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Dive into the research topics where Francesca Lepri is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesca Lepri.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Gain-of-function RAF1 mutations cause Noonan and LEOPARD syndromes with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Bhaswati Pandit; Anna Sarkozy; Len A. Pennacchio; Claudio Carta; Kimihiko Oishi; Simone Martinelli; Edgar A. Pogna; Wendy Schackwitz; Anna Ustaszewska; Andrew P. Landstrom; J. Martijn Bos; Steve R. Ommen; Giorgia Esposito; Francesca Lepri; Christian Faul; Peter Mundel; Juan Pedro López Siguero; Romano Tenconi; Angelo Selicorni; Cesare Rossi; Laura Mazzanti; Isabella Torrente; Bruno Marino; Maria Cristina Digilio; Giuseppe Zampino; Michael J. Ackerman; Bruno Dallapiccola; Marco Tartaglia; Bruce D. Gelb

Noonan and LEOPARD syndromes are developmental disorders with overlapping features, including cardiac abnormalities, short stature and facial dysmorphia. Increased RAS signaling owing to PTPN11, SOS1 and KRAS mutations causes ∼60% of Noonan syndrome cases, and PTPN11 mutations cause 90% of LEOPARD syndrome cases. Here, we report that 18 of 231 individuals with Noonan syndrome without known mutations (corresponding to 3% of all affected individuals) and two of six individuals with LEOPARD syndrome without PTPN11 mutations have missense mutations in RAF1, which encodes a serine-threonine kinase that activates MEK1 and MEK2. Most mutations altered a motif flanking Ser259, a residue critical for autoinhibition of RAF1 through 14-3-3 binding. Of 19 subjects with a RAF1 mutation in two hotspots, 18 (or 95%) showed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), compared with the 18% prevalence of HCM among individuals with Noonan syndrome in general. Ectopically expressed RAF1 mutants from the two HCM hotspots had increased kinase activity and enhanced ERK activation, whereas non–HCM-associated mutants were kinase impaired. Our findings further implicate increased RAS signaling in pathological cardiomyocyte hypertrophy.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Gain-of-function SOS1 mutations cause a distinctive form of Noonan syndrome

Marco Tartaglia; Len A. Pennacchio; Chen Zhao; Kamlesh K. Yadav; Valentina Fodale; Anna Sarkozy; Bhaswati Pandit; Kimihiko Oishi; Simone Martinelli; Wendy Schackwitz; Anna Ustaszewska; Joel Martin; James Bristow; Claudio Carta; Francesca Lepri; Cinzia Neri; Isabella Vasta; Kate Gibson; Cynthia J. Curry; Juan Pedro López Siguero; Maria Cristina Digilio; Giuseppe Zampino; Bruno Dallapiccola; Dafna Bar-Sagi; Bruce D. Gelb

Noonan syndrome is a developmental disorder characterized by short stature, facial dysmorphia, congenital heart defects and skeletal anomalies. Increased RAS-mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling due to PTPN11 and KRAS mutations causes 50% of cases of Noonan syndrome. Here, we report that 22 of 129 individuals with Noonan syndrome without PTPN11 or KRAS mutation have missense mutations in SOS1, which encodes a RAS-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor. SOS1 mutations cluster at codons encoding residues implicated in the maintenance of SOS1 in its autoinhibited form. In addition, ectopic expression of two Noonan syndrome–associated mutants induces enhanced RAS and ERK activation. The phenotype associated with SOS1 defects lies within the Noonan syndrome spectrum but is distinctive, with a high prevalence of ectodermal abnormalities but generally normal development and linear growth. Our findings implicate gain-of-function mutations in a RAS guanine nucleotide exchange factor in disease for the first time and define a new mechanism by which upregulation of the RAS pathway can profoundly change human development.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Mutation of SHOC2 promotes aberrant protein N-myristoylation and causes Noonan-like syndrome with loose anagen hair

Viviana Cordeddu; Elia Di Schiavi; Len A. Pennacchio; Avi Ma'ayan; Anna Sarkozy; Valentina Fodale; Serena Cecchetti; Alessio Cardinale; Joel Martin; Wendy Schackwitz; Anna Lipzen; Giuseppe Zampino; Laura Mazzanti; Maria Cristina Digilio; Simone Martinelli; Elisabetta Flex; Francesca Lepri; Deborah Bartholdi; Kerstin Kutsche; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Cecilia Anichini; Angelo Selicorni; Cesare Rossi; Romano Tenconi; Martin Zenker; Daniela Merlo; Bruno Dallapiccola; Ravi Iyengar; Paolo Bazzicalupo; Bruce D. Gelb

N-myristoylation is a common form of co-translational protein fatty acylation resulting from the attachment of myristate to a required N-terminal glycine residue. We show that aberrantly acquired N-myristoylation of SHOC2, a leucine-rich repeat–containing protein that positively modulates RAS-MAPK signal flow, underlies a clinically distinctive condition of the neuro-cardio-facial-cutaneous disorders family. Twenty-five subjects with a relatively consistent phenotype previously termed Noonan-like syndrome with loose anagen hair (MIM607721) shared the 4A>G missense change in SHOC2 (producing an S2G amino acid substitution) that introduces an N-myristoylation site, resulting in aberrant targeting of SHOC2 to the plasma membrane and impaired translocation to the nucleus upon growth factor stimulation. Expression of SHOC2S2G in vitro enhanced MAPK activation in a cell type–specific fashion. Induction of SHOC2S2G in Caenorhabditis elegans engendered protruding vulva, a neomorphic phenotype previously associated with aberrant signaling. These results document the first example of an acquired N-terminal lipid modification of a protein causing human disease.


Nature Genetics | 2010

A restricted spectrum of NRAS mutations causes Noonan syndrome

Ion C. Cirstea; Kerstin Kutsche; Radovan Dvorsky; Lothar Gremer; Claudio Carta; Denise Horn; Amy E. Roberts; Francesca Lepri; Torsten Merbitz-Zahradnik; Rainer König; Christian P. Kratz; Francesca Pantaleoni; Maria Lisa Dentici; Victoria A. Joshi; Raju Kucherlapati; Laura Mazzanti; Stefan Mundlos; Michael A. Patton; Margherita Silengo; Cesare Rossi; Giuseppe Zampino; Cristina Digilio; Liborio Stuppia; Eva Seemanova; Len A. Pennacchio; Bruce D. Gelb; Bruno Dallapiccola; Alfred Wittinghofer; Mohammad Reza Ahmadian; Marco Tartaglia

Noonan syndrome, a developmental disorder characterized by congenital heart defects, reduced growth, facial dysmorphism and variable cognitive deficits, is caused by constitutional dysregulation of the RAS-MAPK signaling pathway. Here we report that germline NRAS mutations conferring enhanced stimulus-dependent MAPK activation account for some cases of this disorder. These findings provide evidence for an obligate dependency on proper NRAS function in human development and growth.


Human Mutation | 2009

Germline BRAF mutations in noonan, LEOPARD, and cardiofaciocutaneous Syndromes: Molecular diversity and associated phenotypic spectrum

Anna Sarkozy; Claudio Carta; Sonia Moretti; Giuseppe Zampino; Maria Cristina Digilio; Francesca Pantaleoni; Anna Paola Scioletti; Giorgia Esposito; Viviana Cordeddu; Francesca Lepri; Valentina Petrangeli; Maria Lisa Dentici; Grazia M.S. Mancini; Angelo Selicorni; Cesare Rossi; Laura Mazzanti; Bruno Marino; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Margherita Silengo; Luigi Memo; Franco Stanzial; Francesca Faravelli; Liborio Stuppia; Efisio Puxeddu; Bruce D. Gelb; Bruno Dallapiccola; Marco Tartaglia

Noonan, LEOPARD, and cardiofaciocutaneous syndromes (NS, LS, and CFCS) are developmental disorders with overlapping features including distinctive facial dysmorphia, reduced growth, cardiac defects, skeletal and ectodermal anomalies, and variable cognitive deficits. Dysregulated RAS–mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK) signal traffic has been established to represent the molecular pathogenic cause underlying these conditions. To investigate the phenotypic spectrum and molecular diversity of germline mutations affecting BRAF, which encodes a serine/threonine kinase functioning as a RAS effector frequently mutated in CFCS, subjects with a diagnosis of NS (N=270), LS (N=6), and CFCS (N=33), and no mutation in PTPN11, SOS1, KRAS, RAF1, MEK1, or MEK2, were screened for the entire coding sequence of the gene. Besides the expected high prevalence of mutations observed among CFCS patients (52%), a de novo heterozygous missense change was identified in one subject with LS (17%) and five individuals with NS (1.9%). Mutations mapped to multiple protein domains and largely did not overlap with cancer‐associated defects. NS‐causing mutations had not been documented in CFCS, suggesting that the phenotypes arising from germline BRAF defects might be allele specific. Selected mutant BRAF proteins promoted variable gain of function of the kinase, but appeared less activating compared to the recurrent cancer‐associated p.Val600Glu mutant. Our findings provide evidence for a wide phenotypic diversity associated with mutations affecting BRAF, and occurrence of a clinical continuum associated with these molecular lesions. Hum Mutat 0:1–8, 2009.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Heterozygous Germline Mutations in the CBL Tumor-Suppressor Gene Cause a Noonan Syndrome-like Phenotype

Simone Martinelli; Alessandro De Luca; Emilia Stellacci; Cesare Rossi; Saula Checquolo; Francesca Lepri; Viviana Caputo; Marianna Silvano; Francesco Buscherini; Federica Consoli; Grazia Ferrara; Maria Cristina Digilio; Maria Luigia Cavaliere; Johanna M. van Hagen; Giuseppe Zampino; Ineke van der Burgt; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Laura Mazzanti; Isabella Screpanti; Helger G. Yntema; Willy M. Nillesen; Ravi Savarirayan; Martin Zenker; Bruno Dallapiccola; Bruce D. Gelb; Marco Tartaglia

RAS signaling plays a key role in controlling appropriate cell responses to extracellular stimuli and participates in early and late developmental processes. Although enhanced flow through this pathway has been established as a major contributor to oncogenesis, recent discoveries have revealed that aberrant RAS activation causes a group of clinically related developmental disorders characterized by facial dysmorphism, a wide spectrum of cardiac disease, reduced growth, variable cognitive deficits, ectodermal and musculoskeletal anomalies, and increased risk for certain malignancies. Here, we report that heterozygous germline mutations in CBL, a tumor-suppressor gene that is mutated in myeloid malignancies and encodes a multivalent adaptor protein with E3 ubiquitin ligase activity, can underlie a phenotype with clinical features fitting or partially overlapping Noonan syndrome (NS), the most common condition of this disease family. Independent CBL mutations were identified in two sporadic cases and two families from among 365 unrelated subjects who had NS or suggestive features and were negative for mutations in previously identified disease genes. Phenotypic heterogeneity and variable expressivity were documented. Mutations were missense changes altering evolutionarily conserved residues located in the RING finger domain or the linker connecting this domain to the N-terminal tyrosine kinase binding domain, a known mutational hot spot in myeloid malignancies. Mutations were shown to affect CBL-mediated receptor ubiquitylation and dysregulate signal flow through RAS. These findings document that germline mutations in CBL alter development to cause a clinically variable condition that resembles NS and that possibly predisposes to malignancies.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Activating mutations in RRAS underlie a phenotype within the RASopathy spectrum and contribute to leukaemogenesis

Elisabetta Flex; Mamta Jaiswal; Francesca Pantaleoni; Simone Martinelli; Marion Strullu; Eyad Kalawy Fansa; Aurélie Caye; Alessandro De Luca; Francesca Lepri; Radovan Dvorsky; Luca Pannone; Stefano Paolacci; Si Cai Zhang; Valentina Fodale; Gianfranco Bocchinfuso; Cesare Rossi; Emma M M Burkitt-Wright; Andrea Farrotti; Emilia Stellacci; Serena Cecchetti; Rosangela Ferese; Lisabianca Bottero; Silvana Castro; Odile Fenneteau; Benoît Brethon; Massimo Sanchez; Amy E. Roberts; Helger G. Yntema; Ineke van der Burgt; Paola Cianci

RASopathies, a family of disorders characterized by cardiac defects, defective growth, facial dysmorphism, variable cognitive deficits and predisposition to certain malignancies, are caused by constitutional dysregulation of RAS signalling predominantly through the RAF/MEK/ERK (MAPK) cascade. We report on two germline mutations (p.Gly39dup and p.Val55Met) in RRAS, a gene encoding a small monomeric GTPase controlling cell adhesion, spreading and migration, underlying a rare (2 subjects among 504 individuals analysed) and variable phenotype with features partially overlapping Noonan syndrome, the most common RASopathy. We also identified somatic RRAS mutations (p.Gly39dup and p.Gln87Leu) in 2 of 110 cases of non-syndromic juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia, a childhood myeloproliferative/myelodysplastic disease caused by upregulated RAS signalling, defining an atypical form of this haematological disorder rapidly progressing to acute myeloid leukaemia. Two of the three identified mutations affected known oncogenic hotspots of RAS genes and conferred variably enhanced RRAS function and stimulus-dependent MAPK activation. Expression of an RRAS mutant homolog in Caenorhabditis elegans enhanced RAS signalling and engendered protruding vulva, a phenotype previously linked to the RASopathy-causing SHOC2S2G mutant. Overall, these findings provide evidence of a functional link between RRAS and MAPK signalling and reveal an unpredicted role of enhanced RRAS function in human disease.


Human Mutation | 2011

SOS1 mutations in Noonan syndrome: molecular spectrum, structural insights on pathogenic effects, and genotype–phenotype correlations†

Francesca Lepri; Alessandro De Luca; Lorenzo Stella; Cesare Rossi; Giuseppina Baldassarre; Francesca Pantaleoni; Viviana Cordeddu; Bradley Williams; Maria Lisa Dentici; Viviana Caputo; Serenella Venanzi; Michela Bonaguro; Ines Kavamura; Maria Felicia Faienza; Alba Pilotta; Franco Stanzial; Francesca Faravelli; Orazio Gabrielli; Bruno Marino; Giovanni Neri; Margherita Silengo; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Isabella Torrrente; Angelo Selicorni; Laura Mazzanti; Maria Cristina Digilio; Giuseppe Zampino; Bruno Dallapiccola; Bruce D. Gelb; Marco Tartaglia

Noonan syndrome (NS) is among the most common nonchromosomal disorders affecting development and growth. NS is caused by aberrant RAS‐MAPK signaling and is genetically heterogeneous, which explains, in part, the marked clinical variability documented for this Mendelian trait. Recently, we and others identified SOS1 as a major gene underlying NS. Here, we explored further the spectrum of SOS1 mutations and their associated phenotypic features. Mutation scanning of the entire SOS1 coding sequence allowed the identification of 33 different variants deemed to be of pathological significance, including 16 novel missense changes and in‐frame indels. Various mutation clusters destabilizing or altering orientation of regions of the protein predicted to contribute structurally to the maintenance of autoinhibition were identified. Two previously unappreciated clusters predicted to enhance SOS1s recruitment to the plasma membrane, thus promoting a spatial reorientation of domains contributing to inhibition, were also recognized. Genotype–phenotype analysis confirmed our previous observations, establishing a high frequency of ectodermal anomalies and a low prevalence of cognitive impairment and reduced growth. Finally, mutation analysis performed on cohorts of individuals with nonsyndromic pulmonic stenosis, atrial septal defects, and ventricular septal defects excluded a major contribution of germline SOS1 lesions to the isolated occurrence of these cardiac anomalies. Hum Mutat 32:760–772, 2011.


Clinical Genetics | 2011

New mutations in ZFPM2/FOG2 gene in tetralogy of Fallot and double outlet right ventricle

A. De Luca; Anna Sarkozy; Rosangela Ferese; F Consoli; Francesca Lepri; Maria Lisa Dentici; P Vergara; A De Zorzi; Paolo Versacci; Maria Cristina Digilio; Bruno Marino; Bruno Dallapiccola

De Luca A, Sarkozy A, Ferese R, Consoli F, Lepri F, Dentici ML, Vergara P, De Zorzi A, Versacci P, Digilio MC, Marino B, Dallapiccola B. New mutations in ZFPM2/FOG2 gene in tetralogy of Fallot and double outlet right ventricle.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Spectrum of MEK1 and MEK2 gene mutations in cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome and genotype–phenotype correlations

Maria Lisa Dentici; Anna Sarkozy; Francesca Pantaleoni; Claudio Carta; Francesca Lepri; Rosangela Ferese; Viviana Cordeddu; Simone Martinelli; Silvana Briuglia; Maria Cristina Digilio; Giuseppe Zampino; Marco Tartaglia; Bruno Dallapiccola

Cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome (CFCS) is a rare disease characterized by mental retardation, facial dysmorphisms, ectodermal abnormalities, heart defects and developmental delay. CFCS is genetically heterogeneous and mutations in the KRAS, BRAF, MAP2K1 (MEK1) and MAP2K2 (MEK2) genes, encoding for components of the RAS–mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathway, have been identified in up to 90% of cases. Here we screened a cohort of 33 individuals with CFCS for MEK1 and MEK2 gene mutations to further explore their molecular spectrum in this disorder, and to analyze genotype–phenotype correlations. Three MEK1 and two MEK2 mutations were detected in six patients. Two missense MEK1 (L42F and Y130H) changes and one in-frame MEK2 (K63_E66del) deletion had not been reported earlier. All mutations were localized within exon 2 or 3. Together with the available records, the present data document that MEK1 mutations are relatively more frequent than those in MEK2, with exons 2 and 3 being mutational hot spots in both genes. Mutational analysis of the affected MEK1 and MEK2 exons did not reveal occurrence of mutations among 75 patients with Noonan syndrome, confirming the low prevalence of MEK gene defects in this disorder. Clinical review of known individuals with MEK1/MEK2 mutations suggests that these patients show dysmorphic features, ectodermal abnormalities and cognitive deficit similar to what was observed in BRAF-mutated patients and in the general CFCS population. Conversely, congenital heart defects, particularly mitral valve and septal defects, and ocular anomalies seem to be less frequent among MEK1/MEK2 mutation-positive patients.

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Marco Tartaglia

Boston Children's Hospital

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Bruno Dallapiccola

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Marino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Dallapiccola

Sapienza University of Rome

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Alessandro De Luca

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

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Giuseppe Zampino

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Simone Martinelli

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Bruce D. Gelb

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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