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Dive into the research topics where Bruce E. Hayward is active.

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Featured researches published by Bruce E. Hayward.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Mutations in the gene encoding the 3'-5' DNA exonuclease TREX1 cause Aicardi-Goutières syndrome at the AGS1 locus

Yanick J. Crow; Bruce E. Hayward; Rekha Parmar; Peter Robins; Andrea Leitch; Manir Ali; Deborah N. Black; Hans van Bokhoven; Han G. Brunner; B.C.J. Hamel; Peter Corry; Frances Cowan; Suzanne Frints; Joerg Klepper; John H. Livingston; Sally Ann Lynch; R.F. Massey; Jean François Meritet; Jacques L. Michaud; Gérard Ponsot; Thomas Voit; Pierre Lebon; David T. Bonthron; Andrew P. Jackson; Deborah E. Barnes; Tomas Lindahl

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) presents as a severe neurological brain disease and is a genetic mimic of the sequelae of transplacentally acquired viral infection. Evidence exists for a perturbation of innate immunity as a primary pathogenic event in the disease phenotype. Here, we show that TREX1, encoding the major mammalian 3′ → 5′ DNA exonuclease, is the AGS1 gene, and AGS-causing mutations result in abrogation of TREX1 enzyme activity. Similar loss of function in the Trex1−/− mouse leads to an inflammatory phenotype. Our findings suggest an unanticipated role for TREX1 in processing or clearing anomalous DNA structures, failure of which results in the triggering of an abnormal innate immune response.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Mutations in genes encoding ribonuclease H2 subunits cause Aicardi-Goutières syndrome and mimic congenital viral brain infection

Yanick J. Crow; Andrea Leitch; Bruce E. Hayward; Anna Garner; Rekha Parmar; Elen Griffith; Manir Ali; Colin A. Semple; Jean Aicardi; Riyana Babul-Hirji; Clarisse Baumann; Peter Baxter; Enrico Bertini; Kate Chandler; David Chitayat; Daniel Cau; Catherine Déry; Elisa Fazzi; Cyril Goizet; Mary D. King; Joerg Klepper; Didier Lacombe; Giovanni Lanzi; Hermione Lyall; María Luisa Martínez-Frías; Michèle Mathieu; Carole McKeown; Anne Monier; Yvette Oade; Oliver Quarrell

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is an autosomal recessive neurological disorder, the clinical and immunological features of which parallel those of congenital viral infection. Here we define the composition of the human ribonuclease H2 enzyme complex and show that AGS can result from mutations in the genes encoding any one of its three subunits. Our findings demonstrate a role for ribonuclease H in human neurological disease and suggest an unanticipated relationship between ribonuclease H2 and the antiviral immune response that warrants further investigation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

Imprinting of the Gsα gene GNAS1 in the pathogenesis of acromegaly

Bruce E. Hayward; Anne Barlier; Márta Korbonits; Ashley B. Grossman; Philippe Jacquet; Alain Enjalbert; David T. Bonthron

Approximately 40% of growth hormone-secreting pituitary adenomas have somatic mutations in the GNAS1 gene (the so-called gsp oncogene). These mutations at codon 201 or codon 227 constitutively activate the alpha subunit of the adenylate cyclase-stimulating G protein G(s). GNAS1 is subject to a complex pattern of genomic imprinting, its various promoters directing the production of maternally, paternally, and biallelically derived gene products. Transcripts encoding G(s)alpha are biallelically derived in most human tissues. Despite this, we show here that in 21 out of 22 gsp-positive somatotroph adenomas, the mutation had occurred on the maternal allele. To investigate the reason for this allelic bias, we also analyzed GNAS1 imprinting in the normal adult pituitary and found that G(s)alpha is monoallelically expressed from the maternal allele in this tissue. We further show that this monoallelic expression of G(s)alpha is frequently relaxed in somatotroph tumors, both in those that have gsp mutations and in those that do not. These findings imply a possible role for loss of G(s)alpha imprinting during pituitary somatotroph tumorigenesis and also suggest that G(s)alpha imprinting is regulated separately from that of the other GNAS1 products, NESP55 and XLalphas, imprinting of which is retained in these tumors.


Nature | 2002

A global disorder of imprinting in the human female germ line

Hannah Judson; Bruce E. Hayward; Eamonn Sheridan; David T. Bonthron

Imprinted genes are expressed differently depending on whether they are carried by a chromosome of maternal or paternal origin. Correct imprinting is established by germline-specific modifications; failure of this process underlies several inherited human syndromes. All these imprinting control defects are cis-acting, disrupting establishment or maintenance of allele-specific epigenetic modifications across one contiguous segment of the genome. In contrast, we report here an inherited global imprinting defect. This recessive maternal-effect mutation disrupts the specification of imprints at multiple, non-contiguous loci, with the result that genes normally carrying a maternal methylation imprint assume a paternal epigenetic pattern on the maternal allele. The resulting conception is phenotypically indistinguishable from an androgenetic complete hydatidiform mole, in which abnormal extra-embryonic tissue proliferates while development of the embryo is absent or nearly so. This disorder offers a genetic route to the identification of trans-acting oocyte factors that mediate maternal imprint establishment.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Novel PMS2 Pseudogenes Can Conceal Recessive Mutations Causing a Distinctive Childhood Cancer Syndrome

Michel De Vos; Bruce E. Hayward; Susan Picton; Eamonn Sheridan; David T. Bonthron

We investigated a family with an autosomal recessive syndrome of cafe-au-lait patches and childhood malignancy, notably supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor. There was no cancer predisposition in heterozygotes; nor was there bowel cancer in any individual. However, autozygosity mapping indicated linkage to a region of 7p22 surrounding the PMS2 mismatch-repair gene. Sequencing of genomic PCR products initially failed to identify a PMS2 mutation. Genome searches then revealed a previously unrecognized PMS2 pseudogene, corresponding to exons 9-15, within a 100-kb inverted duplication situated 600 kb centromeric from PMS2 itself. This information allowed a redesigned sequence analysis, identifying a homozygous mutation (R802X) in PMS2 exon 14. Furthermore, in the family with Turcot syndrome, in which the first inherited PMS2 mutation (R134X) was described, a further truncating mutation was identified on the other allele, in exon 13. Further whole-genome analysis shows that the complexity of PMS2 pseudogenes is greater than appreciated and may have hindered previous mutation studies. Several previously reported PMS2 polymorphisms are, in fact, pseudogene sequence variants. Although PMS2 mutations may be rare in colorectal cancer, they appear, for the most part, to behave as recessive traits. For technical reasons, their involvement in childhood cancer, particularly in primitive neuroectodermal tumor, may have been underestimated.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Mutations Causing Familial Biparental Hydatidiform Mole Implicate C6orf221 as a Possible Regulator of Genomic Imprinting in the Human Oocyte

David A. Parry; Clare V. Logan; Bruce E. Hayward; Michael Shires; Hanène Landolsi; Christine P. Diggle; Ian M. Carr; Cécile Rittore; Isabelle Touitou; Laurent Philibert; Rosemary A. Fisher; Masoumeh Fallahian; John Huntriss; Helen M. Picton; Saghira Malik; Graham R. Taylor; Colin A. Johnson; David T. Bonthron; Eamonn Sheridan

Familial biparental hydatidiform mole (FBHM) is the only known pure maternal-effect recessive inherited disorder in humans. Affected women, although developmentally normal themselves, suffer repeated pregnancy loss because of the development of the conceptus into a complete hydatidiform mole in which extraembryonic trophoblastic tissue develops but the embryo itself suffers early demise. This developmental phenotype results from a genome-wide failure to correctly specify or maintain a maternal epigenotype at imprinted loci. Most cases of FBHM result from mutations of NLRP7, but genetic heterogeneity has been demonstrated. Here, we report biallelic mutations of C6orf221 in three families with FBHM. The previously described biological properties of their respective gene families suggest that NLRP7 and C6orf221 may interact as components of an oocyte complex that is directly or indirectly required for determination of epigenetic status on the oocyte genome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Mutation of the Variant α-Tubulin TUBA8 Results in Polymicrogyria with Optic Nerve Hypoplasia

Mohammad R. Abdollahi; Ewan E. Morrison; Tamara Sirey; Zoltán Molnár; Bruce E. Hayward; Ian M. Carr; Kelly Springell; C. Geoff Woods; Mushtaq Ahmed; Louise Hattingh; Peter Corry; Daniela T. Pilz; Neil Stoodley; Yanick J. Crow; Graham R. Taylor; David T. Bonthron; Eamonn Sheridan

The critical importance of cytoskeletal function for correct neuronal migration during development of the cerebral cortex has been underscored by the identities of germline mutations underlying a number of human neurodevelopmental disorders. The proteins affected include TUBA1A, a major alpha-tubulin isoform, and microtubule-associated components such as doublecortin, and LIS1. Mutations in these genes are associated with the anatomical abnormality lissencephaly, which is believed to reflect failure of neuronal migration. An important recent observation has been the dependence of cortical neuronal migration upon acetylation of alpha-tubulin at lysine 40 by the histone acetyltransferase Elongator complex. Here, we describe a recognizable autosomal recessive syndrome, characterized by generalized polymicrogyria in association with optic nerve hypoplasia (PMGOH). By autozygosity mapping, we show that the molecular basis for this condition is mutation of the TUBA8 gene, encoding a variant alpha-tubulin of unknown function that is not susceptible to the lysine 40 acetylation that regulates microtubule function during cortical neuron migration. Together with the unique expression pattern of TUBA8 within the developing cerebral cortex, these observations suggest a role for this atypical microtubule component in regulating mammalian brain development.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

Using next-generation sequencing for high resolution multiplex analysis of copy number variation from nanogram quantities of DNA from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded specimens

Henry M. Wood; Ornella Belvedere; Caroline Conway; Catherine Daly; Rebecca Chalkley; Melissa Bickerdike; Claire McKinley; Phil Egan; Lisa Ross; Bruce E. Hayward; J.E. Morgan; Leslie Davidson; Ken MacLennan; T.K. Ong; Kostas Papagiannopoulos; Ian Cook; David J. Adams; Graham R. Taylor; Pamela Rabbitts

The use of next-generation sequencing technologies to produce genomic copy number data has recently been described. Most approaches, however, reply on optimal starting DNA, and are therefore unsuitable for the analysis of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples, which largely precludes the analysis of many tumour series. We have sought to challenge the limits of this technique with regards to quality and quantity of starting material and the depth of sequencing required. We confirm that the technique can be used to interrogate DNA from cell lines, fresh frozen material and FFPE samples to assess copy number variation. We show that as little as 5 ng of DNA is needed to generate a copy number karyogram, and follow this up with data from a series of FFPE biopsies and surgical samples. We have used various levels of sample multiplexing to demonstrate the adjustable resolution of the methodology, depending on the number of samples and available resources. We also demonstrate reproducibility by use of replicate samples and comparison with microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) and digital PCR. This technique can be valuable in both the analysis of routine diagnostic samples and in examining large repositories of fixed archival material.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Mutations in NMNAT1 cause Leber congenital amaurosis and identify a new disease pathway for retinal degeneration

Robert K. Koenekoop; Hui Wang; Jacek Majewski; Xia Wang; Irma Lopez; Huanan Ren; Yiyun Chen; Yumei Li; Gerald A. Fishman; Mohammed Genead; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Naimesh Solanki; Elias I. Traboulsi; Jingliang Cheng; Clare V. Logan; Martin McKibbin; Bruce E. Hayward; David A. Parry; Colin A. Johnson; Mohammed Nageeb; James A. Poulter; Moin D. Mohamed; Hussain Jafri; Yasmin Rashid; Graham R. Taylor; Vafa Keser; Graeme Mardon; Huidan Xu; Chris F. Inglehearn; Qing Fu

Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) is a blinding retinal disease that presents within the first year after birth. Using exome sequencing, we identified mutations in the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) synthase gene NMNAT1 encoding nicotinamide mononucleotide adenylyltransferase 1 in eight families with LCA, including the family in which LCA was originally linked to the LCA9 locus. Notably, all individuals with NMNAT1 mutations also have macular colobomas, which are severe degenerative entities of the central retina (fovea) devoid of tissue and photoreceptors. Functional assays of the proteins encoded by the mutant alleles identified in our study showed that the mutations reduce the enzymatic activity of NMNAT1 in NAD biosynthesis and affect protein folding. Of note, recent characterization of the slow Wallerian degeneration (Wlds) mouse model, in which prolonged axonal survival after injury is observed, identified NMNAT1 as a neuroprotective protein when ectopically expressed. Our findings identify a new disease mechanism underlying LCA and provide the first link between endogenous NMNAT1 dysfunction and a human nervous system disorder.


Human Mutation | 2009

Genetic and epigenetic analysis of recurrent hydatidiform mole

Bruce E. Hayward; Michel De Vos; Nargese Talati; M. Reza Abdollahi; Graham R. Taylor; Esther Meyer; Denise Williams; Eamonn R. Maher; Faridon Setna; Kausar Nazir; Shahnaz Hussaini; Hussain Jafri; Yasmin Rashid; Eamonn Sheridan; David T. Bonthron

Familial biparental hydatidiform mole (FBHM) is a maternal‐effect autosomal recessive disorder in which recurrent pregnancy failure with molar degeneration occurs. The phenotype mimics molar pregnancy due to androgenesis, despite the normal genetic makeup of the conceptus. FBHM appears to result from a failure to establish correct maternal epigenetic identity at imprinted loci during oogenesis. Several women affected with FBHM have previously been shown to have biallelic mutations in the NLRP7 gene (NALP7). Here, we present the results of epigenetic and mutational analysis on FBHM patients from 11 families, 10 of them novel. We demonstrate a methylation defect at imprinted loci in tissue from four new FBHM cases. Biallelic NLRP7 mutations, including eight previously undescribed mutations, were found in all but one family. These results indicate for the first time that maternal imprints at some loci may be correctly specified in FBHM conceptions, since differential methylation of SGCE/PEG10 was preserved in all four cases.

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David T. Bonthron

St James's University Hospital

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Lisa Strain

Western General Hospital

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Michel De Vos

St James's University Hospital

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Veronica Moran

St James's University Hospital

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