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Featured researches published by Alessandra Renieri.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

FOXG1 Is Responsible for the Congenital Variant of Rett Syndrome

Francesca Ariani; Giuseppe Hayek; Dalila Rondinella; Rosangela Artuso; Maria Antonietta Mencarelli; Ariele Spanhol-Rosseto; Marzia Pollazzon; Sabrina Buoni; Ottavia Spiga; Sara Ricciardi; Ilaria Meloni; Ilaria Longo; Francesca Mari; Vania Broccoli; Michele Zappella; Alessandra Renieri

Rett syndrome is a severe neurodevelopmental disease caused by mutations in the X-linked gene encoding for the methyl-CpG-binding protein MeCP2. Here, we report the identification of FOXG1-truncating mutations in two patients affected by the congenital variant of Rett syndrome. FOXG1 encodes a brain-specific transcriptional repressor that is essential for early development of the telencephalon. Molecular analysis revealed that Foxg1 might also share common molecular mechanisms with MeCP2 during neuronal development, exhibiting partially overlapping expression domain in postnatal cortex and neuronal subnuclear localization.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

X-linked Alport syndrome: Natural history and genotype-phenotype correlations in girls and women belonging to 195 families: A "European community Alport syndrome concerted action" study

J. P. Jais; Bertrand Knebelmann; I. Giatras; M. De Marchi; Gianfranco Rizzoni; Alessandra Renieri; M. Weber; Oliver Gross; K. O. Netzer; Frances Flinter; Yves Pirson; Karin Dahan; Jörgen Wieslander; Ulf Persson; Karl Tryggvason; P. Martin; Jens Michael Hertz; C. Schroder; M. Sanak; M. F. Carvalho; J. Saus; Corinne Antignac; H. Smeets; Marie-Claire Gubler

Alport syndrome (AS) is a type IV collagen hereditary disease characterized by progressive hematuric nephritis, hearing loss, and ocular changes. Mutations in the COL4A5 collagen gene are responsible for the more common X-linked dominant form of the disease characterized by much less severe disease in girls and women. A European Community Alport Syndrome Concerted Action (ECASCA) group was established to delineate the Alport syndrome phenotype in each gender and to determine genotype-phenotype correlations in a large number of families. Data concerning 329 families, 250 of them with an X-linked transmission, were collected. Characteristics of heterozygous girls and women belonging to the 195 families with proven COL4A5 mutation are compared with those of hemizygous boys and men. Hematuria was observed in 95% of carriers and consistently absent in the others. Proteinuria, hearing loss, and ocular defects developed in 75%, 28%, and 15%, respectively. The probability of developing end-stage renal disease or deafness before the age of 40 yr was 12% and 10%, respectively, in girls and women versus 90 and 80%, respectively, in boys and men. The risk of progression to end-stage renal disease appears to increase after the age of 60 yr in women. Because of the absence of genotype-phenotype correlation and the large intrafamilial phenotypic heterogeneity, early prognosis of the disease in X-linked Alport syndrome carriers remains moot. Risk factors for developing renal failure have been identified: the occurrence and progressive increase in proteinuria, and the development of a hearing defect.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

A Mutation in the Rett Syndrome Gene, MECP2, Causes X-Linked Mental Retardation and Progressive Spasticity in Males

Ilaria Meloni; Mirella Bruttini; Ilaria Longo; Francesca Mari; Flavio Rizzolio; Patrizia D'Adamo; Koenraad Denvriendt; Jean-Pierre Fryns; Daniela Toniolo; Alessandra Renieri

Heterozygous mutations in the X-linked MECP2 gene cause Rett syndrome, a severe neurodevelopmental disorder of young females. Only one male presenting an MECP2 mutation has been reported; he survived only to age 1 year, suggesting that mutations in MECP2 are male lethal. Here we report a three-generation family in which two affected males showed severe mental retardation and progressive spasticity, previously mapped in Xq27.2-qter. Two obligate carrier females showed either normal or borderline intelligence, simulating an X-linked recessive trait. The two males and the two obligate carrier females presented a mutation in the MECP2 gene, demonstrating that, in males, MECP2 can be responsible for severe mental retardation associated with neurological disorders.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005

CDKL5/STK9 is mutated in Rett syndrome variant with infantile spasms

Elisa Scala; Francesca Ariani; Francesca Mari; Rossella Caselli; Chiara Pescucci; I. Longo; Ilaria Meloni; Daniela Giachino; Mirella Bruttini; Giuseppe Hayek; Michele Zappella; Alessandra Renieri

Background: Rett syndrome is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder, almost exclusively affecting females and characterised by a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations. Both the classic form and preserved speech variant of Rett syndrome are due to mutations in the MECP2 gene. Several other variants of Rett syndrome have been described. In 1985, Hanefeld described a variant with the early appearance of convulsions. In this variant, the normal perinatal period is soon followed by the appearance of seizures, usually infantile spasms. We have observed two patients with signs of Rett syndrome showing acquired microcephaly and stereotypic midline hand movements. The disease started with generalised convulsions and myoclonic fits at 1.5 months in the first patient and with spasms at 10 days in the other, suggesting a diagnosis of the Hanefeld variant. In these patients, MECP2 point mutations and gross rearrangements were excluded by denaturing high performance liquid chromatography and real time quantitative PCR. The ARX and CDKL5 genes have been associated with West syndrome (infantile spasms, hypsarrhythmia, and mental retardation). Methods: Based on the clinical overlap between the Hanefeld variant and West syndrome, we analysed ARX and CDKL5 in the two girls. Results: We found frameshift deletions in CDKL5 in both patients; one in exon 5 (c.163_166delGAAA) and the other in exon 18 (c.2635_2636delCT). CDKL5 was then analysed in 19 classic Rett and 15 preserved speech variant patients, all MECP2 negative, but no mutations were found. Conclusion: Our results show that CDKL5 is responsible for a rare variant of Rett syndrome characterised by early development of convulsions, usually of the spasm type.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Preserved speech variant is allelic of classic Rett syndrome

Cristina De Bona; Michele Zappella; Giuseppe Hayek; Ilaria Meloni; Francesca Vitelli; Mirella Bruttini; Roberto Cusano; Paola Loffredo; Ilaria Longo; Alessandra Renieri

Rett syndrome is a neurological disorder affecting predominantly females with regression loss of speech and purposeful hand use, after a few months of almost normal development. Postnatal microcephaly, hand dispraxia, stereotypic ‘hand-washing’ activities, ataxia, and abnormal breathing are among its most characteristic features. Another aspect of this disorder is growth failure. The preserved speech variant (PSV) shares with Rett syndrome the same course and the stereotypic hand-washing activities but it differs in that patients typically recover some degree of speech and hand use and usually do not show growth failure. Progressive scoliosis, epilepsy and other minor handicaps, usually present in Rett syndrome, are rare in the preserved speech variant. Here we explore the spectrum of mutations affecting the MECP2 gene in a group of 25xa0classic Rett syndrome girls and in three patients with the preserved speech variant. Among the Rett syndrome group, two novel mutational hot spots (R270X and R294X), four novel mutations, two novel small deletions, as well as the previously reported 806delG, R168X and R255X mutations, were identified in 20/25xa0patients. Of note, among the preserved speech variants, two patients carry deletions of 41xa0bp and 44xa0bp each, which are strikingly similar to those observed in classic Rett syndrome. Our results confirm the presence of mutational hot spots in MECP2, broaden the spectrum of mutations, pinpoint additional mutational hot spots and establish that the preserved speech variant is indeed allelic of the classic form. Phenotype variability is only partially dependent on the kind of MECP2 mutation and other mechanisms such as skewed X-inactivation, and/or modifier gene effects should be investigated to explain the variable recovery in speech and hand use.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2014

Redox Imbalance and Morphological Changes in Skin Fibroblasts in Typical Rett Syndrome

Cinzia Signorini; Silvia Leoncini; Claudio De Felice; Alessandra Pecorelli; Ilaria Meloni; Francesca Ariani; Francesca Mari; Sonia Amabile; Eugenio Paccagnini; Mariangela Gentile; Giuseppe Belmonte; Gloria Zollo; Giuseppe Valacchi; Thierry Durand; Jean-Marie Galano; Lucia Ciccoli; Alessandra Renieri; Joussef Hayek

Evidence of oxidative stress has been reported in the blood of patients with Rett syndrome (RTT), a neurodevelopmental disorder mainly caused by mutations in the gene encoding the Methyl-CpG-binding protein 2. Little is known regarding the redox status in RTT cellular systems and its relationship with the morphological phenotype. In RTT patients (n = 16) we investigated four different oxidative stress markers, F2-Isoprostanes (F2-IsoPs), F4-Neuroprostanes (F4-NeuroPs), nonprotein bound iron (NPBI), and (4-HNE PAs), and glutathione in one of the most accessible cells, that is, skin fibroblasts, and searched for possible changes in cellular/intracellular structure and qualitative modifications of synthesized collagen. Significantly increased F4-NeuroPs (12-folds), F2-IsoPs (7.5-folds) NPBI (2.3-folds), 4-HNE PAs (1.48-folds), and GSSG (1.44-folds) were detected, with significantly decreased GSH (−43.6%) and GSH/GSSG ratio (−3.05 folds). A marked dilation of the rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae, associated with several cytoplasmic multilamellar bodies, was detectable in RTT fibroblasts. Colocalization of collagen I and collagen III, as well as the percentage of type I collagen as derived by semiquantitative immunofluorescence staining analyses, appears to be significantly reduced in RTT cells. Our findings indicate the presence of a redox imbalance and previously unrecognized morphological skin fibroblast abnormalities in RTT patients.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2003

Study of MECP2 gene in Rett syndrome variants and autistic girls.

Michele Zappella; Ilaria Meloni; Ilaria Longo; Roberto Canitano; Giuseppe Hayek; Lucia Rosaia; Francesca Mari; Alessandra Renieri

Mutations in MECP2 gene account for approximately 80% of cases of Rett syndrome (RTT), an X‐linked severe developmental disorder affecting young girls, as well as for most cases of Preserved Speech Variant (PSV), a mild RTT variant in which autistic behavior is common. The aim of this study is to determine whether MECP2 mutations are responsible for PSV only or may cause other forms of autistic disorders. We screened for mutations by SSCP 19 girls with a clinical diagnosis of autism, two of them fulfilling the PSV criteria. A pathogenic mutation was found only in the latter two cases (R133C and R453X). A long follow‐up of these two girls revealed a unique clinical course. They initially developed the first three stages of RTT, they were severely retarded and had autistic behavior. Over the years their abilities increased progressively and by early adolescence they lost autistic behavior, becoming adequately accustomed to people and reaching an IQ close to 45. These results confirm previous clinical studies suggesting that a wide spectrum of RTT exists including girls with mental abilities considerably higher than in classic RTT. We conclude that MECP2 mutations (missense or late truncating) can be found in girls with an IQ close to 45 and a clinical history of PSV of Rett syndrome. Furthermore, MECP2 mutations are not found in patients in which autism remains stable over the years.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2003

Rett syndrome: the complex nature of a monogenic disease

Alessandra Renieri; Ilaria Meloni; Ilaria Longo; Francesca Ariani; Francesca Mari; Chiara Pescucci; Franca Cambi

Rett syndrome (RTT) is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder affecting almost exclusively girls. It is currently considered a monogenic X-linked dominant disorder due to mutations in MECP2 gene, encoding the methyl-CpG binding protein 2. A few RTT male cases, resulting from mosaicism for MECP2 mutations, have been reported. Male germline MECP2 mutations cause either severe encephalopathy with death at birth (usually in brothers of classical RTT females) or X-linked recessive mental retardation (XLMR). To date the wide phenotypic heterogeneity associated with MECP2 mutations in females (from classical RTT to healthy carriers) has been explained by differences in X chromosome inactivation. However, conflicting results have been obtained in different studies, with both random and highly skewed X-inactivation reported in healthy carrier females. Consequently it is possible that mechanisms other than X-inactivation play a role in the expressivity of MECP2 mutations. To explain the phenotypic heterogeneity associated with MECP2 mutations we propose a digenic model in which the presence of a mutated allele in a second gene, leading to a less functional protein, determines the clinical severity of the MECP2 mutation. The model is supported by the identification of the same mutation in XLMR and RTT cases. The carrier mothers of XLMR families are clinically asymptomatic and present balanced X chromosome inactivation. Therefore the same mutation arising in different genetic backgrounds can cause XLMR in males, remain silent in the carrier females and cause classic RTT in females. MECP2 mutations account for approximately 70–80% of classic RTT cases. MECP2 negative cases might result from mutations in noncoding regions of MECP2 gene. Alternatively, these cases might be due to mutations in other genes (locus heterogeneity). This hypothesis is supported by the identification of several chromosomal rearrangements in MECP2 negative patients with RTT and RTT-like phenotypes. MeCP2 is considered a general transcriptional repressor. However, conditional mouse mutants with selective loss of Mecp2 in the brain develop clinical manifestations similar to RTT, indicating that MECP2 is exclusively required for central nervous system function. The involvement of MeCP2 in methylation-specific transcriptional repression suggests that MECP2 related disorders result from dysregulated gene expression. Studies on gene expression have been performed in mouse and human brains. A relatively small number of gene expression changes were identified. It is possible that MeCP2 causes dysregulation of a very small subset of genes that are not detected with this method of analysis, or that very subtle changes in many genes cause the neuronal phenotype.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Advances in Alport syndrome diagnosis using next-generation sequencing

Rosangela Artuso; Chiara Fallerini; Laura Dosa; Francesca Scionti; Maurizio Clementi; Guido Garosi; Laura Massella; Maria Carmela Epistolato; Roberta Mancini; Francesca Mari; I. Longo; Francesca Ariani; Alessandra Renieri; Mirella Bruttini

Alport syndrome (ATS) is a hereditary nephropathy often associated with sensorineural hypoacusis and ocular abnormalities. Mutations in the COL4A5 gene cause X-linked ATS. Mutations in COL4A4 and COL4A3 genes have been reported in both autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant ATS. The conventional mutation screening, performed by DHPLC and/or Sanger sequencing, is time-consuming and has relatively high costs because of the absence of hot spots and to the high number of exons per gene: 51 (COL4A5), 48 (COL4A4) and 52 (COL4A3). Several months are usually necessary to complete the diagnosis, especially in cases with less informative pedigrees. To overcome these limitations, we designed a next-generation sequencing (NGS) protocol enabling simultaneous detection of all possible variants in the three genes. We used a method coupling selective amplification to the 454 Roche DNA sequencing platform (Genome Sequencer junior). The application of this technology allowed us to identify the second mutation in two ATS patients (p.Ser1147Phe in COL4A3 and p.Arg1682Trp in COL4A4) and to reconsider the diagnosis of ATS in a third patient. This study, therefore, illustrates the successful application of NGS to mutation screening of Mendelian disorders with locus heterogeneity.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008

Private inherited microdeletion/microduplications: implications in clinical practice.

Maria Antonietta Mencarelli; Eleni Katzaki; Filomena Tiziana Papa; Katia Sampieri; Rossella Caselli; Vera Uliana; Marzia Pollazzon; Roberto Canitano; Rosa Mostardini; Salvatore Grosso; Ilaria Longo; Francesca Ariani; Ilaria Meloni; Josef Hayek; Paolo Balestri; Francesca Mari; Alessandra Renieri

The introduction of array-CGH analysis is allowing the identification of novel genomic disorders. However, this new high-resolution technique is also opening novel diagnostic challenges when inherited private CNVs of unclear clinical significance are found. Oligo array-CGH analysis of 84 patients with mild to severe mental retardation associated with multiple congenital anomalies revealed 10 private CNVs inherited from a healthy parent. Three were deletions (7q31, 14q21.1, Xq25) and seven duplications (12p11.22, 12q21.31, 13q31.1, 17q12, Xp22.31, Xq28) ranging between 0.1 and 3.8Mb. Six rearrangements were not polymorphic. Four overlapped polymorphic regions to the extent of 10-61%. In one case the size was different between the proband and the healthy relative. Three small rearrangements were gene deserts. The remaining seven had a mean gene content of five (ranging from 1 to 18). None of the rearranged genes is known to be imprinted. Three disease-genes were found in three different cases: KAL1 in dupXp22.31, STS in another dupXp22.31 and TCF2 in dup17q12. The patient carrying the last duplication presents sex reversal, Peters anomaly and renal cysts and the duplication is located 4Mb away from the HSD17B1 gene, coding a key enzyme of testosterone biosynthesis. Considering the overlap with polymorphic regions, size-identity within the family, gene content, kind of rearrangement and size of rearrangement we suggest that at least in five cases the relationship to the phenotype has not to be excluded. We recommend to maintain caution when asserting that chromosomal abnormalities inherited from a healthy parent are benign. A more complex mechanism may in fact be involved, such as a concurrent variation in the other allele or in another chromosome that influences the phenotype.

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