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Dive into the research topics where Cornelius F. Boerkoel is active.

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Featured researches published by Cornelius F. Boerkoel.


Nature Genetics | 2011

NBEAL2 is mutated in gray platelet syndrome and is required for biogenesis of platelet α-granules

Meral Gunay-Aygun; Tzipora C. Falik-Zaccai; Thierry Vilboux; Yifat Zivony-Elboum; Fatma Gumruk; Mualla Cetin; Morad Khayat; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Nehama Kfir; Yan Huang; Dawn M. Maynard; Heidi Dorward; Katherine Berger; Robert Kleta; Yair Anikster; Mutlu Arat; Andrew Freiberg; Beate E. Kehrel; Kerstin Jurk; Pedro Cruz; Jim Mullikin; James G. White; Marjan Huizing; William A. Gahl

Gray platelet syndrome (GPS) is an autosomal recessive bleeding disorder that is characterized by large platelets that lack α-granules. Here we show that mutations in NBEAL2 (neurobeachin-like 2), which encodes a BEACH/ARM/WD40 domain protein, cause GPS and that megakaryocytes and platelets from individuals with GPS express a unique combination of NBEAL2 transcripts. Proteomic analysis of sucrose-gradient subcellular fractions of platelets indicated that NBEAL2 localizes to the dense tubular system (endoplasmic reticulum) in platelets.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

The Human Phenotype Ontology in 2017

Sebastian Köhler; Nicole Vasilevsky; Mark Engelstad; Erin Foster; Julie McMurry; Ségolène Aymé; Gareth Baynam; Susan M. Bello; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Kym M. Boycott; Michael Brudno; Orion J. Buske; Patrick F. Chinnery; Valentina Cipriani; Laureen E. Connell; Hugh Dawkins; Laura E. DeMare; Andrew Devereau; Bert B.A. de Vries; Helen V. Firth; Kathleen Freson; Daniel Greene; Ada Hamosh; Ingo Helbig; Courtney Hum; Johanna A. Jähn; Roger James; Roland Krause; Stanley J. F. Laulederkind; Hanns Lochmüller

Deep phenotyping has been defined as the precise and comprehensive analysis of phenotypic abnormalities in which the individual components of the phenotype are observed and described. The three components of the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO; www.human-phenotype-ontology.org) project are the phenotype vocabulary, disease-phenotype annotations and the algorithms that operate on these. These components are being used for computational deep phenotyping and precision medicine as well as integration of clinical data into translational research. The HPO is being increasingly adopted as a standard for phenotypic abnormalities by diverse groups such as international rare disease organizations, registries, clinical labs, biomedical resources, and clinical software tools and will thereby contribute toward nascent efforts at global data exchange for identifying disease etiologies. This update article reviews the progress of the HPO project since the debut Nucleic Acids Research database article in 2014, including specific areas of expansion such as common (complex) disease, new algorithms for phenotype driven genomic discovery and diagnostics, integration of cross-species mapping efforts with the Mammalian Phenotype Ontology, an improved quality control pipeline, and the addition of patient-friendly terminology.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2013

1,25-(OH)2D-24 Hydroxylase (CYP24A1) Deficiency as a Cause of Nephrolithiasis.

Galina Nesterova; May Christine V. Malicdan; Kaori Yasuda; Toshiyuki Sakaki; Thierry Vilboux; Carla Ciccone; Ronald L. Horst; Yan Huang; Gretchen Golas; Wendy J. Introne; Marjan Huizing; David Adams; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Michael T. Collins; William A. Gahl

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Elevated serum vitamin D with hypercalciuria can result in nephrocalcinosis and nephrolithiasis. This study evaluated the cause of excess 1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol (1α,25(OH)2D3) in the development of those disorders in two individuals. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS Two patients with elevated vitamin D levels and nephrocalcinosis or nephrolithiasis were investigated at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Center and the NIH Undiagnosed Diseases Program, by measuring calcium, phosphate, and vitamin D metabolites, and by performing CYP24A1 mutation analysis. RESULTS Both patients exhibited hypercalciuria, hypercalcemia, low parathyroid hormone, elevated vitamin D (1α,25(OH)2D3), normal 25-OHD3, decreased 24,25(OH)2D, and undetectable activity of 1,25(OH)2D-24-hydroxylase (CYP24A1), the enzyme that inactivates 1α,25(OH)2D3. Both patients had bi-allelic mutations in CYP24A1 leading to loss of function of this enzyme. On the basis of dbSNP data, the frequency of predicted deleterious bi-allelic CYP24A1 variants in the general population is estimated to be as high as 4%-20%. CONCLUSIONS The results of this study show that 1,25(OH)2D-24-hydroxylase deficiency due to bi-allelic mutations in CYP24A1 causes elevated serum vitamin D, hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis, and renal stones.


Human Mutation | 2015

PhenomeCentral: A Portal for Phenotypic and Genotypic Matchmaking of Patients with Rare Genetic Diseases

Orion J. Buske; Marta Girdea; Sergiu Dumitriu; Bailey Gallinger; Taila Hartley; Heather Trang; Andriy Misyura; Tal Friedman; Chandree L. Beaulieu; William P. Bone; Amanda E. Links; Nicole L. Washington; Melissa Haendel; Peter N. Robinson; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; David Adams; William A. Gahl; Kym M. Boycott; Michael Brudno

The discovery of disease‐causing mutations typically requires confirmation of the variant or gene in multiple unrelated individuals, and a large number of rare genetic diseases remain unsolved due to difficulty identifying second families. To enable the secure sharing of case records by clinicians and rare disease scientists, we have developed the PhenomeCentral portal (https://phenomecentral.org). Each record includes a phenotypic description and relevant genetic information (exome or candidate genes). PhenomeCentral identifies similar patients in the database based on semantic similarity between clinical features, automatically prioritized genes from whole‐exome data, and candidate genes entered by the users, enabling both hypothesis‐free and hypothesis‐driven matchmaking. Users can then contact other submitters to follow up on promising matches. PhenomeCentral incorporates data for over 1,000 patients with rare genetic diseases, contributed by the FORGE and Care4Rare Canada projects, the US NIH Undiagnosed Diseases Program, the EU Neuromics and ANDDIrare projects, as well as numerous independent clinicians and scientists. Though the majority of these records have associated exome data, most lack a molecular diagnosis. PhenomeCentral has already been used to identify causative mutations for several patients, and its ability to find matching patients and diagnose these diseases will grow with each additional patient that is entered.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2015

York platelet syndrome is a CRAC channelopathy due to gain-of-function mutations in STIM1

Thomas C. Markello; Dong Chen; Justin Y. Kwan; Iren Horkayne-Szakaly; Alan Morrison; Olga Simakova; Irina Maric; Jay N. Lozier; Andrew R. Cullinane; Tatjana Kilo; Lynn Meister; Kourosh Pakzad; William P. Bone; Sanjay Chainani; Elizabeth Lee; Amanda E. Links; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Roxanne Fischer; Camilo Toro; James G. White; William A. Gahl; Meral Gunay-Aygun

Store-operated Ca(2+) entry is the major route of replenishment of intracellular Ca(2+) in animal cells in response to the depletion of Ca(2+) stores in the endoplasmic reticulum. It is primarily mediated by the Ca(2+)-selective release-activated Ca(2+) (CRAC) channel, which consists of the pore-forming subunits ORAI1-3 and the Ca(2+) sensors, STIM1 and STIM2. Recessive loss-of-function mutations in STIM1 or ORAI1 result in immune deficiency and nonprogressive myopathy. Heterozygous gain-of-function mutations in STIM1 cause non-syndromic myopathies as well as syndromic forms of miosis and myopathy with tubular aggregates and Stormorken syndrome; some of these syndromic forms are associated with thrombocytopenia. Increased concentration of Ca(2+) as a result of store-operated Ca(2+) entry is essential for platelet activation. The York Platelet syndrome (YPS) is characterized by thrombocytopenia, striking ultrastructural platelet abnormalities including giant electron-opaque organelles and massive, multilayered target bodies and deficiency of platelet Ca(2+) storage in delta granules. We present clinical and molecular findings in 7 YPS patients from 4 families, demonstrating that YPS patients have a chronic myopathy associated with rimmed vacuoles and heterozygous gain-of-function STIM1 mutations. These findings expand the phenotypic spectrum of STIM1-related human disorders and define the molecular basis of YPS.


Genetics in Medicine | 2016

Computational evaluation of exome sequence data using human and model organism phenotypes improves diagnostic efficiency.

William P. Bone; Nicole L. Washington; Orion J. Buske; David Adams; Joie Davis; David D. Draper; Elise Flynn; Marta Girdea; Rena Godfrey; Gretchen Golas; Catherine Groden; Julius Jacobsen; Sebastian Köhler; Elizabeth M.J. Lee; Amanda E. Links; Thomas C. Markello; Christopher J. Mungall; Michele E. Nehrebecky; Peter N. Robinson; Murat Sincan; Ariane Soldatos; Cynthia J. Tifft; Camilo Toro; Heather Trang; Elise Valkanas; Nicole Vasilevsky; Colleen Wahl; Lynne A. Wolfe; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Michael Brudno

Purpose:Medical diagnosis and molecular or biochemical confirmation typically rely on the knowledge of the clinician. Although this is very difficult in extremely rare diseases, we hypothesized that the recording of patient phenotypes in Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) terms and computationally ranking putative disease-associated sequence variants improves diagnosis, particularly for patients with atypical clinical profiles.Methods:Using simulated exomes and the National Institutes of Health Undiagnosed Diseases Program (UDP) patient cohort and associated exome sequence, we tested our hypothesis using Exomiser. Exomiser ranks candidate variants based on patient phenotype similarity to (i) known disease–gene phenotypes, (ii) model organism phenotypes of candidate orthologs, and (iii) phenotypes of protein–protein association neighbors.Results:Benchmarking showed Exomiser ranked the causal variant as the top hit in 97% of known disease–gene associations and ranked the correct seeded variant in up to 87% when detectable disease–gene associations were unavailable. Using UDP data, Exomiser ranked the causative variant(s) within the top 10 variants for 11 previously diagnosed variants and achieved a diagnosis for 4 of 23 cases undiagnosed by clinical evaluation.Conclusion:Structured phenotyping of patients and computational analysis are effective adjuncts for diagnosing patients with genetic disorders.Genet Med 18 6, 608–617.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Recurrent Mutations in the Basic Domain of TWIST2 Cause Ablepharon Macrostomia and Barber-Say Syndromes

Shannon Marchegiani; Taylor Davis; Federico Tessadori; Gijs van Haaften; Francesco Brancati; Alexander Hoischen; Haigen Huang; Elise Valkanas; Barbara N. Pusey; Denny Schanze; Hanka Venselaar; Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Lynne A. Wolfe; Cynthia J. Tifft; Patricia M. Zerfas; Giovanna Zambruno; Ariana Kariminejad; Farahnaz Sabbagh-Kermani; Janice Lee; Maria Tsokos; Chyi Chia R. Lee; Victor Evangelista de Faria Ferraz; Eduarda Morgana Da Silva; Cathy A. Stevens; Nathalie Roche; Oliver Bartsch; Peter Farndon; Eva Bermejo-Sánchez; Brian P. Brooks; Valerie Maduro

Ablepharon macrostomia syndrome (AMS) and Barber-Say syndrome (BSS) are rare congenital ectodermal dysplasias characterized by similar clinical features. To establish the genetic basis of AMS and BSS, we performed extensive clinical phenotyping, whole exome and candidate gene sequencing, and functional validations. We identified a recurrent de novo mutation in TWIST2 in seven independent AMS-affected families, as well as another recurrent de novo mutation affecting the same amino acid in ten independent BSS-affected families. Moreover, a genotype-phenotype correlation was observed, because the two syndromes differed based solely upon the nature of the substituting amino acid: a lysine at TWIST2 residue 75 resulted in AMS, whereas a glutamine or alanine yielded BSS. TWIST2 encodes a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor that regulates the development of mesenchymal tissues. All identified mutations fell in the basic domain of TWIST2 and altered the DNA-binding pattern of Flag-TWIST2 in HeLa cells. Comparison of wild-type and mutant TWIST2 expressed in zebrafish identified abnormal developmental phenotypes and widespread transcriptome changes. Our results suggest that autosomal-dominant TWIST2 mutations cause AMS or BSS by inducing protean effects on the transcription factors DNA binding.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2014

Three rare diseases in one Sib pair: RAI1, PCK1, GRIN2B mutations associated with Smith-Magenis Syndrome, cytosolic PEPCK deficiency and NMDA receptor glutamate insensitivity.

David Adams; Hongjie Yuan; Todd Holyoak; Katrina H. Arajs; Parvin Hakimi; Thomas C. Markello; Lynne A. Wolfe; Thierry Vilboux; Barbara K. Burton; Karin Fuentes Fajardo; George Grahame; Conisha Holloman; Murat Sincan; Ann C.M. Smith; Gordon Wells; Yan Huang; Hugo Vega; James P. Snyder; Gretchen Golas; Cynthia J. Tifft; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Richard W. Hanson; Stephen F. Traynelis; Douglas S. Kerr; William A. Gahl

The National Institutes of Health Undiagnosed Diseases Program evaluates patients for whom no diagnosis has been discovered despite a comprehensive diagnostic workup. Failure to diagnose a condition may arise from the mutation of genes previously unassociated with disease. However, we hypothesized that this could also co-occur with multiple genetic disorders. Demonstrating a complex syndrome caused by multiple disorders, we report two siblings manifesting both similar and disparate signs and symptoms. They shared a history of episodes of hypoglycemia and lactic acidosis, but had differing exam findings and developmental courses. Clinical acumen and exome sequencing combined with biochemical and functional studies identified three genetic conditions. One sibling had Smith-Magenis Syndrome and a nonsense mutation in the RAI1 gene. The second sibling had a de novo mutation in GRIN2B, which resulted in markedly reduced glutamate potency of the encoded receptor. Both siblings had a protein-destabilizing homozygous mutation in PCK1, which encodes the cytosolic isoform of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK-C). In summary, we present the first clinically-characterized mutation of PCK1 and demonstrate that complex medical disorders can represent the co-occurrence of multiple diseases.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

ATP6V1H Deficiency Impairs Bone Development through Activation of MMP9 and MMP13

Yihan Zhang; Haigen Huang; Gexin Zhao; Tadafumi Yokoyama; Hugo Vega; Yan Huang; Raman Sood; Kevin Bishop; Valerie Maduro; John Accardi; Camilo Toro; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Karen M. Lyons; William A. Gahl; Xiaohong Duan; May Christine V. Malicdan; Shuo Lin

ATP6V1H is a component of a large protein complex with vacuolar ATPase (V-ATPase) activity. We identified two generations of individuals in which short stature and osteoporosis co-segregated with a mutation in ATP6V1H. Since V-ATPases are highly conserved between human and zebrafish, we generated loss-of-function mutants in atp6v1h in zebrafish through CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene knockout. Homozygous mutant atp6v1h zebrafish exhibited a severe reduction in the number of mature calcified bone cells and a dramatic increase in the expression of mmp9 and mmp13. Heterozygous adults showed curved vertebra that lack calcified centrum structure and reduced bone mass and density. Treatment of mutant embryos with small molecule inhibitors of MMP9 and MMP13 significantly restored bone mass in the atp6v1h mutants. These studies have uncovered a new, ATP6V1H-mediated pathway that regulates bone formation, and defines a new mechanism of disease that leads to bone loss. We propose that MMP9/MMP13 could be therapeutic targets for patients with this rare genetic disease.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2016

Complex translocation disrupting TCF4 and altering TCF4 isoform expression segregates as mild autosomal dominant intellectual disability

Valerie Maduro; Barbara N. Pusey; Praveen F. Cherukuri; Paul Atkins; Christèle du Souich; Rosemarie Rupps; Marjolaine Limbos; David Adams; Samarth Bhatt; Patrice Eydoux; Amanda E. Links; Anna Lehman; May Christine V. Malicdan; Christopher E. Mason; Marie Morimoto; James C. Mullikin; Andrew Sear; Clara van Karnebeek; Pawel Stankiewicz; William A. Gahl; Camilo Toro; Cornelius F. Boerkoel

BackgroundMutations of TCF4, which encodes a basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor, cause Pitt-Hopkins syndrome (PTHS) via multiple genetic mechanisms. TCF4 is a complex locus expressing multiple transcripts by alternative splicing and use of multiple promoters. To address the relationship between mutation of these transcripts and phenotype, we report a three-generation family segregating mild intellectual disability with a chromosomal translocation disrupting TCF4.ResultsUsing whole genome sequencing, we detected a complex unbalanced karyotype disrupting TCF4 (46,XY,del(14)(q23.3q23.3)del(18)(q21.2q21.2)del(18)(q21.2q21.2)inv(18)(q21.2q21.2)t(14;18)(q23.3;q21.2)(14pter®14q23.3::18q21.2®18q21.2::18q21.1®18qter;18pter®18q21.2::14q23.3®14qter). Subsequent transcriptome sequencing, qRT-PCR and nCounter analyses revealed that cultured skin fibroblasts and peripheral blood had normal expression of genes along chromosomes 14 or 18 and no marked changes in expression of genes other than TCF4. Affected individuals had 12–33 fold higher mRNA levels of TCF4 than did unaffected controls or individuals with PTHS. Although the derivative chromosome generated a PLEKHG3-TCF4 fusion transcript, the increased levels of TCF4 mRNA arose from transcript variants originating distal to the translocation breakpoint, not from the fusion transcript.ConclusionsAlthough validation in additional patients is required, our findings suggest that the dysmorphic features and severe intellectual disability characteristic of PTHS are partially rescued by overexpression of those short TCF4 transcripts encoding a nuclear localization signal, a transcription activation domain, and the basic helix-loop-helix domain.

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William A. Gahl

National Institutes of Health

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David Adams

National Institutes of Health

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Camilo Toro

National Institutes of Health

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Lynne A. Wolfe

National Institutes of Health

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Thomas C. Markello

National Institutes of Health

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Valerie Maduro

National Institutes of Health

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William P. Bone

National Institutes of Health

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Christèle du Souich

University of British Columbia

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Amanda E. Links

National Institutes of Health

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