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Dive into the research topics where Alice M. George is active.

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Featured researches published by Alice M. George.


Molecular Syndromology | 2012

Recurrent Transmission of a 17q12 Microdeletion and a Variable Clinical Spectrum

Alice M. George; Donald R. Love; Ian Hayes; B. Tsang

The relatively rare proximal microdeletion of 17q12 (including deletion of the HNF1B gene) is associated with the renal cysts and diabetes syndrome. Recent reports have suggested that there may also be an association between this microdeletion and learning difficulties/autism. This case report describes one of only a few reported families segregating the 17q12 microdeletion, but which highlights the nonpenetrance and variable expressivity of multiple features of this condition.


Case reports in genetics | 2012

Amino-Terminal Microdeletion within the CNTNAP2 Gene Associated with Variable Expressivity of Speech Delay

Amel Al-Murrani; Fern Ashton; Salim Aftimos; Alice M. George; Donald R. Love

The contactin-associated protein-like 2 (CNTNAP2) gene is highly expressed in the frontal lobe circuits in the developing human brain. Mutations in this gene have been associated with several neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and specific language impairment. Here we describe a 450 kb deletion within the CNTNAP2 gene that is maternally inherited in two male siblings, but with a variable clinical phenotype. This variability is described in the context of a limited number of other cases reported in the literature. The in-frame intragenic deletion removes a critical domain of the CNTNAP2 protein, and this case also highlights the challenges of correlating genotype and phenotype.


Case reports in genetics | 2014

Microduplication of 3p26.3 Implicated in Cognitive Development

Leah Te Weehi; Raj Maikoo; Adrian Mc Cormack; Roberto Mazzaschi; Fern Ashton; Liangtao Zhang; Alice M. George; Donald R. Love

We report here a 34-month-old boy with global developmental delay referred for molecular karyotyping and fragile X studies. Molecular karyotype analysis revealed a microduplication in the 3p26.3 region involving part of the CHL1 and CNTN6 genes. Several deletions, one translocation, and one duplication have previously been described in this region of chromosome 3. The CHL1 gene has been proposed as a dosage-sensitive gene with a central role in cognitive development, and so the microduplication reported here appears to be implicated in our patients phenotype.


Case reports in genetics | 2015

12q14 Microdeletions: Additional Case Series with Confirmation of a Macrocephaly Region.

Adrian Mc Cormack; Cynthia Sharpe; Nerine Gregersen; Warwick Smith; Ian Hayes; Alice M. George; Donald R. Love

To date, there have been only a few reports of patients carrying a microdeletion in chromosome 12q14. These patients usually present with pre- and postnatal growth retardation, and developmental delay. Here we report on two additional patients with both genotype and phenotype differences. Similar to previously published cases, one patient has haploinsufficiency of the HMGA2 gene and shows severe short stature and developmental delay. The second patient is only one of a handful without the loss of the HMGA2 gene and shows a much better growth profile, but with absolute macrocephaly. This patients deletion is unique and hence defines a likely macrocephaly locus that contributes to the general phenotype characterising the 12q14 syndrome.


British Journal of Biomedical Science | 2011

Chromosome microarray analysis in a clinical environment: new perspective and new challenge

Alice M. George; Renate Marquis-Nicholson; Liangtao Zhang; Jennifer M. Love; Fern Ashton; Salim Aftimos; Ian Hayes; Liam Williams; Donald R. Love

Abstract The analysis of the human genome has largely been undertaken in a research environment, but recent developments in technology and associated workflow have allowed diagnostic laboratories to interrogate DNA at significantly improved levels of resolution. Principally, whole genome-based analysis of copy number changes using microarrays has led to this method replacing conventional karyotyping as a routine diagnostic workhorse. The resolution offered by microarrays is an improvement of at least an order of magnitude compared to karyotyping, but it comes at a cost in terms of the time spent in data interpretation. Overall, however, the die has been cast and cytogeneticists need to become familiar with the tools used by molecular geneticists and bioinformaticists. The following review provides a brief background to array technology, but uses a series of case studies to illustrate the usefulness and challenges of interpreting array data.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2014

Array Comparative Genomic Hybridization Identifies a Heterozygous Deletion of the Entire KCNJ2 Gene as a Cause of Sudden Cardiac Death

Renate Marquis-Nicholson; Debra O. Prosser; Jennifer M. Love; Liangtao Zhang; Ian Hayes; Alice M. George; Jackie Crawford; Jonathan R. Skinner; Donald R. Love

Background—Large gene rearrangements, not detectable by standard molecular genetic sequencing techniques, are present in a minority of patients with long QT syndrome. We aimed to screen for large rearrangements in genes responsible for long QT syndrome as part of the molecular autopsy of a 36-year-old woman who died suddenly and had a negative autopsy. A retrospective analysis of an ECG identified a long QT interval, but sequencing of known LQT genes was uninformative. Methods and Results—Array comparative genomic hybridization was used to screen for deletions and duplications in 101 genes implicated in cardiac disorders and sudden death using a postmortem blood sample. A 542 kb deletion encompassing the entire KCNJ2 gene was identified in the decedent. The mother had electrocardiographic U-wave changes consistent with Andersen–Tawil syndrome and exaggerated by exercise but none of the characteristic noncardiac features. Fluorescence in situ hybridization confirmed the deletion in the decedent and established its presence in the mother. Conclusions—A novel application of array comparative genomic hybridization and fluorescence in situ hybridization has identified that long QT syndrome and sudden cardiac death may occur as a result of a deletion of an entire gene. The case also supports recent research suggesting that noncardiac features of Andersen–Tawil syndrome occur only with missense or minor gene rearrangements in the KCNJ2 gene, resulting in a dominant negative effect on Kir2.x channels.


Molecular Medicine Reports | 2013

Bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs)-on-Beads™ as a diagnostic platform for the rapid aneuploidy screening of products of conception

Karen L. Sheath; Lisa Duffy; Philip Asquith; Donald R. Love; Alice M. George

The aim of the present study was to evaluate the use of KaryoLite™ bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs)‑on‑Beads™ (BoBs) technology for the rapid screening of products of conception (POC). Validation and prospective studies were carried out on 85 and 95 patient samples, respectively. Validation studies had previously been analyzed using routine culture and G-banded karyotyping. BoBs resulted in an abnormality detection frequency of 27%, with a failure rate of <3%. The time required for processing was significantly lower compared with that of tissue culture. In conclusion, BoBs technology decreased the failure rate, while increasing the analytical sensitivity compared with G-banded karyotype analysis alone. Additionally, significant cost savings may be achieved with regard to the time of processing and analysis of specimens.


Case reports in genetics | 2014

A case of 17q21.31 microduplication and 7q31.33 microdeletion, associated with developmental delay, microcephaly, and mild dysmorphic features.

Adrian Mc Cormack; Juliet Taylor; Leah Te Weehi; Donald R. Love; Alice M. George

Concurrent cryptic microdeletion and microduplication syndromes have recently started to reveal themselves with the advent of microarray technology. Analysis has shown that low-copy repeats (LCRs) have allowed chromosome regions throughout the genome to become hotspots for nonallelic homologous recombination to take place. Here, we report a case of a 7.5-year-old girl who manifests microcephaly, developmental delay, and mild dysmorphic features. Microarray analysis identified a microduplication in chromosome 17q21.31, which encompasses the CRHR1, MAPT, and KANSL1 genes, as well as a microdeletion in chromosome 7q31.33 that is localised within the GRM8 gene. To our knowledge this is one of only a few cases of 17q21.31 microduplication. The clinical phenotype of patients with this microduplication is milder than of those carrying the reciprocal microdeletions, and suggests that the lower incidence of the former compared to the latter may be due to underascertainment.


Case reports in genetics | 2011

Pure Duplication of the Distal Long Arm of Chromosome 15 with Ebstein Anomaly and Clavicular Anomaly

Rachel O'Connor; Amel Al-Murrani; Salim Aftimos; Philip Asquith; Roberto Mazzaschi; Dominique Eyrolle-Guignot; Alice M. George; Donald R. Love

This report is of a patient with pure trisomy of 15q24-qter who presents with the rare Ebstein anomaly and a previously unreported skeletal anomaly. Chromosome microarray analysis allowed high-resolution identification of the extent of the trisomy and provided a means of achieving higher-resolution breakpoint data. The phenotypic expression of unbalanced chromosomal regions is a complex phenomenon, and fine mapping of the involved region, as described here, is only a first step on the path to its full understanding. Overexpression of the LINGO-1 and CSPG4 genes has been implicated in developmental delay seen in other patients with trisomy of 15q24-qter, but our patient is currently too young to ascertain developmental progress. The genetic underpinning of Ebstein anomaly and the skeletal anomaly reported here is unclear based on our high-resolution dosage mapping.


Case reports in genetics | 2014

A Turner Syndrome Patient Carrying a Mosaic Distal X Chromosome Marker

Roberto Mazzaschi; Juliet Taylor; Stephen P. Robertson; Donald R. Love; Alice M. George

A skin sample from a 17-year-old female was received for routine karyotyping with a set of clinical features including clonic seizures, cardiomyopathy, hepatic adenomas, and skeletal dysplasia. Conventional karyotyping revealed a mosaic Turner syndrome karyotype with a cell line containing a small marker of X chromosome origin. This was later confirmed on peripheral blood cultures by conventional G-banding, fluorescence in situ hybridisation and microarray analysis. Similar Turner mosaic marker chromosome cases have been previously reported in the literature, with a variable phenotype ranging from the mild “classic” Turner syndrome to anencephaly, agenesis of the corpus callosum, complex heart malformation, and syndactyly of the fingers and toes. This case report has a phenotype that is largely discordant with previously published cases as it lies at the severe end of the Turner variant phenotype scale. The observed cytogenetic abnormalities in this study may represent a coincidental finding, but we cannot exclude the possibility that the marker has a nonfunctioning X chromosome inactivation locus, leading to functional disomy of those genes carried by the marker.

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Fern Ashton

Auckland City Hospital

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Ian Hayes

Auckland City Hospital

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