Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dennis Bartholomew is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dennis Bartholomew.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Assessment of 2q23.1 microdeletion syndrome implicates MBD5 as a single causal locus of intellectual disability, epilepsy, and autism spectrum disorder

Michael E. Talkowski; Sureni V Mullegama; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Bregje W.M. van Bon; Yiping Shen; Elena A. Repnikova; Julie M. Gastier-Foster; Devon Lamb Thrush; Sekar Kathiresan; Douglas M. Ruderfer; Colby Chiang; Carrie Hanscom; Carl Ernst; Amelia M. Lindgren; Cynthia C. Morton; Yu An; Caroline Astbury; Louise Brueton; Klaske D. Lichtenbelt; Lesley C. Adès; Marco Fichera; Corrado Romano; Jeffrey W. Innis; Charles A. Williams; Dennis Bartholomew; Margot I. Van Allen; Aditi Shah Parikh; Lilei Zhang; Bai-Lin Wu; Robert E. Pyatt

Persons with neurodevelopmental disorders or autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often harbor chromosomal microdeletions, yet the individual genetic contributors within these regions have not been systematically evaluated. We established a consortium of clinical diagnostic and research laboratories to accumulate a large cohort with genetic alterations of chromosomal region 2q23.1 and acquired 65 subjects with microdeletion or translocation. We sequenced translocation breakpoints; aligned microdeletions to determine the critical region; assessed effects on mRNA expression; and examined medical records, photos, and clinical evaluations. We identified a single gene, methyl-CpG-binding domain 5 (MBD5), as the only locus that defined the critical region. Partial or complete deletion of MBD5 was associated with haploinsufficiency of mRNA expression, intellectual disability, epilepsy, and autistic features. Fourteen alterations, including partial deletions of noncoding regions not typically captured or considered pathogenic by current diagnostic screening, disrupted MBD5 alone. Expression profiles and clinical characteristics were largely indistinguishable between MBD5-specific alteration and deletion of the entire 2q23.1 interval. No copy-number alterations of MBD5 were observed in 7878 controls, suggesting MBD5 alterations are highly penetrant. We surveyed MBD5 coding variations among 747 ASD subjects compared to 2043 non-ASD subjects analyzed by whole-exome sequencing and detected an association with a highly conserved methyl-CpG-binding domain missense variant, p.79Gly>Glu (c.236G>A) (p = 0.012). These results suggest that genetic alterations of MBD5 cause features of 2q23.1 microdeletion syndrome and that this epigenetic regulator significantly contributes to ASD risk, warranting further consideration in research and clinical diagnostic screening and highlighting the importance of chromatin remodeling in the etiology of these complex disorders.


Hepatology | 2013

AMMONIA CONTROL AND NEUROCOGNITIVE OUTCOME AMONG UREA CYCLE DISORDER PATIENTS TREATED WITH GLYCEROL PHENYLBUTYRATE

George A. Diaz; Lauren Krivitzky; Masoud Mokhtarani; William J. Rhead; J. Bartley; Annette Feigenbaum; Nicola Longo; William E. Berquist; Susan A. Berry; Renata C. Gallagher; Uta Lichter-Konecki; Dennis Bartholomew; Cary O. Harding; Stephen D. Cederbaum; Shawn E. McCandless; Wendy Smith; Gerald Vockley; Stephen A. Bart; Mark S. Korson; David Kronn; Roberto T. Zori; J. Lawrence Merritt; Sandesh C.S. Nagamani; Joseph Mauney; Cynthia LeMons; Klara Dickinson; Tristen Moors; Dion F. Coakley; Bruce F. Scharschmidt; Brendan Lee

Glycerol phenylbutyrate is under development for treatment of urea cycle disorders (UCDs), rare inherited metabolic disorders manifested by hyperammonemia and neurological impairment. We report the results of a pivotal Phase 3, randomized, double‐blind, crossover trial comparing ammonia control, assessed as 24‐hour area under the curve (NH3‐AUC0‐24hr), and pharmacokinetics during treatment with glycerol phenylbutyrate versus sodium phenylbutyrate (NaPBA) in adult UCD patients and the combined results of four studies involving short‐ and long‐term glycerol phenylbutyrate treatment of UCD patients ages 6 and above. Glycerol phenylbutyrate was noninferior to NaPBA with respect to ammonia control in the pivotal study, with mean (standard deviation, SD) NH3‐AUC0‐24hr of 866 (661) versus 977 (865) μmol·h/L for glycerol phenylbutyrate and NaPBA, respectively. Among 65 adult and pediatric patients completing three similarly designed short‐term comparisons of glycerol phenylbutyrate versus NaPBA, NH3‐AUC0‐24hr was directionally lower on glycerol phenylbutyrate in each study, similar among all subgroups, and significantly lower (P < 0.05) in the pooled analysis, as was plasma glutamine. The 24‐hour ammonia profiles were consistent with the slow‐release behavior of glycerol phenylbutyrate and better overnight ammonia control. During 12 months of open‐label glycerol phenylbutyrate treatment, average ammonia was normal in adult and pediatric patients and executive function among pediatric patients, including behavioral regulation, goal setting, planning, and self‐monitoring, was significantly improved. Conclusion: Glycerol phenylbutyrate exhibits favorable pharmacokinetics and ammonia control relative to NaPBA in UCD patients, and long‐term glycerol phenylbutyrate treatment in pediatric UCD patients was associated with improved executive function (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00551200, NCT00947544, NCT00992459, NCT00947297). (HEPATOLOGY 2012)


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Identification of a Recurrent Microdeletion at 17q23.1q23.2 Flanked by Segmental Duplications Associated with Heart Defects and Limb Abnormalities

Blake C. Ballif; Aaron Theisen; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Ryan Traylor; Julie M. Gastier-Foster; Devon Lamb Thrush; Caroline Astbury; Dennis Bartholomew; Kim L. McBride; Robert E. Pyatt; Kate P. Shane; Wendy Smith; Valerie Banks; William B. Gallentine; Pamela Brock; M. Katharine Rudd; Margaret P Adam; Julia Keene; John A. Phillips; Jean Pfotenhauer; Gordon C. Gowans; Pawel Stankiewicz; Bassem A. Bejjani; Lisa G. Shaffer

Segmental duplications, which comprise approximately 5%-10% of the human genome, are known to mediate medically relevant deletions, duplications, and inversions through nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR) and have been suggested to be hot spots in chromosome evolution and human genomic instability. We report seven individuals with microdeletions at 17q23.1q23.2, identified by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH). Six of the seven deletions are approximately 2.2 Mb in size and flanked by large segmental duplications of >98% sequence identity and in the same orientation. One of the deletions is approximately 2.8 Mb in size and is flanked on the distal side by a segmental duplication, whereas the proximal breakpoint falls between segmental duplications. These characteristics suggest that NAHR mediated six out of seven of these rearrangements. These individuals have common features, including mild to moderate developmental delay (particularly speech delay), microcephaly, postnatal growth retardation, heart defects, and hand, foot, and limb abnormalities. Although all individuals had at least mild dysmorphic facial features, there was no characteristic constellation of features that would elicit clinical suspicion of a specific disorder. The identification of common clinical features suggests that microdeletions at 17q23.1q23.2 constitute a novel syndrome. Furthermore, the inclusion in the minimal deletion region of TBX2 and TBX4, transcription factors belonging to a family of genes implicated in a variety of developmental pathways including those of heart and limb, suggests that these genes may play an important role in the phenotype of this emerging syndrome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Mutations in PURA Cause Profound Neonatal Hypotonia, Seizures, and Encephalopathy in 5q31.3 Microdeletion Syndrome

Seema R. Lalani; Jing Zhang; Christian P. Schaaf; Chester W. Brown; Pilar L. Magoulas; Anne Chun Hui Tsai; Areeg El-Gharbawy; Klaas J. Wierenga; Dennis Bartholomew; Chin-To Fong; Tina Barbaro-Dieber; Mary K. Kukolich; Lindsay C. Burrage; Elise G. Austin; Kory Keller; Matthew Pastore; Fabio Fernandez; Timothy Lotze; Angus A. Wilfong; Gabriela Purcarin; Wenmiao Zhu; William J. Craigen; Marianne McGuire; Mahim Jain; Erin Cooney; Mahshid S. Azamian; Matthew N. Bainbridge; Donna M. Muzny; Eric Boerwinkle; Richard E. Person

5q31.3 microdeletion syndrome is characterized by neonatal hypotonia, encephalopathy with or without epilepsy, and severe developmental delay, and the minimal critical deletion interval harbors three genes. We describe 11 individuals with clinical features of 5q31.3 microdeletion syndrome and de novo mutations in PURA, encoding transcriptional activator protein Pur-α, within the critical region. These data implicate causative PURA mutations responsible for the severe neurological phenotypes observed in this syndrome.


Human Mutation | 2015

High Incidence of Noonan Syndrome Features Including Short Stature and Pulmonic Stenosis in Patients carrying NF1 Missense Mutations Affecting p.Arg1809: Genotype–Phenotype Correlation

Kitiwan Rojnueangnit; Jing Xie; Alicia Gomes; Angela Sharp; Tom Callens; Yunjia Chen; Ying Liu; Meagan Cochran; Mary Alice Abbott; Joan F. Atkin; Dusica Babovic-Vuksanovic; Christopher Barnett; Melissa Crenshaw; Dennis Bartholomew; Lina Basel; Gary Bellus; Shay Ben-Shachar; Martin G. Bialer; David P. Bick; Bruce Blumberg; Fanny Cortés; Karen L. David; Anne Destrée; Anna Duat-Rodriguez; Dawn Earl; Luis F. Escobar; Marthanda Eswara; Begona Ezquieta; Ian Frayling; Moshe Frydman

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is one of the most frequent genetic disorders, affecting 1:3,000 worldwide. Identification of genotype–phenotype correlations is challenging because of the wide range clinical variability, the progressive nature of the disorder, and extreme diversity of the mutational spectrum. We report 136 individuals with a distinct phenotype carrying one of five different NF1 missense mutations affecting p.Arg1809. Patients presented with multiple café‐au‐lait macules (CALM) with or without freckling and Lisch nodules, but no externally visible plexiform neurofibromas or clear cutaneous neurofibromas were found. About 25% of the individuals had Noonan‐like features. Pulmonic stenosis and short stature were significantly more prevalent compared with classic cohorts (P < 0.0001). Developmental delays and/or learning disabilities were reported in over 50% of patients. Melanocytes cultured from a CALM in a segmental NF1‐patient showed two different somatic NF1 mutations, p.Arg1809Cys and a multi‐exon deletion, providing genetic evidence that p.Arg1809Cys is a loss‐of‐function mutation in the melanocytes and causes a pigmentary phenotype. Constitutional missense mutations at p.Arg1809 affect 1.23% of unrelated NF1 probands in the UAB cohort, therefore this specific NF1 genotype–phenotype correlation will affect counseling and management of a significant number of patients.


Human Genetics | 2015

De novo mutations in beta-catenin (CTNNB1) appear to be a frequent cause of intellectual disability: expanding the mutational and clinical spectrum.

Alma Kuechler; Marjolein H. Willemsen; Beate Albrecht; Carlos A. Bacino; Dennis Bartholomew; Hans van Bokhoven; Marie Jose H. van den Boogaard; Nuria C. Bramswig; Christian Büttner; Kirsten Cremer; Johanna Christina Czeschik; Hartmut Engels; Koen L.I. van Gassen; Elisabeth Graf; Mieke M. van Haelst; Weimin He; Jacob Hogue; Marlies Kempers; David A. Koolen; Glen R. Monroe; Sonja de Munnik; Matthew Pastore; André Reis; Miriam S. Reuter; David Tegay; Joris A. Veltman; Gepke Visser; Peter M. van Hasselt; Eric Smeets; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers

Recently, de novo heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in beta-catenin (CTNNB1) were described for the first time in four individuals with intellectual disability (ID), microcephaly, limited speech and (progressive) spasticity, and functional consequences of CTNNB1 deficiency were characterized in a mouse model. Beta-catenin is a key downstream component of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway. Somatic gain-of-function mutations have already been found in various tumor types, whereas germline loss-of-function mutations in animal models have been shown to influence neuronal development and maturation. We report on 16 additional individuals from 15 families in whom we newly identified de novo loss-of-function CTNNB1 mutations (six nonsense, five frameshift, one missense, two splice mutation, and one whole gene deletion). All patients have ID, motor delay and speech impairment (both mostly severe) and abnormal muscle tone (truncal hypotonia and distal hypertonia/spasticity). The craniofacial phenotype comprised microcephaly (typically −2 to −4 SD) in 12 of 16 and some overlapping facial features in all individuals (broad nasal tip, small alae nasi, long and/or flat philtrum, thin upper lip vermillion). With this detailed phenotypic characterization of 16 additional individuals, we expand and further establish the clinical and mutational spectrum of inactivating CTNNB1 mutations and thereby clinically delineate this new CTNNB1 haploinsufficiency syndrome.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2001

High Mitochondrial DNA T8993G Mutation (>90%) Without Typical Features of Leigh's and NARP Syndromes

Chang-Yong Tsao; Dennis Bartholomew

Neuropathy, ataxia, and retinitis pigmentosa (NARP) syndrome and maternally inherited Leighs syndrome have been associated with T8993G point mutations in the mitochondrial adenosine triphosphatase 6 gene. Typically, NARP syndrome is characterized by developmental delay, seizures, dementia, retinitis pigmentosa, ataxia, sensory neuropathy, and proximal weakness. Usually, there is a correlation between the percentage of mutated mitochondrial DNA and clinical severity, and when mutated mitochondrial DNA is > 90%, it is often seen with Leighs syndrome. We now report a family with mitochondrial DNA T8993G mutation in eight living members, five with mutant mitochondrial DNA >90% and one with 20% mutant mitochondrial DNA. However, their clinical features include variable combinations of seizures, behavior problems, learning disability, mental retardation, sensorineural deafness, cerebellar ataxia, and proximal muscle weakness. No retinitis pigmentosa was found in all eight living members, including a 56-year-old grandmother. Only one dead female relative was diagnosed with Leighs syndrome on the neuropathologic examination at age 22 years, when she died of an accident. High mitochondrial DNA T8993G mutation is not always associated with typical features of Leighs and NARP syndromes. (J Child Neurol 2001;16:533-535).


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2016

Clinical course of sly syndrome (mucopolysaccharidosis type VII)

Adriana M. Montaño; Ngu Lock-Hock; Robert D. Steiner; Brett H. Graham; Marina Szlago; Robert M. Greenstein; M. Pineda; Antonio Gonzalez-Meneses; Mahmut Çoker; Dennis Bartholomew; Mark S. Sands; Raymond Y. Wang; Roberto Giugliani; Alfons Macaya; Gregory M. Pastores; Anastasia K. Ketko; Fatih Süheyl Ezgü; Akemi Tanaka; Laila Arash; Michael Beck; Rena E. Falk; Kaustuv Bhattacharya; José Francisco da Silva Franco; Klane K. White; Grant A. Mitchell; Loreta Cimbalistiene; Max Holtz; William S. Sly

Background Mucopolysaccharidosis VII (MPS VII) is an ultra-rare disease characterised by the deficiency of β-glucuronidase (GUS). Patients’ phenotypes vary from severe forms with hydrops fetalis, skeletal dysplasia and mental retardation to milder forms with fewer manifestations and mild skeletal abnormalities. Accurate assessments on the frequency and clinical characteristics of the disease have been scarce. The aim of this study was to collect such data. Methods We have conducted a survey of physicians to document the medical history of patients with MPS VII. The survey included anonymous information on patient demographics, family history, mode of diagnosis, age of onset, signs and symptoms, severity, management, clinical features and natural progression of the disease. Results We collected information on 56 patients from 11 countries. Patients with MPS VII were classified based on their phenotype into three different groups: (1) neonatal non-immune hydrops fetalis (NIHF) (n=10), (2) Infantile or adolescent form with history of hydrops fetalis (n=13) and (3) Infantile or adolescent form without known hydrops fetalis (n=33). Thirteen patients with MPS VII who had the infantile form with history of hydrops fetalis and survived childhood, had a wide range of clinical manifestations from mild to severe. Five patients underwent bone marrow transplantation and one patient underwent enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant human GUS. Conclusions MPS VII is a pan-ethnic inherited lysosomal storage disease with considerable phenotypical heterogeneity. Most patients have short stature, skeletal dysplasia, hepatosplenomegaly, hernias, cardiac involvement, pulmonary insufficiency and cognitive impairment. In these respects it resembles MPS I and MPS II. In MPS VII, however, one unique and distinguishing clinical feature is the unexpectedly high proportion of patients (41%) that had a history of NIHF. Presence of NIHF does not, by itself, predict the eventual severity of the clinical course, if the patient survives infancy.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

Urinary Phenylacetylglutamine as Dosing Biomarker for Patients with Urea Cycle Disorders

Masoud Mokhtarani; George A. Diaz; William J. Rhead; Uta Lichter-Konecki; J. Bartley; Annette Feigenbaum; Nicola Longo; William E. Berquist; Susan A. Berry; Renata C. Gallagher; Dennis Bartholomew; Cary O. Harding; Mark S. Korson; Shawn E. McCandless; Wendy Smith; Jerry Vockley; S. Bart; David Kronn; Roberto T. Zori; Stephen D. Cederbaum; Naghmeh Dorrani; J. L. Merritt; Sandesh Sreenath-Nagamani; Marshall Summar; Cynthia LeMons; Klara Dickinson; Dion F. Coakley; Tristen Moors; Brendan Lee; Bruce F. Scharschmidt

UNLABELLED We have analyzed pharmacokinetic data for glycerol phenylbutyrate (also GT4P or HPN-100) and sodium phenylbutyrate with respect to possible dosing biomarkers in patients with urea cycle disorders (UCD). STUDY DESIGN These analyses are based on over 3000 urine and plasma data points from 54 adult and 11 pediatric UCD patients (ages 6-17) who participated in three clinical studies comparing ammonia control and pharmacokinetics during steady state treatment with glycerol phenylbutyrate or sodium phenylbutyrate. All patients received phenylbutyric acid equivalent doses of glycerol phenylbutyrate or sodium phenylbutyrate in a cross over fashion and underwent 24-hour blood samples and urine sampling for phenylbutyric acid, phenylacetic acid and phenylacetylglutamine. RESULTS Patients received phenylbutyric acid equivalent doses of glycerol phenylbutyrate ranging from 1.5 to 31.8 g/day and of sodium phenylbutyrate ranging from 1.3 to 31.7 g/day. Plasma metabolite levels varied widely, with average fluctuation indices ranging from 1979% to 5690% for phenylbutyric acid, 843% to 3931% for phenylacetic acid, and 881% to 1434% for phenylacetylglutamine. Mean percent recovery of phenylbutyric acid as urinary phenylacetylglutamine was 66.4 and 69.0 for pediatric patients and 68.7 and 71.4 for adult patients on glycerol phenylbutyrate and sodium phenylbutyrate, respectively. The correlation with dose was strongest for urinary phenylacetylglutamine excretion, either as morning spot urine (r = 0.730, p < 0.001) or as total 24-hour excretion (r = 0.791 p<0.001), followed by plasma phenylacetylglutamine AUC(24-hour), plasma phenylacetic acid AUC(24-hour) and phenylbutyric acid AUC(24-hour). Plasma phenylacetic acid levels in adult and pediatric patients did not show a consistent relationship with either urinary phenylacetylglutamine or ammonia control. CONCLUSION The findings are collectively consistent with substantial yet variable pre-systemic (1st pass) conversion of phenylbutyric acid to phenylacetic acid and/or phenylacetylglutamine. The variability of blood metabolite levels during the day, their weaker correlation with dose, the need for multiple blood samples to capture trough and peak, and the inconsistency between phenylacetic acid and urinary phenylacetylglutamine as a marker of waste nitrogen scavenging limit the utility of plasma levels for therapeutic monitoring. By contrast, 24-hour urinary phenylacetylglutamine and morning spot urine phenylacetylglutamine correlate strongly with dose and appear to be clinically useful non-invasive biomarkers for compliance and therapeutic monitoring.


Genetics in Medicine | 2015

Blood ammonia and glutamine as predictors of hyperammonemic crises in patients with urea cycle disorder

Brendan Lee; George A. Diaz; William J. Rhead; Uta Lichter-Konecki; Annette Feigenbaum; Susan A. Berry; Cindy Le Mons; J. Bartley; Nicola Longo; Sandesh C.S. Nagamani; William E. Berquist; Renata C. Gallagher; Dennis Bartholomew; Cary O. Harding; Mark S. Korson; Shawn E. McCandless; Wendy Smith; Stephen D. Cederbaum; Derek Wong; J. Lawrence Merritt; Andreas Schulze; Gerard Vockley; David Kronn; Roberto T. Zori; Marshall Summar; Douglas A. Milikien; Miguel Marino; Dion F. Coakley; Masoud Mokhtarani; Bruce F. Scharschmidt

Purpose:The aim of this study was to examine predictors of ammonia exposure and hyperammonemic crises in patients with urea cycle disorders.Methods:The relationships between fasting ammonia, daily ammonia exposure, and hyperammonemic crises were analyzed in >100 patients with urea cycle disorders.Results:Fasting ammonia correlated strongly with daily ammonia exposure (r = 0.764; P < 0.001). For patients with fasting ammonia concentrations <0.5 upper limit of normal (ULN), 0.5 to <1.0 ULN, and ≥1.0 ULN, the probability of a normal average daily ammonia value was 87, 60, and 39%, respectively, and 10.3, 14.1, and 37.0% of these patients, respectively, experienced ≥1 hyperammonemic crisis over 12 months. Time to first hyperammonemic crisis was shorter (P = 0.008) and relative risk (4.5×; P = 0.011) and rate (~5×, P = 0.006) of hyperammonemic crises were higher in patients with fasting ammonia ≥1.0 ULN vs. <0.5ULN; relative risk was even greater (20×; P = 0.009) in patients ≥6 years old. A 10- or 25-µmol/l increase in ammonia exposure increased the relative risk of a hyperammonemic crisis by 50 and >200% (P < 0.0001), respectively. The relationship between ammonia and hyperammonemic crisis risk seemed to be independent of treatment, age, urea cycle disorder subtype, dietary protein intake, or blood urea nitrogen. Fasting glutamine correlated weakly with daily ammonia exposure assessed as 24-hour area under the curve and was not a significant predictor of hyperammonemic crisis.Conclusion:Fasting ammonia correlates strongly and positively with daily ammonia exposure and with the risk and rate of hyperammonemic crises, suggesting that patients with urea cycle disorder may benefit from tight ammonia control.Genet Med 17 7, 561–568.

Collaboration


Dive into the Dennis Bartholomew's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brendan Lee

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Kronn

New York Medical College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

George A. Diaz

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Bartley

Long Beach Memorial Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Matthew Pastore

Nationwide Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge