Publications (8)45.53 Total impact
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Article: High incidence of NLRP3 somatic mosaicism in patients with chronic infantile neurologic, cutaneous, articular syndrome: results of an International Multicenter Collaborative Study.
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ABSTRACT: Chronic infantile neurologic, cutaneous, articular (CINCA) syndrome, also known as neonatal-onset multisystem inflammatory disease (NOMID), is a dominantly inherited systemic autoinflammatory disease. Although heterozygous germline gain-of-function NLRP3 mutations are a known cause of this disease, conventional genetic analyses fail to detect disease-causing mutations in ∼40% of patients. Since somatic NLRP3 mosaicism has been detected in several mutation-negative NOMID/CINCA syndrome patients, we undertook this study to determine the precise contribution of somatic NLRP3 mosaicism to the etiology of NOMID/CINCA syndrome. An international case-control study was performed to detect somatic NLRP3 mosaicism in NOMID/CINCA syndrome patients who had shown no mutation during conventional sequencing. Subcloning and sequencing of NLRP3 was performed in these mutation-negative NOMID/CINCA syndrome patients and their healthy relatives. Clinical features were analyzed to identify potential genotype-phenotype associations. Somatic NLRP3 mosaicism was identified in 18 of the 26 patients (69.2%). Estimates of the level of mosaicism ranged from 4.2% to 35.8% (mean ± SD 12.1 ± 7.9%). Mosaicism was not detected in any of the 19 healthy relatives (18 of 26 patients versus 0 of 19 relatives; P < 0.0001). In vitro functional assays indicated that the detected somatic NLRP3 mutations had disease-causing functional effects. No differences in NLRP3 mosaicism were detected between different cell lineages. Among nondescript clinical features, a lower incidence of mental retardation was noted in patients with somatic mosaicism. Genotype-matched comparison confirmed that patients with somatic NLRP3 mosaicism presented with milder neurologic symptoms. Somatic NLRP3 mutations were identified in 69.2% of patients with mutation-negative NOMID/CINCA syndrome. This indicates that somatic NLRP3 mosaicism is a major cause of NOMID/CINCA syndrome.Arthritis & Rheumatism 06/2011; 63(11):3625-32. · 7.87 Impact Factor -
Article: Role of TNFRSF13B variants in patients with common variable immunodeficiency.
Blood 09/2009; 114(13):2846-8. · 9.90 Impact Factor -
Article: An unexpectedly high frequency of MEFV mutations in patients with anti-citrullinated protein antibody-negative palindromic rheumatism.
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ABSTRACT: To investigate whether the MEFV gene, which is involved in the regulation of the inflammatory response and has been associated with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) and intermittent hydrarthrosis, is implicated in the pathogenesis of palindromic rheumatism (PR) and to examine its clinical presentation and its evolution in a Spanish cohort of PR patients. Family histories, demographic clinical data, and laboratory characteristics of 75 patients diagnosed as having PR were collected from medical records and personal interviews. The healthy control group included 325 blood bank donors. The FMF control group was made up of 84 Spanish FMF patients. Genomic DNA was isolated, and MEFV gene mutation analysis was performed by polymerase chain reaction amplification and sequence analysis. Sixty-five unrelated PR patients were finally included in the study. MEFV gene mutation analysis identified 8 of these 65 patients (12.3%) as carriers of at least 1 mutated MEFV allele. Patients with MEFV mutations had higher mean age and age at disease onset, but lower mean serum levels of anti-citrullinated protein antibodies (ACPAs). No other significant differences were observed between patients with and those without mutations. The frequency of MEFV mutations in ACPA-negative PR patients was 22.2%, compared with 5.3% in ACPA-positive PR patients (P = 0.058). This study shows a previously unreported high prevalence of mutations of the MEFV gene in patients with ACPA-negative PR. This supports the hypothesis that it might be a susceptibility gene. Our findings also support the hypothesis that the MEFV gene might participate in the pathogenesis of other undifferentiated relapsing inflammatory rheumatic disorders.Arthritis & Rheumatism 09/2007; 56(8):2784-8. · 7.87 Impact Factor -
Article: Crohn's disease patients carrying Nod2/CARD15 gene variants have an increased and early need for first surgery due to stricturing disease and higher rate of surgical recurrence.
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ABSTRACT: To study the predictive value of Nod2/CARD15 gene variants along with disease phenotypic characteristics for requirement of initial surgery and for surgical recurrence in Crohn's disease (CD). Nod2/CARD15 gene variants play an important role in the susceptibility to CD. Studies of genotype-phenotype relationship suggest that these variants are associated with development of intestinal strictures. Preliminary reports analyzing the association between these variants and need for surgery have produced inconsistent results. A total of 170 CD patients were included prospectively in the study and followed up regularly for a mean of 7.4 +/- 6.1 years. Clinical characteristics of CD, time and indication for surgery, and recurrence were registered. Nod2/CARD15 gene variants were determined by DNA sequencing analysis. Surgery for stricturing disease was significantly more frequent in patients with Nod2/CARD15 variants in the univariate analysis (odds ratio [OR], 3.63; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.42-9.27), and it was required at an earlier time (P = 0.004). Only Nod2/CARD15 variants (OR, 3.58; 95% CI, 1.21-10.5) and stricturing phenotype at diagnosis of CD (OR, 9.34; 95% CI, 2.56-33.3) were independent predictive factors of initial surgery for stricturing lesions in the multivariate analysis. Among 70 patients that required surgery, postoperative recurrence was also more frequent in patients with Nod2/CARD15 variants in the univariate and multivariate analysis (OR, 3.29; 95% CI, 1.13-9.56), and reoperation was needed at an earlier time (P = 0.03). Nod2/CARD15 variants are associated with early initial surgery due to stenosis and with surgical recurrence in Crohn's disease. Patients with these variants could benefit from preventive and/or early therapeutic strategies.Annals of Surgery 12/2005; 242(5):693-700. · 7.49 Impact Factor -
Article: A severe autosomal-dominant periodic inflammatory disorder with renal AA amyloidosis and colchicine resistance associated to the MEFV H478Y variant in a Spanish kindred: an unusual familial Mediterranean fever phenotype or another MEFV-associated periodic inflammatory disorder?
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ABSTRACT: Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by recurring short attacks of fever and serositis. Secondary AA amyloidosis is the worst complication of the disease and often determines the prognosis. The MEFV gene, on chromosome 16p13.3, is responsible for the disease and around 30 mutations have been reported to date. Colchicine is the standard FMF treatment today, and prevents both attacks and amyloid deposition in 95% of patients. Here we describe a three-generation Spanish kindred with five family members affected by a severe periodic inflammatory disorder associated with renal AA amyloidosis and colchicine unresponsiveness. Clinical diagnosis of definite FMF disease was made based on the Tel-Hashomer criteria set. Genetic analyses revealed that all subjects were heterozygous for the new H478Y MEFV variant, segregating with the disease. In addition, mutations in the TNFRSF1A and CIAS1/PYPAF1/NALP3 genes, related to the dominantly inherited autoinflammatory periodic syndromes, were ruled out. However, the dominant inheritance of the disease, the long fever episodes with a predominant joint involvement, and the resistance to colchicine in these patients raise the question of whether the periodic syndrome seen in this kindred is a true FMF disease with unusual manifestations or rather another MEFV-associated periodic syndrome. We conclude that the new H478Y MEFV mutation is the dominant pathological variant causing the inflammatory periodic syndrome in this kindred and that full-length analyses of the MEFV gene are needed to obtain an adequate diagnosis of patients with clinical suspicion of a hereditary periodic fever syndrome, especially those from non-ancestral populations.American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A 02/2004; 124A(1):67-73. · 2.39 Impact Factor -
Article: Heterogeneity among patients with tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome phenotypes.
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ABSTRACT: To investigate the prevalence of tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS) among outpatients presenting with recurrent fevers and clinical features consistent with TRAPS. Mutational screening was performed in affected members of 18 families in which multiple members had symptoms compatible with TRAPS and in 176 consecutive subjects with sporadic (nonfamilial) "TRAPS-like" symptoms. Plasma concentrations of soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor superfamily 1A (sTNFRSF1A) were measured, and fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis was used to measure TNFRSF1A shedding from monocytes. Eight novel and 3 previously reported TNFRSF1A missense mutations were identified, including an amino acid deletion (Delta D42) in a Northern Irish family and a C70S mutation in a Japanese family, both reported for the first time. Only 3 TNFRSF1A variants were found in patients with sporadic TRAPS (4 of 176 patients). Evidence for nonallelic heterogeneity in TRAPS-like conditions was found: 3 members of the "prototype familial Hibernian fever" family did not possess C33Y, present in 9 other affected members. Plasma sTNFRSF1A levels were low in TRAPS patients in whom renal amyloidosis had not developed, but also in mutation-negative symptomatic subjects in 4 families, and in 14 patients (8%) with sporadic TRAPS. Reduced shedding of TNFRSF1A from monocytes was demonstrated in vitro in patients with the T50M and T50K variants, but not in those with other variants. The presence of TNFRSF1A shedding defects and low sTNFRSF1A levels in 3 families without a TNFRSF1A mutation indicates that the genetic basis among patients with "TRAPS-like" features is heterogeneous. TNFRSF1A mutations are not commonly associated with nonfamilial recurrent fevers of unknown etiology.Arthritis & Rheumatism 10/2003; 48(9):2632-44. · 7.87 Impact Factor -
Article: Possible association between NOD2 variants and joint surgery in psoriatic arthritis.
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ABSTRACT: Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) has been inconsistently associated with common NOD2 gene variants, although some of these studies did not include patient stratification by clinical phenotype. To analyse the association between the three common NOD2 variants (R702W, G908R and L1007fs) and clinical phenotypes of PsA, particularly with surrogate markers of severe joint destruction. A total of 183 unrelated PsA patients and 187 controls were included. Demographic, clinical, biological and immunological characteristics were collected. Genotypes for the three common NOD2 gene variants were obtained by PCR and direct sequencing. NOD2 variants in PsA patients (7.6%) are just as prevalent as in healthy controls (7.5%). 18.5% of PsA patients carrying at least one NOD2 variant underwent joint surgery compared with 4.5% of those without these variants (p=0.019). Multivariate analysis confirmed this finding (OR 8.82, CI 1.7-46.3). There was no requirement for early surgery in patients carrying the NOD2 variants but there was an increased possibility of requiring surgery at similar times of disease duration. No other association with clinical features and NOD2 status carrier was found. Common NOD2 gene variants are not associated with PsA, but might increase the risk of undergoing joint replacement surgery, suggesting that this autoinflammatory-associated gene could act as a phenotypic modifier gene in PsA patients by increasing the risk of joint destruction. Given the small number of PsA patients with joint surgery included, we consider our findings a new hypothesis that will need further testing.Clinical and experimental rheumatology 28(1):30-4. · 2.15 Impact Factor -
Article: Familial CD8 deficiency due to a mutation in the CD8α gene
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ABSTRACT: CD8 glycoproteins play an important role in both the maturation and function of MHC class I-restricted T lymphocytes. A 25-year-old man, from a consanguineous family, with recurrent bacterial infections and total absence of CD8+ cells, was studied. Ab deficiencies and ZAP-70 and TAP defects were ruled out. A missense mutation (gly90→ser) in both alleles of the immunoglobulin domain of the CD8α gene was shown to correlate with the absence of CD8 expression found in the patient and two sisters. Conversely, high percentages of CD4–CD8–TCRαβ+ T cells were found in the three siblings. A novel autosomal recessive immunologic defect characterized by absence of CD8+ cells is described. These findings may help to further understanding of the role of CD8 molecules in human immune response.