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Dive into the research topics where Davut Pehlivan is active.

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Featured researches published by Davut Pehlivan.


Cell | 2014

A drosophila genetic resource of mutants to study mechanisms underlying human genetic diseases.

Shinya Yamamoto; Manish Jaiswal; Wu Lin Charng; Tomasz Gambin; Ender Karaca; Ghayda M. Mirzaa; Wojciech Wiszniewski; Hector Sandoval; Nele A. Haelterman; Bo Xiong; Ke Zhang; Vafa Bayat; Gabriela David; Tongchao Li; Kuchuan Chen; Upasana Gala; Tamar Harel; Davut Pehlivan; Samantha Penney; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Joep de Ligt; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Yajing Xie; Stephen H. Tsang; Yesim Parman; Merve Sivaci; Esra Battaloglu; Donna M. Muzny; Ying Wooi Wan; Zhandong Liu

Invertebrate model systems are powerful tools for studying human disease owing to their genetic tractability and ease of screening. We conducted a mosaic genetic screen of lethal mutations on the Drosophila X chromosome to identify genes required for the development, function, and maintenance of the nervous system. We identified 165 genes, most of whose function has not been studied in vivo. In parallel, we investigated rare variant alleles in 1,929 human exomes from families with unsolved Mendelian disease. Genes that are essential in flies and have multiple human homologs were found to be likely to be associated with human diseases. Merging the human data sets with the fly genes allowed us to identify disease-associated mutations in six families and to provide insights into microcephaly associated with brain dysgenesis. This bidirectional synergism between fly genetics and human genomics facilitates the functional annotation of evolutionarily conserved genes involved in human health.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Compound Heterozygosity for Loss-of-Function Lysyl-tRNA Synthetase Mutations in a Patient with Peripheral Neuropathy

Heather M. McLaughlin; Reiko Sakaguchi; Cuiping Liu; Takao Igarashi; Davut Pehlivan; Kristine Chu; Ram Iyer; Pedro Cruz; Praveen F. Cherukuri; Nancy F. Hansen; James C. Mullikin; Leslie G. Biesecker; Thomas E. Wilson; Victor Ionasescu; Garth A. Nicholson; Charles Searby; Kevin Talbot; J. M. Vance; Stephan Züchner; Kinga Szigeti; James R. Lupski; Ya-Ming Hou; Eric D. Green; Anthony Antonellis

Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease comprises a genetically and clinically heterogeneous group of peripheral nerve disorders characterized by impaired distal motor and sensory function. Mutations in three genes encoding aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs) have been implicated in CMT disease primarily associated with an axonal pathology. ARSs are ubiquitously expressed, essential enzymes responsible for charging tRNA molecules with their cognate amino acids. To further explore the role of ARSs in CMT disease, we performed a large-scale mutation screen of the 37 human ARS genes in a cohort of 355 patients with a phenotype consistent with CMT. Here we describe three variants (p.Leu133His, p.Tyr173SerfsX7, and p.Ile302Met) in the lysyl-tRNA synthetase (KARS) gene in two patients from this cohort. Functional analyses revealed that two of these mutations (p.Leu133His and p.Tyr173SerfsX7) severely affect enzyme activity. Interestingly, both functional variants were found in a single patient with CMT disease and additional neurological and non-neurological sequelae. Based on these data, KARS becomes the fourth ARS gene associated with CMT disease, indicating that this family of enzymes is specifically critical for axon function.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Inverted genomic segments and complex triplication rearrangements are mediated by inverted repeats in the human genome.

Claudia M.B. Carvalho; Melissa B. Ramocki; Davut Pehlivan; Luis M. Franco; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Ping Fang; Alanna E. McCall; Eniko K. Pivnick; Stacy Hines-Dowell; Laurie H. Seaver; Linda Friehling; Sansan Lee; Rosemarie Smith; Daniela del Gaudio; Marjorie Withers; Pengfei Liu; Sau Wai Cheung; John W. Belmont; Huda Y. Zoghbi; P. J. Hastings; James R. Lupski

We identified complex genomic rearrangements consisting of intermixed duplications and triplications of genomic segments at the MECP2 and PLP1 loci. These complex rearrangements were characterized by a triplicated segment embedded within a duplication in 11 unrelated subjects. Notably, only two breakpoint junctions were generated during each rearrangement formation. All the complex rearrangement products share a common genomic organization, duplication-inverted triplication-duplication (DUP-TRP/INV-DUP), in which the triplicated segment is inverted and located between directly oriented duplicated genomic segments. We provide evidence that the DUP-TRP/INV-DUP structures are mediated by inverted repeats that can be separated by >300 kb, a genomic architecture that apparently leads to susceptibility to such complex rearrangements. A similar inverted repeat–mediated mechanism may underlie structural variation in many other regions of the human genome. We propose a mechanism that involves both homology-driven events, via inverted repeats, and microhomologous or nonhomologous events.


Cell | 2014

Human CLP1 Mutations Alter tRNA Biogenesis, Affecting Both Peripheral and Central Nervous System Function

Ender Karaca; Stefan Weitzer; Davut Pehlivan; Hiroshi Shiraishi; Tasos Gogakos; Toshikatsu Hanada; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Wojciech Wiszniewski; Marjorie Withers; Ian M. Campbell; Serkan Erdin; Sedat Işıkay; Luis M. Franco; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Tomasz Gambin; Violet Gelowani; Jill V. Hunter; Gozde Yesil; Erkan Koparir; Sarenur Yilmaz; Miguel Brown; Daniel Briskin; Markus Hafner; Pavel Morozov; Thalia A. Farazi; Christian Bernreuther; Markus Glatzel; Siegfried Trattnig; Joachim Friske; Claudia Kronnerwetter

CLP1 is a RNA kinase involved in tRNA splicing. Recently, CLP1 kinase-dead mice were shown to display a neuromuscular disorder with loss of motor neurons and muscle paralysis. Human genome analyses now identified a CLP1 homozygous missense mutation (p.R140H) in five unrelated families, leading to a loss of CLP1 interaction with the tRNA splicing endonuclease (TSEN) complex, largely reduced pre-tRNA cleavage activity, and accumulation of linear tRNA introns. The affected individuals develop severe motor-sensory defects, cortical dysgenesis, and microcephaly. Mice carrying kinase-dead CLP1 also displayed microcephaly and reduced cortical brain volume due to the enhanced cell death of neuronal progenitors that is associated with reduced numbers of cortical neurons. Our data elucidate a neurological syndrome defined by CLP1 mutations that impair tRNA splicing. Reduction of a founder mutation to homozygosity illustrates the importance of rare variations in disease and supports the clan genomics hypothesis.


Cell Reports | 2015

Exome Sequence Analysis Suggests that Genetic Burden Contributes to Phenotypic Variability and Complex Neuropathy

Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Tamar Harel; Tomasz Gambin; Maria Kousi; Laurie B. Griffin; Ludmila Francescatto; Burcak Ozes; Ender Karaca; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Matthew N. Bainbridge; Kim Lawson; Davut Pehlivan; Yuji Okamoto; Marjorie Withers; Pedro Mancias; Anne Slavotinek; Pamela J. Reitnauer; Meryem Tuba Goksungur; Michael E. Shy; Thomas O. Crawford; Michel Koenig; Jason R. Willer; Brittany N. Flores; Igor Pediaditrakis; Onder Us; Wojciech Wiszniewski; Yesim Parman; Anthony Antonellis; Donna M. Muzny; Nicholas Katsanis

Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous distal symmetric polyneuropathy. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) of 40 individuals from 37 unrelated families with CMT-like peripheral neuropathy refractory to molecular diagnosis identified apparent causal mutations in ∼ 45% (17/37) of families. Three candidate disease genes are proposed, supported by a combination of genetic and in vivo studies. Aggregate analysis of mutation data revealed a significantly increased number of rare variants across 58 neuropathy-associated genes in subjects versus controls, confirmed in a second ethnically discrete neuropathy cohort, suggesting that mutation burden potentially contributes to phenotypic variability. Neuropathy genes shown to have highly penetrant Mendelizing variants (HPMVs) and implicated by burden in families were shown to interact genetically in a zebrafish assay exacerbating the phenotype established by the suppression of single genes. Our findings suggest that the combinatorial effect of rare variants contributes to disease burden and variable expressivity.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Replicative mechanisms for CNV formation are error prone

Claudia M.B. Carvalho; Davut Pehlivan; Melissa B. Ramocki; Ping Fang; Benjamin Alleva; Luis M. Franco; John W. Belmont; P. J. Hastings; James R. Lupski

We investigated 67 breakpoint junctions of gene copy number gains in 31 unrelated subjects. We observed a strikingly high frequency of small deletions and insertions (29%) apparently originating from polymerase slippage events, in addition to frameshifts and point mutations in homonucleotide runs (13%), at or flanking the breakpoint junctions of complex copy number variants. These single-nucleotide variants were generated concomitantly with the de novo complex genomic rearrangement (CGR) event. Our findings implicate low-fidelity, error-prone DNA polymerase activity in synthesis associated with DNA repair mechanisms as the cause of local increase in point mutation burden associated with human CGR.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

ARMC4 mutations cause primary ciliary dyskinesia with randomization of left/right body asymmetry.

Rim Hjeij; Anna Lindstrand; Richard Francis; Maimoona A. Zariwala; Xiaoqin Liu; You Li; Rama Rao Damerla; Gerard W. Dougherty; Marouan Abouhamed; Heike Olbrich; Niki T. Loges; Petra Pennekamp; Erica E. Davis; Claudia M.B. Carvalho; Davut Pehlivan; Claudius Werner; Johanna Raidt; Gabriele Köhler; Karsten Häffner; Miguel Reyes-Múgica; James R. Lupski; Margaret W. Leigh; Margaret Rosenfeld; Lucy Morgan; Cecilia W. Lo; Nicholas Katsanis; Heymut Omran

The motive forces for ciliary movement are generated by large multiprotein complexes referred to as outer dynein arms (ODAs), which are preassembled in the cytoplasm prior to transport to the ciliary axonemal compartment. In humans, defects in structural components, docking complexes, or cytoplasmic assembly factors can cause primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a disorder characterized by chronic airway disease and defects in laterality. By using combined high resolution copy-number variant and mutation analysis, we identified ARMC4 mutations in twelve PCD individuals whose cells showed reduced numbers of ODAs and severely impaired ciliary beating. Transient suppression in zebrafish and analysis of an ENU mouse mutant confirmed in both model organisms that ARMC4 is critical for left-right patterning. We demonstrate that ARMC4 is an axonemal protein that is necessary for proper targeting and anchoring of ODAs.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

Whole-Exome Sequencing Identifies Homozygous GPR161 Mutation in a Family with Pituitary Stalk Interruption Syndrome

Ender Karaca; Ramazan Buyukkaya; Davut Pehlivan; Wu-Lin Charng; Kürşat Oğuz Yaykaşlı; Yavuz Bayram; Tomasz Gambin; Marjorie Withers; Mehmed M. Atik; İlknur Arslanoğlu; Semih Bolu; Serkan Erdin; Ayla Buyukkaya; Emine Yaykasli; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Donna M. Muzny; Richard A. Gibbs; James R. Lupski

CONTEXT Pituitary stalk interruption syndrome (PSIS) is a rare, congenital anomaly of the pituitary gland characterized by pituitary gland insufficiency, thin or discontinuous pituitary stalk, anterior pituitary hypoplasia, and ectopic positioning of the posterior pituitary gland (neurohypophysis). The clinical presentation of patients with PSIS varies from isolated growth hormone (GH) deficiency to combined pituitary insufficiency and accompanying extrapituitary findings. Mutations in HESX1, LHX4, OTX2, SOX3, and PROKR2 have been associated with PSIS in less than 5% of cases; thus, the underlying genetic etiology for the vast majority of cases remains to be determined. OBJECTIVE We applied whole-exome sequencing (WES) to a consanguineous family with two affected siblings who have pituitary gland insufficiency and radiographic findings of hypoplastic (thin) pituitary gland, empty sella, ectopic neurohypophysis, and interrupted pitiutary stalk-characteristic clinical diagnostic findings of PSIS. DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS WES was applied to two affected and one unaffected siblings. RESULTS WES of two affected and one unaffected sibling revealed a unique homozygous missense mutation in GPR161, which encodes the orphan G protein-coupled receptor 161, a protein responsible for transducing extracellular signals across the plasma membrane into the cell. CONCLUSION Mutations of GPR161 may be implicated as a potential novel cause of PSIS.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Molecular etiology of arthrogryposis in multiple families of mostly Turkish origin

Yavuz Bayram; Ender Karaca; Zeynep Coban Akdemir; Elif Yilmaz; Gulsen Akay Tayfun; Hatip Aydin; Deniz Torun; Sevcan Tug Bozdogan; Alper Gezdirici; Sedat Işıkay; Mehmed M. Atik; Tomasz Gambin; Tamar Harel; Ayman W. El-Hattab; Wu Lin Charng; Davut Pehlivan; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Donna M. Muzny; Ali Karaman; Tamer Celik; Ozge Ozalp Yuregir; Timur Yildirim; Ilhan A. Bayhan; Eric Boerwinkle; Richard A. Gibbs; Nursel Elcioglu; Beyhan Tüysüz; James R. Lupski

BACKGROUND Arthrogryposis, defined as congenital joint contractures in 2 or more body areas, is a clinical sign rather than a specific disease diagnosis. To date, more than 400 different disorders have been described that present with arthrogryposis, and variants of more than 220 genes have been associated with these disorders; however, the underlying molecular etiology remains unknown in the considerable majority of these cases. METHODS We performed whole exome sequencing (WES) of 52 patients with clinical presentation of arthrogryposis from 48 different families. RESULTS Affected individuals from 17 families (35.4%) had variants in known arthrogryposis-associated genes, including homozygous variants of cholinergic γ nicotinic receptor (CHRNG, 6 subjects) and endothelin converting enzyme-like 1 (ECEL1, 4 subjects). Deleterious variants in candidate arthrogryposis-causing genes (fibrillin 3 [FBN3], myosin IXA [MYO9A], and pleckstrin and Sec7 domain containing 3 [PSD3]) were identified in 3 families (6.2%). Moreover, in 8 families with a homozygous mutation in an arthrogryposis-associated gene, we identified a second locus with either a homozygous or compound heterozygous variant in a candidate gene (myosin binding protein C, fast type [MYBPC2] and vacuolar protein sorting 8 [VPS8], 2 families, 4.2%) or in another disease-associated genes (6 families, 12.5%), indicating a potential mutational burden contributing to disease expression. CONCLUSION In 58.3% of families, the arthrogryposis manifestation could be explained by a molecular diagnosis; however, the molecular etiology in subjects from 20 families remained unsolved by WES. Only 5 of these 20 unrelated subjects had a clinical presentation consistent with amyoplasia; a phenotype not thought to be of genetic origin. Our results indicate that increased use of genome-wide technologies will provide opportunities to better understand genetic models for diseases and molecular mechanisms of genetically heterogeneous disorders, such as arthrogryposis. FUNDING This work was supported in part by US National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI)/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) grant U54HG006542 to the Baylor-Hopkins Center for Mendelian Genomics, and US National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) grant R01NS058529 to J.R. Lupski.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Copy-Number Variation Contributes to the Mutational Load of Bardet-Biedl Syndrome.

Anna Lindstrand; Stephan Frangakis; Claudia M.B. Carvalho; Ellen B. Richardson; Kelsey McFadden; Jason R. Willer; Davut Pehlivan; Pengfei Liu; Igor Pediaditakis; Aniko Sabo; Richard Alan Lewis; Eyal Banin; James R. Lupski; Erica E. Davis; Nicholas Katsanis

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a defining ciliopathy, notable for extensive allelic and genetic heterogeneity, almost all of which has been identified through sequencing. Recent data have suggested that copy-number variants (CNVs) also contribute to BBS. We used a custom oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) covering 20 genes that encode intraflagellar transport (IFT) components and 74 ciliopathy loci to screen 92 unrelated individuals with BBS, irrespective of their known mutational burden. We identified 17 individuals with exon-disruptive CNVs (18.5%), including 13 different deletions in eight BBS genes (BBS1, BBS2, ARL6/BBS3, BBS4, BBS5, BBS7, BBS9, and NPHP1) and a deletion and a duplication in other ciliopathy-associated genes (ALMS1 and NPHP4, respectively). By contrast, we found a single heterozygous exon-disruptive event in a BBS-associated gene (BBS9) in 229 control subjects. Superimposing these data with resequencing revealed CNVs to (1) be sufficient to cause disease, (2) Mendelize heterozygous deleterious alleles, and (3) contribute oligogenic alleles by combining point mutations and exonic CNVs in multiple genes. Finally, we report a deletion and a splice site mutation in IFT74, inherited under a recessive paradigm, defining a candidate BBS locus. Our data suggest that CNVs contribute pathogenic alleles to a substantial fraction of BBS-affected individuals and highlight how either deletions or point mutations in discrete splice isoforms can induce hypomorphic mutations in genes otherwise intolerant to deleterious variation. Our data also suggest that CNV analyses and resequencing studies unbiased for previous mutational burden is necessary to delineate the complexity of disease architecture.

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James R. Lupski

Baylor College of Medicine

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Ender Karaca

Baylor College of Medicine

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Richard A. Gibbs

Baylor College of Medicine

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Donna M. Muzny

Baylor College of Medicine

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Yavuz Bayram

Baylor College of Medicine

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Tomasz Gambin

Warsaw University of Technology

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Mehmed M. Atik

Baylor College of Medicine

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