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Publications (92)
Background
Aarskog-Scott syndrome (AAS) is a rare condition with multiple congenital anomalies, caused by hemizygote variants in the FGD1 gene. Its description was based mostly on old case reports, in whom a molecular diagnosis was not always available, or on small series. The aim of this study was to better delineate the phenotype and the natural...
Proteus syndrome (PS) is a rare disorder (< 1/1000000), marked by progressive overgrowth commonly impacting the skeleton, skin, adipose tissue, and central nervous system. Clinical criteria were established in 2019. PS arises from a somatic activating variation in the AKT1 gene. We report the second case of PS diagnosed prenatally using whole exome...
Xq28 int22h‐1/int22h‐2 duplication is the result of non‐allelic homologous recombination between int22h‐1/int22h‐2 repeats separated by 0.5 Mb. It is responsible for a syndromic form of intellectual disability (ID), with recurrent infections and atopic diseases. Minor defects, nonspecific facial dysmorphic features, and overweight have also been de...
Cat Eye Syndrome (CES) is a rare genetic disease caused by the presence of a small supernumerary marker chromosome derived from chromosome 22, which results in a partial tetrasomy of 22p-22q11.21. CES is classically defined by association of iris coloboma, anal atresia, and preauricular tags or pits, with high clinical and genetic heterogeneity. We...
Introduction
Systemic primary carnitine deficiency is a rare genetic disease characterized by severe hypokinetic dilated cardiomyopathy and/or severe rhythm disorders. Without carnitine supplementation, evolution is usually towards a fatal cardiac decompensation. While the cardiomyopathy is most likely secondary to the energy deficiency, the mechan...
Kleefstra syndrome (KS) is a rare autosomic dominant genetic disorder caused by euchromatic histone methyltransferase 1 (EHMT1) alterations. Patients mainly present with moderate to severe intellectual disability, a severe delay in/or absence of speech, autism spectrum disorder, childhood hypotonia, neuropsychiatric anomalies, and distinctive dysmo...
Background:
In France, the Ministry of Health has implemented a comprehensive program for rare diseases (RD) that includes an epidemiological program as well as the establishment of expert centers for the clinical care of patients with RD. Since 2007, most of these centers have entered the data for patients with developmental disorders into the CE...
Deletion 1p36 (del1p36) syndrome is the most common human disorder resulting from a terminal autosomal deletion. This condition is molecularly and clinically heterogeneous. Deletions involving two non-overlapping regions, known as the distal (telomeric) and proximal (centromeric) critical regions, are sufficient to cause the majority of the recurre...
Megalencephaly‐CApillary malformation‐Polymicrogyria (MCAP) syndrome results from somatic mosaic gain‐of‐function variants in PIK3CA. Main features are macrocephaly, somatic overgrowth, cutaneous vascular malformations, connective tissue dysplasia, neurodevelopmental delay, and brain anomalies. The objectives of this study were to describe the clin...
Overlapping syndromes such as Noonan, Cardio‐Facio‐Cutaneous, Noonan syndrome (NS) with multiple lentigines and Costello syndromes are genetically heterogeneous conditions sharing a dysregulation of the RAS/mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway and are known collectively as the RASopathies. PTPN11 was the first disease‐causing gene identi...
Background
One hundred fifty-seven preterm infants enrolled in the study were hospitalized between 2012-2014 at Amiens-Picardie University Hospital.Only 28 (17.8%) of these children who had experienced at least one episode of secondary Coagulase-negative Staphylococcal bacteremia with concomitant positive stool cultures were included in this study....
Intellectual disability (ID) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are genetically heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorders. We sought to delineate the clinical, molecular, and neuroimaging spectrum of a novel neurodevelopmental disorder caused by variants in the zinc finger protein 292 gene (ZNF292).
We ascertained a cohort of 28 families with ID d...
Congenital limb malformations (CLM) comprise many conditions affecting limbs and more than 150 associated genes have been reported. Due to this large heterogeneity, a high proportion of patients remains without a molecular diagnosis. In the last two decades, advances in high throughput sequencing have allowed new methodological strategies in clinic...
Calcium (Ca2+) acts as a ubiquitous second messenger, and normal cell and tissue physiology strictly depends on the precise regulation of Ca2+ entry, storage and release. Store‐operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) is a major mechanism controlling extracellular Ca2+ entry, and mainly relies on the accurate interplay between the Ca2+ sensor STIM1 and the Ca2+...
Introduction
Le syndrome de MERRF fait partie du groupe des encéphalomyopathies mitochondriales. Il est classiquement caractérisé par l’association d’une épilepsie myoclonique, d’une ataxie cérébelleuse et d’une myopathie avec fibres rouges déchiquetées à la biopsie musculaire et se déclare en général à l’adolescence ou chez l’adulte jeune. On peut...
We describe the clinical, hematologic and genetic characteristics of a retrospective series of 126 subjects from 64 families with hereditary xerocytosis. Twelve patients from six families carried a KCNN4 mutation, five had the recurrent p.Arg352His mutation and one had a new deletion at the exon 7-intron 7 junction. Forty-nine families carried a PI...
51st Conference of the European-Society-of-Human-Genetics (ESHG) in conjunction with the European Meeting on Psychosocial Aspects of Genetics (EMPAG), Milan, ITALY, JUN 16-19, 2018
51st Conference of the European-Society-of-Human-Genetics (ESHG) in conjunction with the European Meeting on Psychosocial Aspects of Genetics (EMPAG), Milan, ITALY, JUN 16-19, 2018
Introduction et but de l’étude
Le cathéter veineux central, relais du cordon ombilical, indispensable pour le support nutritionnel des grands prématurés, est souvent mis en cause au cours des bactériémies rencontrées fréquemment chez ces enfants.
L’objectif de ce travail est d’évaluer la part de translocation bactérienne à point de départ digestif...
Background:
The frequency of late-onset Huntington's disease (>59 years) is assumed to be low and the clinical course milder. However, previous literature on late-onset disease is scarce and inconclusive.
Objective:
Our aim is to study clinical characteristics of late-onset compared to common-onset HD patients in a large cohort of HD patients fr...
Neonatal-onset movement disorders, especially in combination with seizures, are rare and often related to mitochondrial disorders. 3-methylglutaconic aciduria (3-MGA-uria) is a marker for mitochondrial dysfunction. In particular, consistently elevated urinary excretion of 3-methylglutaconic acid is the hallmark of a small but growing group of inbor...
Purpose
Constitutional epimutations are an alternative to genetic mutations in the etiology of genetic diseases. Some of these epimutations, termed secondary, correspond to the epigenetic effects of cis-acting genetic defects transmitted to the offspring following a Mendelian inheritance pattern. In Lynch syndrome, a few families with such apparent...
Creatine transporter is currently the focus of renewed interest with emerging roles in brain neurotransmission and physiology, and the bioenergetics of cancer metastases. We here report on amendments of a standard creatine uptake assay which might help clinical chemistry laboratories to extend their current range of measurements of creatine and met...
50th European-Society-of-Human-Genetics (ESHG) Conference, Copenhagen, DENMARK, MAY 27-30, 2017
50th European-Society-of-Human-Genetics (ESHG) Conference, Copenhagen, DENMARK, MAY 27-30, 2017
50th European-Society-of-Human-Genetics (ESHG) Conference, Copenhagen, DENMARK, MAY 27-30, 2017
Background
MAGED2 was recently identified in an X-linked severe and transient form of antenatal Bartter's syndrome associated with polyhydramnios and prematurity but also in idiopathic polyhydramnios in the male offspring. An inappropriate expression of the sodium-chloride transporters NKCC2 and NCC is disclosed.
Methods
MAGED2 was screened by San...
Background and objectives:
Mutations in the MAGED2 gene, located on the X chromosome, have been recently detected in males with a transient form of antenatal Bartter syndrome or with idiopathic polyhydramnios. The aim of this study is to analyze the proportion of the population with mutations in this gene in a French cohort of patients with antena...
Microphthalmia and anophthalmia (MA) are severe developmental eye anomalies, many of which are likely to have an underlying genetic cause. More than 30 genes have been described, each of which is responsible for a small percentage of these anomalies. Amongst these, is the FOXE3 gene, which was initially described in individuals with dominantly inhe...
Background
Phosphomannomutase 2-congenital disorder of glycosylation (PMM2-CDG) is a multisystem inborn error of metabolism.
Objectives
To better characterise the natural history of PMM2-CDG.
Methods
Medical charts of 96 patients with PMM2-CDG (86 families, 41 males, 55 females) were retrospectively reviewed. Data on clinical, laboratory and mole...
Facial femoral syndrome (FFS) is a rare congenital abnormality, also known as femoral hypoplasia-unusual facies syndrome, characterized by variable degrees of femoral hypoplasia, associated with specific facial features. Other organ malformations are sometimes present. Most cases are sporadic, but rare family observations suggest genetic origin. Ho...
Prenatal growth is a complex dynamic process controlled by various genetic and environmental factors. Among genetic syndromes characterized by growth restriction, MULIBREY nanism represents a rare autosomal recessive condition presenting with severe pre- and post-natal growth failure, characteristic dysmorphic features but normal neurological devel...
Background:
Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is caused by homozygous inactivation of the SMN1 gene. The SMN2 copy number modulates the severity of SMA. The 0SMN1/1SMN2 genotype, the most severe genotype compatible with life, is expected to be associated with the most severe form of the disease, called type 0 SMA, defined by prenatal onset.
Objective...
Growth hormone deficiency affects roughly between one in 3000 and one in 4000 children with most instances of growth hormone deficiency being idiopathic. Growth hormone deficiency can also be associated with genetic diseases or chromosome abnormalities. Association of growth hormone deficiency together with hypothalamic-pituitary axis malformation...
Dent disease is a rare X-linked tubulopathy characterised by low molecular weight proteinuria (LMWP), hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis and/or nephrolithiasis, progressive renal failure and variable manifestations of other proximal tubule dysfunctions. It often progresses over a few decades to chronic renal insufficiency, and therefore molecular cha...
Mowat-Wilson syndrome (MWS) is a rare genetic syndrome characterized by a specific facial gestalt, intellectual deficiency, Hirschsprung disease and multiple congenital anomalies. Heterozygous mutations or deletions in the zinc finger E-box-binding homeobox2 gene (ZEB2) cause MWS. ZEB2 encodes for Smad-interacting protein 1, a transcriptional co-re...
DNA methylation at CpG sites is an epigenetic mechanism that regulates cellular gene expression. In cancer cells, aberrant methylation is correlated with the abnormalities in expression of genes that are known to be involved in the particular characteristics of cancer cells such as proliferation, apoptosis, migration or invasion. During the past 30...
Cat-eye syndrome is a rare genetic syndrome of chromosomal origin. Individuals with cat-eye syndrome are characterized by the presence of preauricular pits and/or tags, anal atresia, and iris coloboma. Many reported cases also presented with variable congenital anomalies and intellectual disability. Most patients diagnosed with CES carry a small su...
Interstitial microdeletions of 20q chromosome are rare, only 17 patients have been reported in the literature to date. Among them, only six carried a proximal 20q11.21-q11.23 deletion, with a size ranging from 2.6 to 6.8 Mb. The existence of a 20q11.2 microdeletion syndrome has been proposed, based on five previously reported cases that displayed a...
Stormorken syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by a phenotype that includes miosis, thrombocytopenia/thrombocytopathy with bleeding time diathesis, intellectual disability, mild hypocalcaemia, muscle fatigue, asplenia and ichthyosis. Using targeted sequencing and whole exome sequencing, we identified the c.910C>T transition...
Background Intellectual disability (ID) is characterised by an extreme genetic heterogeneity. Several hundred genes have been associated to monogenic forms of ID, considerably complicating molecular diagnostics. Trio-exome sequencing was recently proposed as a diagnostic approach, yet remains costly for a general implementation.
Methods We report t...
Baraitser-Winter, Fryns-Aftimos and cerebrofrontofacial syndrome types 1 and 3 have recently been associated with heterozygous gain-of-function mutations in one of the two ubiquitous cytoplasmic actin-encoding genes ACTB and ACTG1 that encode β- and γ-actins. We present detailed phenotypic descriptions and neuroimaging on 36 patients analyzed by ou...
Mandibulofacial dysostosis, Guion-Almeida type (MFDGA) is a recently delineated multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome characterized by the association of mandibulofacial dysostosis (MFD) with external ear malformations, hearing loss, cleft palate, choanal atresia, microcephaly, intellectual disability, oesophageal atresia (OA),...
Chromatin remodeling complexes are known to modify chemical marks on histones or to induce conformational changes in the chromatin
in order to regulate transcription. De novo dominant mutations in different members of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex have recently been described in individuals
with Coffin–Siris (CSS) and Nicolaides–Baraitse...
The introduction of molecular karyotyping technologies into the diagnostic work-up of patients with congenital disorders permitted the identification and delineation of novel microdeletion and microduplication syndromes. Interstitial 16p13.3 duplication, encompassing the CREBBP gene, which is mutated or deleted in the Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome, hav...
Dominant missense mutations in FLNB, encoding the actin-cross linking protein filamin B (FLNB), cause a broad range of skeletal dysplasias with varying severity by an unknown mechanism. Here these FLNB mutations are shown to cluster in exons encoding the actin-binding domain (ABD) and filamin repeats surrounding the flexible hinge 1 region of the F...
Résumé
Cette enquête de pratique avait pour objectif de définir, en l’absence de référentiel, la prise en charge en France des hommes asymptomatiques porteurs d’une mutation BRCA1 ou 2. Un questionnaire a été adressé à 90 centres d’oncogénétique. Trente-quatre praticiens travaillant dans 58 centres ont répondu. Parmi les répondants, 85,3 % proposai...
We have systematically analyzed the two known minor genes involved in Usher syndrome type 2, DFNB31 and GPR98, for mutations in a cohort of 31 patients not linked to USH2A. PDZD7, an Usher syndrome type 2 (USH2) related gene, was analyzed when indicated. We found that mutations in GPR98 contribute significantly to USH2. We report 17 mutations in 10...
Constitutional epimutations of DNA mismatch repair (MMR) genes have been recently reported as a possible cause of Lynch syndrome. However, little is known about their prevalence, the risk of transmission through the germline and the risk for carriers to develop cancers. In this study, we evaluated the contribution of constitutional epimutations of...
During the last few years, an increasing number of microdeletion/microduplication syndromes have been delineated. This rapid evolution is mainly due to the availability of microarray technology as a routine diagnostic tool. Microdeletions of the 21q22.11q22.12 region encompassing the RUNX1 gene have been reported in nine patients presenting with sy...
Objectif
Décrire la première famille française de syndrome H et ses principaux signes cliniques.
Sujet
Nous rapportons une patiente de 12 ans atteinte de syndrome H. Elle présente un syndrome inflammatoire sévère, des poussées de fièvre, des douleurs articulaires, une péricardite fluctuante, une surdité progressive, un infléchissement pondéral, un...
In a previous 52-wk trial, treatment with alglucosidase alpha markedly improved cardiomyopathy, ventilatory function, and overall survival among 18 children <7 mo old with infantile-onset Pompe disease. Sixteen of the 18 patients enrolled in an extension study, where they continued to receive alglucosidase alpha at either 20 mg/kg biweekly (n = 8)...
Pitt-Hopkins syndrome (PHS) is a probably underdiagnosed, syndromic mental retardation disorder, marked by hyperventilation episodes and characteristic dysmorphism (large beaked nose, wide mouth, fleshy lips, and clubbed fingertips). PHS was shown to be caused by de novo heterozygous mutations of the TCF4 gene, located in 18q21. We selected for thi...
Familial leukonychia with sebaceous cysts is a rare autosomal dominant genetic condition, previously reported in four families. Molecular basis of the disorder is unknown. We report on a five-generation family with subtotal leukonychia and sebaceous cysts. Six individuals were affected, five women and one boy. One of the women exhibited a cervical...
Neonates with Down's syndrome have an increased risk for congenital leukaemia, particularly acute megakaryoblastic leukaemia (FAB, M7) which most often resolves spontaneously and is called transient leukaemia. It can be observed in non-constitutional trisomy 21 infants then presenting trisomy 21 on blasts cells. OBSERVATION: We report a transient l...
Neonates with Down's syndrome have an increased risk for congenital leukaemia, particularly acute megakaryoblastic leukaemia (FAB, M7) which most often resolves spontaneously and is called transient leukaemia. It can be observed in non-constitutional trisomy 21 infants then presenting trisomy 21 on blasts cells.
Observation
We report a transient l...
Pompe disease is a progressive metabolic neuromuscular disorder resulting from deficiency of lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA). Infantile-onset Pompe disease is characterized by cardiomyopathy, respiratory and skeletal muscle weakness, and early death. The safety and efficacy of recombinant human (rh) GAA were evaluated in 18 patients with rap...
Heterozygous missense mutations in the serine-threonine kinase receptor BMPR1B result typically in brachydactyly type A2 (BDA2), whereas mutations in the corresponding ligand GDF5 cause brachydactyly type C (BDC). Mutations in the GDF inhibitor Noggin (NOG) or activating mutations in GDF5 cause proximal symphalangism (SYM1). Here, we describe a nov...
Mutations in the ATP6V1B1 and ATP6V0A4 genes, encoding subunits B1 and 4 of apical H(+) ATPase, cause recessive forms of distal renal tubular acidosis (dRTA). ATP6V1B mutations have been associated with early sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL), whereas ATP6V0A4 mutations are classically associated with either late-onset SNHL or normal hearing. The p...
Intrauterine growth retardation is caused by maternal, fetal or placental factors that result in impaired endovascular trophoblast invasion and reduced placental perfusion. Although various causes of intrauterine growth retardation have been identified, most cases remain unexplained. Studying 29 families with 3-M syndrome (OMIM 273750), an autosoma...
The phenotype of Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is defined by the association of retinitis pigmentosa, obesity, polydactyly, hypogenitalism, renal disease and cognitive impairement. The significant genetic heterogeneity of this condition is supported by the identification, to date, of eight genes (BBS1-8) implied with cilia assembly or function. Trial...
In 1993, Nicolaides and Baraitser reported a new condition consisting of short stature, hypotrichosis, brachydactyly with cone-shaped epiphyses, epilepsy and severe mental delay. We report here two unrelated patients with identical features, thus confirming the status of this rare disorder of unknown aetiology.
The MELAS syndrome (Mitochondrial Encephalopathy, Lactic Acidosis and Stroke-like episodes) belongs to the category of mitochondrial disorders. The most common molecular etiology of the syndrome is a mutation A to G transition at base pair 3243 in the mitochondrial genome. The phenotype is varied and depends on the proportion of DNA muted and which...
Ultrasonography in a female fetus revealed cystic cervical hygroma, severe micrognathia, and vertebral and upper limb anomalies suggestive of cerebro-costo-mandibular syndrome (CCMS) which was diagnosed ultrasonographically at 16 weeks' gestation. The father is affected and presents with a Pierre Robin sequence, short stature and typical costoverte...
We report the sporadic case of a boy with clinical features of KBG syndrome, including slight mental retardation, characteristic facies, macrodontia, and skeletal anomalies.
Three cases (one girl, two boys) were reported. From birth there was reticulated erythema with atrophic and ulcerated areas. The distribution was unilateral: right upper limb. All investigations were normal without any malformations. Thus, when a cutis marmorata telangiectatica is very confined, we suggest only a clinical follow-up. Ophtalmologic i...