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Dive into the research topics where Akanchha Kesari is active.

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Featured researches published by Akanchha Kesari.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Mutations in GDP-Mannose Pyrophosphorylase B Cause Congenital and Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophies Associated with Hypoglycosylation of α-Dystroglycan

Keren J. Carss; Elizabeth Stevens; A. Reghan Foley; Sebahattin Cirak; Moniek Riemersma; Silvia Torelli; Alexander Hoischen; Tobias Willer; Monique van Scherpenzeel; Steven A. Moore; Sonia Messina; Enrico Bertini; Carsten G. Bönnemann; Jose E. Abdenur; Carla Grosmann; Akanchha Kesari; R. Quinlivan; Leigh B. Waddell; Helen Young; Elizabeth Wraige; Shu Yau; Lina Brodd; L. Feng; C. Sewry; Daniel G. MacArthur; Kathryn N. North; Eric P. Hoffman; Derek L. Stemple; Hans van Bokhoven; Kevin P. Campbell

Congenital muscular dystrophies with hypoglycosylation of α-dystroglycan (α-DG) are a heterogeneous group of disorders often associated with brain and eye defects in addition to muscular dystrophy. Causative variants in 14 genes thought to be involved in the glycosylation of α-DG have been identified thus far. Allelic mutations in these genes might also cause milder limb-girdle muscular dystrophy phenotypes. Using a combination of exome and Sanger sequencing in eight unrelated individuals, we present evidence that mutations in guanosine diphosphate mannose (GDP-mannose) pyrophosphorylase B (GMPPB) can result in muscular dystrophy variants with hypoglycosylated α-DG. GMPPB catalyzes the formation of GDP-mannose from GTP and mannose-1-phosphate. GDP-mannose is required for O-mannosylation of proteins, including α-DG, and it is the substrate of cytosolic mannosyltransferases. We found reduced α-DG glycosylation in the muscle biopsies of affected individuals and in available fibroblasts. Overexpression of wild-type GMPPB in fibroblasts from an affected individual partially restored glycosylation of α-DG. Whereas wild-type GMPPB localized to the cytoplasm, five of the identified missense mutations caused formation of aggregates in the cytoplasm or near membrane protrusions. Additionally, knockdown of the GMPPB ortholog in zebrafish caused structural muscle defects with decreased motility, eye abnormalities, and reduced glycosylation of α-DG. Together, these data indicate that GMPPB mutations are responsible for congenital and limb-girdle muscular dystrophies with hypoglycosylation of α-DG.


American Journal of Pathology | 2008

Dysferlin Deficiency Enhances Monocyte Phagocytosis A Model for the Inflammatory Onset of Limb-Girdle Muscular Dystrophy 2B

Kanneboyina Nagaraju; Rashmi Rawat; Edina Veszelovszky; Rachana Thapliyal; Akanchha Kesari; Susan Sparks; Nina Raben; Paul H. Plotz; Eric P. Hoffman

Dysferlin deficiency causes limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B (LGMD2B; proximal weakness) and Miyoshi myopathy (distal weakness). Muscle inflammation is often present in dysferlin deficiency, and patients are frequently misdiagnosed as having polymyositis. Because monocytes normally express dysferlin, we hypothesized that monocyte/macrophage dysfunction in dysferlin-deficient patients might contribute to disease onset and progression. We therefore examined phagocytic activity, in the presence and absence of cytokines, in freshly isolated peripheral blood monocytes from LGMD2B patients and in the SJL dysferlin-deficient mouse model. Dysferlin-deficient monocytes showed increased phagocytic activity compared with control cells. siRNA-mediated inhibition of dysferlin expression in the J774 macrophage cell line resulted in significantly enhanced phagocytosis, both at baseline and in response to tumor necrosis factor-alpha. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed positive staining for several mononuclear cell activation markers in LGMD2B human muscle and SJL mouse muscle. SJL muscle showed strong up-regulation of endocytic proteins CIMPR, clathrin, and adaptin-alpha, and LGMD2B muscle exhibited decreased expression of decay accelerating factor, which was not dysferlin-specific. We further showed that expression levels of small Rho family GTPases RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc 42 were increased in dysferlin-deficient murine immune cells compared with control cells. Therefore, we hypothesize that mild myofiber damage in dysferlin-deficient muscle stimulates an inflammatory cascade that may initiate, exacerbate, and possibly perpetuate the underlying myofiber-specific dystrophic process.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Lamin A/C–mediated neuromuscular junction defects in Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy

Alexandre Méjat; Valérie Decostre; Juan Li; Laure Renou; Akanchha Kesari; Daniel Hantaï; Colin L. Stewart; Xiao Xiao; Eric P. Hoffman; Gisèle Bonne; Tom Misteli

The LMNA gene encodes lamins A and C, two intermediate filament-type proteins that are important determinants of interphase nuclear architecture. Mutations in LMNA lead to a wide spectrum of human diseases including autosomal dominant Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (AD-EDMD), which affects skeletal and cardiac muscle. The cellular mechanisms by which mutations in LMNA cause disease have been elusive. Here, we demonstrate that defects in neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) are part of the disease mechanism in AD-EDMD. Two AD-EDMD mouse models show innervation defects including misexpression of electrical activity–dependent genes and altered epigenetic chromatin modifications. Synaptic nuclei are not properly recruited to the NMJ because of mislocalization of nuclear envelope components. AD-EDMD patients with LMNA mutations show the same cellular defects as the AD-EDMD mouse models. These results suggest that lamin A/C–mediated NMJ defects contribute to the AD-EDMD disease phenotype and provide insights into the cellular and molecular mechanisms for the muscle-specific phenotype of AD-EDMD.


Human Mutation | 2008

Integrated DNA, cDNA, and protein studies in Becker muscular dystrophy show high exception to the reading frame rule

Akanchha Kesari; Laura Pirra; Lakshmi Bremadesam; Orinthal McIntyre; Erynn Gordon; Alberto Dubrovsky; V. Viswanathan; Eric P. Hoffman

Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) is a milder form of X‐linked Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Here, we report a study of 75 patients with immunoblot and/or immunostaining findings of muscle biopsy consistent with BMD (abnormal dystrophin). We utilized multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification (MLPA) on genomic DNA (gDNA) to screen all 79 exons for both deletions and duplications. A total of 19 patients testing negative for MLPA mutations were tested for mRNA splicing abnormalities using cDNA‐MLPA on muscle biopsy. Complete cDNA sequencing was done on MLPA‐negative patients. We identified disease‐causing mutations in 66 (88%) of the patients. Of the mutation‐positive patients, 42 (64%) showed deletions of one or more exons, 14 (21%) showed duplications, and 10 (15%) showed various mutations detected by cDNA‐MLPA and sequencing studies. We found a high rate of “exceptions” to the reading frame rule in this BMD series (out‐of‐frame BMD; 17/56 deletions/duplications; 30%). This was partly explained by the high incidence of 5′ gene deletions in BMD patients (a region known to be a hotspot for exceptions), and due to complex splicing patterns in which a subset of transcripts showed deletions larger than gDNA (exon‐skipping). Comparing our findings in BMD to previously published DMD data, BMD patients have higher proportions of duplications, a different distribution of mutations, and higher exception to the reading frame rule. Hum Mutat 29(5), 728–737, 2008. 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


Annals of Neurology | 2015

Genetic modifiers of ambulation in the cooperative international Neuromuscular research group Duchenne natural history study

Luca Bello; Akanchha Kesari; Heather Gordish-Dressman; Avital Cnaan; Lauren P. Morgenroth; T. Duong; Erik Henricson; Elena Pegoraro; Craig M. McDonald; Eric P. Hoffman

We studied the effects of LTBP4 and SPP1 polymorphisms on age at loss of ambulation (LoA) in a multiethnic Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) cohort.


American Journal of Pathology | 2008

Dysferlin Deficiency Shows Compensatory Induction of Rab27A/Slp2a That May Contribute to Inflammatory Onset

Akanchha Kesari; Mitsunori Fukuda; Susan Knoblach; Rumaisa Bashir; Gustavo A. Nader; Deepak A. Rao; Kanneboyina Nagaraju; Eric P. Hoffman

Mutations in the dysferlin gene cause limb girdle muscular dystrophy 2B (LGMD2B) and Miyoshi myopathy. Dysferlin-deficient cells show abnormalities in vesicular traffic and membrane repair although onset of symptoms is not commonly seen until the late teenage years and is often associated with subacute onset and marked muscle inflammation. To identify molecular networks specific to dysferlin-deficient muscle that might explain disease pathogenesis, muscle mRNA profiles from 10 mutation-positive LGMD2B/MM patients were compared with a disease control [LGMD2I; (n = 9)], and normal muscle samples (n = 11). Query of inflammatory pathways suggested LGMD2B-specific increases in co-stimulatory signaling between dendritic cells and T cells (CD86, CD28, and CTLA4), associated with localized expression of both versican and tenascin. LGMD2B muscle also showed an increase in vesicular trafficking pathway proteins not normally observed in muscle (synaptotagmin-like protein Slp2a/SYTL2 and the small GTPase Rab27A). We propose that Rab27A/Slp2a expression in LGMD2B muscle provides a compensatory vesicular trafficking pathway that is able to repair membrane damage in the absence of dysferlin. However, this same pathway may release endocytotic vesicle contents, resulting in an inflammatory microenvironment. As dysferlin deficiency has been shown to enhance phagocytosis by macrophages, together with our findings of abnormal myofiber endocytosis pathways and dendritic-T cell activation markers, these results suggest a model of immune and inflammatory network over-stimulation that may explain the subacute inflammatory presentation.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2013

A novel mutation expands the genetic and clinical spectrum of MYH7-related myopathies

Nigel F. Clarke; Kimberly Amburgey; James W. Teener; Sandra Camelo-Piragua; Akanchha Kesari; Leigh B. Waddell; Mark R. Davis; Nigel G. Laing; Nicole Monnier; Kathryn N. North; Eric P. Hoffman; James J. Dowling

MYH7 mutations are an established cause of Laing distal myopathy, myosin storage myopathy, and cardiomyopathy, as well as additional myopathy subtypes. We report a novel MYH7 mutation (p.Leu1597Arg) that arose de novo in two unrelated probands. Proband 1 has a myopathy characterized by distal weakness and prominent contractures and histopathology typical of multi-minicore disease. Proband 2 has an axial myopathy and histopathology consistent with congenital fiber type disproportion. These cases highlight the broad spectrum of clinical and histological patterns associated with MYH7 mutations, and provide further evidence that MYH7 is likely responsible for a greater proportion of congenital myopathies than currently appreciated.


Environment International | 2010

PCB congener specific oxidative stress response by microarray analysis using human liver cell line.

Supriyo De; Somiranjan Ghosh; Raghunath Chatterjee; Y-Q Chen; Linda Moses; Akanchha Kesari; Eric P. Hoffman; Sisir K. Dutta

In this study we have examined the effect of exposure to different congeners of PCBs and their role in oxidative stress response. A metabolically competent human liver cell line (HepG2) was exposed with two prototype congeners of PCBs: coplanar PCB-77 and non-coplanar PCB-153. After the predetermined times of exposure (0-24h) at 70 μM concentration, the HepG2 cells showed significant apoptotic changes by fluorescent microscopy after 12h of exposure. Gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) identified oxidative stress as the predominant enrichment. Further, paraquat assay showed that PCB congeners lead to oxidative stress to different extents, PCB-77 being more toxic. This study, with emphasis on all recommended microarray quality control steps, showed that apoptosis was one of the most significant cellular processes as a result of oxidative stress, but each of these congeners had a unique signature gene expression, which was further validated by Taqman real time PCR and immunoblotting. The pathways involved leading to the common apoptotic effect were completely different. Further in-silico analysis showed that PCB-153 most likely acted through the TNF receptor, leading to oxidative stress involving metallothionein gene families, and causing apoptosis mainly by the Fas receptor signaling pathway. In contrast, PCB-77 acted through the aryl hydrocarbon receptor. It induced oxidative stress through the involvement of cytochrome P450 (CYP1A1) leading to apoptosis through AHR/ARNT pathway.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2009

Somatic mosaicism for Duchenne dystrophy: Evidence for genetic normalization mitigating muscle symptoms

Akanchha Kesari; Robert Neel; Lynne E. Wagoner; Brennan Harmon; Christopher F. Spurney; Eric P. Hoffman

We describe a young adult male presenting with cardiac failure necessitating cardiac transplantation 7 months after presentation. Skeletal muscle biopsy showed mosaic immunostaining for dystrophin. DNA studies showed somatic mosaicism for a nonsense mutation in the dystrophin gene (Arg2905X). The frequency of normal versus mutant genes were determined in blood/DNA (50:50), muscle/DNA (80:20) and muscle/mRNA (90:10). These data are consistent with genetic normalization processes that may biochemically rescue skeletal muscle in male somatic mosaic patients mitigating muscle symptoms (gradual loss of dystrophin‐negative skeletal muscle tissue replaced by dystrophin‐positive stem cells). To our knowledge, this is only the second reported case of a clinically ascertained patient showing somatic mosaicism for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). We hypothesize that many somatic mosaic males for DMD exist, yet they are not detected clinically due to genetic normalization. Somatic mosaicism for DMD should be considered in acute heart failure with dilated cardiomyopathy, as genetic normalization in heart is unlikely to occur.


Journal of Neurology | 2005

Study of Survival of Motor Neuron (SMN) and Neuronal Apoptosis Inhibitory Protein (NAIP) gene deletions in SMA patients

Akanchha Kesari; Usha Kant Misra; Jayantee Kalita; Vijay Nath Mishra; Sunil Pradhan; S. J. Patil; Sr Phadke; Balraj Mittal

In view of the paucity of deletion studies of survival of motor neuron (SMN) and neuronal apoptosis inhibitor protein (NAIP) genes in Indian SMA patients, this study has been undertaken to determine the status of SMN1, SMN2 and NAIP gene deletions in Indian SMA patients. Clinically and neurophysiologically diagnosed SMA patients were included in the study. A gene deletion study was carried out in 45 proximal SMA patients and 50 controls of the same ethnic group. Both SMN1 and NAIP genes showed homozygous absence in 76 % and 31 % respectively in proximal SMA patients. It is proposed that the lower deletion frequency of SMN1 gene in Indian patients may be due to mutations present in other genes or population variation, which need further study.

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Eric P. Hoffman

Children's National Medical Center

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Carsten G. Bönnemann

National Institutes of Health

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Balraj Mittal

Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences

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Leigh B. Waddell

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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Paul H. Plotz

National Institutes of Health

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Tulio E. Bertorini

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Avital Cnaan

Children's National Medical Center

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