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Dive into the research topics where A. López de Munain is active.

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Featured researches published by A. López de Munain.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2005

Phenotypic variability in familial prion diseases due to the D178N mutation

Juan J. Zarranz; Antón Digón; Begoña Atarés; Ana B. Rodríguez-Martínez; Ana de Arce; Nieves Carrera; Iñaki Fernández-Manchola; Manuel Fernández-Martínez; C. Fernández-Maiztegui; I Forcadas; Luis Galdos; Juan Carlos Gómez-Esteban; Agustín Ibáñez; Elena Lezcano; A. López de Munain; J.F. Martí-Massó; M M Mendibe; M. Urtasun; J.M. Uterga; N Saracibar; Fernando Velasco; M M de Pancorbo

Background: Between January 1993 and December 2003, 19 patients with familial prion diseases due to the D178N mutation were referred to the regional epidemiological registry for spongiform encephalopathies in the Basque Country in Spain, a small community of some 2 100 000 inhabitants. Methods: Ten further patients belonging to the same pedigrees were retrospectively ascertained through neurological or neuropathological records. In four of the patients, the diagnosis was confirmed by analysing DNA obtained from paraffin blocks. In this article, we report on the clinical, genetic, and pathological features of the 23 patients carrying the D178N mutation confirmed by genetic molecular analysis. Haplotyping studies suggest a founder effect among Basque born families, explaining in part this unusually high incidence of the D178N mutation in a small community. Only two patients (8%) lack familial antecedents. Results: We have observed a phenotypic variability even among homozygous 129MM patients. Our findings challenge the currently accepted belief that MM homozygosity in codon 129 is always related to a fatal familial insomnia (FFI) phenotype. Indeed, seven out of 17 patients with a 129MM genotype in this series presented with a Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) clinicopathological picture. Conclusions: The considerable clinical and pathological overlapping observed among homozygous 129MM patients favours the view that FFI and CJD178 are the extremes of a spectrum rather than two discrete and separate entities. Other genetic or environmental factors apart from the polymorphism in codon 129 may play a role in determining the phenotypic expression of the D178N mutation in the PRNP gene.


Psychological Medicine | 2010

Cognitive/personality pattern and triplet expansion size in adult myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1): CTG repeats, cognition and personality in DM1

Andone Sistiaga; I. Urreta; M. Jodar; Ana-Maria Cobo; J I Emparanza; David Otaegui; J. J. Poza; José J. Merino; H. Imaz; J.F. Martí-Massó; A. López de Munain

BACKGROUNDnAlthough central nervous system (CNS) involvement in adult myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) was described long ago, the large number of variables affecting the cognitive and personality profile have made it difficult to determine the effect of DM1 on the brain. The aim of this study was to define the cognitive and personality patterns in adult DM1 patients, and to analyse the relationship between these clinical patterns and their association with the underlying molecular defect.nnnMETHODnWe examined 121 adult DM1 patients with confirmed molecular CTG repeat expansion and 54 control subjects using comprehensive neuropsychological tests and personality assessments with the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI)-II. We used a multiple linear regression model to assess the effect of each variable on cognition and personality adjusted to the remainders.nnnRESULTSnPatients performed significantly worse than controls in tests measuring executive function (principally cognitive inflexibility) and visuoconstructive ability. In the personality profile, some paranoid and aggressive traits were predominant. Furthermore, there was a significant negative correlation between the CTG expansion size and many of the neuropsychological and personality measures. The molecular defect also correlated with patients daytime somnolence.nnnCONCLUSIONSnBesides muscular symptomatology, there is significant CTG-dependent involvement of the CNS in adult DM1 patients. Our data indicate that the cognitive impairment predominantly affects the fronto-parietal lobe.


Computers in Biology and Medicine | 2011

Neurocognitive disorder detection based on feature vectors extracted from VBM analysis of structural MRI

Alexandre Savio; Maite García-Sebastián; D. Chyzyk; Carmen Hernández; Manuel Graña; Andone Sistiaga; A. López de Munain; Jorge Villanúa

Dementia is a growing concern due to the aging process of the western societies. Non-invasive detection is therefore a high priority research endeavor. In this paper we report results of classification systems applied to the feature vectors obtained by a feature extraction method computed on structural magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI) volumes for the detection of two neurological disorders with cognitive impairment: myotonic dystrophy of type 1 (MD1) and Alzheimer disease (AD). The feature extraction process is based on the voxel clusters detected by voxel-based morphometry (VBM) analysis of sMRI upon a set of patient and control subjects. This feature extraction process is specific for each kind of disease and is grounded on the findings obtained by medical experts. The 10-fold cross-validation results of several statistical and neural network based classification algorithms trained and tested on these features show high specificity and moderate sensitivity of the classifiers, suggesting that the approach is better suited for rejecting than for detecting early stages of the diseases.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

Mis-splicing of Tau exon 10 in myotonic dystrophy type 1 is reproduced by overexpression of CELF2 but not by MBNL1 silencing

Claire-Marie Dhaenens; H. Tran; M.-L. Frandemiche; C. Carpentier; S. Schraen-Maschke; Andone Sistiaga; M. Goicoechea; Sabiha Eddarkaoui; E. Van Brussels; Hélène Obriot; A. Labudeck; M.H. Gevaert; Francisco-Jose Fernandez-Gomez; Nicolas Charlet-Berguerand; Vincent Deramecourt; Claude-Alain Maurage; Luc Buée; A. López de Munain; Bernard Sablonnière; M.L. Caillet-Boudin; Nicolas Sergeant

Tau is the proteinaceous component of intraneuronal aggregates common to neurodegenerative diseases called Tauopathies, including myotonic dystrophy type 1. In myotonic dystrophy type 1, the presence of microtubule-associated protein Tau aggregates is associated with a mis-splicing of Tau. A toxic gain-of-function at the ribonucleic acid level is a major etiological factor responsible for the mis-splicing of several transcripts in myotonic dystrophy type 1. These are probably the consequence of a loss of muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) function or gain of CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 1 (CELF1) splicing function. Whether these two dysfunctions occur together or separately and whether all mis-splicing events in myotonic dystrophy type 1 brain result from one or both of these dysfunctions remains unknown. Here, we analyzed the splicing of Tau exons 2 and 10 in the brain of myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients. Two myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients showed a mis-splicing of exon 10 whereas exon 2-inclusion was reduced in all myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients. In order to determine the potential factors responsible for exon 10 mis-splicing, we studied the effect of the splicing factors muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1), CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 1 (CELF1), CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 2 (CELF2), and CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 4 (CELF4) or a dominant-negative CUGBP1 and ETR-3 like factor (CELF) factor on Tau exon 10 splicing by ectopic expression or siRNA. Interestingly, the inclusion of Tau exon 10 is reduced by CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 2 (CELF2) whereas it is insensitive to the loss-of-function of muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1), CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 1 (CELF1) gain-of-function, or a dominant-negative of CUGBP1 and ETR-3 like factor (CELF) factor. Moreover, we observed an increased expression of CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 2 (CELF2) only in the brain of myotonic dystrophy type 1 patients with a mis-splicing of exon 10. Taken together, our results indicate the occurrence of a mis-splicing event in myotonic dystrophy type 1 that is induced neither by a loss of muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) function nor by a gain of CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 1 (CELF1) function but is rather associated to CUGBP1 and ETR3-like factor 2 (CELF2) gain-of-function.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 1993

Clinical signs of brain death simulated by Guillain-Barré syndrome

J.F. Martí-Massó; J. Suárez; A. López de Munain; Nieves Carrera

A 58-year-old woman with relapsing acute Guillain-Barré syndrome separated by long asymptomatic intervals presented clinical symptoms resembling those of brain death. She remained in this situation for 15 days and recovered with amnesia for this period. The amnesia was not explained either by metabolic encephalopathy or by sedative drugs. This case stresses the importance of the precise etiologic diagnosis of severe brain disease and the isoelectric EEG in brain death.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2010

Somatic mosaicism in a case of apparently sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease carrying a de novo D178N mutation in the PRNP gene†‡

Ainhoa Alzualde; Fermín Moreno; Pablo Martinez-Lage; Isidre Ferrer; Ana Gorostidi; David Otaegui; L. Blázquez; Begoña Atarés; Sergio Cardoso; M. Martínez de Pancorbo; Ramón A. Juste; Ana B. Rodríguez-Martínez; Begoña Indakoetxea; A. López de Munain

Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) are a group of rare fatal neurodegenerative disorders. Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease (CJD) represents the most common form of TSE and can be classified into sporadic, genetic, iatrogenic and variant forms. Genetic cases are related to prion protein gene mutations but they only account for 10–20% of cases. Here we report an apparently sporadic CJD case with negative family history carrying a mutation at codon 178 of prion protein gene. This mutation is a de novo mutation as the parents of the case do not show it. Furthermore the presence of three different alleles (wild type 129M‐178D and 129V‐178D and mutated 129V‐178N), confirmed by different methods, indicates that this de novo mutation is a post‐zygotic mutation that produces somatic mosaicism. The proportion of mutated cells in peripheral blood cells and in brain tissue was similar and was estimated at approximately 97%, suggesting that the mutation occurred at an early stage of embryogenesis. Neuropathological examination disclosed spongiform change mainly involving the caudate and putamen, and the cerebral cortex, together with proteinase K‐resistant PrP globular deposits in the cerebrum and cerebellum. PrP typing was characterized by a lower band of 21u2009kDa. This is the first case of mosaicism described in prion diseases and illustrates a potential etiology for apparently sporadic neurodegenerative diseases. In light of this case, genetic counseling for inherited and sporadic forms of transmissible encephalopathies should take into account this possibility for genetic screening procedures.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2007

Genes related to iron metabolism and susceptibility to Alzheimer's disease in Basque population.

L. Blázquez; D. De Juan; Javier Ruiz-Martínez; J I Emparanza; A. Sáenz; David Otaegui; Andone Sistiaga; Pablo Martinez-Lage; Isabel Lamet; Lluís Samaranch; Cristina Buiza; Igone Etxeberria; Enrique Arriola; Emilio Cuadrado; E. Urdaneta; José Javier Yanguas; A. López de Munain

Alzheimers disease (AD) is the most common dementing disorder and presents with a progressive and irreversible cognitive decline of gradual onset. To date, several reports have involved iron in AD physiopathology. In this study, we have analysed TFC2 variant and HFE mutations (H63D and C282Y) in 211 AD patients and 167 controls recruited from an area of the Basque Country. Furthermore, we have studied APOE genotype as it is a well-known risk factor for AD. APOE epsilon 4 allele was associated with an increased risk of AD and an earlier age at onset, whereas no association was found between TFC2 or HFE C282Y mutation and disease susceptibility. The frequency of H63D mutation was higher in control population (29.9%) than in AD patients (18%), suggesting a protective role of this allele on AD either due to the presence of the mutation itself or through the effect of other related genes in the ancestral haplotype in which it is included.


Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2009

Cognitive function in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy correlates with the molecular defect

Andone Sistiaga; Pilar Camaño; D. Otaegui; B. Ibáñez; J. Ruiz-Martinez; J. F. Martí-Massó; A. López de Munain

Previous studies based on case descriptions and neuroradiological findings have suggested central nervous system (CNS) involvement in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy. The aim of this work is to explore the relationship between cognitive/personality pattern and the underlying molecular defect for this muscular dystrophy. We performed a wide‐ranging neuropsychological assessment of 34 molecularly confirmed facioscapulohumeral dystrophy patients and 49 control subjects, all of whom also received the Millon‐II Multiaxial Clinical Inventory (MCMI‐II). Patients and controls show mild learning‐level differences in the neuropsychological profile, and only the hysteriform scale is statistically higher in patients than controls. The patients’ intelligence quotient (IQ) is related to the size of the deleted fragment but not to the degree of muscular impairment. The results of this study indicate a cut‐off point and two distinct cognitive profiles in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, depending on the patients’ molecular defect: patients with a fragment size >24 kb show a relatively normal cognitive pattern, whereas those with a fragment size ≤24 kb show a significantly reduced IQ and difficulties with verbal function and visuo‐constructive tasks. This work provides more evidence for the involvement of the CNS in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy and suggests that the fragment size should be taken into account in the clinical management of facioscapulohumeral dystrophy as it has a predictive value on the cognitive phenotype.


Neurologia | 2006

Anticuerpos IgG-NMO en la neuromielitis óptica : a propósito de 2 casos

L. Zuliani; A. López de Munain; J. Ruiz Martinez; Javier Olascoaga; Francesc Graus; A. Saiz


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2013

MRI muscle fat quantification in ambulant patients with limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2A and correlation with clinical severity

R. Fernández-Torrón; A. Guisasola; J.M. Alústiza; Elsa Fernandez; J. Sánchez-González; I. Lodoso; D. Otaegui; J. J. Poza; A. Sáenz; A. López de Munain

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J.F. Martí-Massó

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Andone Sistiaga

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Nieves Carrera

University of the Basque Country

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A. Sáenz

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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J. J. Poza

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Ainhoa Alzualde

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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Ana Gorostidi

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

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