E. Filippova
University of Michigan
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Featured researches published by E. Filippova.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004
Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Beverly M. Yashar; Yu Zhao; Noor M. Ghiasvand; Sepideh Zareparsi; Kari Branham; Adam C. Reddick; Edward H. Trager; Shigeo Yoshida; John Bahling; E. Filippova; Susan G. Elner; Mark W. Johnson; Andrew K. Vine; Paul A. Sieving; Samuel G. Jacobson; Julia E. Richards; Anand Swaroop
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a complex multifactorial disease that affects the central region of the retina. AMD is clinically heterogeneous, leading to geographic atrophy (GA) and/or choroidal neovascularization (CNV) at advanced stages. Considerable data exists in support of a genetic predisposition for AMD. Recent linkage studies have provided evidence in favor of several AMD susceptibility loci. We have performed a high-resolution (5-cM) genome scan of 412 affected relative pairs that were enriched for late-stage disease (GA and/or CNV). Nonparametric linkage analysis was performed using two different diagnostic criteria and also by dividing the affected individuals according to GA or CNV phenotype. Our results demonstrate evidence of linkage in regions that were suggested in at least one previous study at chromosomes 1q (236–240 cM in the Marshfield genetic map), 5p (40–50 cM), and 9q (111 cM). Multipoint analysis of affected relatives with CNV provided evidence of additional susceptibility loci on chromosomes 2p (10 cM) and 22q (25 cM). A recently identified Gln5345Arg change in HEMICENTIN-1 on chromosome 1q25 was not detected in 274 affected members in the restricted group with AMD, 346 additional patients with AMD, and 237 unaffected controls. Our results consolidate the chromosomal locations of several AMD susceptibility loci and, together with previous reports, should facilitate the search for disease-associated sequence variants.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006
James S. Friedman; Bo Chang; Chitra Kannabiran; Christina Chakarova; Hardeep Pal Singh; Subhadra Jalali; Norman L. Hawes; Kari Branham; Mohammad Othman; E. Filippova; Debra A. Thompson; Andrew R. Webster; Sten Andréasson; Samuel G. Jacobson; Shomi S. Bhattacharya; John R. Heckenlively; Anand Swaroop
The rd3 mouse is one of the oldest identified models of early-onset retinal degeneration. Using the positional candidate approach, we have identified a C-->T substitution in a novel gene, Rd3, that encodes an evolutionarily conserved protein of 195 amino acids. The rd3 mutation results in a predicted stop codon after residue 106. This change is observed in four rd3 lines derived from the original collected mice but not in the nine wild-type mouse strains that were examined. Rd3 is preferentially expressed in the retina and exhibits increasing expression through early postnatal development. In transiently transfected COS-1 cells, the RD3-fusion protein shows subnuclear localization adjacent to promyelocytic leukemia-gene-product bodies. The truncated mutant RD3 protein is detectable in COS-1 cells but appears to get degraded rapidly. To explore potential association of the human RD3 gene at chromosome 1q32 with retinopathies, we performed a mutation screen of 881 probands from North America, India, and Europe. In addition to several alterations of uncertain significance, we identified a homozygous alteration in the invariant G nucleotide of the RD3 exon 2 donor splice site in two siblings with Leber congenital amaurosis. This mutation is predicted to result in premature truncation of the RD3 protein, segregates with the disease, and is not detected in 121 ethnically matched control individuals. We suggest that the retinopathy-associated RD3 protein is part of subnuclear protein complexes involved in diverse processes, such as transcription and splicing.
Ophthalmic Genetics | 2003
Sten Andréasson; Debra K. Breuer; Louise Eksandh; Vesna Ponjavic; Christina Frennesson; Suja Hiriyanna; E. Filippova; Beverly M. Yashar; Anand Swaroop
Purpose: To describe new disease-causing RP2 and RPGR-ORF15 mutations and their corresponding clinical phenotypes in Swedish families with X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP) and to establish genotype-phenotype correlations by studying the clinical spectrum of disease in families with a known molecular defect. Methods: Seventeen unrelated families with RP and an apparent X-linked pattern of disease inheritance were identified from the Swedish RP registry and screened for mutations in the RP2 and RPGR (for the RP3 disease) genes. These families had been previously screened for the RPGR exons 1–19, and disease-causing mutations were identified in four of them. In the remaining 13 families, we sequenced the RP2 gene and the newly discovered RPGR-ORF exon. Detailed clinical evaluations were then obtained from individuals in the three families with identified mutations. Results: Mutations in RP2 and RPGRORF15 were identified in three of the 13 families. Clinical evaluations of affected males and carrier females demonstrated varying degrees of retinal dysfunction and visual handicap, with early onset and severe disease in the families with mutations in the ORF15 exon of the RPGR gene. Conclusions: A total of seven mutations in the RP2 and RPGR genes have been discovered so far in Swedish XLRP families. All affected individuals express a severe form of retinal degeneration with visual handicap early in life, although the degree of retinal dysfunction varies both in hemizygous male patients and in heterozygous carrier females. Retinal disease phenotypes in patients with mutations in the RPGR-ORF15 were more severe than in patients with mutations in RP2 or other regions of the RPGR .
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Masayuki Akimoto; Hong Cheng; Dongxiao Zhu; Joseph A. Brzezinski; Ritu Khanna; E. Filippova; Edwin C.T. Oh; Yuezhou Jing; Jose Luis Linares; Matthew Brooks; Sepideh Zareparsi; Alan J. Mears; Alfred O. Hero; Tom Glaser; Anand Swaroop
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002
Debra K. Breuer; Beverly M. Yashar; E. Filippova; Suja Hiriyanna; Robert H. Lyons; Alan J. Mears; Bersabell Asaye; Ceren Acar; Raf Vervoort; Alan F. Wright; Maria A. Musarella; Patricia G. Wheeler; Ian M. MacDonald; Alessandro Iannaccone; David G. Birch; Dennis R. Hoffman; Gerald A. Fishman; John R. Heckenlively; Samuel G. Jacobson; Paul A. Sieving; Anand Swaroop
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2004
Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Beverly M. Yashar; Yu Zhao; N.M. Ghiavand; Sepideh Zareparsi; E.H. Branham; Adam C. Reddick; Edward H. Trager; Shigeo Yoshida; J. Bahling; E. Filippova; Susan G. Elner; Mark W. Johnson; Andrew K. Vine; Paul A. Sieving; Samuel G. Jacobson; Julia E. Richards; Anand Swaroop
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2002
Monika Buraczynska; Alan J. Mears; Sepideh Zareparsi; Rafal Farjo; E. Filippova; Yukun Yuan; Sean P. MacNee; Bret A. Hughes; Anand Swaroop
American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2004
Alessandro Iannaccone; Debra K. Breuer; Xinjing Wang; Sharon F. Kuo; E M Normando; E. Filippova; Alfonso Baldi; Suja Hiriyanna; MacDonald Cb; F Baldi; Dominic Cosgrove; Cynthia C. Morton; Anand Swaroop; Monica M. Jablonski
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2007
Hong Cheng; Jingyu Yao; E. Filippova; Bo Chang; John R. Heckenlively; Anand Swaroop
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2007
Ying Lu; E. Filippova; John R. Heckenlively