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Dive into the research topics where Ban Dawood is active.

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Featured researches published by Ban Dawood.


Blood | 2009

Identification and characterization of a novel P2Y12 variant in a patient diagnosed with type 1 von Willebrand disease in the European MCMDM-1VWD study

Martina E. Daly; Ban Dawood; William Lester; I. R. Peake; Francesco Rodeghiero; Anne Goodeve; M. Makris; Jonathan T. Wilde; Andrew D. Mumford; Stephen P. Watson; Stuart J. Mundell

We investigated whether defects in the P2Y(12) ADP receptor gene (P2RY12) contribute to the bleeding tendency in 92 index cases enrolled in the European MCMDM-1VWD study. A heterozygous mutation, predicting a lysine to glutamate (K174E) substitution in P2Y(12), was identified in one case with mild type 1 von Willebrand disease (VWD) and a VWF defect. Platelets from the index case and relatives carrying the K174E defect changed shape in response to ADP, but showed reduced and reversible aggregation in response to 10 muM ADP, unlike the maximal, sustained aggregation observed in controls. The reduced response was associated with an approximate 50% reduction in binding of [(3)H]2MeS-ADP to P2Y(12), whereas binding to the P2Y(1) receptor was normal. A hemagglutinin-tagged K174E P2Y(12) variant showed surface expression in CHO cells, markedly reduced binding to [(3)H]2MeS-ADP, and minimal ADP-mediated inhibition of forskolin-induced adenylyl cyclase activity. Our results provide further evidence for locus heterogeneity in type 1 VWD.


Gastroenterology | 2010

Mutations in TTC37 Cause Trichohepatoenteric Syndrome (Phenotypic Diarrhea of Infancy)

Jane Hartley; Nicholas C. Zachos; Ban Dawood; Mark Donowitz; Julia R. Forman; R. J. Pollitt; Neil V. Morgan; Louise Tee; Paul Gissen; Walter H. A. Kahr; Alex S. Knisely; Steve P. Watson; David Chitayat; I W Booth; Sue Protheroe; Stephen Murphy; Esther de Vries; Deirdre Kelly; Eamonn R. Maher

BACKGROUND & AIMS Trichohepatoenteric syndrome (THES) is an autosomal-recessive disorder characterized by life-threatening diarrhea in infancy, immunodeficiency, liver disease, trichorrhexis nodosa, facial dysmorphism, hypopigmentation, and cardiac defects. We attempted to characterize the phenotype and elucidate the molecular basis of THES. METHODS Twelve patients with classic THES from 11 families had detailed phenotyping. Autozygosity mapping was undertaken in 8 patients from consanguineous families using 250,000 single nucleotide polymorphism arrays and linked regions evaluated using microsatellite markers. Linkage was confirmed to one region from which candidate genes were analyzed. The effect of mutations on protein production and/or localization in hepatocytes and intestinal epithelial cells from affected patients was characterized by immunohistochemistry. RESULTS Previously unrecognized platelet abnormalities (reduced platelet alpha-granules, unusual stimulated alpha granule content release, abnormal lipid inclusions, abnormal platelet canalicular system, and reduced number of microtubules) were identified. The THES locus was mapped to 5q14.3-5q21.2. Sequencing of candidate genes showed mutations in TTC37, which encodes the uncharacterized tetratricopeptide repeat protein, thespin. Bioinformatic analysis suggested thespin to be involved in protein-protein interactions or chaperone. Preliminary studies of enterocyte brush-border ion transporter proteins (sodium hydrogen exchanger 2, sodium hydrogen exchanger 3, aquaporin 7, sodium iodide symporter, and hydrogen potassium adenosine triphosphatase [ATPase]) showed reduced expression or mislocalization in all THES patients with different profiles for each. In contrast the basolateral localization of Na/K ATPase was not altered. CONCLUSIONS THES is caused by mutations in TTC37. TTC37 mutations have a multisystem effect, which may be owing to abnormal stability and/or intracellular localization of TTC37 target proteins.


Blood | 2012

Evaluation of participants with suspected heritable platelet function disorders including recommendation and validation of a streamlined agonist panel

Ban Dawood; Gillian C. Lowe; Marie Lordkipanidzé; Danai Bem; Martina E. Daly; M. Makris; Andrew D. Mumford; Jonathan T. Wilde; Steve P. Watson

Light transmission aggregometry (LTA) is used worldwide for the investigation of heritable platelet function disorders (PFDs), but interpretation of results is complicated by the feedback effects of ADP and thromboxane A(2) (TxA(2)) and by the overlap with the response of healthy volunteers. Over 5 years, we have performed lumi-aggregometry on 9 platelet agonists in 111 unrelated research participants with suspected PFDs and in 70 healthy volunteers. Abnormal LTA or ATP secretion test results were identified in 58% of participants. In 84% of these, the patterns of response were consistent with defects in Gi receptor signaling, the TxA(2) pathway, and dense granule secretion. Participants with defects in signaling to Gq-coupled receptor agonists and to collagen were also identified. Targeted genotyping identified 3 participants with function-disrupting mutations in the P2Y(12) ADP and TxA(2) receptors. The results of the present study illustrate that detailed phenotypic analysis using LTA and ATP secretion is a powerful tool for the diagnosis of PFDs. Our data also enable subdivision at the level of platelet-signaling pathways and in some cases to individual receptors. We further demonstrate that most PFDs can be reliably diagnosed using a streamlined panel of key platelet agonists and specified concentrations suitable for testing in most clinical diagnostic laboratories.


Blood | 2013

Enrichment of FLI1 and RUNX1 mutations in families with excessive bleeding and platelet dense granule secretion defects

Jacqueline Stockley; Neil V. Morgan; Danai Bem; Gillian C. Lowe; Marie Lordkipanidzé; Ban Dawood; Michael A. Simpson; Kirsty Macfarlane; Kevin Horner; Vincenzo C. Leo; Kate Talks; Jayashree Motwani; Jonathan T. Wilde; Peter William Collins; M. Makris; Steve P. Watson; Martina E. Daly

We analyzed candidate platelet function disorder genes in 13 index cases with a history of excessive bleeding in association with a significant reduction in dense granule secretion and impaired aggregation to a panel of platelet agonists. Five of the index cases also had mild thrombocytopenia. Heterozygous alterations in FLI1 and RUNX1, encoding Friend leukemia integration 1 and RUNT-related transcription factor 1, respectively, which have a fundamental role in megakaryocytopoeisis, were identified in 6 patients, 4 of whom had mild thrombocytopenia. Two FLI1 alterations predicting p.Arg337Trp and p.Tyr343Cys substitutions in the FLI1 DNA-binding domain abolished transcriptional activity of FLI1. A 4-bp deletion in FLI1, and 2 splicing alterations and a nonsense variation in RUNX1, which were predicted to cause haploinsufficiency of either FLI1 or RUNX1, were also identified. Our findings suggest that alterations in FLI1 and RUNX1 may be common in patients with platelet dense granule secretion defects and mild thrombocytopenia.


Platelets | 2007

Reference curves for aggregation and ATP secretion to aid diagnose of platelet-based bleeding disorders: Effect of inhibition of ADP and thromboxane A2 pathways

Ban Dawood; Jonathan T. Wilde; Steve P. Watson

Platelet aggregation is widely used in clinical laboratories to evaluate patients with bleeding disorders of suspected platelet aetiology. Simultaneous monitoring of ATP release as a measure of dense granule secretion provides additional information to aid diagnosis. There is, however, no standard way of performing or interpreting these tests. The present study has evaluated aggregation and ATP secretion to eight platelet agonists in healthy donors and has evaluated the reproducibility of response for a number of variables, including platelet number and time after donation. The effect of inhibition of the two major platelet feedback mediators, ADP and thromboxane A2 (TxA2), was investigated using the P2Y1 and P2Y12 receptor antagonists, MRS2179 and AR-C67085, and the cyclooxygenase inhibitor, indomethacin. The results demonstrate that, if used within certain boundaries, the investigation of platelet aggregation and secretion is a powerful way to discriminate between differing pathways of platelet activation. The present data-set are an invaluable resource to the clinical laboratory to aid evaluation of patients with suspected platelet-based bleeding disorders.


Blood | 2010

A novel thromboxane A2 receptor D304N variant that abrogates ligand binding in a patient with a bleeding diathesis.

Andrew D Mumford; Ban Dawood; Martina E. Daly; Sherina L. Murden; Michael Williams; Majd B. Protty; Jennifer C. Spalton; Mark Wheatley; Stuart J. Mundell; Steve P. Watson

We investigated the cause of mild mucocutaneous bleeding in a 14-year-old male patient (P1). Platelet aggregation and ATP secretion induced by arachidonic acid and the thromboxane A(2) receptor (TxA(2)R) agonist U46619 were reduced in P1 compared with controls, whereas the responses to other platelet agonists were retained. P1 was heterozygous for a transversion within the TBXA2R gene predictive of a D304N substitution in the TxA(2)R. In Chinese hamster ovary-K1 cells expressing the variant D304N TxA(2)R, U46619 did not increase cytosolic free Ca(2+) concentration, indicating loss of receptor function. The TxA(2)R antagonist [(3)H]-SQ29548 showed an approximate 50% decrease in binding to platelets from P1 but absent binding to Chinese hamster ovary-K1 cells expressing variant D304N TxA(2)R. This is the second naturally occurring TxA(2)R variant to be associated with platelet dysfunction and the first in which loss of receptor function is associated with reduced ligand binding. D304 lies within a conserved NPXXY motif in transmembrane domain 7 of the TxA(2)R that is a key structural element in family A G protein-coupled receptors. Our demonstration that the D304N substitution causes clinically significant platelet dysfunction by reducing ligand binding establishes the importance of the NPXXY motif for TxA(2)R function in vivo.


Haematologica | 2016

Whole exome sequencing identifies genetic variants in inherited thrombocytopenia with secondary qualitative function defects

Ben Johnson; Gillian C. Lowe; Jane Futterer; Marie Lordkipanidzé; David MacDonald; Michael A. Simpson; Isabel Sánchez-Guiu; Sian Drake; Danai Bem; Vincenzo C. Leo; Sarah J. Fletcher; Ban Dawood; José Rivera; David Allsup; Tina Biss; Paula H. B. Bolton-Maggs; Peter William Collins; Nicola Curry; Charlotte Grimley; Beki James; M. Makris; Jayashree Motwani; Sue Pavord; Kate Talks; Jecko Thachil; Jonathan T. Wilde; Michael Williams; Paul Harrison; Paul Gissen; Stuart J. Mundell

Inherited thrombocytopenias are a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by abnormally low platelet counts which can be associated with abnormal bleeding. Next-generation sequencing has previously been employed in these disorders for the confirmation of suspected genetic abnormalities, and more recently in the discovery of novel disease-causing genes. However its full potential has not yet been exploited. Over the past 6 years we have sequenced the exomes from 55 patients, including 37 index cases and 18 additional family members, all of whom were recruited to the UK Genotyping and Phenotyping of Platelets study. All patients had inherited or sustained thrombocytopenia of unknown etiology with platelet counts varying from 11×109/L to 186×109/L. Of the 51 patients phenotypically tested, 37 (73%), had an additional secondary qualitative platelet defect. Using whole exome sequencing analysis we have identified “pathogenic” or “likely pathogenic” variants in 46% (17/37) of our index patients with thrombocytopenia. In addition, we report variants of uncertain significance in 12 index cases, including novel candidate genetic variants in previously unreported genes in four index cases. These results demonstrate that whole exome sequencing is an efficient method for elucidating potential pathogenic genetic variants in inherited thrombocytopenia. Whole exome sequencing also has the added benefit of discovering potentially pathogenic genetic variants for further study in novel genes not previously implicated in inherited thrombocytopenia.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

SLFN14 mutations underlie thrombocytopenia with excessive bleeding and platelet secretion defects

Sarah J. Fletcher; Ben Johnson; Gillian C. Lowe; Danai Bem; Sian Drake; Marie Lordkipanidzé; Isabel Sánchez Guiú; Ban Dawood; José Rivera; Michael A. Simpson; Martina E. Daly; Jayashree Motwani; Peter William Collins; Steve P. Watson; Neil V. Morgan

Inherited thrombocytopenias are a group of disorders that are characterized by a low platelet count and are sometimes associated with excessive bleeding that ranges from mild to severe. We evaluated 36 unrelated patients and 17 family members displaying thrombocytopenia that were recruited to the UK Genotyping and Phenotyping of Platelets (GAPP) study. All patients had a history of excessive bleeding of unknown etiology. We performed platelet phenotyping and whole-exome sequencing (WES) on all patients and identified mutations in schlafen 14 (SLFN14) in 12 patients from 3 unrelated families. Patients harboring SLFN14 mutations displayed an analogous phenotype that consisted of moderate thrombocytopenia, enlarged platelets, decreased ATP secretion, and a dominant inheritance pattern. Three heterozygous missense mutations were identified in affected family members and predicted to encode substitutions (K218E, K219N, and V220D) within an ATPase-AAA-4, GTP/ATP-binding region of SLFN14. Endogenous SLFN14 expression was reduced in platelets from all patients, and mutant SLFN14 expression was markedly decreased compared with that of WT SLFN14 when overexpressed in transfected cells. Electron microscopy revealed a reduced number of dense granules in affected patients platelets, correlating with a decreased ATP secretion observed in lumiaggregometry studies. These results identify SLFN14 mutations as cause for an inherited thrombocytopenia with excessive bleeding, outlining a fundamental role for SLFN14 in platelet formation and function.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2010

Src family kinases are essential for primary aggregation by G(i) -coupled receptors.

Ca Nash; S. Severin; Ban Dawood; M. Makris; Andrew D. Mumford; Jh Wilde; Yotis A. Senis; Steve P. Watson

Summary.  Introduction and Background: Adrenaline stimulates biphasic aggregation in plasma through the Gi‐coupled α2A‐adrenoreceptor. In the present study, we demonstrate that both primary and secondary wave aggregation induced by adrenaline in plasma is blocked by two structurally distinct inhibitors of Src family kinases, dasatinib and PD0173952. Methods and Results: In contrast, primary aggregation is partially inhibited or unaffected in the presence of inhibitors of cyclo‐oxygenase, phosphoinositide (PI) 3‐kinases, and P2Y1 and P2Y12 ADP receptors, although secondary aggregation is abolished. The ability of adrenaline to inhibit adenylyl cyclase and to synergize with platelet agonists in mediating platelet activation in plasma is retained in the presence of Src family kinase inhibition. Moreover, adrenaline does not activate Src family kinases, as determined by western blotting of their regulatory tyrosines, suggesting that constitutive signaling from Src family kinases may underlie their role in activation. Adrenaline is widely used in clinical laboratories for investigation of patients with suspected bleeding disorders. In a group of 90 unrelated patients with a clinically diagnosed platelet bleeding disorder, we identified four who did not exhibit primary wave aggregation in response to adrenaline, although the catecholamine potentiated the response to other agonists, and five who failed to undergo secondary wave aggregation. In contrast, adrenaline stimulated biphasic aggregation in 60 controls. All of the patients with a defective response to adrenaline had impaired ADP‐induced platelet activation. Conclusions: The present results indicate a previously unappreciated role for Src family kinases in mediating Gi signaling in plasma, and demonstrate heterogeneity in response to adrenaline in patients with a clinically diagnosed platelet disorder.


Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2014

Evaluation of a whole blood remote platelet function test for the diagnosis of mild bleeding disorders

Natalia Dovlatova; Marie Lordkipanidzé; Gillian C. Lowe; Ban Dawood; Jane May; S. Heptinstall; Steve P. Watson; Susan C. Fox

Mild platelet function disorders (PFDs) are complex and difficult to diagnose. The current gold standard test, light transmission aggregometry (LTA), including lumi‐aggregometry, is time and labour intensive and blood samples must be processed within a limited time after venepuncture. Furthermore, many subjects with suspected PFDs do not show a platelet abnormality on LTA.

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M. Makris

University of Sheffield

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Jonathan T. Wilde

Queen Elizabeth Hospital Birmingham

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Paul Gissen

University College London

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