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Featured researches published by B.W.M. van Bon.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Further delineation of the 15q13 microdeletion and duplication syndromes: a clinical spectrum varying from non-pathogenic to a severe outcome

B.W.M. van Bon; Mefford Hc; Björn Menten; David A. Koolen; Andrew J. Sharp; Willy M. Nillesen; Jeffrey W. Innis; T. de Ravel; Catherine Mercer; Marco Fichera; Helen Stewart; L E Connell; Katrin Õunap; Katherine Lachlan; B Castle; N. Van der Aa; C.M.A. van Ravenswaaij; Marcelo A. Nobrega; C Serra-Juhé; Ingrid Simonic; N. de Leeuw; Rolph Pfundt; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Carl Baker; P Finnemore; S Huang; Viv Maloney; John A. Crolla; M van Kalmthout; Maurizio Elia

Background: Recurrent 15q13.3 microdeletions were recently identified with identical proximal (BP4) and distal (BP5) breakpoints and associated with mild to moderate mental retardation and epilepsy. Methods: To assess further the clinical implications of this novel 15q13.3 microdeletion syndrome, 18 new probands with a deletion were molecularly and clinically characterised. In addition, we evaluated the characteristics of a family with a more proximal deletion between BP3 and BP4. Finally, four patients with a duplication in the BP3–BP4–BP5 region were included in this study to ascertain the clinical significance of duplications in this region. Results: The 15q13.3 microdeletion in our series was associated with a highly variable intra- and inter-familial phenotype. At least 11 of the 18 deletions identified were inherited. Moreover, 7 of 10 siblings from four different families also had this deletion: one had a mild developmental delay, four had only learning problems during childhood, but functioned well in daily life as adults, whereas the other two had no learning problems at all. In contrast to previous findings, seizures were not a common feature in our series (only 2 of 17 living probands). Three patients with deletions had cardiac defects and deletion of the KLF13 gene, located in the critical region, may contribute to these abnormalities. The limited data from the single family with the more proximal BP3–BP4 deletion suggest this deletion may have little clinical significance. Patients with duplications of the BP3–BP4–BP5 region did not share a recognisable phenotype, but psychiatric disease was noted in 2 of 4 patients. Conclusions: Overall, our findings broaden the phenotypic spectrum associated with 15q13.3 deletions and suggest that, in some individuals, deletion of 15q13.3 is not sufficient to cause disease. The existence of microdeletion syndromes, associated with an unpredictable and variable phenotypic outcome, will pose the clinician with diagnostic difficulties and challenge the commonly used paradigm in the diagnostic setting that aberrations inherited from a phenotypically normal parent are usually without clinical consequences.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012

Mutations in DYNC1H1 cause severe intellectual disability with neuronal migration defects

Marjolein H. Willemsen; L.E.L.M. Peart-Vissers; M.A.A.P. Willemsen; B.W.M. van Bon; Thessa Kroes; J. de Ligt; L.B.A. de Vries; Jeroen Schoots; Dorien Lugtenberg; B.C.J. Hamel; J.H.L.M. van Bokhoven; Han G. Brunner; J.A. Veltman; Tjitske Kleefstra

Background DYNC1H1 encodes the heavy chain protein of the cytoplasmic dynein 1 motor protein complex that plays a key role in retrograde axonal transport in neurons. Furthermore, it interacts with the LIS1 gene of which haploinsufficiency causes a severe neuronal migration disorder in humans, known as classical lissencephaly or Miller-Dieker syndrome. Aim To describe the clinical spectrum and molecular characteristics of DYNC1H1 mutations. Methods A family based exome sequencing approach was used to identify de novo mutations in patients with severe intellectual disability. Results In this report the identification of two de novo missense mutations in DYNC1H1 (p.Glu1518Lys and p.His3822Pro) in two patients with severe intellectual disability and variable neuronal migration defects is described. Conclusion Since an autosomal dominant mutation in DYNC1H1 was previously identified in a family with the axonal (type 2) form of Charcot- Marie-Tooth (CMT2) disease and mutations in Dync1h1 in mice also cause impaired neuronal migration in addition to neuropathy, these data together suggest that mutations in DYNC1H1 can lead to a broad phenotypic spectrum and confirm the importance of DYNC1H1 in both central and peripheral neuronal functions.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008

Clinical and molecular characteristics of 1qter microdeletion syndrome: delineating a critical region for corpus callosum agenesis/hypogenesis

B.W.M. van Bon; David A. Koolen; Renato Borgatti; Alex Magee; S. Garcia-Minaur; Liesbeth Rooms; Willie Reardon; Marcella Zollino; Maria Clara Bonaglia; M. De Gregori; Francesca Novara; R. Grasso; Roberto Ciccone; H.A. van Duyvenvoorde; A.M. Aalbers; Renzo Guerrini; Elisa Fazzi; Willy M. Nillesen; S. McCullough; Sarina G. Kant; Carlo Marcelis; R.P. Pfundt; N. de Leeuw; Dominique Smeets; Erik A. Sistermans; Jan M. Wit; B.C.J. Hamel; Han G. Brunner; Frank Kooy; Orsetta Zuffardi

Background: Patients with a microscopically visible deletion of the distal part of the long arm of chromosome 1 have a recognisable phenotype, including mental retardation, microcephaly, growth retardation, a distinct facial appearance and various midline defects including corpus callosum abnormalities, cardiac, gastro-oesophageal and urogenital defects, as well as various central nervous system anomalies. Patients with a submicroscopic, subtelomeric 1qter deletion have a similar phenotype, suggesting that the main phenotype of these patients is caused by haploinsufficiency of genes in this region. Objective: To describe the clinical presentation of 13 new patients with a submicroscopic deletion of 1q43q44, of which nine were interstitial, and to report on the molecular characterisation of the deletion size. Results and conclusions: The clinical presentation of these patients has clear similarities with previously reported cases with a terminal 1q deletion. Corpus callosum abnormalities were present in 10 of our patients. The AKT3 gene has been reported as an important candidate gene causing this abnormality. However, through detailed molecular analysis of the deletion sizes in our patient cohort, we were able to delineate the critical region for corpus callosum abnormalities to a 360 kb genomic segment which contains four possible candidate genes, but excluding the AKT3 gene.


Human Mutation | 2013

Clinical significance of de novo and inherited copy-number variation.

A.T. van Silfhout; Jayne Y. Hehir-Kwa; B.W.M. van Bon; J.H.M. Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; Stephen Meader; C.J. Hellebrekers; I.J. Thoonen; A.P.M. de Brouwer; Han G. Brunner; Caleb Webber; Rolph Pfundt; N. de Leeuw; L.B.A. de Vries

Copy‐number variations (CNVs) are a common cause of intellectual disability and/or multiple congenital anomalies (ID/MCA). However, the clinical interpretation of CNVs remains challenging, especially for inherited CNVs. Well‐phenotyped patients (5,531) with ID/MCA were screened for rare CNVs using a 250K single‐nucleotide polymorphism array platform in order to improve the understanding of the contribution of CNVs to a patients phenotype. We detected 1,663 rare CNVs in 1,388 patients (25.1%; range 0–5 per patient) of which 437 occurred de novo and 638 were inherited. The detected CNVs were analyzed for various characteristics, gene content, and genotype–phenotype correlations. Patients with severe phenotypes, including organ malformations, had more de novo CNVs (P < 0.001), whereas patient groups with milder phenotypes, such as facial dysmorphisms, were enriched for both de novo and inherited CNVs (P < 0.001), indicating that not only de novo but also inherited CNVs can be associated with a clinically relevant phenotype. Moreover, patients with multiple CNVs presented with a more severe phenotype than patients with a single CNV (P < 0.001), pointing to a combinatorial effect of the additional CNVs. In addition, we identified 20 de novo single‐gene CNVs that directly indicate novel genes for ID/MCA, including ZFHX4, ANKH, DLG2, MPP7, CEP89, TRIO, ASTN2, and PIK3C3.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2016

Disruptive de novo mutations of DYRK1A lead to a syndromic form of autism and ID

B.W.M. van Bon; Bradley P. Coe; Raphael Bernier; Cherie Green; Jennifer Gerdts; Kali Witherspoon; Tjitske Kleefstra; Marjolein H. Willemsen; Raman Kumar; Paolo Bosco; Marco Fichera; Deana Li; David G. Amaral; Francesca Cristofoli; Hilde Peeters; Eric Haan; Corrado Romano; Mefford Hc; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Jozef Gecz; B.B.A. de Vries; Evan E. Eichler

Dual-specificity tyrosine-(Y)-phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1 A (DYRK1A) maps to the Down syndrome critical region; copy number increase of this gene is thought to have a major role in the neurocognitive deficits associated with Trisomy 21. Truncation of DYRK1A in patients with developmental delay (DD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) suggests a different pathology associated with loss-of-function mutations. To understand the phenotypic spectrum associated with DYRK1A mutations, we resequenced the gene in 7162 ASD/DD patients (2446 previously reported) and 2169 unaffected siblings and performed a detailed phenotypic assessment on nine patients. Comparison of our data and published cases with 8696 controls identified a significant enrichment of DYRK1A truncating mutations (P=0.00851) and an excess of de novo mutations (P=2.53 × 10−10) among ASD/intellectual disability (ID) patients. Phenotypic comparison of all novel (n=5) and recontacted (n=3) cases with previous case reports, including larger CNV and translocation events (n=7), identified a syndromal disorder among the 15 patients. It was characterized by ID, ASD, microcephaly, intrauterine growth retardation, febrile seizures in infancy, impaired speech, stereotypic behavior, hypertonia and a specific facial gestalt. We conclude that mutations in DYRK1A define a syndromic form of ASD and ID with neurodevelopmental defects consistent with murine and Drosophila knockout models.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Whole-exome sequencing points to considerable genetic heterogeneity of cerebral palsy

Gai McMichael; Matthew N. Bainbridge; Eric Haan; Mark Corbett; Alison Gardner; Suzanna Thompson; B.W.M. van Bon; C.L. van Eyk; Jessica L. Broadbent; C Reynolds; Michael O'Callaghan; Lam Son Nguyen; David L. Adelson; R Russo; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Harsha Doddapaneni; Donna M. Muzny; Richard A. Gibbs; Jozef Gecz; Alastair H. MacLennan

Cerebral palsy (CP) is a common, clinically heterogeneous group of disorders affecting movement and posture. Its prevalence has changed little in 50 years and the causes remain largely unknown. The genetic contribution to CP causation has been predicted to be ~2%. We performed whole-exome sequencing of 183 cases with CP including both parents (98 cases) or one parent (67 cases) and 18 singleton cases (no parental DNA). We identified and validated 61 de novo protein-altering variants in 43 out of 98 (44%) case-parent trios. Initial prioritization of variants for causality was by mutation type, whether they were known or predicted to be deleterious and whether they occurred in known disease genes whose clinical spectrum overlaps CP. Further, prioritization used two multidimensional frameworks—the Residual Variation Intolerance Score and the Combined Annotation-dependent Depletion score. Ten de novo mutations in three previously identified disease genes (TUBA1A (n=2), SCN8A (n=1) and KDM5C (n=1)) and in six novel candidate CP genes (AGAP1, JHDM1D, MAST1, NAA35, RFX2 and WIPI2) were predicted to be potentially pathogenic for CP. In addition, we identified four predicted pathogenic, hemizygous variants on chromosome X in two known disease genes, L1CAM and PAK3, and in two novel candidate CP genes, CD99L2 and TENM1. In total, 14% of CP cases, by strict criteria, had a potentially disease-causing gene variant. Half were in novel genes. The genetic heterogeneity highlights the complexity of the genetic contribution to CP. Function and pathway studies are required to establish the causative role of these putative pathogenic CP genes.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

GATAD2B loss-of-function mutations cause a recognisable syndrome with intellectual disability and are associated with learning deficits and synaptic undergrowth in Drosophila

Marjolein H. Willemsen; Bonnie Nijhof; Michaela Fenckova; Willy M. Nillesen; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Anna Castells-Nobau; Lenke Asztalos; Erika Virágh; B.W.M. van Bon; E. Tezel; Joris A. Veltman; Han G. Brunner; L.B.A. de Vries; J. de Ligt; Helger G. Yntema; H. van Bokhoven; Bertrand Isidor; C Le Caignec; E. Lorino; Z. Asztalos; David A. Koolen; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Annette Schenck; Tjitske Kleefstra

Background GATA zinc finger domain containing 2B (GATAD2B) encodes a subunit of the MeCP1-Mi-2/nucleosome remodelling and deacetylase complex involved in chromatin modification and regulation of transcription. We recently identified two de novo loss-of-function mutations in GATAD2B by whole exome sequencing in two unrelated individuals with severe intellectual disability. Methods To identify additional individuals with GATAD2B aberrations, we searched for microdeletions overlapping with GATAD2B in inhouse and international databases, and performed targeted Sanger sequencing of the GATAD2B locus in a selected cohort of 80 individuals based on an overlap with the clinical features in the two index cases. To address whether GATAD2B is required directly in neurones for cognition and neuronal development, we investigated the role of Drosophila GATAD2B orthologue simjang (simj) in learning and synaptic connectivity. Results We identified a third individual with a 240 kb microdeletion encompassing GATAD2B and a fourth unrelated individual with GATAD2B loss-of-function mutation. Detailed clinical description showed that all four individuals with a GATAD2B aberration had a distinctive phenotype with childhood hypotonia, severe intellectual disability, limited speech, tubular shaped nose with broad nasal tip, short philtrum, sparse hair and strabismus. Neuronal knockdown of Drosophila GATAD2B orthologue, simj, resulted in impaired learning and altered synapse morphology. Conclusions We hereby define a novel clinically recognisable intellectual disability syndrome caused by loss-of-function of GATAD2B. Our results in Drosophila suggest that GATAD2B is required directly in neurones for normal cognitive performance and synapse development.


Clinical Genetics | 2015

De novo WNT5A-associated autosomal dominant Robinow syndrome suggests specificity of genotype and phenotype.

Maian Roifman; Carlo Marcelis; T. Paton; Christian R. Marshall; R. Silver; Jamie L. Lohr; Helger G. Yntema; Hanka Venselaar; Hülya Kayserili; B.W.M. van Bon; G. Seaward; Han G. Brunner; David Chitayat

Robinow Syndrome (RS), a rare skeletal dysplasia syndrome, is characterized by dysmorphic features resembling a fetal face, mesomelic limb shortening, hypoplastic external genitalia in males, and renal and vertebral anomalies. Both autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive patterns of inheritance have been reported. Since the description of autosomal dominant Robinow Syndrome (ADRS; OMIM 180700) in 1969 by Meinhard Robinow and colleagues, the molecular etiology remained elusive until only recently. WNT5A was proposed to be the candidate gene for ADRS, as mutations were found in two affected families, one of those being the originally described index family. We report three families with RS caused by novel heterozygous WNT5A mutations, which were confirmed in the first family by whole exome sequencing, and in all by Sanger sequencing. To our knowledge, this is the largest number of published families with ADRS in whom a WNT5A mutation was identified. Families 1 and 2 are the first cases showing de novo inheritance in the affected family members and thus strengthen the evidence for WNT5A as the causative gene in ADRS. Finally, we propose WNT5A mutation specificity in ADRS, which may affect interactions with other proteins in the Wnt pathway.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Refining the critical region of the novel 19q13.11 microdeletion syndrome to 750 Kb

J.H.M. Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; Sascha Vermeer; B.W.M. van Bon; R Pfundt; Carlo Marcelis; A.P.M. de Brouwer; N. de Leeuw; L.B.A. de Vries

With great interest we read the article of Malan et al , who reported on a novel clinically recognisable 19q13.11 microdeletion syndrome.1 Here we report on a fifth patient with an interstitial deletion overlapping the 19q13.11 region and compare our findings with those described by Malan et al . The proband was born after 37 weeks of gestation as one of dizygotic twins with a birth weight of 1620 g (−3.5 SD). His twin sister had a normal birth weight of 2290 g (p25). They were the first children of healthy non-consanguineous parents. Pregnancy was complicated by intrauterine growth retardation. At birth the proband had cutis aplasia over the posterior occiput, hypospadias, abnormal positioning of the feet, and a third nipple on the left side of the chest (the latter was also present in the father) whereas no dysmorphisms were reported in his sister. During the first years of life, feeding difficulties, failure to thrive, and psychomotor delay were noted: he sat independently at 2 years of age, started crawling at the same age, and started walking at the age of 3 years and 10 months. Because of fatigue, he was able to walk short distances only, and walked with a stiff gait. He suffered from recurrent airway infections. At the age of 4 years and 10 months he could not speak, but was able to communicate with pictograms. He had hypermetropia (+3D/+4D) similar to his sister. At …


Human Mutation | 2013

Genotype-Phenotype Correlations Emerging from the Identification of Missense Mutations in MBTPS2

Dorothea Bornholdt; T.P. Atkinson; B. Bouadjar; B. Catteau; H. Cox; Deepthi De Silva; Judith Fischer; C.N. Gunasekera; S. Hadj-Rabia; Rudolf Happle; Muriel Holder-Espinasse; E. Kaminski; Axel König; André Mégarbané; H. Megarbane; Ulrike Neidel; Frank Oeffner; Vinzenz Oji; A. Theos; Heiko Traupe; A. Vahlquist; B.W.M. van Bon; M. Virtanen; Karl-Heinz Grzeschik

Missense mutations affecting membrane‐bound transcription factor protease site 2 (MBTPS2) have been associated with Ichthyosis Follicularis with Atrichia and Photophobia (IFAP) syndrome with or without BRESHECK syndrome, with keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans, and Olmsted syndrome. This metalloprotease activates, by intramembranous trimming in conjunction with the protease MBTPS1, regulatory factors involved in sterol control of transcription and in cellular stress response. In this study, 11 different MBTPS2 missense mutations detected in patients from 13 unrelated families were correlated with the clinical phenotype, with their effect on cellular growth in media without lipids, and their potential role for sterol control of transcription. Seven variants were novel [c.774C>G (p.I258M); c.758G>C (p.G253A); c.686T>C (p.F229S); c.1427T>C (p.L476S); c.1430A>T (p.D477V); c.1499G>A (p.G500D); c.1538T>C (p.L513P)], four had previously been reported in unrelated sibships [c.261G>A (p.M87I); c.1286G>A (p.R429H); c.1424T>C (p.F475S); c.1523A>G (p.N508S)]. In the enzyme, the mutations cluster in transmembrane domains. Amino‐acid exchanges near the active site are more detrimental to functionality of the enzyme and, clinically, associated with more severe phenotypes. In male patients, a genotype–phenotype correlation begins to emerge, linking the site of the mutation in MBTPS2 with the clinical outcome described as IFAP syndrome with or without BRESHECK syndrome, keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans, X‐linked, Olmsted syndrome, or possibly further X‐linked traits with an oculocutaneous component.

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Carlo Marcelis

Radboud University Nijmegen

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David A. Koolen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Han G. Brunner

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Helger G. Yntema

Radboud University Nijmegen

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N. de Leeuw

Radboud University Nijmegen

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L.B.A. de Vries

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Tjitske Kleefstra

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Willy M. Nillesen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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B.C.J. Hamel

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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