Faiqa Imtiaz
Alfaisal University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Faiqa Imtiaz.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008
Nabil Sabri Enattah; Tine G. K. Jensen; Mette Nielsen; Rikke Lewinski; Mikko Kuokkanen; Heli Rasinperä; Hatem El-Shanti; Jeong Kee Seo; Michael Alifrangis; Insaf F. Khalil; Abdrazak Natah; Ahmed Ali; Sirajedin S. Natah; David Comas; S. Qasim Mehdi; Leif Groop; Else Marie Vestergaard; Faiqa Imtiaz; Mohamed S. Rashed; Brian F. Meyer; Jesper T. Troelsen; Leena Peltonen
The T(-13910) variant located in the enhancer element of the lactase (LCT) gene correlates perfectly with lactase persistence (LP) in Eurasian populations whereas the variant is almost nonexistent among Sub-Saharan African populations, showing high prevalence of LP. Here, we report identification of two new mutations among Saudis, also known for the high prevalence of LP. We confirmed the absence of the European T(-13910) and established two new mutations found as a compound allele: T/G(-13915) within the -13910 enhancer region and a synonymous SNP in the exon 17 of the MCM6 gene T/C(-3712), -3712 bp from the LCT gene. The compound allele is driven to a high prevalence among Middle East population(s). Our functional analyses in vitro showed that both SNPs of the compound allele, located 10 kb apart, are required for the enhancer effect, most probably mediated through the binding of the hepatic nuclear factor 1 alpha (HNF1 alpha). High selection coefficient (s) approximately 0.04 for LP phenotype was found for both T(-13910) and the compound allele. The European T(-13910) and the earlier identified East African G(-13907) LP allele share the same ancestral background and most likely the same history, probably related to the same cattle domestication event. In contrast, the compound Arab allele shows a different, highly divergent ancestral haplotype, suggesting that these two major global LP alleles have arisen independently, the latter perhaps in response to camel milk consumption. These results support the convergent evolution of the LP in diverse populations, most probably reflecting different histories of adaptation to milk culture.
Diabetes-metabolism Research and Reviews | 2008
Osama Alsmadi; Khalid Al-Rubeaan; Salma M. Wakil; Faiqa Imtiaz; Gamal Mohamed; Haya Al-Saud; Nouran Abu Al-Saud; Nasser M. Al-Daghri; Shahinaz Mohammad; Brian F. Meyer
The E23K variant of KCNJ11 has been associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D) in several but not all populations studied. Thus far, despite a high incidence of T2D, the role of this variant in Arabs has not been established.
Genetics in Medicine | 2008
Namik Kaya; Faiqa Imtiaz; Dilek Colak; Moeenaldeen Al-Sayed; Ali Al-Odaib; Fatma Al-Zahrani; Bashayer Al-Mubarak; Mohammad Al-Owain; Hesham Aldhalaan; Aziza Chedrawi; Zuhair Al-Hassnan; Serdar Coskun; Nadia Sakati; Pinar T. Ozand; Brian F. Meyer
Purpose: Canavan disease, caused by a deficiency of aspartoacylase, is one of the most common cerebral degenerative diseases of infancy. The aims of this study were to identify the mutations associated with Canavan disease in Saudi Arabia and to identify differentially expressed genes likely to contribute to the development of this disease.Methods: Polymerase chain reaction, long polymerase chain reaction, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, sequencing, array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), and global gene expression profiling were used to determine putative mutations and likely gene signatures in cultured fibroblasts of patients from Saudi Arabia.Results: One novel and one known large deletion and two previously known mutations (IVS4 + 1G>T and G27R) were identified. Compared with controls, 1440 genes were significantly modulated in Canavan patients (absolute fold change [FC] ≥4). Genome-wide gene expression profiling results indicated that some genes, involved in apoptosis, muscle contraction and development, mitochondrial oxidation, inflammation and glutamate, and aspartate metabolism, were significantly dysregulated.Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the presence of muscle weakness and hypotonia in patients may be associated with the dysregulated gene activities of cell motility, muscle contraction and development, actin binding, and cytoskeletal-related activities. Overall, these observations are in accordance with previous studies performed in a knockout mouse model.
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2005
Moeenaldeen Al-Sayed; S. AlAhmed; O. Alsmadi; H. Khalil; Mohamed S. Rashed; Faiqa Imtiaz; B. F. Meyer
SummaryWe have identified a common novel mutation (Q354X) in the argininosuccinate lyase (ASL) gene in Saudi patients with argininosuccinic aciduria (ASAuria; McKusick 207900). The two index patients were siblings, had a neonatal onset of the disease and were diagnosed based on the clinical presentation and confirmed by analysis of their dried blood spots (DBS) by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). The ASL gene was then analysed by direct sequencing. A further 28 patients with a confirmed diagnosis of ASAuria based on MS/MS of their DBS were tested by sequencing for the presence of the Q354X mutation. This mutation was found in 14 out of the 28 patients (50%) tested. Our work indicates that the Q354X allele is common, may account for 50% of the abnormal ASL genes in the Saudi population, and is likely to be associated with the neonatal form of the disease. We recommend that all patients diagnosed with ASAuria in Saudi Arabia or of Arab origin be tested for this mutation and for Q116X, which has been described previously. In addition, further analysis is needed to identify other underlying disease mutations for ASAuria in the Saudi population.
BMC Medical Genetics | 2006
Moeenaldeen Al-Sayed; Faiqa Imtiaz; Osama Alsmadi; Mohammed S Rashed; Brian F. Meyer
Background3-Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaric aciduria (3HMG, McKusick: 246450) is an autosomal recessive branched chain organic aciduria caused by deficiency of the enzyme 3-Hydroxy-3-Methylglutaryl CoA lyase (HL, HMGCL, EC 4.1.3.4). HL is encoded by HMGCL gene and many mutations have been reported. 3HMG is commonly observed in Saudi Arabia.MethodsWe utilized Whole Genome Amplification (WGA), PCR and direct sequencing to identify mutations underlying 3HMG in the Saudi population. Two patients from two unrelated families and thirty-four 3HMG positive dried blood spots (DBS) were included.ResultsWe detected the common missense mutation R41Q in 89% of the tested alleles (64 alleles). 2 alleles carried the frame shift mutation F305fs (-2) and the last two alleles had a novel splice site donor IVS6+1G>A mutation which was confirmed by its absence in more than 100 chromosomes from the normal population. All mutations were present in a homozygous state, reflecting extensive consanguinity. The high frequency of R41Q is consistent with a founder effect. Together the three mutations described account for >94% of the pathogenic mutations underlying 3HMG in Saudi Arabia.ConclusionOur study provides the most extensive genotype analysis on 3HMG patients from Saudi Arabia. Our findings have direct implications on rapid molecular diagnosis, prenatal and pre-implantation diagnosis and population based prevention programs directed towards 3HMG.
Genetics in Medicine | 2016
Mohamed Abouelhoda; Turki Sobahy; Mohamed El-Kalioby; Nisha Patel; Hanan E. Shamseldin; Dorota Monies; Nada A. Al-Tassan; Khushnooda Ramzan; Faiqa Imtiaz; Ranad Shaheen; Fowzan S. Alkuraya
Background:Most autosomal recessive diseases are rare, but they collectively account for a substantial proportion of disease burden, especially in consanguineous populations. Estimation of this disease burden, however, is hampered by many factors, including lack of countrywide registries. Establishing carrier frequency can be a practical surrogate to estimate disease burden, although the requirement of a large representative cohort may be challenging.Purpose:We propose that the application of clinical genomics in the diagnostic setting offers a unique opportunity to estimate carrier frequency in the population as a secondary benefit.Methods:We used a data set of ~7,100 patients who underwent genomic testing for various Mendelian disorders to estimate the carrier frequency.Results:We were able to calculate the frequency of 259 confirmed founder recessive mutations. We found the corresponding disease burden to be, at minimum, ~7 per 1,000 children born to first-cousin parents, with disorders related to intellectual disability and vision impairment being the most common.Conclusion:Our approach can be utilized to inform the design of new policies for the prevention of genetic disorders and highlights an important secondary benefit of clinical genomics.Genet Med 18 12, 1244–1249.
JIMD reports | 2011
Faiqa Imtiaz; Abeer Al-Mostafa; Zuhair Al-Hassnan
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are an expanding group of genetic diseases affecting protein and lipid glycosylation. These disorders have a variable presentation and are individually rare. DPAGT1-CDG is a protein N-glycosylation disorder with epilepsy, development delay, severe hypotonia, and dysmorphy, reported in a single patient. Here we present the second family with DPAGT1-CDG identified through homozygosity mapping in a large consanguineous family with 18 affected infants. The patients had severe hypotonia, global developmental delay, seizures, and microcephaly but no dysmorphy. In the index case, the brain MRI revealed delayed myelination, and there was fiber type disproportion on muscle biopsy. Homozygosity mapping identified a large block of homozygosity on chromosome 11p15.5-q25 where two known CDG-I causing genes, ALG9 and DPAGT1, are located. Sequencing ALG9 did not reveal any mutations while analysis of DPAGT1 identified a novel homozygous mutation c.902G>A (p.R301H) in two affected infants. The disorder was fatal in all affected cases and mostly in early infancy.
European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008
Namik Kaya; Mohammad Al-Owain; Albandary Al-Bakheet; Dilek Colak; Ali Al-Odaib; Faiqa Imtiaz; Serdar Coskun; Moeenaldeen Al-Sayed; Zuhair Al-Hassnan; Hamad Al-Zaidan; Brian F. Meyer; Pinar T. Ozand
Propionic acidemia is a metabolic disorder (OMIM 606054) caused by deficiency of the propionyl-coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase, which subsequently results in accumulation of propionic acid. Patients may initially present with poor feeding, vomiting, loss of appetite, hypotonia, and lethargy. Later, most children will show different degrees of motor, social and language delay even more serious medical problems, including heart abnormalities, seizures, coma, and possibly death. Two siblings affected with propionic acidemia were screened for putative mutations in PCCA and PCCB genes coding alpha and beta subunits of propionyl-coenzyme A (CoA) carboxylase, respectively. Both patients had a mild-severe form of propionic acidemia. The investigations using PCR, long-PCR, array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), and sequencing techniques showed a approximately 73kb deletion extending from intron 16 to intron 19 and an 18bp insertion at the distal end of the deletion in PCCA gene. The deletion so far is the largest gross change reported in the literature for the PCCA gene.
BMC Medical Genetics | 2011
Faiqa Imtiaz; Khalid Taibah; Khushnooda Ramzan; Ghada Bin-Khamis; Shelley Kennedy; Bashayer Al-Mubarak; Daniah Trabzuni; Rabab Allam; Abeer Al-Mostafa; Sameera Sogaty; Abdulmoneem H Al-Shaikh; Saeed S Bamukhayyar; Brian F. Meyer; Mohammed Al-Owain
BackgroundHearing loss is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder. Mutations in the DFNB1 locus have been reported to be the most common cause of autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss worldwide. Apart from DFNB1, many other loci and their underlying genes have also been identified and the basis of our study was to provide a comprehensive introduction to the delineation of the molecular basis of non-syndromic hearing loss in the Saudi Arabian population. This was performed by screening DFNB1 and to initiate prioritized linkage analysis or homozygosity mapping for a pilot number of families in which DFNB1 has been excluded.MethodsIndividuals from 130 families of Saudi Arabian tribal origin diagnosed with an autosomal recessive non-syndromic sensorineural hearing loss were screened for mutations at the DFNB1 locus by direct sequencing. If negative, genome wide linkage analysis or homozygosity mapping were performed using Affymetrix GeneChip® Human Mapping 250K/6.0 Arrays to identify regions containing any known-deafness causing genes that were subsequently sequenced.ResultsOur results strongly indicate that DFNB1 only accounts for 3% of non-syndromic hearing loss in the Saudi Arabian population of ethnic ancestry. Prioritized linkage analysis or homozygosity mapping in five separate families established that their hearing loss was caused by five different known-deafness causing genes thus confirming the genetic heterogeneity of this disorder in the kingdom.ConclusionThe overall results of this study are highly suggestive that underlying molecular basis of autosomal recessive non-syndromic deafness in Saudi Arabia is very genetically heterogeneous. In addition, we report that the preliminary results indicate that there does not seem to be any common or more prevalent loci, genes or mutations in patients with autosomal recessive non-syndromic hearing loss in patients of Saudi Arabian tribal origin.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012
Ola Khalifa; Faiqa Imtiaz; Rabab Allam; Zuhair Al-Hassnan; Amal Al-Hemidan; Khalid Al-Mane; Gheid Abuharb; Ameera Balobaid; Nadia Sakati; James Hyland; Mohammed Al-Owain
Recently, Tompson et al 1 described the use of autozygosity mapping and expression studies to identify compound heterozygous mutations (c.2386G>C/c.3943G>T; c.1786dupG/c.3124G>A) in the COL11A1 gene in two unrelated patients as a cause of fibrochondrogenesis (MIM 228520). They concluded that fibrochondrogenesis, a short-limbed skeletal dysplasia, represents the most severe end of a spectrum of disorders caused by a COL11A1 defect to date.1 Subsequently, dominant and recessive forms of fibrochondrogenesis resulting from mutations at a second locus, COL11A2 , were described.2 Mutations in these two genes along with COL2A1 were previously reported to cause autosomal dominant forms of Stickler (MIM 604841) and Marshall syndromes (MIM 154780).3–5 COL9A1 and COL9A2 defects, on the other hand, were identified as causing forms of Stickler syndrome with an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern.6 7 Here we report the first evidence that adds COL11A1 defect as a cause of Marshall syndrome with a recessive mode of inheritance. The proband is a Saudi boy born at term after an uneventful pregnancy to consanguineous parents. He was referred to us at the age of 16 months because of mild motor, speech delay, and dysmorphic facial features (figure 1 A,B). He had ocular hypertelorism with midface hypoplasia and a broad, flat nasal bridge, anteverted nares, and long philtrum. He also had sparse lusterless scalp hair. He had normal palate, teeth, nails, and skin with normal hidrosis. Ophthalmological examination showed progressive high myopia (−12 Diopters), iridodenesis and subluxation of lenses nasally with loss of zonules temporally resulting …