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Dive into the research topics where Angela M. O'Rawe is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela M. O'Rawe.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1997

Spectrum of Mutations in the Batten Disease Gene, CLN3

Patricia B. Munroe; Hannah M. Mitchison; Angela M. O'Rawe; John W. Anderson; Rose-Mary Boustany; Terry J. Lerner; Peter E.M. Taschner; Nanneke de Vos; Martijn H. Breuning; R. Mark Gardiner; Sara E. Mole

Batten disease (juvenile-onset neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis [JNCL]) is an autosomal recessive condition characterized by accumulation of lipopigments (lipofuscin and ceroid) in neurons and other cell types. The Batten disease gene, CLN3, was recently isolated, and four disease-causing mutations were identified, including a 1.02-kb deletion that is present in the majority of patients (The International Batten Disease Consortium 1995). One hundred eighty-eight unrelated patients with JNCL were screened in this study to determine how many disease chromosomes carried the 1.02-kb deletion and how many carried other mutations in CLN3. One hundred thirty-nine patients (74%) were found to have the 1.02-kb deletion on both chromosomes, whereas 49 patients (41 heterozygous for the 1.02-kb deletion) had mutations other than the 1.02-kb deletion. SSCP analysis and direct sequencing were used to screen for new mutations in these individuals. Nineteen novel mutations were found: six missense mutations, five nonsense mutations, three small deletions, three small insertions, one intronic mutation, and one splice-site mutation. This report brings the total number of disease-associated mutations in CLN3 to 23. All patients homozygous for mutations predicted to give rise to truncated proteins were found to have classical JNCL. However, a proportion of the patients (n = 4) who were compound heterozygotes for a missense mutation and the 1.02-kb deletion were found to display an atypical phenotype that was dominated by visual failure rather than by severe neurodegeneration. All missense mutations were found to affect residues conserved between the human protein and homologues in diverse species.


Neurology | 1999

Delayed classic and protracted phenotypes of compound heterozygous juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis

L. Lauronen; Patricia B. Munroe; Irma Järvelä; Taina Autti; Hannah M. Mitchison; Angela M. O'Rawe; R. M. Gardiner; Sara E. Mole; J. Puranen; A.-M. Hakkinen; E. Kirveskari; Pirkko Santavuori

Objective: To correlate the phenotypes with the genotypes of 10 Finnish juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL; late-onset Batten disease) patients who all are compound heterozygotes for the major 1.02-kb deletion in the CLN3 gene. Methods: The mutations on the non–1.02-kb deletion chromosomes were screened in 6 patients; in the other 4 patients the mutations were known (one affecting a splice site, two missense mutations, and one deletion of exons 10 through 13). Clinical features were examined, and MRI, MRS, somatosensory evoked magnetic field (SEF), and overnight polysomnography (PSG) studies were performed. Results: A novel deletion of exons 10 through 13 was found in 6 patients belonging to three families. In the patients carrying the deletions of exons 10 through 13 the clinical course of the disease was fairly similar. Variation was greatest in the time course to blindness. In these patients the mental and motor decline was slower than in classic JNCL, but more severe than in the two patients with missense mutations in exons 11 and 13. MRI showed brain atrophy in 4 patients. One patient had hyperintense periventricular white matter, otherwise brain signal intensities were normal. SEFs were enhanced in patients older than 14 years, whereas in PSG all but the youngest 6-year-old patient showed epileptiform activity in slow-wave sleep. Conclusions: JNCL can manifest as at least three different phenotypes: classic, delayed classic, and protracted JNCL with predominantly ocular symptoms. Finnish compound heterozygotes have the delayed classic or the protracted form of JNCL.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Rapid diagnostic test for the major mutation underlying Batten disease.

Irma Järvelä; Hannah M. Mitchison; Patricia B. Munroe; Angela M. O'Rawe; Sara E. Mole; Ann-Christine Syvänen

Batten disease is the most common progressive neurodegenerative disorder of childhood in western countries. A novel cDNA responsible for Batten disease has recently been identified. We have developed a rapid diagnostic solid phase minisequencing test to detect the major 1.02 kb deletion which is responsible for 81% of affected chromosomes in Batten disease worldwide. In Finland, 90% of Batten chromosomes carry the major deletion owing to the enrichment of the CLN3 gene in the isolated Finnish population.


Human Molecular Genetics | 1998

Mutations in the Palmitoyl-Protein Thioesterase Gene (PPT; CLN1) Causing Juvenile Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis with Granular Osmiophilic Deposits

Hannah M. Mitchison; Sandra L. Hofmann; Carlos Becerra; Patricia B. Munroe; Brian D. Lake; Yanick J. Crow; John B.P. Stephenson; Ruth E Williams; Irene L. Hofman; Peter E.M. Taschner; Jean Jacques Martin; Michel Philippart; Eva Andermann; Frederick Andermann; Sara E. Mole; R. Mark Gardiner; Angela M. O'Rawe


Genomics | 1997

Genomic structure and complete nucleotide sequence of the Batten disease gene, CLN3

Hannah M. Mitchison; Patricia B. Munroe; Angela M. O'Rawe; Peter E.M. Taschner; Nanneke de Vos; Gabriel Kremmidiotis; I Lensink; A. Christine Munk; Kenneth L. D'Arigo; John W. Anderson; Terry J. Lerner; Robert K. Moyzis; David F. Callen; Martijn H. Breuning; Norman A. Doggett; R. Mark Gardiner; Sara E. Mole


Genomics | 1994

Genetic Mapping of the Batten Disease Locus (CLN3) to the Interval D16S288-D16S383 by Analysis of Haplotypes and Allelic Association

Hannah M. Mitchison; Peter E M Taschner; Angela M. O'Rawe; Nanneke de Vos; Hilary A. Phillips; Andrew Thompson; Helen M. Kozman; Jonathan L. Haines; Karen Schlumpf; Kenneth D'Arigo; Rose Mary N Boustany; David F. Callen; Martijn H. Breuning; R. Mark Gardiner; Sara E. Mole; Terry J. Lerner


Neuropediatrics | 1997

Structure of the CLN3 Gene and Predicted Structure, Location and Function of CLN3 Protein

Hannah M. Mitchison; Peter E.M. Taschner; C. Kremmidiotis; David F. Callen; Norman A. Doggett; T. J. Lemer; R. B. Janes; B. A. Wallace; Patricia B. Munroe; Angela M. O'Rawe; R. M. Gardiner; Sara E. Mole


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1995

Refined localization of the Batten disease gene (CLN3) by haplotype and linkage disequilibrium mapping to D16S288‐D16S383 and exclusion from this region of a variant form of Batten disease with granular osmiophilic deposits

Hannah M. Mitchison; Angela M. O'Rawe; Terry J. Lerner; Peter E.M. Taschner; K. Schlumpf; Kenneth L. D'Arigo; N de Vos; E. Gormally; H. A. Phillips; A.D. Thompson; Jonathan L. Haines; Y. M. Hart; Eva Andermann; D.F. Callen; Martijn H. Breuning; R. M. Gardiner; Sara E. Mole


Neuropediatrics | 1997

Genetic Linkage Analysis of a Variant of Juvenile Onset Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis with Granular Osmiophilic Deposits

Angela M. O'Rawe; Hannah M. Mitchison; Ruth Williams; Ruth B. Wheeler; Eva Andermann; F. Andermann; Y. M. Hart; Jean-Jacques Martin; Michel Philippart; John B.P. Stephenson; R. M. Gardiner; Sara E. Mole


Neuropediatrics | 1997

Strategy for Mutation Detection in CLN3: Characterisation of Two Finnish Mutations

Patricia B. Munroe; Angela M. O'Rawe; Hannah M. Mitchison; Irma Järvelä; Pirkko Santavuori; Terry J. Lerner; Peter E.M. Taschner; R. M. Gardiner; Sara E. Mole

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Sara E. Mole

University College London

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Patricia B. Munroe

Queen Mary University of London

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Peter E.M. Taschner

Leiden University Medical Center

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R. M. Gardiner

University College London

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Martijn H. Breuning

Leiden University Medical Center

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Eva Andermann

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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