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Dive into the research topics where Atteeq U. Rehman is active.

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Featured researches published by Atteeq U. Rehman.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Targeted capture and next-generation sequencing identifies C9orf75, encoding taperin, as the mutated gene in nonsyndromic deafness DFNB79.

Atteeq U. Rehman; Robert J. Morell; Inna A. Belyantseva; Shahid Y. Khan; Erich T. Boger; Mohsin Shahzad; Zubair M. Ahmed; Saima Riazuddin; Shaheen N. Khan; Sheikh Riazuddin; Thomas B. Friedman

Targeted genome capture combined with next-generation sequencing was used to analyze 2.9 Mb of the DFNB79 interval on chromosome 9q34.3, which includes 108 candidate genes. Genomic DNA from an affected member of a consanguineous family segregating recessive, nonsyndromic hearing loss was used to make a library of fragments covering the DFNB79 linkage interval defined by genetic analyses of four pedigrees. Homozygosity for eight previously unreported variants in transcribed sequences was detected by evaluating a library of 402,554 sequencing reads and was later confirmed by Sanger sequencing. Of these variants, six were determined to be polymorphisms in the Pakistani population, and one was in a noncoding gene that was subsequently excluded genetically from the DFNB79 linkage interval. The remaining variant was a nonsense mutation in a predicted gene, C9orf75, renamed TPRN. Evaluation of the other three DFNB79-linked families identified three additional frameshift mutations, for a total of four truncating alleles of this gene. Although TPRN is expressed in many tissues, immunolocalization of the protein product in the mouse cochlea shows prominent expression in the taper region of hair cell stereocilia. Consequently, we named the protein taperin.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Perrault syndrome is caused by recessive mutations in CLPP, encoding a mitochondrial ATP-dependent chambered protease.

Emma M. Jenkinson; Atteeq U. Rehman; Tom Walsh; Jill Clayton-Smith; Kwanghyuk Lee; Robert J. Morell; Meghan C. Drummond; Shaheen N. Khan; Muhammad Asif Naeem; Bushra Rauf; Neil Billington; Julie M. Schultz; Jill Urquhart; Ming K. Lee; Andrew Berry; Neil A. Hanley; Sarju G. Mehta; Deirdre Cilliers; Peter Clayton; Helen Kingston; Miriam J. Smith; Thomas T. Warner; Graeme C.M. Black; Dorothy Trump; Julian R.E. Davis; Wasim Ahmad; Suzanne M. Leal; Sheikh Riazuddin; Mary Claire King; Thomas B. Friedman

Perrault syndrome is a genetically and clinically heterogeneous autosomal-recessive condition characterized by sensorineural hearing loss and ovarian failure. By a combination of linkage analysis, homozygosity mapping, and exome sequencing in three families, we identified mutations in CLPP as the likely cause of this phenotype. In each family, affected individuals were homozygous for a different pathogenic CLPP allele: c.433A>C (p.Thr145Pro), c.440G>C (p.Cys147Ser), or an experimentally demonstrated splice-donor-site mutation, c.270+4A>G. CLPP, a component of a mitochondrial ATP-dependent proteolytic complex, is a highly conserved endopeptidase encoded by CLPP and forms an element of the evolutionarily ancient mitochondrial unfolded-protein response (UPR(mt)) stress signaling pathway. Crystal-structure modeling suggests that both substitutions would alter the structure of the CLPP barrel chamber that captures unfolded proteins and exposes them to proteolysis. Together with the previous identification of mutations in HARS2, encoding mitochondrial histidyl-tRNA synthetase, mutations in CLPP expose dysfunction of mitochondrial protein homeostasis as a cause of Perrault syndrome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Loss-of-function mutations of ILDR1 cause autosomal-recessive hearing impairment DFNB42.

Guntram Borck; Atteeq U. Rehman; Kwanghyuk Lee; Hans Martin Pogoda; Naseebullah Kakar; Simon von Ameln; Nicolas Grillet; Michael S. Hildebrand; Zubair M. Ahmed; Gudrun Nürnberg; Muhammad Ansar; Sulman Basit; Qamar Javed; Robert J. Morell; Nabilah Nasreen; A. Eliot Shearer; Adeel Ahmad; Kimia Kahrizi; Rehan Sadiq Shaikh; Shaheen N. Khan; Ingrid Goebel; Nicole C. Meyer; William J. Kimberling; Jennifer A. Webster; Dietrich A. Stephan; Martin R. Schiller; Melanie Bahlo; Hossein Najmabadi; Peter G. Gillespie; Peter Nürnberg

By using homozygosity mapping in a consanguineous Pakistani family, we detected linkage of nonsyndromic hearing loss to a 7.6 Mb region on chromosome 3q13.31-q21.1 within the previously reported DFNB42 locus. Subsequent candidate gene sequencing identified a homozygous nonsense mutation (c.1135G>T [p.Glu379X]) in ILDR1 as the cause of hearing impairment. By analyzing additional consanguineous families with homozygosity at this locus, we detected ILDR1 mutations in the affected individuals of 10 more families from Pakistan and Iran. The identified ILDR1 variants include missense, nonsense, frameshift, and splice-site mutations as well as a start codon mutation in the family that originally defined the DFNB42 locus. ILDR1 encodes the evolutionarily conserved immunoglobulin-like domain containing receptor 1, a putative transmembrane receptor of unknown function. In situ hybridization detected expression of Ildr1, the murine ortholog, early in development in the vestibule and in hair cells and supporting cells of the cochlea. Expression in hair cell- and supporting cell-containing neurosensory organs is conserved in the zebrafish, in which the ildr1 ortholog is prominently expressed in the developing ear and neuromasts of the lateral line. These data identify loss-of-function mutations of ILDR1, a gene with a conserved expression pattern pointing to a conserved function in hearing in vertebrates, as underlying nonsyndromic prelingual sensorineural hearing impairment.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Mutations in TBC1D24, a gene associated with epilepsy, also cause nonsyndromic deafness DFNB86.

Atteeq U. Rehman; Regie Lyn P. Santos-Cortez; Robert J. Morell; Meghan C. Drummond; Taku Ito; Kwanghyuk Lee; Asma A. Khan; Muhammad Asim R. Basra; Naveed Wasif; Muhammad Ayub; Syed Irfan Raza; Deborah A. Nickerson; Jay Shendure; Michael J. Bamshad; Saima Riazuddin; Neil Billington; Shaheen N. Khan; Penelope L. Friedman; Andrew J. Griffith; Wasim Ahmad; Sheikh Riazuddin; Suzanne M. Leal; Thomas B. Friedman

Inherited deafness is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. We recently mapped DFNB86, a locus associated with nonsyndromic deafness, to chromosome 16p. In this study, whole-exome sequencing was performed with genomic DNA from affected individuals from three large consanguineous families in which markers linked to DFNB86 segregate with profound deafness. Analyses of these data revealed homozygous mutation c.208G>T (p.Asp70Tyr) or c.878G>C (p.Arg293Pro) in TBC1D24 as the underlying cause of deafness in the three families. Sanger sequence analysis of TBC1D24 in an additional large family in which deafness segregates with DFNB86 identified the c.208G>T (p.Asp70Tyr) substitution. These mutations affect TBC1D24 amino acid residues that are conserved in orthologs ranging from fruit fly to human. Neither variant was observed in databases of single-nucleotide variants or in 634 chromosomes from ethnically matched control subjects. TBC1D24 in the mouse inner ear was immunolocalized predominantly to spiral ganglion neurons, indicating that DFNB86 deafness might be an auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder. Previously, six recessive mutations in TBC1D24 were reported to cause seizures (hearing loss was not reported) ranging in severity from epilepsy with otherwise normal development to epileptic encephalopathy resulting in childhood death. Two of our four families in which deafness segregates with mutant alleles of TBC1D24 were available for neurological examination. Cosegregation of epilepsy and deafness was not observed in these two families. Although the causal relationship between genotype and phenotype is not presently understood, our findings, combined with published data, indicate that recessive alleles of TBC1D24 can cause either epilepsy or nonsyndromic deafness.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Challenges and solutions for gene identification in the presence of familial locus heterogeneity

Atteeq U. Rehman; Regie Lyn P. Santos-Cortez; Meghan C. Drummond; Mohsin Shahzad; Kwanghyuk Lee; Robert J. Morell; Muhammad Ansar; Abid Jan; Xin Wang; Abdul Aziz; Saima Riazuddin; Joshua D. Smith; Gao T. Wang; Zubair M. Ahmed; Khitab Gul; A. Eliot Shearer; Richard J.H. Smith; Jay Shendure; Michael J. Bamshad; Deborah A. Nickerson; John T. Hinnant; Shaheen N. Khan; Rachel Fisher; Wasim Ahmad; Karen H. Friderici; Sheikh Riazuddin; Thomas B. Friedman; Ellen Wilch; Suzanne M. Leal

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) of exomes and genomes has accelerated the identification of genes involved in Mendelian phenotypes. However, many NGS studies fall short of identifying causal variants, with estimates for success rates as low as 25% for uncovering the pathological variant underlying disease etiology. An important reason for such failures is familial locus heterogeneity, where within a single pedigree causal variants in two or more genes underlie Mendelian trait etiology. As examples of intra- and inter-sibship familial locus heterogeneity, we present 10 consanguineous Pakistani families segregating hearing impairment due to homozygous variants in two different hearing impairment genes and a European-American pedigree in which hearing impairment is caused by four variants in three different genes. We have identified 41 additional pedigrees with syndromic and nonsyndromic hearing impairment for which a single previously reported hearing impairment gene has been identified but only segregates with the phenotype in a subset of affected pedigree members. We estimate that locus heterogeneity occurs in 15.3% (95% confidence interval: 11.9%, 19.9%) of the families in our collection. We demonstrate novel approaches to apply linkage analysis and homozygosity mapping (for autosomal recessive consanguineous pedigrees), which can be used to detect locus heterogeneity using either NGS or SNP array data. Results from linkage analysis and homozygosity mapping can also be used to group sibships or individuals most likely to be segregating the same causal variants and thereby increase the success rate of gene identification.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

DFNB79: reincarnation of a nonsyndromic deafness locus on chromosome 9q34.3

Shahid Y. Khan; Saima Riazuddin; Mohsin Shahzad; Nazir Ahmed; Ahmad Usman Zafar; Atteeq U. Rehman; Robert J. Morell; Andrew J. Griffith; Zubair M. Ahmed; Sheikh Riazuddin; Thomas B. Friedman

Genetic analysis of an inbred Pakistani family PKDF280, segregating prelingual severe to profound sensorineural hearing loss, provided evidence for a DFNB locus on human chromosome 9q34.3. Co-segregation of the deafness trait with marker D9SH159 was determined by a two-point linkage analysis (LOD score 9.43 at θ=0). Two additional large families, PKDF517 and PKDF741, co-segregate recessive deafness with markers linked to the same interval. Haplotype analyses of these three families refined the interval to 3.84 Mb defined by D9S1818 (centromeric) and D9SH6 (telomeric). This interval overlaps with the previously reported DFNB33 locus whose chromosomal map position has been recently revised and assigned to a new position on chromosome 10p11.23–q21.1. The nonsyndromic deafness locus on chromosome 9q segregating in family PKDF280 was designated DFNB79. We are currently screening the 113 candidate DFNB79 genes for mutations and have excluded CACNA1B, EDF1, PTGDS, EHMT1, QSOX2, NOTCH1, MIR126 and MIR602.


Clinical Genetics | 2017

Genetic causes of moderate to severe hearing loss point to modifiers

Sadaf Naz; Ayesha Imtiaz; Ghulam Mujtaba; Azra Maqsood; Rasheeda Bashir; Ihtisham Bukhari; Muhammad Riaz Khan; Memoona Ramzan; Amara Fatima; Atteeq U. Rehman; Muddassar Iqbal; Taimur Chaudhry; Merete Lund; Carmen C. Brewer; Robert J. Morell; Thomas B. Friedman

The genetic underpinnings of recessively inherited moderate to severe sensorineural hearing loss are not well understood, despite its higher prevalence in comparison to profound deafness. We recruited 92 consanguineous families segregating stable or progressive, recessively inherited moderate or severe hearing loss. We utilized homozygosity mapping, Sanger sequencing, targeted capture of known deafness genes with massively parallel sequencing and whole exome sequencing to identify the molecular basis of hearing loss in these families. Variants of the known deafness genes were found in 69% of the participating families with the SLC26A4, GJB2, MYO15A, TMC1, TMPRSS3, OTOF, MYO7A and CLDN14 genes together accounting for hearing loss in 54% of the families. We identified 20 reported and 21 novel variants in 21 known deafness genes; 16 of the 20 reported variants, previously associated with stable, profound deafness were associated with moderate to severe or progressive hearing loss in our families. These data point to a prominent role for genetic background, environmental factors or both as modifiers of human hearing loss severity.


Neurogenetics | 2016

Recessive mutations of TMC1 associated with moderate to severe hearing loss

Ayesha Imtiaz; Azra Maqsood; Atteeq U. Rehman; Robert J. Morell; Jeffrey R. Holt; Thomas B. Friedman; Sadaf Naz

TMC1 encodes a protein required for the normal function of mechanically activated channels that enable sensory transduction in auditory and vestibular hair cells. TMC1 protein is localized at the tips of the hair cell stereocilia, the site of conventional mechanotransduction. In many populations, loss-of-function recessive mutations of TMC1 are associated with profound deafness across all frequencies tested. In six families reported here, variable moderate-to-severe or moderate-to-profound hearing loss co-segregated with STR (short tandem repeats) markers at the TMC1 locus DFNB7/11. Massively parallel and Sanger sequencing of genomic DNA revealed each family co-segregating hearing loss with a homozygous TMC1 mutation: two reported mutations (p.R34X and p.R389Q) and three novel mutations (p.S596R, p.N199I, and c.1404 + 1G > T). TMC1 cDNA sequence from affected subjects homozygous for the donor splice site transversion c.1404 + 1G > T revealed skipping of exon 16, deleting 60 amino acids from the TMC1 protein. Since the mutations in our study cause less than profound hearing loss, we speculate that there is hypo-functional TMC1 mechanotransduction channel activity and that other even less damaging variants of TMC1 may be associated with more common mild-to-severe sensorineural hearing loss.


Clinical Genetics | 2017

Mutations of SGO2 and CLDN14 collectively cause coincidental Perrault syndrome.

Rabia Faridi; Atteeq U. Rehman; Robert J. Morell; Penelope E. Friedman; Leigh A M Demain; Sana Zahra; Asma A. Khan; Dalia Tohlob; Muhammad Zaman Khan Assir; Glenda Beaman; Shaheen N. Khan; William G. Newman; Sheikh Riazuddin; Thomas B. Friedman

Perrault syndrome (PS) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized by primary ovarian insufficiency (POI) in females and sensorineural hearing loss in males and females. In many PS subjects, causative variants have not been found in the five reported PS genes. The objective of this study was to identify the genetic cause of PS in an extended consanguineous family with six deaf individuals. Whole exome sequencing (WES) was completed on four affected members of a large family, and variants and co‐segregation was confirmed by Sanger sequencing. All hearing impaired individuals, including the proband, are homozygous for a pathogenic variant of CLDN14, but this only explains the deafness. The PS proband is also homozygous for a frameshift variant (c.1453_1454delGA, p.(Glu485Lysfs*5)) in exon 7 of SGO2 encoding shugoshin 2, which is the likely cause of her concurrent ovarian insufficiency. In mouse, Sgol2a encoding shugoshin‐like 2a is necessary during meiosis in both sexes to maintain the integrity of the cohesin complex that tethers sister chromatids. Human SGO2 has not previously been implicated in any disorder, but in this case of POI and perhaps others, it is a candidate for unexplained infertility.


Human Mutation | 2016

Mutational Spectrum of MYO15A and the Molecular Mechanisms of DFNB3 Human Deafness

Atteeq U. Rehman; Jonathan E. Bird; Rabia Faridi; Mohsin Shahzad; Sujay Shah; Kwanghyuk Lee; Shaheen N. Khan; Ayesha Imtiaz; Zubair M. Ahmed; Saima Riazuddin; Regie Lyn P. Santos-Cortez; Wasim Ahmad; Suzanne M. Leal; Sheikh Riazuddin; Thomas B. Friedman

Deafness in humans is a common neurosensory disorder and is genetically heterogeneous. Across diverse ethnic groups, mutations of MYO15A at the DFNB3 locus appear to be the third or fourth most common cause of autosomal‐recessive, nonsyndromic deafness. In 49 of the 67 exons of MYO15A, there are currently 192 recessive mutations identified, including 14 novel mutations reported here. These mutations are distributed uniformly across MYO15A with one enigmatic exception; the alternatively spliced giant exon 2, encoding 1,233 residues, has 17 truncating mutations but no convincing deafness‐causing missense mutations. MYO15A encodes three distinct isoform classes, one of which is 395 kDa (3,530 residues), the largest member of the myosin superfamily of molecular motors. Studies of Myo15 mouse models that recapitulate DFNB3 revealed two different pathogenic mechanisms of hearing loss. In the inner ear, myosin 15 is necessary both for the development and the long‐term maintenance of stereocilia, mechanosensory sound‐transducing organelles that extend from the apical surface of hair cells. The goal of this Mutation Update is to provide a comprehensive review of mutations and functions of MYO15A.

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Thomas B. Friedman

National Institutes of Health

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Robert J. Morell

National Institutes of Health

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Kwanghyuk Lee

Baylor College of Medicine

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Suzanne M. Leal

Baylor College of Medicine

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Wasim Ahmad

Quaid-i-Azam University

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