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Dive into the research topics where Adeline K. Nicholas is active.

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Featured researches published by Adeline K. Nicholas.


Nature | 2006

An SCN9A channelopathy causes congenital inability to experience pain.

James J. Cox; Frank Reimann; Adeline K. Nicholas; G Thornton; Emma Roberts; K Springell; Gulshan Karbani; H Jafri; J Mannan; Y Raashid; Lihadh Al-Gazali; H Hamamy; Enza Maria Valente; S Gorman; R Williams; Duncan P. McHale; John N. Wood; Fiona M. Gribble; Christopher Geoffrey Woods

The complete inability to sense pain in an otherwise healthy individual is a very rare phenotype. In three consanguineous families from northern Pakistan, we mapped the condition as an autosomal-recessive trait to chromosome 2q24.3. This region contains the gene SCN9A, encoding the α-subunit of the voltage-gated sodium channel, Nav1.7, which is strongly expressed in nociceptive neurons. Sequence analysis of SCN9A in affected individuals revealed three distinct homozygous nonsense mutations (S459X, I767X and W897X). We show that these mutations cause loss of function of Nav1.7 by co-expression of wild-type or mutant human Nav1.7 with sodium channel β1 and β2 subunits in HEK293 cells. In cells expressing mutant Nav1.7, the currents were no greater than background. Our data suggest that SCN9A is an essential and non-redundant requirement for nociception in humans. These findings should stimulate the search for novel analgesics that selectively target this sodium channel subunit.


Nature Genetics | 2010

WDR62 is associated with the spindle pole and is mutated in human microcephaly

Adeline K. Nicholas; Maryam Khurshid; Julie Désir; Ofélia P. Carvalho; James J. Cox; Gemma Thornton; Rizwana Kausar; Muhammad Ansar; Wasim Ahmad; Alain Verloes; Sandrine Passemard; Jean Paul Misson; Susan Lindsay; Fanni Gergely; William B. Dobyns; Emma Roberts; Marc Abramowicz; C. Geoffrey Woods

Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH) is a disorder of neurodevelopment resulting in a small brain. We identified WDR62 as the second most common cause of MCPH after finding homozygous missense and frame-shifting mutations in seven MCPH families. In human cell lines, we found that WDR62 is a spindle pole protein, as are ASPM and STIL, the MCPH7 and MCHP7 proteins. Mutant WDR62 proteins failed to localize to the mitotic spindle pole. In human and mouse embryonic brain, we found that WDR62 expression was restricted to neural precursors undergoing mitosis. These data lend support to the hypothesis that the exquisite control of the cleavage furrow orientation in mammalian neural precursor cell mitosis, controlled in great part by the centrosomes and spindle poles, is critical both in causing MCPH when perturbed and, when modulated, generating the evolutionarily enlarged human brain.


Nature Genetics | 2011

A primary microcephaly protein complex forms a ring around parental centrioles

Joo-Hee Sir; Alexis R. Barr; Adeline K. Nicholas; Ofélia P. Carvalho; Maryam Khurshid; Alex Sossick; Stefanie Reichelt; Clive D'Santos; C. Geoffrey Woods; Fanni Gergely

Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH) is characterized by a substantial reduction in prenatal human brain growth without alteration of the cerebral architecture and is caused by biallelic mutations in genes coding for a subset of centrosomal proteins. Although at least three of these proteins have been implicated in centrosome duplication, the nature of the centrosome dysfunction that underlies the neurodevelopmental defect in MCPH is unclear. Here we report a homozygous MCPH-causing mutation in human CEP63. CEP63 forms a complex with another MCPH protein, CEP152, a conserved centrosome duplication factor. Together, these two proteins are essential for maintaining normal centrosome numbers in cells. Using super-resolution microscopy, we found that CEP63 and CEP152 co-localize in a discrete ring around the proximal end of the parental centriole, a pattern specifically disrupted in CEP63-deficient cells derived from patients with MCPH. This work suggests that the CEP152-CEP63 ring-like structure ensures normal neurodevelopment and that its impairment particularly affects human cerebral cortex growth.


Pain | 2009

Two novel SCN9A mutations causing insensitivity to pain.

Kristian Bernhard Nilsen; Adeline K. Nicholas; C.G. Woods; Svein Ivar Mellgren; M. Nebuchennykh; Jan O. Aasly

The sensation of pain is important and there may be serious consequences if it is missing. Recently, the genetic basis for a channelopathy characterised by a congenital inability to experience pain has been described and channelopathy-associated insensitivity to pain has been proposed as a suitable name for this condition. Different mutations in the SCN9A gene causing loss of function of the voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 have been reported in patients with this rare disease. Here we describe a woman with insensitivity to pain with two novel mutations in the SCN9A gene, coding for the Nav1.7 channel. We also discuss the finding of anosmia which apparently is a common feature in these patients.


Human Mutation | 2010

Congenital Insensitivity to Pain: Novel SCN9A Missense and In-Frame Deletion Mutations

James J. Cox; Jony Sheynin; Zamir Shorer; Frank Reimann; Adeline K. Nicholas; Lorena Zubović; Marco Baralle; Elizabeth Wraige; Esther Manor; Jacov Levy; C. Geoffery Woods; Ruti Parvari

SCN9Aencodes the voltage‐gated sodium channel Nav1.7, a protein highly expressed in pain‐sensing neurons. Mutations in SCN9A cause three human pain disorders: bi‐allelic loss of function mutations result in Channelopathy‐associated Insensitivity to Pain (CIP), whereas activating mutations cause severe episodic pain in Paroxysmal Extreme Pain Disorder (PEPD) and Primary Erythermalgia (PE). To date, all mutations in SCN9A that cause a complete inability to experience pain are protein truncating and presumably lead to no protein being produced. Here, we describe the identification and functional characterization of two novel non‐truncating mutations in families with CIP: a homozygously‐inherited missense mutation found in a consanguineous Israeli Bedouin family (Nav1.7‐R896Q) and a five amino acid in‐frame deletion found in a sporadic compound heterozygote (Nav1.7‐ΔR1370‐L1374). Both of these mutations map to the pore region of the Nav1.7 sodium channel. Using transient transfection of PC12 cells we found a significant reduction in membrane localization of the mutant protein compared to the wild type. Furthermore, voltage clamp experiments of mutant‐transfected HEK293 cells show a complete loss of function of the sodium channel, consistent with the absence of pain phenotype. In summary, this study has identified critical amino acids needed for the normal subcellular localization and function of Nav1.7.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

The molecular landscape of ASPM mutations in primary microcephaly

Adeline K. Nicholas; Eric Swanson; James J. Cox; Gulshan Karbani; Saghira Malik; Kelly Springell; Daniel J. Hampshire; Mustaq Ahmed; Jacquelyn Bond; Daniela Di Benedetto; Marco Fichera; Corrado Romano; William B. Dobyns; Christopher Geoffrey Woods

Background: Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH) is a model disease to study human neurogenesis. In affected individuals the brain grows at a reduced rate during fetal life resulting in a small but structurally normal brain and mental retardation. The condition is genetically heterogeneous with mutations in ASPM being most commonly reported. Methods and results: We have examined this further by studying three cohorts of microcephalic children to extend both the phenotype and the mutation spectrum. Firstly, in 99 consecutively ascertained consanguineous families with a strict diagnosis of MCPH, 41 (41%) were homozygous at the MCPH5 locus and all but two families had mutations. Thus, 39% of consanguineous MCPH families had homozygous ASPM mutations. Secondly, in 27 non-consanguineous, predominantly Caucasian families with a strict diagnosis of MCPH, 11 (40%) had ASPM mutations. Thirdly, in 45 families with a less restricted phenotype including microcephaly and mental retardation, but regardless of other neurological features, only 3 (7%) had an ASPM mutation. This report contains 27 novel mutations and almost doubles the number of MCPH associated ASPM mutations known to 57. All but one of the mutations lead to the use of a premature termination codon, 23 were nonsense mutations, 28 deletions or insertions, 5 splicing, and 1 was a translocation. Seventeen of the 57 mutations were recurrent. There were no definitive missense mutations found nor was there any mutation/phenotype correlation. ASPM mutations were found in all ethnic groups studied. Conclusion: This study confirms that mutations in ASPM are the most common cause of MCPH, that ASPM mutations are restricted to individuals with an MCPH phenotype, and that ASPM testing in primary microcephaly is clinically useful.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2011

A novel NGF mutation clarifies the molecular mechanism and extends the phenotypic spectrum of the HSAN5 neuropathy

Ofélia P. Carvalho; Gemma Thornton; J Hertecant; Henry Houlden; Adeline K. Nicholas; James J. Cox; M Rielly; Lihadh Al-Gazali; Christopher Geoffrey Woods

Background Nerve growth factor β (NGFβ) and tyrosine kinase receptor type A (TRKA) are a well studied neurotrophin/receptor duo involved in neuronal survival and differentiation. The only previously reported hereditary sensory neuropathy caused by an NGF mutation, c.661C>T (HSAN5), and the pathology caused by biallelic mutations in the TRKA gene (NTRK1) (HSAN4), share only some clinical features. A consanguineous Arab family, where five of the six children were completely unable to perceive pain, were mentally retarded, did not sweat, could not discriminate temperature, and had a chronic immunodeficiency, is reported here. The condition is linked to a new homozygous mutation in the NGF gene, c.[680C>A]+[681_682delGG]. Methods Genetic linkage and standard sequencing techniques were used to identify the causative gene. Using wild-type or mutant over-expression constructs transfected into PC12 and COS-7 cells, the cellular and molecular consequences of the mutations were investigated. Results The mutant gene produced a precursor protein V232fs that was unable to differentiate PC12 cells. V232fs was not secreted from cells as mature NGFβ. Conclusions Both the clinical and cellular data suggest that the c.[680C>A]+[681_682delGG] NGF mutation is a functional null. The HSAN5 phenotype is extended to encompass HSAN4-like characteristics. It is concluded that the HSAN4 and HSAN5 phenotypes are parts of a phenotypic spectrum caused by changes in the NGF/TRKA signalling pathway.


Nature Genetics | 2015

Transcriptional regulator PRDM12 is essential for human pain perception

Ya Chun Chen; Michaela Auer-Grumbach; Shinya Matsukawa; Manuela Zitzelsberger; Andreas C. Themistocleous; Tim M. Strom; Chrysanthi Samara; Adrian W Moore; Lily Ting-Yin Cho; Gareth T. Young; Caecilia Weiss; Maria Schabhüttl; Rolf Stucka; Annina B. Schmid; Yesim Parman; Luitgard Graul-Neumann; Wolfram Heinritz; Eberhard Passarge; Rosemarie Watson; Jens Michael Hertz; Ute Moog; Manuela Baumgartner; Enza Maria Valente; Diego Pereira; Carlos Martín Restrepo; Istvan Katona; Marina Dusl; Claudia Stendel; Thomas Wieland; Fay Stafford

Pain perception has evolved as a warning mechanism to alert organisms to tissue damage and dangerous environments. In humans, however, undesirable, excessive or chronic pain is a common and major societal burden for which available medical treatments are currently suboptimal. New therapeutic options have recently been derived from studies of individuals with congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP). Here we identified 10 different homozygous mutations in PRDM12 (encoding PRDI-BF1 and RIZ homology domain-containing protein 12) in subjects with CIP from 11 families. Prdm proteins are a family of epigenetic regulators that control neural specification and neurogenesis. We determined that Prdm12 is expressed in nociceptors and their progenitors and participates in the development of sensory neurons in Xenopus embryos. Moreover, CIP-associated mutants abrogate the histone-modifying potential associated with wild-type Prdm12. Prdm12 emerges as a key factor in the orchestration of sensory neurogenesis and may hold promise as a target for new pain therapeutics.


Pain | 2009

Absence of pain with hyperhidrosis: A new syndrome where vascular afferents may mediate cutaneous sensation

David Bowsher; C. Geoffrey Woods; Adeline K. Nicholas; Ofelia M. Carvalho; Carol E. Haggett; Brian Tedman; James MacKenzie; Daniel R. Crooks; Nasir Mahmood; J. Aidan Twomey; Samantha Hann; Dilwyn Jones; James Wymer; Phillip J. Albrecht; Charles Argoff; Frank L. Rice

ABSTRACT Congenital absence of pain perception is a rare phenotype. Here we report two unrelated adult individuals who have a previously unreported neuropathy consisting of congenital absence of pain with hyperhidrosis (CAPH). Both subjects had normal intelligence and productive lives despite failure to experience pain due to broken bones, severe cold or burns. Functional assessments revealed that both are generally hypesthetic with thresholds greater than two standard deviations above normal for a several of modalities in addition to noxious stimuli. Sweating was 3 to 8‐fold greater than normal. Sural nerve biopsy showed that all types of myelinated and unmyelinated fibers were severely reduced. Extensive multi‐antibody immunofluorescence analyses were conducted on several skin biopsies from the hands and back of one CAPH subject and two normal subjects. The CAPH subject had all normal types of immunochemically and morphologically distinct sensory and autonomic innervation to the vasculature and sweat glands, including a previously unknown cholinergic arterial innervation. Virtually all other types of normal cutaneous C, Aδ and Aβ‐fiber endings were absent. This subject had no mutations in the genes SCN9A, SCN10A, SCN11A, NGFB, TRKA, NRTN and GFRA2. Our findings suggest three hypotheses: (1) that development or maintenance of sensory innervation to cutaneous vasculature and sweat glands may be under separate genetic control from that of all other cutaneous sensory innervation, (2) the latter innervation is preferentially vulnerable to some environmental factor, and (3) vascular and sweat gland afferents may contribute to conscious cutaneous perception.


European Journal of Pain | 2009

190 TWO NOVEL SCN9A MUTATIONS CAUSING INSENSITIVITY TO PAIN

Kristian Bernhard Nilsen; Adeline K. Nicholas; C.G. Woods; Svein Ivar Mellgren; M. Nebuchennykh; Jan O. Aasly

to “inflammatory soup”. In this study, we investigated the contribution of TRPV4 to thermal and mechanical hyperalgesia in wild type and TRPV4 knockout mice, following NGF administration. After acclimatisation, baseline measurements of the latency of withdrawal to radiant heat and 50% withdrawal threshold to repeated von Frey hair application to the plantar surface of the hind paws were made. The withdrawal threshold to pressure applied to the whole paw was also assessed. These measurements were repeated 1 hour and 24 hours after systemic administration of NGF (1mg/g, i.p.). No differences were seen between baseline measurements for wild type and knockout mice. Both wild type and knockout mice showed a significant decrease in the latency of withdrawal to heat stimuli and von Frey withdrawal thresholds at 1 hour and 24 hours following NGF injection, indicative of thermal and mechanical hypersensitivity. However, only wild type mice showed a reduced withdrawal threshold to paw pressure after NGF treatment. We conclude that TRPV4 sensitisation is involved in the increased sensitivity to paw pressure observed following NGF injection in mice.

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James J. Cox

University College London

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Adrian W Moore

Western General Hospital

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C.G. Woods

University of Cambridge

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Fay Stafford

University of Cambridge

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