lew, Mark F., Klein, Christine, Shill, Holly A., Golbe, Lawrence I., Mark, Margery H., Racette, Brad A., Perlmutter, Joel S., Parsian, Abbas, Guttman, Mark, Nicholson, Garth, Gang Xu, Wilk, Jemma B., Saint-Hilaire, Marie H., DeStefano, Anita L., Prakash, Ranjana, Williamson, Sally, and Suchowersky, Oksana
- Abstract
Background: The PARK2 gene at 6q26 encodes parkin, whose inactivation is implicated in an early-onset autosomal recessive form of Parkinson disease (PD). Objective: To evaluate the influence of heterozygosity for parkin mutation on onset age in a sample of families with at least 2 PD-affected members. Design: Clinical and genetic study. Setting: Twenty collaborative clinical sites. Patients: Patients with familial PD collected in the GenePD study. Studied families were selected for (1) affected sibling pairs sharing 2 alleles identical by state at PARK2 (D6S305) or (2) 1 or more family members with onset age younger than 54 years, regardless of D6S305 status. At least 1 member from each of 183 families underwent comprehensive screening for deletion/insertion variants and point mutations in PARK2. Main Outcome Measures: Mutations in the parkin gene were screened by means of single-stranded conformation polymorphism and sequencing in all 12 coding exons and flanking intronic sequences for point mutations and duplex quantitative polymerase chain reaction in all exons for rearrangement, duplication, and deletion. Results: Mutations were found in 23 families (12.6% of those screened). Among the mutation-positive families, 10 (43%) contained compound heterozygotes; 3 (13%), homozygotes; and 10 (43%), heterozygotes. The onset age in patients with parkin gene mutations ranged from 20 to 76 years. Patients with 1 parkin mutation had an 11.7-year age at onset than did patients with none (P=.04), and patients with 2 or more parkin mutations had a 13.2-year decrease in age at onset compared with patients with 1 mutation (P = .04). Conclusions: These data indicate that parkin mutations are not rare in multiply affected sibships, and that heterozygous mutation carrier status in PARK2 significantly influences age at onset of PD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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45. Genomewide Association Study for Onset Age in Parkinson Disease
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Latourelle, Jeanne C, Pankratz, Nathan, Dumitriu, Alexandra, Wilk, Jemma B, Goldwurm, Stefano, Pezzoli, Gianni, Mariani, Claudio B, DeStefano, Anita L, Halter, Cheryl, Nichols, William C, Foroud, Tatiana, Gusella, James Francis, and Myers, Richard Hepworth
- Abstract
Background: Age at onset in Parkinson disease (PD) is a highly heritable quantitative trait for which a significant genetic influence is supported by multiple segregation analyses. Because genes associated with onset age may represent invaluable therapeutic targets to delay the disease, we sought to identify such genetic modifiers using a genomewide association study in familial PD. There have been previous genomewide association studies (GWAS) to identify genes influencing PD susceptibility, but this is the first to identify genes contributing to the variation in onset age. Methods: Initial analyses were performed using genotypes generated with the Illumina HumanCNV370Duo array in a sample of 857 unrelated, familial PD cases. Subsequently, a meta-analysis of imputed SNPs was performed combining the familial PD data with that from a previous GWAS of 440 idiopathic PD cases. The SNPs from the meta-analysis with the lowest p-values and consistency in the direction of effect for onset age were then genotyped in a replication sample of 747 idiopathic PD cases from the Parkinson Institute Biobank of Milan, Italy. Results: Meta-analysis across the three studies detected consistent association (p < 1 × 10-5) with five SNPs, none of which reached genomewide significance. On chromosome 11, the SNP with the lowest p-value (rs10767971; p = 5.4 × 10-7) lies between the genes QSER1 and PRRG4. Near the PARK3 linkage region on chromosome 2p13, association was observed with a SNP (rs7577851; p = 8.7 × 10-6) which lies in an intron of the AAK1 gene. This gene is closely related to GAK, identified as a possible PD susceptibility gene in the GWAS of the familial PD cases.Conclusion Taken together, these results suggest an influence of genes involved in endocytosis and lysosomal sorting in PD pathogenesis.
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- 2009
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46. The Gly2019Ser Mutation in LRRK2 is not Fully Penetrant in Familial Parkinson's Disease: The GenePD Study
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Latourelle, Jeanne C, Lew, Mark F, Suchowersky, Oksana, Klein, Christine, Golbe, Lawrence I, Mark, Margery H, Wooten, G Frederick, Watts, Ray L, Guttman, Mark, Racette, Brad A, Perlmutter, Joel S, Ahmed, Anwar, Shill, Holly A, Singer, Carlos, Goldwurm, Stefano, Pezzoli, Gianni, Zini, Michela, Saint-Hilaire, Marie H, Hendricks, Audrey E, Williamson, Sally, Nagle, Michael W, Wilk, Jemma B, Massood, Tiffany, Huskey, Karen W, Laramie, Jason M, DeStefano, Anita L, Baker, Kenneth B, Itin, Ilia, Litvan, Irene, Nicholson, Garth, Corbett, Alastair, Nance, Martha, Drasby, Edward, Isaacson, Stuart, Burn, David J, Chinnery, Patrick F, Pramstaller, Peter P, Al-hinti, Jomana, Moller, Anette T, Ostergaard, Karen, Roxburgh, Richard, Snow, Barry, Slevin, John T, Cambi, Franca, Growdon, John Herbert, Gusella, James Francis, Sun, Mei, Sherman, Scott J, and Myers, Richard Hepworth
- Abstract
Background: We report age-dependent penetrance estimates for leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2)-related Parkinson's disease (PD) in a large sample of familial PD. The most frequently seen LRRK2 mutation, Gly2019Ser (G2019S), is associated with approximately 5 to 6% of familial PD cases and 1 to 2% of idiopathic cases, making it the most common known genetic cause of PD. Studies of the penetrance of LRRK2 mutations have produced a wide range of estimates, possibly due to differences in study design and recruitment, including in particular differences between samples of familial PD versus sporadic PD. Methods: A sample, including 903 affected and 58 unaffected members from 509 families ascertained for having two or more PD-affected members, 126 randomly ascertained PD patients and 197 controls, was screened for five different LRRK2 mutations. Penetrance was estimated in families of LRRK2 carriers with consideration of the inherent bias towards increased penetrance in a familial sample. Results: Thirty-one out of 509 families with multiple cases of PD (6.1%) were found to have 58 LRRK2 mutation carriers (6.4%). Twenty-nine of the 31 families had G2019S mutations while two had R1441C mutations. No mutations were identified among controls or unaffected relatives of PD cases. Nine PD-affected relatives of G2019S carriers did not carry the LRRK2 mutation themselves. At the maximum observed age range of 90 to 94 years, the unbiased estimated penetrance was 67% for G2019S families, compared with a baseline PD risk of 17% seen in the non-LRRK2-related PD families. Conclusion: Lifetime penetrance of LRRK2 estimated in the unascertained relatives of multiplex PD families is greater than that reported in studies of sporadically ascertained LRRK2 cases, suggesting that inherited susceptibility factors may modify the penetrance of LRRK2 mutations. In addition, the presence of nine PD phenocopies in the LRRK2 families suggests that these susceptibility factors may also increase the risk of non-LRRK2-related PD. No differences in penetrance were found between men and women, suggesting that the factors that influence penetrance for LRRK2 carriers are independent of the factors which increase PD prevalence in men.
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- 2008
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47. Multiethnic meta-analysis identifies ancestry-specific and cross-ancestry loci for pulmonary function.
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Wyss, Annah B., Sofer, Tamar, Lee, Mi Kyeong, Terzikhan, Natalie, Nguyen, Jennifer N., Lahousse, Lies, Latourelle, Jeanne C., Smith, Albert Vernon, Bartz, Traci M., Feitosa, Mary F., Gao, Wei, Ahluwalia, Tarunveer S., Tang, Wenbo, Oldmeadow, Christopher, Duan, Qing, de Jong, Kim, Wojczynski, Mary K., Wang, Xin-Qun, Noordam, Raymond, and Hartwig, Fernando Pires
- Abstract
Nearly 100 loci have been identified for pulmonary function, almost exclusively in studies of European ancestry populations. We extend previous research by meta-analyzing genome-wide association studies of 1000 Genomes imputed variants in relation to pulmonary function in a multiethnic population of 90,715 individuals of European (N = 60,552), African (N = 8429), Asian (N = 9959), and Hispanic/Latino (N = 11,775) ethnicities. We identify over 50 additional loci at genome-wide significance in ancestry-specific or multiethnic meta-analyses. Using recent fine-mapping methods incorporating functional annotation, gene expression, and differences in linkage disequilibrium between ethnicities, we further shed light on potential causal variants and genes at known and newly identified loci. Several of the novel genes encode proteins with predicted or established drug targets, including KCNK2 and CDK12. Our study highlights the utility of multiethnic and integrative genomics approaches to extend existing knowledge of the genetics of lung function and clinical relevance of implicated loci. Pulmonary function is influenced by environmental factors, lifestyle, and genetics. Here, in a multiethnic GWAS meta-analysis for pulmonary function traits, the authors identify over 50 additional genetic loci, a subset of which are specific for European, African, Asian, or Hispanic/Latino ancestry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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48. Sepiapterin reductase expression is increased in Parkinson's disease brain tissue
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Tobin, Jennifer E., Cui, Jing, Wilk, Jemma B., Latourelle, Jeanne C., Laramie, Jason M., McKee, Ann C., Guttman, Mark, Karamohamed, Samer, DeStefano, Anita L., and Myers, Richard H.
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BRAIN diseases , *PARKINSON'S disease , *GENETIC polymorphisms - Abstract
Abstract: The PARK3 locus on chromosome 2p13 has shown linkage to both the development and age of onset of Parkinson''s disease (PD). One candidate gene at this locus is sepiapterin reductase (SPR). Sepiapterin reductase catalyzes the final step in the biosynthetic pathway of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), an essential cofactor for aromatic amino acid hydrolases including tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in dopamine synthesis. The expression of SPR was assayed using semiquantitative real-time RT-PCR in human post-mortem cerebellar tissue from neuropathologically confirmed PD cases and neurologically normal controls. The expression of other enzymes involved in BH4 biosynthesis, including aldose reductase (AKR1B1), carbonyl reductase (CBR1 and CBR3), GTP-cyclohydrolase I (GCH1), and 6-pyruvoyltetrahydrobiopterin (PTS), was also examined. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms around the SPR gene that have been previously reported to show association to PD affection and onset age were genotyped in these samples. Expression of SPR showed a significant 4-fold increase in PD cases relative to controls, while the expression of AKR1B1 and PTS was significantly decreased in PD cases. No difference in expression was detected for CBR1, CBR3, and GCH1. Genetic variants did not show a significant effect on SPR expression, however, this is likely due to the low frequency of rare genotypes in the sample. While the association of SPR to PD is not strong enough to support that this is the PARK3 gene, this study further implicates a role for SPR in idiopathic PD. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2007
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