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Dive into the research topics where Federica Buonocore is active.

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Featured researches published by Federica Buonocore.


Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism | 2015

DAX-1 (NR0B1) and steroidogenic factor-1 (SF-1, NR5A1) in human disease.

Jenifer Suntharalingham; Federica Buonocore; Andrew J. Duncan; John C. Achermann

DAX-1 (NR0B1) and SF-1 (NR5A1) are two nuclear receptor transcription factors that play a key role in human adrenal and reproductive development. Loss of DAX-1 function is classically associated with X-linked adrenal hypoplasia congenita. This condition typically affects boys and presents as primary adrenal insufficiency in early infancy or childhood, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism at puberty and impaired spermatogenesis. Late onset forms of this condition and variant phenotypes are increasingly recognized. In contrast, disruption of SF-1 only rarely causes adrenal insufficiency, usually in combination with testicular dysgenesis. Variants in SF-1/NR5A1 more commonly cause a spectrum of reproductive phenotypes ranging from 46,XY DSD (partial testicular dysgenesis or reduced androgen production) and hypospadias to male factor infertility or primary ovarian insufficiency. Making a specific diagnosis of DAX-1 or SF-1 associated conditions is important for long-term monitoring of endocrine and reproductive function, appropriate genetic counselling for family members, and for providing appropriate informed support for young people.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

Rare Causes of Primary Adrenal Insufficiency: Genetic and Clinical Characterization of a Large Nationwide Cohort

Tulay Guran; Federica Buonocore; Nurcin Saka; Mehmet Nuri Özbek; Zehra Aycan; Abdullah Bereket; Firdevs Bas; Sukran Darcan; Aysun Bideci; Ayla Güven; Korcan Demir; Aysehan Akinci; Muammer Buyukinan; Banu Kucukemre Aydin; Serap Turan; Sebahat Yılmaz Ağladıoğlu; Zeynep Atay; Zehra Yavas Abali; Omer Tarim; Gönül Çatlı; Bilgin Yuksel; Teoman Akcay; Metin Yildiz; Samim Ozen; Esra Döğer; Huseyin Demirbilek; Ahmet Uçar; Emregul Isik; Bayram Özhan; Semih Bolu

Context: Primary adrenal insufficiency (PAI) is a life-threatening condition that is often due to monogenic causes in children. Although congenital adrenal hyperplasia occurs commonly, several other important molecular causes have been reported, often with overlapping clinical and biochemical features. The relative prevalence of these conditions is not known, but making a specific diagnosis can have important implications for management. Objective: The objective of the study was to investigate the clinical and molecular genetic characteristics of a nationwide cohort of children with PAI of unknown etiology. Design: A structured questionnaire was used to evaluate clinical, biochemical, and imaging data. Genetic analysis was performed using Haloplex capture and next-generation sequencing. Patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, adrenoleukodystrophy, autoimmune adrenal insufficiency, or obvious syndromic PAI were excluded. Setting: The study was conducted in 19 tertiary pediatric endocrinology clinics. Patients: Ninety-five children (48 females, aged 0–18 y, eight familial) with PAI of unknown etiology participated in the study. Results: A genetic diagnosis was obtained in 77 patients (81%). The range of etiologies was as follows: MC2R (n = 25), NR0B1 (n = 12), STAR (n = 11), CYP11A1 (n = 9), MRAP (n = 9), NNT (n = 7), ABCD1 (n = 2), NR5A1 (n = 1), and AAAS (n = 1). Recurrent mutations occurred in several genes, such as c.560delT in MC2R, p.R451W in CYP11A1, and c.IVS3ds+1delG in MRAP. Several important clinical and molecular insights emerged. Conclusion: This is the largest nationwide study of the molecular genetics of childhood PAI undertaken. Achieving a molecular diagnosis in more than 80% of children has important translational impact for counseling families, presymptomatic diagnosis, personalized treatment (eg, mineralocorticoid replacement), predicting comorbidities (eg, neurological, puberty/fertility), and targeting clinical genetic testing in the future.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Effects of cis-regulatory variation differ across regions of the adult human brain

Federica Buonocore; Matthew Hill; Colin D. Campbell; Paul B. Oladimeji; Aaron Jeffries; Claire Troakes; Tibor Hortobágyi; Brenda P. Williams; Jonathan D. Cooper; Nicholas John Bray

Cis-regulatory variation is considered to be an important determinant of human phenotypic variability, including susceptibility to complex disease. Recent studies have shown that the effects of cis-regulatory polymorphism on gene expression can differ widely between tissues. In the present study, we tested whether the effects of cis-regulatory variation can also differ between regions of the adult human brain. We used relative allelic expression to measure cis-effects on the RNA expression of five candidate genes for neuropsychiatric illness (ZNF804A, NOS1, RGS4, AKT1 and TCF4) across multiple discrete brain regions within individual subjects. For all five genes, we observed significant differences in allelic expression between brain regions in several individual subjects, suggesting regional differences in the effects of cis-regulatory polymorphism to be a common phenomenon. As well as highlighting an important caveat for studies of regulatory polymorphism in the brain, our findings indicate that it is possible to delineate brain areas in which cis-regulatory variants are active. This may provide important insights into the fundamental biology of neuropsychiatric phenotypes with which such variants are associated.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2016

A recurrent p.Arg92Trp variant in steroidogenic factor-1 (NR5A1) can act as a molecular switch in human sex development

Anu Bashamboo; Patricia A. Donohoue; Eric Vilain; Sandra Rojo; Pierre Calvel; Sumudu Nimali Seneviratne; Federica Buonocore; Hayk Barseghyan; Nathan C. Bingham; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Surya N. Mulukutla; Mahim Jain; Lindsay C. Burrage; Shweta U. Dhar; Ashok Balasubramanyam; Brendan Lee; Marie-Charlotte Dumargne; Caroline Eozenou; Jenifer Suntharalingham; Ksh de Silva; Lin Lin; Joelle Bignon-Topalovic; Francis Poulat; Carlos F. Lagos; Ken McElreavey; John C. Achermann

Cell lineages of the early human gonad commit to one of the two mutually antagonistic organogenetic fates, the testis or the ovary. Some individuals with a 46,XX karyotype develop testes or ovotestes (testicular or ovotesticular disorder of sex development; TDSD/OTDSD), due to the presence of the testis-determining gene, SRY. Other rare complex syndromic forms of TDSD/OTDSD are associated with mutations in pro-ovarian genes that repress testis development (e.g. WNT4); however, the genetic cause of the more common non-syndromic forms is unknown. Steroidogenic factor-1 (known as NR5A1) is a key regulator of reproductive development and function. Loss-of-function changes in NR5A1 in 46,XY individuals are associated with a spectrum of phenotypes in humans ranging from a lack of testis formation to male infertility. Mutations in NR5A1 in 46,XX women are associated with primary ovarian insufficiency, which includes a lack of ovary formation, primary and secondary amenorrhoea as well as early menopause. Here, we show that a specific recurrent heterozygous missense mutation (p.Arg92Trp) in the accessory DNA-binding region of NR5A1 is associated with variable degree of testis development in 46,XX children and adults from four unrelated families. Remarkably, in one family a sibling raised as a girl and carrying this NR5A1 mutation was found to have a 46,XY karyotype with partial testicular dysgenesis. These unique findings highlight how a specific variant in a developmental transcription factor can switch organ fate from the ovary to testis in mammals and represents the first missense mutation causing isolated, non-syndromic 46,XX testicular/ovotesticular DSD in humans.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Somatic mutations and progressive monosomy modify SAMD9 -related phenotypes in humans

Federica Buonocore; Peter Kühnen; Jenifer Suntharalingham; Ignacio del Valle; Martin Digweed; Harald Stachelscheid; Noushafarin Khajavi; Mohammed Didi; Angela F. Brady; Oliver Blankenstein; Annie M. Procter; Paul Dimitri; J. K. H. Wales; Paolo Ghirri; Dieter Knöbl; Brigitte Strahm; Miriam Erlacher; Marcin W. Wlodarski; Wei Chen; George Kokai; Glenn Anderson; Deborah Morrogh; Dale Moulding; Shane McKee; Charlotte M. Niemeyer; Annette Grüters; John C. Achermann

It is well established that somatic genomic changes can influence phenotypes in cancer, but the role of adaptive changes in developmental disorders is less well understood. Here we have used next-generation sequencing approaches to identify de novo heterozygous mutations in sterile &agr; motif domain–containing protein 9 (SAMD9, located on chromosome 7q21.2) in 8 children with a multisystem disorder termed MIRAGE syndrome that is characterized by intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) with gonadal, adrenal, and bone marrow failure, predisposition to infections, and high mortality. These mutations result in gain of function of the growth repressor product SAMD9. Progressive loss of mutated SAMD9 through the development of monosomy 7 (–7), deletions of 7q (7q–), and secondary somatic loss-of-function (nonsense and frameshift) mutations in SAMD9 rescued the growth-restricting effects of mutant SAMD9 proteins in bone marrow and was associated with increased length of survival. However, 2 patients with –7 and 7q– developed myelodysplastic syndrome, most likely due to haploinsufficiency of related 7q21.2 genes. Taken together, these findings provide strong evidence that progressive somatic changes can occur in specific tissues and can subsequently modify disease phenotype and influence survival. Such tissue-specific adaptability may be a more common mechanism modifying the expression of human genetic conditions than is currently recognized.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase mutations cause primary adrenal insufficiency and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome

Rathi Prasad; Irene Hadjidemetriou; Avinaash Maharaj; Eirini Meimaridou; Federica Buonocore; Moin A. Saleem; Jenny A. Hurcombe; Agnieszka Bierzynska; Eliana Barbagelata; Ignacio Bergadá; Hamilton Cassinelli; Urmi Das; GOSgene; Ruth Krone; Bülent Hacıhamdioğlu; Erkan Sari; Ediz Yesilkaya; Helen L. Storr; Maria Grazia Clemente; Mónica Fernández-Cancio; Núria Camats; Nanik Ram; John C. Achermann; Paul P. Van Veldhoven; Leonardo Guasti; Débora Braslavsky; Tulay Guran; Louise A. Metherell

Primary adrenal insufficiency is life threatening and can present alone or in combination with other comorbidities. Here, we have described a primary adrenal insufficiency syndrome and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome caused by loss-of-function mutations in sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase (SGPL1). SGPL1 executes the final decisive step of the sphingolipid breakdown pathway, mediating the irreversible cleavage of the lipid-signaling molecule sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P). Mutations in other upstream components of the pathway lead to harmful accumulation of lysosomal sphingolipid species, which are associated with a series of conditions known as the sphingolipidoses. In this work, we have identified 4 different homozygous mutations, c.665G>A (p.R222Q), c.1633_1635delTTC (p.F545del), c.261+1G>A (p.S65Rfs*6), and c.7dupA (p.S3Kfs*11), in 5 families with the condition. In total, 8 patients were investigated, some of whom also manifested other features, including ichthyosis, primary hypothyroidism, neurological symptoms, and cryptorchidism. Sgpl1–/– mice recapitulated the main characteristics of the human disease with abnormal adrenal and renal morphology. Sgpl1–/– mice displayed disrupted adrenocortical zonation and defective expression of steroidogenic enzymes as well as renal histology in keeping with a glomerular phenotype. In summary, we have identified SGPL1 mutations in humans that perhaps represent a distinct multisystemic disorder of sphingolipid metabolism.


Wellcome Open Research | 2017

A genomic atlas of human adrenal and gonad development

Ignacio del Valle; Federica Buonocore; Andrew J. Duncan; Lin Lin; Martino Barenco; Rahul Parnaik; Sonia Shah; Mike Hubank; Dianne Gerrelli; John C. Achermann

Background: In humans, the adrenal glands and gonads undergo distinct biological events between 6-10 weeks post conception (wpc), such as testis determination, the onset of steroidogenesis and primordial germ cell development. However, relatively little is currently known about the genetic mechanisms underlying these processes. We therefore aimed to generate a detailed genomic atlas of adrenal and gonad development across these critical stages of human embryonic and fetal development. Methods: RNA was extracted from 53 tissue samples between 6-10 wpc (adrenal, testis, ovary and control). Affymetrix array analysis was performed and differential gene expression was analysed using Bioconductor. A mathematical model was constructed to investigate time-series changes across the dataset. Pathway analysis was performed using ClueGo and cellular localisation of novel factors confirmed using immunohistochemistry. Results: Using this approach, we have identified novel components of adrenal development (e.g. ASB4, NPR3) and confirmed the role of SRY as the main human testis-determining gene. By mathematical modelling time-series data we have found new genes up-regulated with SOX9 in the testis (e.g. CITED1), which may represent components of the testis development pathway. We have shown that testicular steroidogenesis has a distinct onset at around 8 wpc and identified potential novel components in adrenal and testicular steroidogenesis (e.g. MGARP, FOXO4, MAP3K15, GRAMD1B, RMND2), as well as testis biomarkers (e.g. SCUBE1). We have also shown that the developing human ovary expresses distinct subsets of genes (e.g. OR10G9, OR4D5), but enrichment for established biological pathways is limited. Conclusion: This genomic atlas is revealing important novel aspects of human development and new candidate genes for adrenal and reproductive disorders.


Genome Biology | 2016

Human sex development: targeted technologies to improve diagnosis

Federica Buonocore; John C. Achermann

A new study of disorders of sex development presents an improved targeted next-generation sequencing approach for their diagnosis.Please see related Research article: http://genomebiology.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13059-016-1105-y.


Journal of Clinical Research in Pediatric Endocrinology | 2017

The description of a new case with proopiomelanocortin (POMC) deficiency: an increasingly important diagnosis to make.

Semra Çetinkaya; Tulay Guran; Erdal Kurnaz; Melikşah Keskin; Elif Sagsak; Senay Savas Erdeve; Jenifer Suntharalingham; Federica Buonocore; John C. Achermann; Zehra Aycan

Proopiomelanocortin (POMC) deficiency is a rare monogenic disorder with early-onset obesity. Investigation of this entity have increased our insight into the important role of the leptin-melanocortin pathway in energy balance. Here, we present a patient with POMC deficiency due to a homozygous c.206delC mutation in the POMC gene. We discuss the pathogenesis of this condition with emphasis on the crosstalk between hypothalamic and peripheral signals in the development of obesity and the POMC-melanocortin 4 receptors system as a target for therapeutic intervention.


Journal of Clinical Research | 2018

A Patient with Proopiomelanocortin Deficiency: An Increasingly Important Diagnosis to Make

S Cetinkaya; T Guran; E Kurnaz; M Keskin; E Sagsak; Ss Erdeve; Jp Suntharalingham; Federica Buonocore; John C. Achermann; Z Aycan

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John C. Achermann

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Andrew J. Duncan

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Lin Lin

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Zehra Aycan

Boston Children's Hospital

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Eirini Meimaridou

Queen Mary University of London

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Lou Metherell

Queen Mary University of London

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Dianne Gerrelli

University College London

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