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Dive into the research topics where Elisa Biamino is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisa Biamino.


Nature Genetics | 2015

7q11.23 dosage-dependent dysregulation in human pluripotent stem cells affects transcriptional programs in disease-relevant lineages

Antonio Adamo; Sina Atashpaz; Pierre Germain; Matteo Zanella; Giuseppe D'Agostino; Veronica Albertin; Josh G. Chenoweth; Lucia Micale; Carmela Fusco; Christian Unger; Bartolomeo Augello; Orazio Palumbo; Brad Hamilton; Massimo Carella; Emilio Donti; Giancarlo Pruneri; Angelo Selicorni; Elisa Biamino; Paolo Prontera; Ronald D. G. McKay; Giuseppe Merla; Giuseppe Testa

Cell reprogramming promises to make characterization of the impact of human genetic variation on health and disease experimentally tractable by enabling the bridging of genotypes to phenotypes in developmentally relevant human cell lineages. Here we apply this paradigm to two disorders caused by symmetrical copy number variations of 7q11.23, which display a striking combination of shared and symmetrically opposite phenotypes—Williams-Beuren syndrome and 7q-microduplication syndrome. Through analysis of transgene-free patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells and their differentiated derivatives, we find that 7q11.23 dosage imbalance disrupts transcriptional circuits in disease-relevant pathways beginning in the pluripotent state. These alterations are then selectively amplified upon differentiation of the pluripotent cells into disease-relevant lineages. A considerable proportion of this transcriptional dysregulation is specifically caused by dosage imbalances in GTF2I, which encodes a key transcription factor at 7q11.23 that is associated with the LSD1 repressive chromatin complex and silences its dosage-sensitive targets.


Clinical Genetics | 2013

MLL2 mutation detection in 86 patients with Kabuki syndrome: a genotype-phenotype study

Periklis Makrythanasis; Bw van Bon; Marloes Steehouwer; B Rodríguez-Santiago; Michael A. Simpson; P Dias; Bm Anderlid; P Arts; M Bhat; Bartolomeo Augello; Elisa Biamino; Emhf Bongers; M. del Campo; I Cordeiro; Am Cueto-González; I Cuscó; C Deshpande; E Frysira; Louise Izatt; R Flores; E Galán; B Gener; Christian Gilissen; Sm Granneman; Juliane Hoyer; Hg Yntema; Cm Kets; David A. Koolen; Cl Marcelis; A Medeira

Recently, pathogenic variants in the MLL2 gene were identified as the most common cause of Kabuki (Niikawa–Kuroki) syndrome (MIM#147920). To further elucidate the genotype–phenotype correlation, we studied a large cohort of 86 clinically defined patients with Kabuki syndrome (KS) for mutations in MLL2. All patients were assessed using a standardized phenotype list and all were scored using a newly developed clinical score list for KS (MLL2‐Kabuki score 0–10). Sequencing of the full coding region and intron–exon boundaries of MLL2 identified a total of 45 likely pathogenic mutations (52%): 31 nonsense, 10 missense and four splice‐site mutations, 34 of which were novel. In five additional patients, novel, i.e. non‐dbSNP132 variants of clinically unknown relevance, were identified. Patients with likely pathogenic nonsense or missense MLL2 mutations were usually more severely affected (median ‘MLL2‐Kabuki score’ of 6) as compared to the patients without MLL2 mutations (median ‘MLL2‐Kabuki score’ of 5), a significant difference (p < 0.0014). Several typical facial features such as large dysplastic ears, arched eyebrows with sparse lateral third, blue sclerae, a flat nasal tip with a broad nasal root, and a thin upper and a full lower lip were observed more often in mutation positive patients.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

An atypical 7q11.23 deletion in a normal IQ Williams-Beuren syndrome patient.

Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Cédric Howald; Lucia Micale; Elisa Biamino; Bartolomeo Augello; Carmela Fusco; Maria Giuseppina Turturo; Serena Forzano; Alexandre Reymond; Giuseppe Merla

Williams–Beuren syndrome (WBS; OMIM no. 194050) is a multisystemic neurodevelopmental disorder caused by a hemizygous deletion of 1.55 Mb on chromosome 7q11.23 spanning 28 genes. Haploinsufficiency of the ELN gene was shown to be responsible for supravalvular aortic stenosis and generalized arteriopathy, whereas LIMK1, CLIP2, GTF2IRD1 and GTF2I genes were suggested to be linked to the specific cognitive profile and craniofacial features. These insights for genotype–phenotype correlations came from the molecular and clinical analysis of patients with atypical deletions and mice models. Here we report a patient showing mild WBS physical phenotype and normal IQ, who carries a shorter 1 Mb atypical deletion. This rearrangement does not include the GTF2IRD1 and GTF2I genes and only partially the BAZ1B gene. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that hemizygosity of the GTF2IRD1 and GTF2I genes might be involved in the facial dysmorphisms and in the specific motor and cognitive deficits observed in WBS patients.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

A restricted spectrum of mutations in the SMAD4 tumor-suppressor gene underlies myhre syndrome

Viviana Caputo; Luciano Cianetti; Marcello Niceta; Claudio Carta; Andrea Ciolfi; Gianfranco Bocchinfuso; Eugenio Carrani; Maria Lisa Dentici; Elisa Biamino; E Belligni; Livia Garavelli; Loredana Boccone; Daniela Melis; Generoso Andria; Bruce D. Gelb; Lorenzo Stella; Margherita Silengo; Bruno Dallapiccola; Marco Tartaglia

Myhre syndrome is a developmental disorder characterized by reduced growth, generalized muscular hypertrophy, facial dysmorphism, deafness, cognitive deficits, joint stiffness, and skeletal anomalies. Here, by performing exome sequencing of a single affected individual and coupling the results to a hypothesis-driven filtering strategy, we establish that heterozygous mutations in SMAD4, which encodes for a transducer mediating transforming growth factor β and bone morphogenetic protein signaling branches, underlie this rare Mendelian trait. Two recurrent de novo SMAD4 mutations were identified in eight unrelated subjects. Both mutations were missense changes altering Ile500 within the evolutionary conserved MAD homology 2 domain, a well known mutational hot spot in malignancies. Structural analyses suggest that the substituted residues are likely to perturb the binding properties of the mutant protein to signaling partners. Although SMAD4 has been established as a tumor suppressor gene somatically mutated in pancreatic, gastrointestinal, and skin cancers, and germline loss-of-function lesions and deletions of this gene have been documented to cause disorders that predispose individuals to gastrointestinal cancer and vascular dysplasias, the present report identifies a previously unrecognized class of mutations in the gene with profound impact on development and growth.


Human Mutation | 2014

Molecular Analysis, Pathogenic Mechanisms, and Readthrough Therapy on a Large Cohort of Kabuki Syndrome Patients

Lucia Micale; Bartolomeo Augello; Claudia Maffeo; Angelo Selicorni; Federica Zucchetti; Carmela Fusco; Pasquelena De Nittis; Maria Teresa Pellico; Barbara Mandriani; Rita Fischetto; Loredana Boccone; Margherita Silengo; Elisa Biamino; Chiara Perria; Stefano Sotgiu; Gigliola Serra; Elisabetta Lapi; Marcella Neri; Alessandra Ferlini; Maria Luigia Cavaliere; Pietro Chiurazzi; Matteo Della Monica; Gioacchino Scarano; Francesca Faravelli; Paola Ferrari; Laura Mazzanti; Alba Pilotta; Maria Grazia Patricelli; Maria Francesca Bedeschi; Francesco Benedicenti

Kabuki syndrome (KS) is a multiple congenital anomalies syndrome characterized by characteristic facial features and varying degrees of mental retardation, caused by mutations in KMT2D/MLL2 and KDM6A/UTX genes. In this study, we performed a mutational screening on 303 Kabuki patients by direct sequencing, MLPA, and quantitative PCR identifying 133 KMT2D, 62 never described before, and four KDM6A mutations, three of them are novel. We found that a number of KMT2D truncating mutations result in mRNA degradation through the nonsense‐mediated mRNA decay, contributing to protein haploinsufficiency. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the reduction of KMT2D protein level in patients’ lymphoblastoid and skin fibroblast cell lines carrying KMT2D‐truncating mutations affects the expression levels of known KMT2D target genes. Finally, we hypothesized that the KS patients may benefit from a readthrough therapy to restore physiological levels of KMT2D and KDM6A proteins. To assess this, we performed a proof‐of‐principle study on 14 KMT2D and two KDM6A nonsense mutations using specific compounds that mediate translational readthrough and thereby stimulate the re‐expression of full‐length functional proteins. Our experimental data showed that both KMT2D and KDM6A nonsense mutations displayed high levels of readthrough in response to gentamicin treatment, paving the way to further studies aimed at eventually treating some Kabuki patients with readthrough inducers.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008

Clinical and molecular characterization of 40 patients with Noonan syndrome.

Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Giuseppina Baldassarre; Angelo Giovanni Delmonaco; Elisa Biamino; Elena Banaudi; Claudio Carta; Cesare Rossi; Margherita Silengo

Noonan syndrome (NS, OMIM 163950) is an autosomal dominant disorder, with a prevalence at birth of 1:1000-1:2500 live births, characterized by short stature, facial and skeletal dysmorphisms, cardiovascular defects and haematological anomalies. Missense mutations of PTPN11 gene account for approximately 50% of NS cases, while molecular lesions of other genes of the RAS/MAPK pathway -KRAS, SOS1 and RAF1 - play a minor role in the molecular pathogenesis of the disease. Forty patients were enrolled in the study with a PTPN11 mutation detection rate of 31.5%, including a novel missense mutation, Phe285Ile, in a familial case with high intrafamilial phenotypic variability. All patients negative for PTPN11 mutations were further screened for mutations of the KRAS, SOS1, and RAF1 genes, revealing a Thr266Lys substitution in SOS1 in a single patient, a newborn with a subtle phenotype, characterized by facial dysmorphisms and a mild pulmonic stenosis.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2015

Phenotype and genotype in 103 patients with tricho-rhino-phalangeal syndrome.

Saskia M. Maas; Adam Shaw; Hennie Bikker; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Karin van der Tuin; Magdalena Badura-Stronka; E Belligni; Elisa Biamino; Maria Teresa Bonati; Daniel R. Carvalho; Jan-Maarten Cobben; Stella A. de Man; Nicolette S. den Hollander; Nataliya Di Donato; Livia Garavelli; Sabine Grønborg; Johanna C. Herkert; A. Jeannette M. Hoogeboom; Aleksander Jamsheer; Anna Latos-Bielenska; Anneke Maat-Kievit; Cinzia Magnani; Carlo Marcelis; Inge B. Mathijssen; Maartje Nielsen; Ellen Otten; Lilian Bomme Ousager; Jacek Pilch; Astrid S. Plomp; G. Poke

Tricho-rhino-phalangeal syndrome (TRPS) is characterized by craniofacial and skeletal abnormalities, and subdivided in TRPS I, caused by mutations in TRPS1, and TRPS II, caused by a contiguous gene deletion affecting (amongst others) TRPS1 and EXT1. We performed a collaborative international study to delineate phenotype, natural history, variability, and genotype-phenotype correlations in more detail. We gathered information on 103 cytogenetically or molecularly confirmed affected individuals. TRPS I was present in 85 individuals (22 missense mutations, 62 other mutations), TRPS II in 14, and in 5 it remained uncertain whether TRPS1 was partially or completely deleted. Main features defining the facial phenotype include fine and sparse hair, thick and broad eyebrows, especially the medial portion, a broad nasal ridge and tip, underdeveloped nasal alae, and a broad columella. The facial manifestations in patients with TRPS I and TRPS II do not show a significant difference. In the limbs the main findings are short hands and feet, hypermobility, and a tendency for isolated metacarpals and metatarsals to be shortened. Nails of fingers and toes are typically thin and dystrophic. The radiological hallmark are the cone-shaped epiphyses and in TRPS II multiple exostoses. Osteopenia is common in both, as is reduced linear growth, both prenatally and postnatally. Variability for all findings, also within a single family, can be marked. Morbidity mostly concerns joint problems, manifesting in increased or decreased mobility, pain and in a minority an increased fracture rate. The hips can be markedly affected at a (very) young age. Intellectual disability is uncommon in TRPS I and, if present, usually mild. In TRPS II intellectual disability is present in most but not all, and again typically mild to moderate in severity. Missense mutations are located exclusively in exon 6 and 7 of TRPS1. Other mutations are located anywhere in exons 4-7. Whole gene deletions are common but have variable breakpoints. Most of the phenotype in patients with TRPS II is explained by the deletion of TRPS1 and EXT1, but haploinsufficiency of RAD21 is also likely to contribute. Genotype-phenotype studies showed that mutations located in exon 6 may have somewhat more pronounced facial characteristics and more marked shortening of hands and feet compared to mutations located elsewhere in TRPS1, but numbers are too small to allow firm conclusions.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

Absence of deletion and duplication of MLL2 and KDM6A genes in a large cohort of patients with Kabuki syndrome

Manuela Priolo; Lucia Micale; Bartolomeo Augello; Carmela Fusco; Federica Zucchetti; Paolo Prontera; Valeria Paduano; Elisa Biamino; Angelo Selicorni; Corrado Mammì; Carmelo Laganà; Leopoldo Zelante; Giuseppe Merla

Kabuki syndrome is a rare, multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation syndrome caused by MLL2 point mutations and KDM6A microdeletions. We screened a large cohort of MLL2 mutation-negative patients for MLL2 and KDM6A exon(s) microdeletion and microduplication. Our assays failed to detect such rearrangements in MLL2 as well as in KDM6A gene. These results show that these genomic events are extremely rare in the Kabuki syndrome, substantiating its genetic heterogeneity and the search for additional causative gene(s).


European Journal of Pediatrics | 2010

Remittent hyperammonemia in congenital portosystemic shunt

Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Francesco Porta; Elisa Biamino; Alessandro Mussa; Emanuela Garelli; Francesca Chiappe; Andrea Veltri; Margherita Silengo; Fabrizio Gennari

Congenital portosystemic shunts (PSS) are rare vascular anomalies with different gross anatomy. Persistent patent ductus venosus (PDV) represents an uncommon cause of intrahepatic PSS. The diagnosis of this condition may not be obvious because of its wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, ranging from asymptomatic to life-threatening disease. We report the case of three boys with neuropsychological symptoms associated with mild fasting hyperammonemia. An oral protein load allowed the detection of a detoxication defect due to PSS related to PDV. This simple procedure can be worthwhile of attention in patients with mental retardation, behavior disturbances, and learning difficulties after exclusion of common causes of inherited hyperammonemia, namely, urea cycle disorders, organic acidemias, and fatty acid oxidation defects.


Molecular Cytogenetics | 2014

Large cryptic genomic rearrangements with apparently normal karyotypes detected by array-CGH

Eleonora Di Gregorio; Elisa Savin; Elisa Biamino; E Belligni; Valeria Giorgia Naretto; Gaetana D’Alessandro; Giorgia Gai; Franco Fiocchi; Alessandro Calcia; Cecilia Mancini; Elisa Giorgio; Simona Cavalieri; Flavia Talarico; Patrizia Pappi; Marina Gandione; Monica Grosso; Valentina Asnaghi; Gabriella Restagno; Giorgia Mandrile; Giovanni Botta; Margherita Silengo; Enrico Grosso; Giovanni Battista Ferrero

BackgroundConventional karyotyping (550 bands resolution) is able to identify chromosomal aberrations >5-10 Mb, which represent a known cause of intellectual disability/developmental delay (ID/DD) and/or multiple congenital anomalies (MCA). Array-Comparative Genomic Hybridization (array-CGH) has increased the diagnostic yield of 15-20%.ResultsIn a cohort of 700 ID/DD cases with or without MCA, including 15 prenatal diagnoses, we identified a subgroup of seven patients with a normal karyotype and a large complex rearrangement detected by array-CGH (at least 6, and up to 18 Mb). FISH analysis could be performed on six cases and showed that rearrangements were translocation derivatives, indistinguishable from a normal karyotype as they involved a similar band pattern and size. Five were inherited from a parent with a balanced translocation, whereas two were apparently de novo. Genes spanning the rearrangements could be associated with some phenotypic features in three cases (case 3: DOCK8; case 4: GATA3, AKR1C4; case 6: AS/PWS deletion, CHRNA7), and in two, likely disease genes were present (case 5: NR2F2, TP63, IGF1R; case 7: CDON). Three of our cases were prenatal diagnoses with an apparently normal karyotype.ConclusionsLarge complex rearrangements of up to 18 Mb, involving chromosomal regions with similar size and band appearance may be overlooked by conventional karyotyping. Array-CGH allows a precise chromosomal diagnosis and recurrence risk definition, further confirming this analysis as a first tier approach to clarify molecular bases of ID/DD and/or MCA. In prenatal tests, array-CGH is confirmed as an important tool to avoid false negative results due to karyotype intrinsic limit of detection.

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Bartolomeo Augello

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Marco Tartaglia

Boston Children's Hospital

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