Estelle Lopez
University of Burgundy
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Publication
Featured researches published by Estelle Lopez.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Jaclyn S Lee; Estelle Lopez; Vicente Herranz-Pérez; Toshinobu Shida; Brunella Franco; Laurence Jego; Fan Ye; Laurent Pasquier; Philippe Loget; Nadège Gigot; Bernard Aral; Carla A. M. Lopes; Judith St-Onge; Ange-Line Bruel; Julien Thevenon; Susana González-Granero; Caroline Alby; Arnold Munnich; Michel Vekemans; Frédéric Huet; Andrew M. Fry; Sophie Saunier; Jean-Baptiste Rivière; Tania Attié-Bitach; Jose Manuel Garcia-Verdugo; Laurence Faivre; André Mégarbané; Maxence V. Nachury
Centrioles are microtubule-based, barrel-shaped structures that initiate the assembly of centrosomes and cilia. How centriole length is precisely set remains elusive. The microcephaly protein CPAP (also known as MCPH6) promotes procentriole growth, whereas the oral-facial-digital (OFD) syndrome protein OFD1 represses centriole elongation. Here we uncover a new subtype of OFD with severe microcephaly and cerebral malformations and identify distinct mutations in two affected families in the evolutionarily conserved C2CD3 gene. Concordant with the clinical overlap, C2CD3 colocalizes with OFD1 at the distal end of centrioles, and C2CD3 physically associates with OFD1. However, whereas OFD1 deletion leads to centriole hyperelongation, loss of C2CD3 results in short centrioles without subdistal and distal appendages. Because C2CD3 overexpression triggers centriole hyperelongation and OFD1 antagonizes this activity, we propose that C2CD3 directly promotes centriole elongation and that OFD1 acts as a negative regulator of C2CD3. Our results identify regulation of centriole length as an emerging pathogenic mechanism in ciliopathies.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012
Virginie Carmignac; Julien Thevenon; Lesley C. Adès; Bert Callewaert; Sophie Julia; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Lucie Gueneau; Jean Benoît Courcet; Estelle Lopez; Katherine Holman; Marjolijn Renard; Henri Plauchu; Ghislaine Plessis; Julie De Backer; Anne H. Child; Gavin Arno; Laurence Duplomb; Patrick Callier; Bernard Aral; Pierre Vabres; Nadège Gigot; Eloisa Arbustini; Maurizia Grasso; Peter N. Robinson; Cyril Goizet; Clarisse Baumann; Maja Di Rocco; Jaime Sanchez del Pozo; Frédéric Huet; Guillaume Jondeau
Shprintzen-Goldberg syndrome (SGS) is characterized by severe marfanoid habitus, intellectual disability, camptodactyly, typical facial dysmorphism, and craniosynostosis. Using family-based exome sequencing, we identified a dominantly inherited heterozygous in-frame deletion in exon 1 of SKI. Direct sequencing of SKI further identified one overlapping heterozygous in-frame deletion and ten heterozygous missense mutations affecting recurrent residues in 18 of the 19 individuals screened for SGS; these individuals included one family affected by somatic mosaicism. All mutations were located in a restricted area of exon 1, within the R-SMAD binding domain of SKI. No mutation was found in a cohort of 11 individuals with other marfanoid-craniosynostosis phenotypes. The interaction between SKI and Smad2/3 and Smad 4 regulates TGF-β signaling, and the pattern of anomalies in Ski-deficient mice corresponds to the clinical manifestations of SGS. These findings define SGS as a member of the family of diseases associated with the TGF-β-signaling pathway.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012
Jean-Benoît Courcet; Laurence Faivre; Perrine Malzac; Alice Masurel-Paulet; Estelle Lopez; Patrick Callier; Laetitia Lambert; Martine Lemesle; Julien Thevenon; Nadège Gigot; Laurence Duplomb; Clémence Ragon; Nathalie Marle; Anne-Laure Mosca-Boidron; Frédéric Huet; Christophe Philippe; Anne Moncla; Christel Thauvin-Robinet
Background DYRK1A plays different functions during development, with an important role in controlling brain growth through neuronal proliferation and neurogenesis. It is expressed in a gene dosage dependent manner since dyrk1a haploinsufficiency induces a reduced brain size in mice, and DYRK1A overexpression is the candidate gene for intellectual disability (ID) and microcephaly in Down syndrome. We have identified a 69 kb deletion including the 5′ region of the DYRK1A gene in a patient with growth retardation, primary microcephaly, facial dysmorphism, seizures, ataxic gait, absent speech and ID. Because four patients previously reported with intragenic DYRK1A rearrangements or 21q22 microdeletions including only DYRK1A presented with overlapping phenotypes, we hypothesised that DYRK1A mutations could be responsible for syndromic ID with severe microcephaly and epilepsy. Methods The DYRK1A gene was studied by direct sequencing and quantitative PCR in a cohort of 105 patients with ID and at least two symptoms from the Angelman syndrome spectrum (microcephaly < −2.5 SD, ataxic gait, seizures and speech delay). Results We identified a de novo frameshift mutation (c.290_291delCT; p.Ser97Cysfs*98) in a patient with growth retardation, primary severe microcephaly, delayed language, ID, and seizures. Conclusion The identification of a truncating mutation in a patient with ID, severe microcephaly, epilepsy, and growth retardation, combined with its dual function in regulating the neural proliferation/neuronal differentiation, adds DYRK1A to the list of genes responsible for such a phenotype. ID, microcephaly, epilepsy, and language delay are the more specific features associated with DYRK1A abnormalities. DYRK1A studies should be discussed in patients presenting such a phenotype.
Human Genetics | 2014
Estelle Lopez; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Bruno Reversade; Nadia El Khartoufi; Louise Devisme; Muriel Holder; Hélène Ansart-Franquet; Magali Avila; Didier Lacombe; Pascale Kleinfinger; Irahara Kaori; Jun-ichi Takanashi; Martine Le Merrer; Jelena Martinovic; Catherine Noël; Mohammad Shboul; Lena Ho; Yeliz Guven; Ferechte Razavi; Lydie Burglen; Nadège Gigot; Véronique Darmency-Stamboul; Julien Thevenon; Bernard Aral; Hülya Kayserili; Frédéric Huet; Stanislas Lyonnet; Cédric Le Caignec; Brunella Franco; Jean-Baptiste Rivière
Oral-facial-digital syndrome type VI (OFD VI) is a recessive ciliopathy defined by two diagnostic criteria: molar tooth sign (MTS) and one or more of the following: (1) tongue hamartoma (s) and/or additional frenula and/or upper lip notch; (2) mesoaxial polydactyly of one or more hands or feet; (3) hypothalamic hamartoma. Because of the MTS, OFD VI belongs to the “Joubert syndrome related disorders”. Its genetic aetiology remains largely unknown although mutations in the TMEM216 gene, responsible for Joubert (JBS2) and Meckel-Gruber (MKS2) syndromes, have been reported in two OFD VI patients. To explore the molecular cause(s) of OFD VI syndrome, we used an exome sequencing strategy in six unrelated families followed by Sanger sequencing. We identified a total of 14 novel mutations in the C5orf42 gene in 9/11 families with positive OFD VI diagnostic criteria including a severe fetal case with microphthalmia, cerebellar hypoplasia, corpus callosum agenesis, polydactyly and skeletal dysplasia. C5orf42 mutations have already been reported in Joubert syndrome confirming that OFD VI and JBS are allelic disorders, thus enhancing our knowledge of the complex, highly heterogeneous nature of ciliopathies.
PLOS Biology | 2016
Chunmei Li; Victor L. Jensen; Kwangjin Park; Julie Kennedy; Francesc R. Garcia-Gonzalo; Marta Romani; Roberta De Mori; Ange Line Bruel; Dominique Gaillard; Bérénice Doray; Estelle Lopez; Jean Baptiste Rivière; Laurence Faivre; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Jeremy F. Reiter; Oliver E. Blacque; Enza Maria Valente; Michel R. Leroux
Cilia have a unique diffusion barrier (“gate”) within their proximal region, termed transition zone (TZ), that compartmentalises signalling proteins within the organelle. The TZ is known to harbour two functional modules/complexes (Meckel syndrome [MKS] and Nephronophthisis [NPHP]) defined by genetic interaction, interdependent protein localisation (hierarchy), and proteomic studies. However, the composition and molecular organisation of these modules and their links to human ciliary disease are not completely understood. Here, we reveal Caenorhabditis elegans CEP-290 (mammalian Cep290/Mks4/Nphp6 orthologue) as a central assembly factor that is specific for established MKS module components and depends on the coiled coil region of MKS-5 (Rpgrip1L/Rpgrip1) for TZ localisation. Consistent with a critical role in ciliary gate function, CEP-290 prevents inappropriate entry of membrane-associated proteins into cilia and keeps ARL-13 (Arl13b) from leaking out of cilia via the TZ. We identify a novel MKS module component, TMEM-218 (Tmem218), that requires CEP-290 and other MKS module components for TZ localisation and functions together with the NPHP module to facilitate ciliogenesis. We show that TZ localisation of TMEM-138 (Tmem138) and CDKL-1 (Cdkl1/Cdkl2/Cdkl3/Cdlk4 related), not previously linked to a specific TZ module, similarly depends on CEP-290; surprisingly, neither TMEM-138 or CDKL-1 exhibit interdependent localisation or genetic interactions with core MKS or NPHP module components, suggesting they are part of a distinct, CEP-290-associated module. Lastly, we show that families presenting with Oral-Facial-Digital syndrome type 6 (OFD6) have likely pathogenic mutations in CEP-290-dependent TZ proteins, namely Tmem17, Tmem138, and Tmem231. Notably, patient fibroblasts harbouring mutated Tmem17, a protein not yet ciliopathy-associated, display ciliogenesis defects. Together, our findings expand the repertoire of MKS module-associated proteins—including the previously uncharacterised mammalian Tmem80—and suggest an MKS-5 and CEP-290-dependent assembly pathway for building a functional TZ.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2014
Laurence Duplomb; Sandrine Duvet; Damien Picot; G Jego; Salima El Chehadeh-Djebbar; Nathalie Marle; Nadège Gigot; Bernard Aral; Virginie Carmignac; Julien Thevenon; Estelle Lopez; Jean-Baptiste Rivière; André Klein; Christophe Philippe; Nathalie Droin; Edward Blair; François Girodon; Jean Donadieu; Christine Bellanné-Chantelot; Laurent Delva; Jean-Claude Michalski; Eric Solary; Laurence Faivre; François Foulquier; Christel Thauvin-Robinet
Cohen syndrome (CS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder with multisytemic clinical features due to mutations in the VPS13B gene, which has recently been described encoding a mandatory membrane protein involved in Golgi integrity. As the Golgi complex is the place where glycosylation of newly synthesized proteins occurs, we hypothesized that VPS13B deficiency, responsible of Golgi apparatus disturbance, could lead to glycosylation defects and/or mysfunction of this organelle, and thus be a cause of the main clinical manifestations of CS. The glycosylation status of CS serum proteins showed a very unusual pattern of glycosylation characterized by a significant accumulation of agalactosylated fucosylated structures as well as asialylated fucosylated structures demonstrating a major defect of glycan maturation in CS. However, CS transferrin and α1-AT profiles, two liver-derived proteins, were normal. We also showed that intercellular cell adhesion molecule 1 and LAMP-2, two highly glycosylated cellular proteins, presented an altered migration profile on SDS-PAGE in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from CS patients. RNA interference against VPS13B confirmed these glycosylation defects. Experiments with Brefeldin A demonstrated that intracellular retrograde cell trafficking was normal in CS fibroblasts. Furthermore, early endosomes were almost absent in these cells and lysosomes were abnormally enlarged, suggesting a crucial role of VPS13B in endosomal-lysosomal trafficking. Our work provides evidence that CS is associated to a tissue-specific major defect of glycosylation and endosomal-lysosomal trafficking defect, suggesting that this could be a new key element to decipher the mechanisms of CS physiopathology.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2017
Ange-Line Bruel; Brunella Franco; Yannis Duffourd; Julien Thevenon; Laurence Jego; Estelle Lopez; Jean-François Deleuze; Diane Doummar; Rachel H. Giles; Colin A. Johnson; Martijn A. Huynen; Véronique Chevrier; Lydie Burglen; Manuela Morleo; Isabelle Desguerres; Geneviève Pierquin; Bérénice Doray; Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier; Bruno Reversade; Elisabeth Steichen-Gersdorf; Clarisse Baumann; Inusha Panigrahi; Anne Fargeot-Espaliat; Anne Dieux; Albert David; Alice Goldenberg; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Dominique Gaillard; Jesus Argente; Bernard Aral
Oral–facial–digital syndromes (OFDS) gather rare genetic disorders characterised by facial, oral and digital abnormalities associated with a wide range of additional features (polycystic kidney disease, cerebral malformations and several others) to delineate a growing list of OFDS subtypes. The most frequent, OFD type I, is caused by a heterozygous mutation in the OFD1 gene encoding a centrosomal protein. The wide clinical heterogeneity of OFDS suggests the involvement of other ciliary genes. For 15 years, we have aimed to identify the molecular bases of OFDS. This effort has been greatly helped by the recent development of whole-exome sequencing (WES). Here, we present all our published and unpublished results for WES in 24 cases with OFDS. We identified causal variants in five new genes (C2CD3, TMEM107, INTU, KIAA0753 and IFT57) and related the clinical spectrum of four genes in other ciliopathies (C5orf42, TMEM138, TMEM231 and WDPCP) to OFDS. Mutations were also detected in two genes previously implicated in OFDS. Functional studies revealed the involvement of centriole elongation, transition zone and intraflagellar transport defects in OFDS, thus characterising three ciliary protein modules: the complex KIAA0753-FOPNL-OFD1, a regulator of centriole elongation; the Meckel-Gruber syndrome module, a major component of the transition zone; and the CPLANE complex necessary for IFT-A assembly. OFDS now appear to be a distinct subgroup of ciliopathies with wide heterogeneity, which makes the initial classification obsolete. A clinical classification restricted to the three frequent/well-delineated subtypes could be proposed, and for patients who do not fit one of these three main subtypes, a further classification could be based on the genotype.
Human Mutation | 2011
M. Avila; Nadège Gigot; Bernard Aral; Patrick Callier; Elodie Gautier; Julien Thevenon; Laurent Pasquier; Estelle Lopez; Lucie Gueneau; Laurence Duplomb; Alice Goldenberg; Clarisse Baumann; V. Cormier; S. Marlin; Alice Masurel-Paulet; Frédéric Huet; Tania Attié-Bitach; Laurence Faivre; Christel Thauvin-Robinet
We read carefully the article recently published by Johnston et al. [2010] about the variability of the spectrum of phenotypes associated with GLI3 mutations. Pathogenic GLI3 [MIM# 165240] mutations are typically associated with Greig cephalopolysyndactyly [MIM# 175700] [Vortkamp et al., 1991], and Pallister-Hall syndrome [MIM# 146510] [Kang et al., 1997] (GCPS, PHS). Three types of apparently isolated polydactyly—PAP-A, PAP-A/B, and PPD-IV—are also caused by GLI3 mutations [Radhakrishna et al., 1997, 1999]. The major clinical findings of PHS include hypothalamic hamartoma, central and postaxial polydactyly, bifid epiglottis, imperforate anus, and renal abnormalities [Biesecker, 1993]. The authors studied GLI3 mutations not only in patients with typical GCPS or PHS (19 probands) but also in 48 probands with features of GCPS or PHS without the clinical criteria (sub-GCPS and sub-PHS), five probands with nonsyndromic polydactyly, and 21 probands with features of oralfacial-digital syndrome (OFD) associated with features of PHS or GCPS. Six of these 21 patients had a GLI3 mutation or large rearrangement for an overall yield of 29%. This yield of mutations is significantly below that for typical PHS. These six patients presented midline abnormalities including hypothalamic hamartoma (four of six cases), mesoaxial polydactyly (four of six cases), imperforate anus (three of six cases), cerebellar vermis hypoplasia (three of six cases), and agenesis of the corpus callosum (one of six cases). Oral manifestations included buccal frenulae in five of six cases, oral hamartoma in one of six cases and cleft palate in one of six cases. The authors suggested that the identification of GLI3 mutations in patients with features of OFD supported the observation that GLI3 interacts with primary cilia. OFD syndromes comprise a heterogeneous group of clinical entities characterized by the association of malformations of the face, oral cavity, and extremities. Thirteen subtypes characterized by specific extra-OFD features have been distinguished so far [Gurrieri et al., 2007]. To date, only the OFD1 gene [MIM# 300170] has been identified as responsible for the OFD type I [MIM# 311200] [Ferrante et al., 2001]. Some mutations in the CORS2 gene [MIM# 613277] have recently been reported in two patients with an OFD type VI [MIM# 277170] [Valente et al., 2010]. To evaluate the prevalence of GLI3 mutations in patients with OFD and midline abnormalities and to determine when the GLI3 gene should be screened in such phenotypes, we had the opportunity to study eight patients with OFD associated with midline abnormalities. OFD1 direct DNA sequencing and specific quantitative analyses were previously performed and appeared normal [Thauvin-Robinet et al., 2006; 2009]. GLI3 direct sequencing of all exons and intron–exon boundaries was performed as previously described. [Wild et al., 1997] Compiled clinical data of the patients are reported in Table 1. All of them had midline abnormalities, including pituitary gland deficiency (five of eight cases) with pituitary stalk interruption (three of five cases), cerebellar hypoplasia (two of eight cases), hypothalamic hamartoma (one of eight cases), imperforate anus (one of eight cases), corpus callosum agenesis (one of eight cases), and central Y-shaped metacarpal (one of eight cases). In our population, no patient was found to have a pathogenic GLI3 mutation. We therefore sought to explain the difference between the two series (29% of GLI3 mutations and 0% in our cohort). This difference is probably explained by phenotypical differences in the two populations (Table 1). Indeed the oral abnormalities in Johnston’s cohort were mainly isolated oral frenulae (five of six cases). Oral frenulae are unspecific to OFD and have previously been described in PHS with a GLI3 mutation. The diagnosis of OFD syndrome in this population appears questionable, in particular since five of the six published mutations by Johnston et al. were similar in position to other GLI3 mutations described in PHS. In our population, oral frenulae were also frequent (six of eight cases), but more specific features such as lingual hamartoma and/or lobulated tongue [Thauvin-Robinet et al., 2006] were frequently associated (four of eight and two of eight cases, respectively). Similarly, the distribution of distal abnormalities was different, with more mesoaxial polydactyly in Johnston’s cohort than in our cohort, a feature that is more suggestive of PHS than OFD. Indeed mesoaxial polydactyly has rarely been described
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012
Estelle Lopez; Patrick Callier; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Didier Lacombe; Anne Moncla; Armand Bottani; Sandy Lambert; Alice Goldenberg; Bérénice Doray; Sylvie Odent; Damien Sanlaville; Lucie Gueneau; Laurence Duplomb; Frédéric Huet; Bernard Aral; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Laurence Faivre
Floating‐Harbor syndrome (FHS) is characterized by characteristic facial dysmorphism, short stature with delayed bone age, and expressive language delay. To date, the gene(s) responsible for FHS is (are) unknown and the diagnosis is only made on the basis of the clinical phenotype. The majority of cases appeared to be sporadic but rare cases following autosomal dominant inheritance have been reported. We identified a 4.7 Mb de novo 12q15‐q21.1 microdeletion in a patient with FHS and intellectual deficiency. Pangenomic 244K array‐CGH performed in a series of 12 patients with FHS failed to identify overlapping deletions. We hypothesized that FHS is caused by haploinsufficiency of one of the 19 genes or predictions located in the deletion found in our index patient. Since none of them appeared to be good candidate gene by their function, a high‐throughput sequencing approach of the region of interest was used in eight FHS patients. No pathogenic mutation was found in these patients. This approach failed to identify the gene responsible for FHS, and this can be explained by at least four reasons: (i) our index patient could be a phenocopy of FHS; (ii) the disease may be clinically heterogeneous (since the diagnosis relies exclusively on clinical features), (iii) these could be genetic heterogeneity of the disease, (iv) the patient could carry a mutation in a gene located elsewhere. Recent descriptions of patients with 12q15‐q21.1 microdeletions argue in favor of the phenocopy hypothesis.
Birth defects research | 2018
Caroline Alby; Lucile Boutaud; Maryse Bonnière; Sophie Collardeau-Frachon; Laurent Guibaud; Estelle Lopez; Ange-Line Bruel; Bernard Aral; P. Sonigo; Philippe Roth; Claude Vibert-Guigue; Vanina Castaigne; Bruno Carbonne; Nicole Joyé; Laurence Faivre; Marie-Pierre Cordier; Antoinette Gelot; Maurizio Clementi; Isabella Mammi; Michel Vekemans; Ferechte Razavi; Marie Gonzales; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Tania Attié-Bitach
OFD1 syndrome is a rare ciliopathy inherited on a dominant X‐linked mode, typically lethal in males in the first or second trimester of pregnancy. It is characterized by oral cavity and digital anomalies possibly associated with cerebral and renal signs. Its prevalence is between 1/250,000 and 1/50,000 births. It is due to heterozygous mutations of OFD1 and mutations are often de novo (75%). Familial forms show highly variable phenotypic expression. OFD1 encodes a protein involved in centriole growth, distal appendix formation, and ciliogenesis.