Erin Loring
Yale University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Erin Loring.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Ute I. Scholl; Gerald Goh; Gabriel Stölting; Regina Campos de Oliveira; Murim Choi; John D. Overton; Annabelle L. Fonseca; Reju Korah; Lee F. Starker; John W. Kunstman; Manju L. Prasad; Erum A. Hartung; Nelly Mauras; Matthew R. Benson; Tammy M. Brady; Jay R. Shapiro; Erin Loring; Carol Nelson-Williams; Steven K. Libutti; Shrikant Mane; Per Hellman; Gunnar Westin; Göran Åkerström; Peyman Björklund; Tobias Carling; Christoph Fahlke; Patricia Hidalgo; Richard P. Lifton
Adrenal aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs) constitutively produce the salt-retaining hormone aldosterone and are a common cause of severe hypertension. Recurrent mutations in the potassium channel gene KCNJ5 that result in cell depolarization and Ca2+ influx cause ∼40% of these tumors. We identified 5 somatic mutations (4 altering Gly403 and 1 altering Ile770) in CACNA1D, encoding a voltage-gated calcium channel, among 43 APAs without mutated KCNJ5. The altered residues lie in the S6 segments that line the channel pore. Both alterations result in channel activation at less depolarized potentials; Gly403 alterations also impair channel inactivation. These effects are inferred to cause increased Ca2+ influx, which is a sufficient stimulus for aldosterone production and cell proliferation in adrenal glomerulosa. We also identified de novo germline mutations at identical positions in two children with a previously undescribed syndrome featuring primary aldosteronism and neuromuscular abnormalities. These findings implicate gain-of-function Ca2+ channel mutations in APAs and primary aldosteronism.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010
A. Gulhan Ercan-Sencicek; Althea A. Stillman; Ananda K. Ghosh; Kaya Bilguvar; Brian J. O'Roak; Christopher E. Mason; Thomas Abbott; Abha R. Gupta; Robert A. King; David L. Pauls; Jay A. Tischfield; Gary A. Heiman; Harvey S. Singer; Donald L. Gilbert; Pieter J. Hoekstra; Thomas Morgan; Erin Loring; Katsuhito Yasuno; Thomas V. Fernandez; Stephan J. Sanders; Angeliki Louvi; Judy H. Cho; Shrikant Mane; Christopher M. Colangelo; Thomas Biederer; Richard P. Lifton; Murat Gunel; Matthew W. State
Tourettes syndrome is a common developmental neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by chronic motor and vocal tics. Despite a strong genetic contribution, inheritance is complex, and risk alleles have proven difficult to identify. Here, we describe an analysis of linkage in a two-generation pedigree leading to the identification of a rare functional mutation in the HDC gene encoding L-histidine decarboxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in histamine biosynthesis. Our findings, together with previously published data from model systems, point to a role for histaminergic neurotransmission in the mechanism and modulation of Tourettes syndrome and tics.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Neil Romberg; Khatoun Al Moussawi; Carol Nelson-Williams; Amy L. Stiegler; Erin Loring; Murim Choi; John D. Overton; Eric Meffre; Mustafa K. Khokha; Anita J Huttner; Brian L. West; Nikolai A. Podoltsev; Titus J. Boggon; Barbara I. Kazmierczak; Richard P. Lifton
Upon detection of pathogen-associated molecular patterns, innate immune receptors initiate inflammatory responses. These receptors include cytoplasmic NOD-like receptors (NLRs) whose stimulation recruits and proteolytically activates caspase-1 within the inflammasome, a multiprotein complex. Caspase-1 mediates the production of interleukin-1 family cytokines (IL1FCs), leading to fever and inflammatory cell death (pyroptosis). Mutations that constitutively activate these pathways underlie several autoinflammatory diseases with diverse clinical features. We describe a family with a previously unreported syndrome featuring neonatal-onset enterocolitis, periodic fever, and fatal or near-fatal episodes of autoinflammation. We show that the disease is caused by a de novo gain-of-function mutation in NLRC4 encoding a p.Val341Ala substitution in the HD1 domain of the protein that cosegregates with disease. Mutant NLRC4 causes constitutive IL1FC production and macrophage cell death. Infected macrophages from affected individuals are polarized toward pyroptosis and exhibit abnormal staining for inflammasome components. These findings identify and describe the cause of a life-threatening but treatable autoinflammatory disease that underscores the divergent roles of the NLRC4 inflammasome.
Neuron | 2014
Lissandra Castellan Baldan; Kyle A. Williams; Jean-Dominique Gallezot; Vladimir Pogorelov; Maximiliano Rapanelli; Michael J. Crowley; George M. Anderson; Erin Loring; Roxanne Gorczyca; Eileen Billingslea; Suzanne Wasylink; A. Gulhan Ercan-Sencicek; Kuakarun Krusong; Bennett L. Leventhal; Hiroshi Ohtsu; Michael H. Bloch; Zoë A. Hughes; John H. Krystal; Linda C. Mayes; Ivan E. de Araujo; Yu-Shin Ding; Matthew W. State; Christopher Pittenger
Tourette syndrome (TS) is characterized by tics, sensorimotor gating deficiencies, and abnormalities of cortico-basal ganglia circuits. A mutation in histidine decarboxylase (Hdc), the key enzyme for the biosynthesis of histamine (HA), has been implicated as a rare genetic cause. Hdc knockout mice exhibited potentiated tic-like stereotypies, recapitulating core phenomenology of TS; these were mitigated by the dopamine (DA) D2 antagonist haloperidol, a proven pharmacotherapy, and by HA infusion into the brain. Prepulse inhibition was impaired in both mice and humans carrying Hdc mutations. HA infusion reduced striatal DA levels; in Hdc knockout mice, striatal DA was increased and the DA-regulated immediate early gene Fos was upregulated. DA D2/D3 receptor binding was altered both in mice and in humans carrying the Hdc mutation. These data confirm histidine decarboxylase deficiency as a rare cause of TS and identify HA-DA interactions in the basal ganglia as an important locus of pathology.
eLife | 2015
Ute I. Scholl; Gabriel Stölting; Carol Nelson-Williams; Alfred A. Vichot; Murim Choi; Erin Loring; Manju L. Prasad; Gerald Goh; Tobias Carling; C. Christofer Juhlin; Ivo Quack; Lars Christian Rump; Anne Thiel; Marc B. Lande; Britney G Frazier; Majid Rasoulpour; David L Bowlin; Christine B. Sethna; Howard Trachtman; Christoph Fahlke; Richard P. Lifton
Many Mendelian traits are likely unrecognized owing to absence of traditional segregation patterns in families due to causation by de novo mutations, incomplete penetrance, and/or variable expressivity. Genome-level sequencing can overcome these complications. Extreme childhood phenotypes are promising candidates for new Mendelian traits. One example is early onset hypertension, a rare form of a global cause of morbidity and mortality. We performed exome sequencing of 40 unrelated subjects with hypertension due to primary aldosteronism by age 10. Five subjects (12.5%) shared the identical, previously unidentified, heterozygous CACNA1HM1549V mutation. Two mutations were demonstrated to be de novo events, and all mutations occurred independently. CACNA1H encodes a voltage-gated calcium channel (CaV3.2) expressed in adrenal glomerulosa. CACNA1HM1549V showed drastically impaired channel inactivation and activation at more hyperpolarized potentials, producing increased intracellular Ca2+, the signal for aldosterone production. This mutation explains disease pathogenesis and provides new insight into mechanisms mediating aldosterone production and hypertension. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.06315.001
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2013
Jonathan L. Levinsohn; Li C. Tian; Lynn M. Boyden; Jennifer M. McNiff; Deepak Narayan; Erin Loring; Duri Yun; Jeffrey L. Sugarman; John D. Overton; Shrikant Mane; Richard P. Lifton; Amy S. Paller; Annette Wagner; Richard J. Antaya; Keith A. Choate
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank the patients and their families for taking part in this project. We also thank S Aasi, R Khosla, and P Lorenz for their valuable assistance. Bryan K. Sun, Andrea Saggini, Kavita Y. Sarin, Jinah Kim, Latanya Benjamin, Philip E. LeBoit and Paul A. Khavari Department of Dermatology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA; Department of Dermatology, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA and Department of Dermatology, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy E-mail: [email protected]
eLife | 2016
Andrew T. Timberlake; Jungmin Choi; Samir Zaidi; Qiongshi Lu; Carol Nelson-Williams; Eric D. Brooks; Kaya Bilguvar; Irina Tikhonova; Shrikant Mane; Jenny F. Yang; Rajendra Sawh-Martinez; Sarah Persing; Elizabeth G. Zellner; Erin Loring; Carolyn Chuang; Amy Galm; Peter W. Hashim; Derek M. Steinbacher; Michael L. DiLuna; Charles C. Duncan; Kevin A. Pelphrey; Hongyu Zhao; John A. Persing; Richard P. Lifton
Premature fusion of the cranial sutures (craniosynostosis), affecting 1 in 2000 newborns, is treated surgically in infancy to prevent adverse neurologic outcomes. To identify mutations contributing to common non-syndromic midline (sagittal and metopic) craniosynostosis, we performed exome sequencing of 132 parent-offspring trios and 59 additional probands. Thirteen probands (7%) had damaging de novo or rare transmitted mutations in SMAD6, an inhibitor of BMP – induced osteoblast differentiation (p<10−20). SMAD6 mutations nonetheless showed striking incomplete penetrance (<60%). Genotypes of a common variant near BMP2 that is strongly associated with midline craniosynostosis explained nearly all the phenotypic variation in these kindreds, with highly significant evidence of genetic interaction between these loci via both association and analysis of linkage. This epistatic interaction of rare and common variants defines the most frequent cause of midline craniosynostosis and has implications for the genetic basis of other diseases. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.20125.001
Nature Genetics | 2018
Ute I. Scholl; Gabriel Stölting; Julia Schewe; Anne Thiel; Hua Tan; Carol Nelson-Williams; Alfred A. Vichot; Sheng Chih Jin; Erin Loring; Verena Untiet; Taekyeong Yoo; Jungmin Choi; Shengxin Xu; Aihua Wu; Marieluise Kirchner; Philipp Mertins; Lars Christian Rump; Ali Mirza Onder; Cory Gamble; Daniel McKenney; Robert W. Lash; Deborah P. Jones; Gary Chune; Priscila Gagliardi; Murim Choi; Richard D. Gordon; Michael Stowasser; Christoph Fahlke; Richard P. Lifton
Primary aldosteronism, a common cause of severe hypertension1, features constitutive production of the adrenal steroid aldosterone. We analyzed a multiplex family with familial hyperaldosteronism type II (FH-II)2 and 80 additional probands with unsolved early-onset primary aldosteronism. Eight probands had novel heterozygous variants in CLCN2, including two de novo mutations and four independent occurrences of a mutation encoding an identical p.Arg172Gln substitution; all relatives with early-onset primary aldosteronism carried the CLCN2 variant found in the proband. CLCN2 encodes a voltage-gated chloride channel expressed in adrenal glomerulosa that opens at hyperpolarized membrane potentials. Channel opening depolarizes glomerulosa cells and induces expression of aldosterone synthase, the rate-limiting enzyme for aldosterone biosynthesis. Mutant channels show gain of function, with higher open probabilities at the glomerulosa resting potential. These findings for the first time demonstrate a role of anion channels in glomerulosa membrane potential determination, aldosterone production and hypertension. They establish the cause of a substantial fraction of early-onset primary aldosteronism.Whole-exome sequencing identifies mutations in CLCN2 in individuals with familial hyperaldosteronism type II or early-onset primary aldosteronism. These gain-of-function mutations cause chloride channel opening and glomerulosa cell depolarization, showing a role for anion channels in aldosterone production.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Andrew T. Timberlake; Charuta Gavankar Furey; Jungmin Choi; Carol Nelson-Williams; Erin Loring; Amy Galm; Kristopher T. Kahle; Derek M. Steinbacher; Dawid Larysz; John A. Persing; Richard P. Lifton; Kaya Bilguvar; Shrikant Mane; Irina Tikhonova; Christopher Castaldi; James Knight
Significance Craniosynostosis is a common congenital malformation resulting from premature fusion of the bones that comprise the cranial vault, requiring surgery in infancy to prevent adverse neurologic outcomes. Eighty-five percent of cases are non-syndromic and of unknown cause. By exome sequencing of families with non-syndromic midline craniosynostosis, we show that 5% of cases have de novo damaging mutations in negative regulators of the Wnt, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), and Ras/ERK signaling pathways, developmental cascades that converge on common nuclear targets to promote bone formation. Another 5% have transmitted mutations in these pathways. Common variants near BMP2 show genetic interaction with these rare mutations. The results provide insight into pathophysiology and have immediate implications for the diagnosis and genetic counseling of families with craniosynostosis. Non-syndromic craniosynostosis (NSC) is a frequent congenital malformation in which one or more cranial sutures fuse prematurely. Mutations causing rare syndromic craniosynostoses in humans and engineered mouse models commonly increase signaling of the Wnt, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), or Ras/ERK pathways, converging on shared nuclear targets that promote bone formation. In contrast, the genetics of NSC is largely unexplored. More than 95% of NSC is sporadic, suggesting a role for de novo mutations. Exome sequencing of 291 parent–offspring trios with midline NSC revealed 15 probands with heterozygous damaging de novo mutations in 12 negative regulators of Wnt, BMP, and Ras/ERK signaling (10.9-fold enrichment, P = 2.4 × 10−11). SMAD6 had 4 de novo and 14 transmitted mutations; no other gene had more than 1. Four familial NSC kindreds had mutations in genes previously implicated in syndromic disease. Collectively, these mutations contribute to 10% of probands. Mutations are predominantly loss-of-function, implicating haploinsufficiency as a frequent mechanism. A common risk variant near BMP2 increased the penetrance of SMAD6 mutations and was overtransmitted to patients with de novo mutations in other genes in these pathways, supporting a frequent two-locus pathogenesis. These findings implicate new genes in NSC and demonstrate related pathophysiology of common non-syndromic and rare syndromic craniosynostoses. These findings have implications for diagnosis, risk of recurrence, and risk of adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes. Finally, the use of pathways identified in rare syndromic disease to find genes accounting for non-syndromic cases may prove broadly relevant to understanding other congenital disorders featuring high locus heterogeneity.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2018
Ahmed Khattab; Carol Nelson-Williams; Vivienne Cabreza; Anne Macdonald; Erin Loring; Jeffrey M. Saland; Maria I. New
Mutations in the gene NR0B1 have been associated with several clinical phenotypes of X‐linked adrenal hypoplasia congenita (AHC). The degree and onset of adrenal insufficiency and involvement of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism is variable and may not be concordant with the identified mutation. We review a patient with AHC in which prenatal estriol levels were low, presenting with early‐onset mineralocorticoid deficiency in the newborn period followed by glucocorticoid deficiency 2 years later. The reported child is hemizygous for a novel mutation that is deemed de novo in the ligand‐binding site of the protein (DAX1) expressed by NR0B1. The identified frameshift mutation results in a T407N/fs protein change. Low prenatal estriol levels may represent a sensitive marker of potentially fatal disorders associated with adrenal insufficiency and should be utilized more frequently. Additionally, accurate reporting of mutations in NR0B1 and the associated phenotype are important to eventually establish a genotype–phenotype correlation that may help anticipate guidance in AHC.