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Dive into the research topics where Cécile Jeanpierre is active.

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Featured researches published by Cécile Jeanpierre.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998

Identification of Constitutional WT1 Mutations, in Patients with Isolated Diffuse Mesangial Sclerosis, and Analysis of Genotype/Phenotype Correlations by Use of a Computerized Mutation Database

Cécile Jeanpierre; E. Denamur; I. Henry; M.-O. Cabanis; S. Luce; A. Cécille; Jacques Elion; M. Peuchmaur; C. Loirat; Patrick Niaudet; Marie-Claire Gubler; Claudine Junien

Constitutional mutations of the WT1 gene, encoding a zinc-finger transcription factor involved in renal and gonadal development, are found in most patients with Denys-Drash syndrome (DDS), or diffuse mesangial sclerosis (DMS) associated with pseudohermaphroditism and/or Wilms tumor (WT). Most mutations in DDS patients lie in exon 8 or exon 9, encoding zinc finger 2 or zinc finger 3, respectively, with a hot spot (R394W) in exon 9. We analyzed a series of 24 patients, 10 with isolated DMS (IDMS), 10 with DDS, and 4 with urogenital abnormalities and/or WT. We report WT1 heterozygous mutations in 16 patients, 4 of whom presented with IDMS. One male and two female IDMS patients with WT1 mutations underwent normal puberty. Two mutations associated with IDMS are different from those described in DDS patients. No WT1 mutations were detected in the six other IDMS patients, suggesting genetic heterogeneity of this disease. We analyzed genotype/phenotype correlations, on the basis of the constitution of a WT1 mutation database of 84 germ-line mutations, to compare the distribution and type of mutations, according to the different symptoms. This demonstrated (1) the association between mutations in exons 8 and 9 and DMS; (2) among patients with DMS, a higher frequency of exon 8 mutations among 46, XY patients with female phenotype than among 46,XY patients with sexual ambiguity or male phenotype; and (3) statistically significant evidence that mutations in exons 8 and 9 preferentially affect amino acids with different functions.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Integrin Alpha 8 Recessive Mutations Are Responsible for Bilateral Renal Agenesis in Humans

Camille Humbert; Flora Silbermann; Bharti Morar; Mélanie Parisot; Mohammed Zarhrate; Cécile Masson; Frédéric Tores; Patricia Blanchet; Marie-José Perez; Yuliya Petrov; Philippe Khau Van Kien; Joëlle Roume; Brigitte Leroy; Olivier Gribouval; Luba Kalaydjieva; Laurence Heidet; Rémi Salomon; Corinne Antignac; Alexandre Benmerah; Sophie Saunier; Cécile Jeanpierre

Renal hypodysplasia (RHD) is a heterogeneous condition encompassing a spectrum of kidney development defects including renal agenesis, hypoplasia, and (cystic) dysplasia. Heterozygous mutations of several genes have been identified as genetic causes of RHD with various severity. However, these genes and mutations are not associated with bilateral renal agenesis, except for RET mutations, which could be involved in a few cases. The pathophysiological mechanisms leading to total absence of kidney development thus remain largely elusive. By using a whole-exome sequencing approach in families with several fetuses with bilateral renal agenesis, we identified recessive mutations in the integrin α8-encoding gene ITGA8 in two families. Itga8 homozygous knockout in mice is known to result in absence of kidney development. We provide evidence of a damaging effect of the human ITGA8 mutations. These results demonstrate that mutations of ITGA8 are a genetic cause of bilateral renal agenesis and that, at least in some cases, bilateral renal agenesis is an autosomal-recessive disease.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2011

Novel perspectives for investigating congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT)

Kirsten Y. Renkema; Paul J.D. Winyard; Ilya Skovorodkin; Elena Levtchenko; An Hindryckx; Cécile Jeanpierre; Stefanie Weber; Rémi Salomon; Corinne Antignac; Seppo Vainio; Andreas Schedl; Franz Schaefer; N.V.A.M. Knoers; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) are the commonest cause of chronic kidney disease in children. Structural anomalies within the CAKUT spectrum include renal agenesis, kidney hypo-/dysplasia, multicystic kidney dysplasia, duplex collecting system, posterior urethral valves and ureter abnormalities. While most CAKUT cases are sporadic, familial clustering of CAKUT is common, emphasizing a strong genetic contribution to CAKUT origin. Animal experiments demonstrate that alterations in genes crucial for kidney development can cause experimental CAKUT, while expression studies implicate mislocalization and/or aberrant levels of the encoded proteins in human CAKUT. Further insight into the pathogenesis of CAKUT will improve strategies for early diagnosis, follow-up and treatment. Here, we outline a collaborative approach to identify and characterize novel factors underlying human CAKUT. This European consortium will share the largest collection of CAKUT patients available worldwide and undertake multidisciplinary research into molecular and genetic pathogenesis, with extension into translational studies to improve long-term patient outcomes.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2011

RET and GDNF mutations are rare in fetuses with renal agenesis or other severe kidney development defects

Cécile Jeanpierre; Guillaume Macé; Mélanie Parisot; Vincent Morinière; Audrey Pawtowsky; Marion Benabou; Jelena Martinovic; Jeanne Amiel; Tania Attié-Bitach; Anne-Lise Delezoide; Philippe Loget; Patricia Blanchet; Dominique Gaillard; Marie Gonzales; Wassila Carpentier; Patrick Nitschke; Frédéric Tores; Laurence Heidet; Corinne Antignac; Rémi Salomon

Background The RET/GDNF signalling pathway plays a crucial role during development of the kidneys and the enteric nervous system. In humans, RET activating mutations cause multiple endocrine neoplasia, whereas inactivating mutations are responsible for Hirschsprung disease. RET mutations have also been reported in fetuses with renal agenesis, based on analysis of a small series of samples. Objective and methods To characterise better the involvement of RET and GDNF in kidney development defects, a series of 105 fetuses with bilateral defects, including renal agenesis, severe hypodysplasia or multicystic dysplastic kidney, was studied. RET and GDNF coding sequences, evolutionary conserved non-coding regions (ECRs) in promoters, 3′UTRs, and RET intron 1 were analysed. Copy number variations at these loci were also investigated. Results The study identified: (1) a low frequency (<7%) of potential mutations in the RET coding sequence, with inheritance from the healthy father for four of them; (2) no GDNF mutation; (3) similar allele frequencies in patients and controls for most single nucleotide polymorphism variants, except for RET intron 1 variant rs2506012 that was significantly more frequent in affected fetuses than in controls (6% vs 2%, p=0.01); (4) distribution of the few rare RET variants unidentified in controls into the various 5′-ECRs; (5) absence of copy number variations. Conclusion These results suggest that genomic alteration of RET or GDNF is not a major mechanism leading to renal agenesis and other severe kidney development defects. Analysis of a larger series of patients will be necessary to validate the association of the RET intron 1 variant rs2506012 with renal development defects.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017

Targeted Exome Sequencing Identifies PBX1 as Involved in Monogenic Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract

Laurence Heidet; Vincent Morinière; Charline Henry; Lara De Tomasi; Madeline Louise Reilly; Camille Humbert; Olivier Alibeu; Cécile Fourrage; Christine Bole-Feysot; Patrick Nitschke; Frédéric Tores; Marc Bras; Marc Jeanpierre; Christine Pietrement; Dominique Gaillard; Marie Gonzales; Robert Novo; Elise Schaefer; Joëlle Roume; Jelena Martinovic; Valérie Malan; Rémi Salomon; Sophie Saunier; Corinne Antignac; Cécile Jeanpierre

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) occur in three to six of 1000 live births, represent about 20% of the prenatally detected anomalies, and constitute the main cause of CKD in children. These disorders are phenotypically and genetically heterogeneous. Monogenic causes of CAKUT in humans and mice have been identified. However, despite high-throughput sequencing studies, the cause of the disease remains unknown in most patients, and several studies support more complex inheritance and the role of environmental factors and/or epigenetics in the pathophysiology of CAKUT. Here, we report the targeted exome sequencing of 330 genes, including genes known to be involved in CAKUT and candidate genes, in a cohort of 204 unrelated patients with CAKUT; 45% of the patients were severe fetal cases. We identified pathogenic mutations in 36 of 204 (17.6%) patients. These mutations included five de novo heterozygous loss of function mutations/deletions in the PBX homeobox 1 gene (PBX1), a gene known to have a crucial role in kidney development. In contrast, the frequency of SOX17 and DSTYK variants recently reported as pathogenic in CAKUT did not indicate causality. These findings suggest that PBX1 is involved in monogenic CAKUT in humans and call into question the role of some gene variants recently reported as pathogenic in CAKUT. Targeted exome sequencing also proved to be an efficient and cost-effective strategy to identify pathogenic mutations and deletions in known CAKUT genes.


Mammalian Genome | 1993

Subregional physical mapping of an αB-crystallin sequence and of a new expressed sequence D11S877E to human 11q

Cécile Jeanpierre; Estelle Austruy; Olivier Delattre; Carol Jones; Claudine Junien

We report the regional assignment on Chromosome (Chr) 11q of two cDNA clones selected as sequences expressed in mature kidney and not expressed in Wilms tumor. Clone T70 was identified as an αB-crystallin sequence (CRYA2). CRYA2 has previously been mapped to 11q22.3–23.1 by in situ hybridization. Clone 6.2 represents a new gene expressed in adult and fetal kidney, pancreas, and liver. In order to map sequences corresponding to clone 6.2 and to physically define the boundaries of the localization of CRYA2, we used somatic cell hybrids carrying either different human chromosomes or Chr 11 segments and a cell line established from a patient with an interstitial deletion of region 11q14.3–q22.1. We showed that CRYA2 lies proximal to the 11q23.2 breakpoint defined by the constitutional t(11;22) and distal to the 11q22.1 breakpoint (between D11S388 and D11S35) of a constitutional interstitial deletion. This is in agreement with previous data obtained by in situ hybridization and provides proximal and distal physical benchmarks for this localization. Clone 6.2-related sequence (D11S877E) was assigned to region 11q23.2–q24.2 defined by the breakpoints of the constitutional t(11;22) and of the Ewings sarcoma neuroepithelioma t(11;22).


Human Mutation | 2016

DCDC2 Mutations Cause Neonatal Sclerosing Cholangitis.

Muriel Girard; Albane A. Bizet; Alain Lachaux; Emmanuel Gonzales; Emilie Filhol; Sophie Collardeau-Frachon; Cécile Jeanpierre; Charline Henry; Monique Fabre; Loic Viremouneix; Louise Galmiche; Dominique Debray; Christine Bole-Feysot; Patrick Nitschke; D. Pariente; Catherine Guettier; Stanislas Lyonnet; Laurence Heidet; Aurelia Bertholet; Emmanuel Jacquemin; Alexandra Henrion-Caude; Sophie Saunier

Neonatal sclerosing cholangitis (NSC) is a rare biliary disease leading to liver transplantation in childhood. Patients with NSC and ichtyosis have already been identified with a CLDN1 mutation, encoding a tight‐junction protein. However, for the majority of patients, the molecular basis of NSC remains unknown. We identified biallelic missense mutations or in‐frame deletion in DCDC2 in four affected children. Mutations involve highly conserved amino acids in the doublecortin domains of the protein. In cholangiocytes, DCDC2 protein is normally located in the cytoplasm and cilia, whereas in patients the mutated protein is accumulated in the cytoplasm, absent from cilia, and associated with ciliogenesis defect. This is the first report of DCDC2 mutations in NSC. This data expands the molecular spectrum of NSC, that can be considered as a ciliopathy and also expands the clinical spectrum of the DCDC2 mutations, previously reported in dyslexia, deafness, and nephronophtisis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

Mutations in GREB1L Cause Bilateral Kidney Agenesis in Humans and Mice

Lara De Tomasi; Pierre David; Camille Humbert; Flora Silbermann; Christelle Arrondel; Frédéric Tores; Stéphane Fouquet; Audrey Desgrange; Olivier Niel; Christine Bole-Feysot; Patrick Nitschke; Joëlle Roume; Marie-Pierre Cordier; Christine Pietrement; Bertrand Isidor; Philippe Khau Van Kien; Marie Gonzales; Marie-Hélène Saint-Frison; Jelena Martinovic; Robert Novo; Juliette Piard; Christelle Cabrol; Ishwar C. Verma; Ratna D. Puri; Hubert Journel; Jacqueline Aziza; Laurent Gavard; Marie-Hélène Said-Menthon; Laurence Heidet; Sophie Saunier

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) constitute a major cause of chronic kidney disease in children and 20% of prenatally detected anomalies. CAKUT encompass a spectrum of developmental kidney defects, including renal agenesis, hypoplasia, and cystic and non-cystic dysplasia. More than 50 genes have been reported as mutated in CAKUT-affected case subjects. However, the pathophysiological mechanisms leading to bilateral kidney agenesis (BKA) remain largely elusive. Whole-exome or targeted exome sequencing of 183 unrelated familial and/or severe CAKUT-affected case subjects, including 54 fetuses with BKA, led to the identification of 16 heterozygous variants in GREB1L (growth regulation by estrogen in breast cancer 1-like), a gene reported as a target of retinoic acid signaling. Four loss-of-function and 12 damaging missense variants, 14 being absent from GnomAD, were identified. Twelve of them were present in familial or simplex BKA-affected case subjects. Female BKA-affected fetuses also displayed uterus agenesis. We demonstrated a significant association between GREB1L variants and BKA. By in situ hybridization, we showed expression of Greb1l in the nephrogenic zone in developing mouse kidney. We generated a Greb1l knock-out mouse model by CRISPR-Cas9. Analysis at E13.5 revealed lack of kidneys and genital tract anomalies in male and female Greb1l-/- embryos and a slight decrease in ureteric bud branching in Greb1l+/- embryos. We showed that Greb1l invalidation in mIMCD3 cells affected tubulomorphogenesis in 3D-collagen culture, a phenotype rescued by expression of the wild-type human protein. This demonstrates that GREB1L plays a major role in early metanephros and genital development in mice and humans.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 2008

Molecular cytogenetic anomalies and phenotype alterations in a newly established cell line from Wilms tumor with diffuse anaplasia

Marine Faussillon; Ichiro Murakami; Magalie Bichat; Louise Telvi; Cécile Jeanpierre; Christian Nezelof; Francis Jaubert; Jean Gogusev

The novel continuous cell line WT-Pe.1 was established in vitro from Wilms tumor with histological features of diffuse anaplasia. The cultures grew as poorly differentiated epithelial-like cells with pleomorphic polygonal shapes and formation of typical monolayers. WT-Pe.1 cells were immunoreactive for cytokeratin, vimentin, laminin, villin, CD10, and CD24 proteins. Conventional cytogenetic analysis by RHG-banding revealed a hypotriploid karyotype with numerous abnormalities including ring chromosomes, double-minutes, homogeneous staining regions, radial structures, dicentrics, and several marker chromosomes. Comparative genomic hybridization analysis revealed DNA copy numbers losses on chromosome segments 1p, 3p, 6q, 9q34.1 approximately q34.3, 11q24 approximately q25, 14q12 approximately qter, 16q, 18q, and 22q11 approximately q13; gain of genomic material was localized on chromosome arms 1q, 4p, 6q, and 7p and the entire chromosome 12. With DNA from the original tumor, copy number losses were detected on chromosomes 1p, 14q, 16q, 17q, and 22q and gains were observed on 1q, 4p, 8q, 12p, 12q, and chromosome 14p. Copy number amplifications of distinct loci were found on 1q21.1 and 4p15.3, as well as an elevated copy number of cyclin D2 (CCND2) and cyclin D associated kinase (CDK4) genes on chromosome 12 (confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization).


Human Molecular Genetics | 1999

Spectrum of hSNF5IINI1 Somatic Mutations in Human Cancer and Genotype-Phenotype Correlations

Nicolas Sévenet; Arielle Lellouch-Tubiana; Deborah Schofield; Khê Hoang-Xuan; Manfred Gessler; Daniel Birnbaum; Cécile Jeanpierre; Anne Jouvet; Olivier Delattre

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Laurence Heidet

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Patrick Nitschke

Paris Descartes University

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Frédéric Tores

Paris Descartes University

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Jelena Martinovic

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Rémi Salomon

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Cécile Fourrage

Paris Descartes University

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Robert Novo

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Vincent Morinière

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Christine Pietrement

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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