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Dive into the research topics where Dominique Smeets is active.

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Featured researches published by Dominique Smeets.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Diagnostic Genome Profiling in Mental Retardation

Bert B.A. de Vries; Rolph Pfundt; Martijn Leisink; David A. Koolen; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Irene M. Janssen; Simon V. van Reijmersdal; Willy M. Nillesen; Erik Huys; Nicole de Leeuw; Dominique Smeets; Erik A. Sistermans; Ton Feuth; Conny M.A. van Ravenswaaij-Arts; Ad Geurts van Kessel; E.F.P.M. Schoenmakers; Han G. Brunner; Joris A. Veltman

Mental retardation (MR) occurs in 2%-3% of the general population. Conventional karyotyping has a resolution of 5-10 million bases and detects chromosomal alterations in approximately 5% of individuals with unexplained MR. The frequency of smaller submicroscopic chromosomal alterations in these patients is unknown. Novel molecular karyotyping methods, such as array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array CGH), can detect submicroscopic chromosome alterations at a resolution of 100 kb. In this study, 100 patients with unexplained MR were analyzed using array CGH for DNA copy-number changes by use of a novel tiling-resolution genomewide microarray containing 32,447 bacterial artificial clones. Alterations were validated by fluorescence in situ hybridization and/or multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, and parents were tested to determine de novo occurrence. Reproducible DNA copy-number changes were present in 97% of patients. The majority of these alterations were inherited from phenotypically normal parents, which reflects normal large-scale copy-number variation. In 10% of the patients, de novo alterations considered to be clinically relevant were found: seven deletions and three duplications. These alterations varied in size from 540 kb to 12 Mb and were scattered throughout the genome. Our results indicate that the diagnostic yield of this approach in the general population of patients with MR is at least twice as high as that of standard GTG-banded karyotyping.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Array-Based Comparative Genomic Hybridization for the Genomewide Detection of Submicroscopic Chromosomal Abnormalities

Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Bert B.A. de Vries; Kazutoyo Osoegawa; Irene M. Janssen; Ton Feuth; Chik On Choy; Huub Straatman; Walter van der Vliet; Erik Huys; Anke van Rijk; Dominique Smeets; Conny M. A. van Ravenswaaij-Arts; Nine V.A.M. Knoers; Ineke van der Burgt; Pieter J. de Jong; Han G. Brunner; Ad Geurts van Kessel; Eric F.P.M. Schoenmakers; Joris A. Veltman

Microdeletions and microduplications, not visible by routine chromosome analysis, are a major cause of human malformation and mental retardation. Novel high-resolution, whole-genome technologies can improve the diagnostic detection rate of these small chromosomal abnormalities. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization allows such a high-resolution screening by hybridizing differentially labeled test and reference DNAs to arrays consisting of thousands of genomic clones. In this study, we tested the diagnostic capacity of this technology using approximately 3,500 flourescent in situ hybridization-verified clones selected to cover the genome with an average of 1 clone per megabase (Mb). The sensitivity and specificity of the technology were tested in normal-versus-normal control experiments and through the screening of patients with known microdeletion syndromes. Subsequently, a series of 20 cytogenetically normal patients with mental retardation and dysmorphisms suggestive of a chromosomal abnormality were analyzed. In this series, three microdeletions and two microduplications were identified and validated. Two of these genomic changes were identified also in one of the parents, indicating that these are large-scale genomic polymorphisms. Deletions and duplications as small as 1 Mb could be reliably detected by our approach. The percentage of false-positive results was reduced to a minimum by use of a dye-swap-replicate analysis, all but eliminating the need for laborious validation experiments and facilitating implementation in a routine diagnostic setting. This high-resolution assay will facilitate the identification of novel genes involved in human mental retardation and/or malformation syndromes and will provide insight into the flexibility and plasticity of the human genome.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1996

Nijmegen breakage syndrome.

C.J.A.M. van der Burgt; K.H. Chrzanowska; Dominique Smeets; Corry M. R. Weemaes

Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), a rare autosomal recessive condition also known as ataxia telangiectasia (AT) variants V1 and V2, is characterised by microcephaly, typical facies, short stature, immunodeficiency, and chromosomal instability. We report the clinical, immunological, chromosomal, and cell biological findings in 42 patients who are included in the NBS Registry in Nijmegen. The immunological, chromosomal, and cell biological findings resemble those in AT, but the clinical findings are quite different. NBS appears to be a separate entity not allelic with AT.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Positional cloning of the gene for Nijmegen breakage syndrome

Shinya Matsuura; Hiroshi Tauchi; Asako Nakamura; Noriko Kondo; Shuichi Sakamoto; Satoru Endo; Dominique Smeets; Brigitte Sölder; Bernd H. Belohradsky; Vazken M. Der Kaloustian; Mitsuo Oshimura; Minoru Isomura; Yusuke Nakamura; Kenshi Komatsu

Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), also known as ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) variant, is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by microcephaly, growth retardation, severe combined immunodeficiency and a high incidence of lymphoid cancers. Cells from NBS patients display chromosome instability, hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation and abnormal cell-cycle regulation after irradiation, all of which are characteristics shared with AT. Recently, the NBS locus was mapped at 8q21 by two independent approaches, complementation studies and linkage analysis. Here, we report the positional cloning of the NBS gene, NBS1, from an 800-kb candidate region. The gene comprises 50 kb and encodes a protein of 754 amino acids. The amino-terminal region of the protein shows weak homology to the yeast XRS2, MEK1, CDS1 and SPK1 proteins. The gene is expressed at high levels in the testes, suggesting that it might be involved in meiotic recombination. We detected the same 5-bp deletion in 13 individuals, and conclude that it is likely to be a founder mutation.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

High-Throughput Analysis of Subtelomeric Chromosome Rearrangements by Use of Array-Based Comparative Genomic Hybridization

Joris A. Veltman; Eric F.P.M. Schoenmakers; Bert H.J. Eussen; Irene M. Janssen; Gerard Merkx; Brigitte van Cleef; Conny M. A. van Ravenswaaij; Han G. Brunner; Dominique Smeets; Ad Geurts van Kessel

Telomeric chromosome rearrangements may cause mental retardation, congenital anomalies, and miscarriages. Automated detection of subtle deletions or duplications involving telomeres is essential for high-throughput diagnosis, but impossible when conventional cytogenetic methods are used. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) allows high-resolution screening of copy number abnormalities by hybridizing differentially labeled test and reference genomes to arrays of robotically spotted clones. To assess the applicability of this technique in the diagnosis of (sub)telomeric imbalances, we here describe a blinded study, in which DNA from 20 patients with known cytogenetic abnormalities involving one or more telomeres was hybridized to an array containing a validated set of human-chromosome-specific (sub)telomere probes. Single-copy-number gains and losses were accurately detected on these arrays, and an excellent concordance between the original cytogenetic diagnosis and the array-based CGH diagnosis was obtained by use of a single hybridization. In addition to the previously identified cytogenetic changes, array-based CGH revealed additional telomere rearrangements in 3 of the 20 patients studied. The robustness and simplicity of this array-based telomere copy-number screening make it highly suited for introduction into the clinic as a rapid and sensitive automated diagnostic procedure.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2004

Screening for subtelomeric rearrangements in 210 patients with unexplained mental retardation using multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification (MLPA)

David A. Koolen; Willy M. Nillesen; M H A Versteeg; Gerard Merkx; N.V.A.M. Knoers; Marleen Kets; Sascha Vermeer; C.M.A. van Ravenswaaij; C. de Kovel; Han G. Brunner; Dominique Smeets; B. de Vries; Erik A. Sistermans

Background: Subtelomeric rearrangements contribute to idiopathic mental retardation and human malformations, sometimes as distinct mental retardation syndromes. However, for most subtelomeric defects a characteristic clinical phenotype remains to be elucidated. Objective: To screen for submicroscopic subtelomeric aberrations using multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification (MLPA). Methods: 210 individuals with unexplained mental retardation were studied. A new set of subtelomeric probes, the SALSA P036 human telomere test kit, was used. Results: A subtelomeric aberration was identified in 14 patients (6.7%) (10 deletions and four duplications). Five deletions were de novo; four were inherited from phenotypically normal parents, suggesting that these were polymorphisms. For one deletion, DNA samples of the parents were not available. Two de novo submicroscopic duplications were detected (dup 5qter, dup 12pter), while the other duplications (dup 18qter and dup 22qter) were inherited from phenotypically similarly affected parents. All clinically relevant aberrations (de novo or inherited from similarly affected parents) occurred in patients with a clinical score of ⩾3 using an established checklist for subtelomeric rearrangements. Testing of patients with a clinical score of ⩾3 increased the diagnostic yield twofold to 12.4%. Abnormalities with clinical relevance occurred in 6.3%, 5.1%, and 1.7% of mildly, moderately, and severely retarded patients, respectively, indicating that testing for subtelomeric aberrations among mildly retarded individuals is necessary. Conclusions: The value of MLPA is confirmed. Subtelomeric screening can be offered to all mentally retarded patients, although clinical preselection increases the percentage of chromosomal aberrations detected. Duplications may be a more common cause of mental retardation than has been appreciated.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009

Array analysis and karyotyping: Workflow consequences based on a retrospective study of 36,325 patients with idiopathic developmental delay in the Netherlands

Ron Hochstenbach; Ellen van Binsbergen; John J.M. Engelen; Aggie Nieuwint; Abeltje Polstra; Pino J. Poddighe; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Birgit Sikkema-Raddatz; Dominique Smeets; Martin Poot

Anomalies of chromosome number and structure are considered to be the most frequent cause of unexplained, non-syndromic developmental delay and mental retardation (DD/MR). High-resolution, genome-wide, array-based segmental aneusomy profiling has emerged as a highly sensitive technique for detecting pathogenic genomic imbalances. A review of 29 array-based studies of DD/MR patients showed that a yield of at least approximately 19% pathogenic aberrations is attainable in unselected, consecutive DD/MR referrals if array platforms with 30-70 kb median probe spacing are used as an initial genetic testing method. This corresponds to roughly twice the rate of classical cytogenetics. This raises the question whether chromosome banding studies, combined with targeted approaches, such as fluorescence in situ hybridisation for the detection of microdeletions, still hold substantial relevance for the clinical investigation of these patients. To address this question, we reviewed the outcome of cytogenetic studies in all 36,325 DD/MR referrals in the Netherlands during the period 1996-2005, a period before the advent of array-based genome investigation. We estimate that in a minimum of 0.78% of all referrals a balanced chromosomal rearrangement would have remained undetected by array-based investigation. These include familial rearrangements (0.48% of all referrals), de novo reciprocal translocations and inversions (0.23% of all referrals), de novo Robertsonian translocations (0.04% of all referrals), and 69,XXX triploidy (0.03% of all referrals). We conclude that karyotyping, following an initial array-based investigation, would give only a limited increase in the number of pathogenic abnormalities, i.e. 0.23% of all referrals with a de novo, apparently balanced, reciprocal translocation or inversion (assuming that all of these are pathogenic), and 0.03% of all referrals with 69,XXX triploidy. We propose that, because of its high diagnostic yield, high-resolution array-based genome investigation should be the first investigation performed in cases of DD/MR, detecting >99% of all pathogenic abnormalities. Performing both array investigation and karyotyping may not be a feasible option when laboratories are faced with a need to limit the number of genetic tests available for each patient. However, laboratories that supplant karyotyping by array-based investigation should be aware that, as shown here, a chromosomal abnormality, with possible pathogenic consequences for the patient or the family, will escape detection in about 0.78% of all DD/MR referrals.


Human Mutation | 2009

Genomic microarrays in mental retardation: a practical workflow for diagnostic applications.

David A. Koolen; Rolph Pfundt; Nicole de Leeuw; Jayne Y. Hehir-Kwa; Willy M. Nillesen; Ineke Neefs; Ine Scheltinga; Erik A. Sistermans; Dominique Smeets; Han G. Brunner; Ad Geurts van Kessel; Joris A. Veltman; Bert B.A. de Vries

Microarray‐based copy number analysis has found its way into routine clinical practice, predominantly for the diagnosis of patients with unexplained mental retardation. However, the clinical interpretation of submicroscopic copy number variants (CNVs) is complicated by the fact that many CNVs are also present in the general population. Here we introduce and discuss a workflow that can be used in routine diagnostics to assess the clinical significance of the CNVs identified. We applied this scheme to our cohort of 386 individuals with unexplained mental retardation tested using a genome‐wide tiling‐resolution DNA microarray and to 978 additional patients with mental retardation reported in 15 genome‐wide microarray studies extracted from the literature. In our cohort of 386 patients we identified 25 clinically significant copy number losses (median size 2.6 Mb), nine copy number gains (median size 2.0 Mb), and one mosaic numerical chromosome aberration. Accordingly, the overall diagnostic yield of clinically significant CNVs was 9.1%. Taken together, our cohort and the patients described in the literature include a total of 1,364 analyses of DNA copy number in which a total of 11.2% (71.9% losses, 19.6% gains, 8.5% complex) could be identified, reflecting the overall diagnostic yield of clinically significant CNVs in individuals with unexplained mental retardation. Hum Mutat 0, 1–10, 2008.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Definition of a critical region on chromosome 18 for congenital aural atresia by arrayCGH

Joris A. Veltman; Y. M. H. Jonkers; Inge Nuijten; Irene M. Janssen; Walter van der Vliet; Erik Huys; Joris Vermeesch; Griet Van Buggenhout; Jean-Pierre Fryns; Ronald J.C. Admiraal; Paulien A. Terhal; Didier Lacombe; Ad Geurts van Kessel; Dominique Smeets; Eric F.P.M. Schoenmakers; Conny M. A. van Ravenswaaij-Arts

Deletions of the long arm of chromosome 18 occur in approximately 1 in 10,000 live births. Congenital aural atresia (CAA), or narrow external auditory canals, occurs in approximately 66% of all patients who have a terminal deletion 18q. The present report describes a series of 20 patients with CAA, of whom 18 had microscopically visible 18q deletions. The extent and nature of the chromosome-18 deletions were studied in detail by array-based comparative genomic hybridization (arrayCGH). High-resolution chromosome-18 profiles were obtained for all patients, and a critical region of 5 Mb that was deleted in all patients with CAA could be defined on 18q22.3-18q23. Therefore, this region can be considered as a candidate region for aural atresia. The array-based high-resolution copy-number screening enabled a refined cytogenetic diagnosis in 12 patients. Our approach appeared to be applicable to the detection of genetic mosaicisms and, in particular, to a detailed delineation of ring chromosomes. This study clearly demonstrates the power of the arrayCGH technology in high-resolution molecular karyotyping. Deletion and amplification mapping can now be performed at the submicroscopic level and will allow high-throughput definition of genomic regions harboring disease genes.


Human Genetics | 1986

The most common fragile site in man is 3p14

Dominique Smeets; J. M. J. C. Scheres; T. W. J. Hustinx

SummaryIn man a common fragile site is known to occur at 3p14. We studied the expression of this fragility in a group of 70 normal healthy subjects. Chromosome breaks, chromatid breaks and gaps at 3p14 could be observed in every examined individual, and in a total of 7000 metaphases they were seen in a mean of 4% of cells. Fluorescence studies in ten persons with chromosome No. 3 polymorphism showed that in all cases both Nos. 3 were about equally liable to breakage. A considerable variation in the fra 3p14 expression was found between individuals as well as in repeated cultures from the same person. Neither sex nor age influences could be detected. Cultures with a high percentage of lesions at 3p14 tended to have also a high number of lesions at other sites. Methotrexate and fluorodeoxyuridine markedly enhanced the expression of fra 3p14 and other fragilities. It is concluded that the chromosomal region at 3p14 represents mans most common fragile site, the expression of which seems to be influenced by environmental and heritable factors.

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B.C.J. Hamel

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Corry M. R. Weemaes

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Han G. Brunner

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Willy M. Nillesen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Arie P.T. Smits

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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David A. Koolen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Gerard Merkx

Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre

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Joris A. Veltman

Radboud University Nijmegen

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