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Dive into the research topics where Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld is active.

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Featured researches published by Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

A Missense Mutation in DHDDS, Encoding Dehydrodolichyl Diphosphate Synthase, Is Associated with Autosomal-Recessive Retinitis Pigmentosa in Ashkenazi Jews

Lina Zelinger; Eyal Banin; Alexey Obolensky; Liliana Mizrahi-Meissonnier; Avigail Beryozkin; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Shahar Frenkel; Tamar Ben-Yosef; Saul Merin; Sharon B. Schwartz; Artur V. Cideciyan; Samuel G. Jacobson; Dror Sharon

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a heterogeneous group of inherited retinal degenerations caused by mutations in at least 50 genes. Using homozygosity mapping in Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) patients with autosomal-recessive RP (arRP), we identified a shared 1.7 Mb homozygous region on chromosome 1p36.11. Sequence analysis revealed a founder homozygous missense mutation, c.124A>G (p.Lys42Glu), in the dehydrodolichyl diphosphate synthase gene (DHDDS) in 20 AJ patients with RP of 15 unrelated families. The mutation was not identified in an additional set of 109 AJ patients with RP, in 20 AJ patients with other inherited retinal diseases, or in 70 patients with retinal degeneration of other ethnic origins. The mutation was found heterozygously in 1 out of 322 ethnically matched normal control individuals. RT-PCR analysis in 21 human tissues revealed ubiquitous expression of DHDDS. Immunohistochemical analysis of the human retina with anti-DHDDS antibodies revealed intense labeling of the cone and rod photoreceptor inner segments. Clinical manifestations of patients who are homozygous for the c.124A>G mutation were within the spectrum associated with arRP. Most patients had symptoms of night and peripheral vision loss, nondetectable electroretinographic responses, constriction of visual fields, and funduscopic hallmarks of retinal degeneration. DHDDS is a key enzyme in the pathway of dolichol, which plays an important role in N-glycosylation of many glycoproteins, including rhodopsin. Our results support a pivotal role of DHDDS in retinal function and may allow for new therapeutic interventions for RP.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Homozygosity mapping reveals null mutations in FAM161A as a cause of autosomal-recessive retinitis pigmentosa.

Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Liliana Mizrahi-Meissonnier; Chen Farhy; Alexey Obolensky; Itay Chowers; Jacob Pe'er; Saul Merin; Tamar Ben-Yosef; Ruth Ashery-Padan; Eyal Banin; Dror Sharon

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a heterogeneous group of inherited retinal degenerations caused by mutations in at least 45 genes. Using homozygosity mapping, we identified a ∼4 Mb homozygous region on chromosome 2p15 in patients with autosomal-recessive RP (arRP). This region partially overlaps with RP28, a previously identified arRP locus. Sequence analysis of 12 candidate genes revealed three null mutations in FAM161A in 20 families. RT-PCR analysis in 21 human tissues revealed high levels of FAM161A expression in the retina and lower levels in the brain and testis. In the human retina, we identified two alternatively spliced transcripts with an intact open reading frame, the major one lacking a highly conserved exon. During mouse embryonic development, low levels of Fam161a transcripts were detected throughout the optic cup. After birth, Fam161a expression was elevated and confined to the photoreceptor layer. FAM161A encodes a protein of unknown function that is moderately conserved in mammals. Clinical manifestations of patients with FAM161A mutations varied but were largely within the spectrum associated with arRP. On funduscopy, pallor of the optic discs and attenuation of blood vessels were common, but bone-spicule-like pigmentation was often mild or lacking. Most patients had nonrecordable electroretinographic responses and constriction of visual fields upon diagnosis. Our data suggest a pivotal role for FAM161A in photoreceptors and reveal that FAM161A loss-of-function mutations are a major cause of arRP, accounting for ∼12% of arRP families in our cohort of patients from Israel and the Palestinian territories.


Human Gene Therapy | 2010

Molecular Anthropology Meets Genetic Medicine to Treat Blindness in the North African Jewish Population: Human Gene Therapy Initiated in Israel

Eyal Banin; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Alexey Obolensky; Artur V. Cideciyan; Tomas S. Aleman; Devora Marks-Ohana; Malka Sela; Sanford L. Boye; Alexander Sumaroka; Alejandro J. Roman; Sharon B. Schwartz; William W. Hauswirth; Samuel G. Jacobson; Itzhak Hemo; Dror Sharon

The history of the North African Jewish community is ancient and complicated with a number of immigration waves and persecutions dramatically affecting its population size. A decade-long process in Israel of clinical-molecular screening of North African Jews with incurable autosomal recessive blindness led to the identification of a homozygous splicing mutation (c.95-2A > T; IVS2-2A > T) in RPE65, the gene encoding the isomerase that catalyzes a key step in the retinoid-visual cycle, in patients from 10 unrelated families. A total of 33 patients (four now deceased) had the severe childhood blindness known as Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), making it the most common cause of retinal degeneration in this population. Haplotype analysis in seven of the patients revealed a shared homozygous region, indicating a population-specific founder mutation. The age of the RPE65 founder mutation was estimated to have emerged 100-230 (mean, 153) generations ago, suggesting it originated before the establishment of the Jewish community in North Africa. Individuals with this RPE65 mutation were characterized with retinal studies to determine if they were candidates for gene replacement, the recent and only therapy to date for this otherwise incurable blindness. The step from molecular anthropological studies to application of genetic medicine was then taken, and a representative of this patient subgroup was treated with subretinal rAAV2-RPE65 gene therapy. An increase in vision was present in the treated area as early as 15 days after the intervention. This process of genetically analyzing affected isolated populations as a screen for gene-based therapy suggests a new paradigm for disease diagnosis and treatment.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Mutations in IMPG2, Encoding Interphotoreceptor Matrix Proteoglycan 2, Cause Autosomal-Recessive Retinitis Pigmentosa

Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Rob W.J. Collin; Eyal Banin; L. Ingeborgh van den Born; Karlien L.M. Coene; Anna M. Siemiatkowska; Lina Zelinger; Muhammad Imran Khan; Dirk J. Lefeber; Inbar Erdinest; Francesco Testa; Francesca Simonelli; Krysta Voesenek; Ellen A.W. Blokland; Tim M. Strom; Caroline C. W. Klaver; Raheel Qamar; Sandro Banfi; Frans P.M. Cremers; Dror Sharon; Anneke I. den Hollander

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a heterogeneous group of inherited retinal diseases caused by progressive degeneration of the photoreceptor cells. Using autozygosity mapping, we identified two families, each with three affected siblings sharing large overlapping homozygous regions that harbored the IMPG2 gene on chromosome 3. Sequence analysis of IMPG2 in the two index cases revealed homozygous mutations cosegregating with the disease in the respective families: three affected siblings of Iraqi Jewish ancestry displayed a nonsense mutation, and a Dutch family displayed a 1.8 kb genomic deletion that removes exon 9 and results in the absence of seven amino acids in a conserved SEA domain of the IMPG2 protein. Transient transfection of COS-1 cells showed that a construct expressing the wild-type SEA domain is properly targeted to the plasma membrane, whereas the mutant lacking the seven amino acids appears to be retained in the endoplasmic reticulum. Mutation analysis in ten additional index cases that were of Dutch, Israeli, Italian, and Pakistani origin and had homozygous regions encompassing IMPG2 revealed five additional mutations; four nonsense mutations and one missense mutation affecting a highly conserved phenylalanine residue. Most patients with IMPG2 mutations showed an early-onset form of RP with progressive visual-field loss and deterioration of visual acuity. The patient with the missense mutation, however, was diagnosed with maculopathy. The IMPG2 gene encodes the interphotoreceptor matrix proteoglycan IMPG2, which is a constituent of the interphotoreceptor matrix. Our data therefore show that mutations in a structural component of the interphotoreceptor matrix can cause arRP.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010

Novel null mutations in the EYS gene are a frequent cause of autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa in the Israeli population.

Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Karin W. Littink; Tamar Ben-Yosef; Tim M. Strom; Itay Chowers; Rob W.J. Collin; A.I. den Hollander; L. I. van den Born; Marijke N Zonneveld; Saul Merin; Eyal Banin; F.P.M. Cremers; Dror Sharon

PURPOSE To characterize the role of EYS, a recently identified retinal disease gene, in families with inherited retinal degenerations in the Israeli and Palestinian populations. METHODS Clinical and molecular analyses included family history, ocular examination, full-field electroretinography (ERG), perimetry, autozygosity mapping, mutation detection, and estimation of mutation age. RESULTS Autozygosity mapping was performed in 171 consanguineous Israeli and Palestinian families with inherited retinal degenerations. Large homozygous regions, harboring the EYS gene, were identified in 15 of the families. EYS mutation analysis in the 15 index cases, followed by genotyping of specific mutations in an additional 121 cases of inherited retinal degenerations, revealed five novel null mutations, two of which are founder mutations, in 10 Israeli and Palestinian families with autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP). The most common mutation identified was a founder mutation in the Moroccan Jewish subpopulation. The ESTIAGE program produced an estimate that the age of the most recent common ancestor was 26 generations. The retinal phenotype in most patients was typical yet relatively severe RP, with an early age of onset and nonrecordable ERGs on presentation. CONCLUSIONS The results demonstrate that EYS is currently the most commonly mutated arRP gene in the Israeli population, mainly due to founder mutations. EYS mutations were associated with an RP phenotype in all patients. The authors concluded that the gene plays only a minor role in causing other retinal phenotypes.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Identification of Mutations Causing Inherited Retinal Degenerations in the Israeli and Palestinian Populations Using Homozygosity Mapping

Avigail Beryozkin; Lina Zelinger; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Elia Shevach; Harel A; Michal Sagi; Dalia Eli; Saul Merin; Eyal Banin; Dror Sharon

PURPOSE The Israeli and Palestinian populations are known to have a relatively high level of consanguineous marriages, leading to a relatively high frequency of autosomal recessive (AR) diseases. Our purpose was to use the homozygosity mapping approach, aiming to prioritize the set of genes and identify the molecular genetic causes underlying AR retinal degenerations in the Israeli and Palestinian populations. METHODS Clinical analysis included family history, ocular examination, full-field electroretinography (ERG), and funduscopy. Molecular analysis included homozygosity mapping and mutation analysis of candidate genes. RESULTS We recruited for the study families with AR nonsyndromic retinal degenerations, including mainly retinitis pigmentosa (RP), cone-rod degeneration (CRD), and Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA). With the aim to identify the causative genes in these families, we performed homozygosity mapping using whole genome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays in 125 families. The analysis revealed the identification of 14 mutations, 5 of which are novel, in 16 of the families. The mutations were identified in the following eight genes: RDH12, PROM1, MFRP, TULP1, LCA5, CEP290, NR2E3, and EYS. While most patients had a retinal disease that is compatible with the causing gene, in some cases new clinical features are evident. CONCLUSIONS Homozygosity mapping is a powerful tool to identify genetic defects underlying heterogeneous AR disorders, such as RP and LCA, in consanguineous and nonconsanguineous patients. The identification of significant and large homozygous regions, which do not include any known retinal disease genes, may be a useful tool to identify novel disease-causing genes, using next generation sequencing.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2012

FAM161A, associated with retinitis pigmentosa, is a component of the cilia-basal body complex and interacts with proteins involved in ciliopathies

Silvio Alessandro Di Gioia; Stef J.F. Letteboer; Corinne Kostic; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Lisette Hetterschijt; Dror Sharon; Yvan Arsenijevic; Ronald Roepman; Carlo Rivolta

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a retinal degenerative disease characterized by the progressive loss of photoreceptors. We have previously demonstrated that RP can be caused by recessive mutations in the human FAM161A gene, encoding a protein with unknown function that contains a conserved region shared only with a distant paralog, FAM161B. In this study, we show that FAM161A localizes at the base of the photoreceptor connecting cilium in human, mouse and rat. Furthermore, it is also present at the ciliary basal body in ciliated mammalian cells, both in native conditions and upon the expression of recombinant tagged proteins. Yeast two-hybrid analysis of binary interactions between FAM161A and an array of ciliary and ciliopathy-associated proteins reveals direct interaction with lebercilin, CEP290, OFD1 and SDCCAG8, all involved in hereditary retinal degeneration. These interactions are mediated by the C-terminal moiety of FAM161A, as demonstrated by pull-down experiments in cultured cell lines and in bovine retinal extracts. As other ciliary proteins, FAM161A can also interact with the microtubules and organize itself into microtubule-dependent intracellular networks. Moreover, small interfering RNA-mediated depletion of FAM161A transcripts in cultured cells causes the reduction in assembled primary cilia. Taken together, these data indicate that FAM161A-associated RP can be considered as a novel retinal ciliopathy and that its molecular pathogenesis may be related to other ciliopathies.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2013

Mutations in CRB1 are a Relatively Common Cause of Autosomal Recessive Early-Onset Retinal Degeneration in the Israeli and Palestinian Populations

Avigail Beryozkin; Lina Zelinger; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Anat Harel; Tim A. Strom; Saul Merin; Itay Chowers; Eyal Banin; Dror Sharon

PURPOSE We evaluated the role of Crumbs homolog 1 (CRB1) in autosomal recessive (AR) retinal diseases in the Israeli and Palestinian populations using homozygosity mapping. METHODS Clinical analysis included family history, ocular examination, full-field electroretinography (ERG), and funduscopy. Molecular analysis included homozygosity mapping using whole genome single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) arrays and mutation analysis of CRB1. RESULTS We recruited over 400 families with AR nonsyndromic retinal degenerations, including retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA). SNP array analysis was performed on 175 index cases, eight of whom carried a homozygous region on chromosome 1 harboring CRB1. A subsequent CRB1 mutation analysis of the eight families, followed by screening of candidate founder mutations in the whole cohort of patients, revealed a total of 13 mutations, six of which are novel, in 15 families. Nine mutations were family-specific, and four were founder mutations identified in patients of Arab-Muslim origin, and Jews originated from Iraq and Kurdistan. Interestingly, a null mutation on at least one of the two mutated CRB1 alleles results in the LCA diagnosis, whereas patients carrying missense mutations were diagnosed with either RP or LCA. The average age at which CRB1 patients were referred to ERG testing was young (11 years). Of the 30 identified CRB1 patients, five had Coats-like exudative vasculopathy. CONCLUSIONS Our data show that CRB1 mutations are a relatively frequent cause of AR early-onset retinal degeneration in the Israeli and Palestinian populations (10% of LCA families), and causes severe retinal degeneration at an early age.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

A Nonsense Mutation in FAM161A Is a Recurrent Founder Allele in Dutch and Belgian Individuals With Autosomal Recessive Retinitis Pigmentosa.

Kristof Van Schil; B. Jeroen Klevering; Bart P. Leroy; Jan Willem R. Pott; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Marijke N. Zonneveld-Vrieling; Dror Sharon; Anneke I. den Hollander; Frans P.M. Cremers; Elfride De Baere; Rob W.J. Collin; L. Ingeborgh van den Born

PURPOSE To identify mutations in FAM161A underlying autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP) in the Dutch and Belgian populations and to investigate whether common FAM161A-associated phenotypic features could be identified. METHODS Homozygosity mapping, amplification-refractory mutation system (ARMS) analysis, and Sanger sequencing were performed to identify mutations in FAM161A. Microsatellite and SNP markers were genotyped for haplotype analysis. Patients with biallelic mutations underwent detailed ophthalmologic examinations, including measuring best-corrected visual acuity, extensive fundus photography with reflectance and autofluorescence imaging, and optical coherence tomography. RESULTS Homozygosity mapping in 230 Dutch individuals with suspected arRP yielded five individuals with a homozygous region harboring FAM161A. Sanger sequencing revealed a homozygous nonsense mutation (c.1309A>T; p.[Arg437*]) in one individual. Subsequent ARMS analysis and Sanger sequencing in Dutch and Belgian arRP patients resulted in the identification of seven additional individuals carrying the p.(Arg437*) mutation, either homozygously or compound heterozygously with another mutation. Haplotype analysis identified a shared haplotype block of 409 kb surrounding the p.(Arg437*) mutation in all patients, suggesting a founder effect. Although the age of onset was variable among patients, all eight developed pronounced outer retinal loss with severe visual field defects and a bulls eye-like maculopathy, followed by loss of central vision within 2 decades after the initial diagnosis in five subjects. CONCLUSIONS A founder mutation in FAM161A p.(Arg437*) underlies approximately 2% of arRP cases in the Dutch and Belgian populations. The age of onset of the retinal dystrophy appears variable, but progression can be steep, with almost complete loss of central vision later in life.


Molecular Vision | 2011

Enhanced S-cone function with preserved rod function: a new clinical phenotype

Michael Kinori; Eran Pras; Andrew Kolker; Gili Ferman-Attar; Iris Moroz; Joseph Moisseiev; Dikla Bandah-Rozenfeld; Liliana Mizrahi-Meissonnier; Dror Sharon; Ygal Rotenstreich

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Dror Sharon

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Eyal Banin

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Alexey Obolensky

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Saul Merin

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Lina Zelinger

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Itay Chowers

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Tamar Ben-Yosef

Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

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Rob W.J. Collin

Radboud University Nijmegen

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