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Dive into the research topics where Franck De Graeve is active.

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Featured researches published by Franck De Graeve.


Nature Genetics | 2009

A variant near MTNR1B is associated with increased fasting plasma glucose levels and type 2 diabetes risk

Nabila Bouatia-Naji; Amélie Bonnefond; Christine Cavalcanti-Proença; Thomas Sparsø; Johan Holmkvist; Marion Marchand; Jérôme Delplanque; Stéphane Lobbens; Ghislain Rocheleau; Emmanuelle Durand; Franck De Graeve; Jean-Claude Chèvre; Knut Borch-Johnsen; Anna-Liisa Hartikainen; Aimo Ruokonen; Jean Tichet; Michel Marre; Jacques Weill; Barbara Heude; Maithe Tauber; Katleen Lemaire; Frans Schuit; Paul Elliott; Torben Jørgensen; Guillaume Charpentier; Samy Hadjadj; Stéphane Cauchi; Martine Vaxillaire; Robert Sladek; Sophie Visvikis-Siest

In genome-wide association (GWA) data from 2,151 nondiabetic French subjects, we identified rs1387153, near MTNR1B (which encodes the melatonin receptor 2 (MT2)), as a modulator of fasting plasma glucose (FPG; P = 1.3 × 10−7). In European populations, the rs1387153 T allele is associated with increased FPG (β = 0.06 mmol/l, P = 7.6 × 10−29, N = 16,094), type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk (odds ratio (OR) = 1.15, 95% CI = 1.08–1.22, P = 6.3 × 10−5, cases N = 6,332) and risk of developing hyperglycemia or diabetes over a 9-year period (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.20, 95% CI = 1.06–1.36, P = 0.005, incident cases N = 515). RT-PCR analyses confirm the presence of MT2 transcripts in neural tissues and show MT2 expression in human pancreatic islets and beta cells. Our data suggest a possible link between circadian rhythm regulation and glucose homeostasis through the melatonin signaling pathway.


Science | 2008

A polymorphism within the G6PC2 gene is associated with fasting plasma glucose levels

Nabila Bouatia-Naji; Ghislain Rocheleau; Leentje Van Lommel; Katleen Lemaire; Frans Schuit; Christine Cavalcanti-Proença; Marion Marchand; Anna-Liisa Hartikainen; Ulla Sovio; Franck De Graeve; Johan Rung; Martine Vaxillaire; Jean Tichet; Michel Marre; Beverley Balkau; Jacques Weill; Paul Elliott; Marjo-Riitta Järvelin; David Meyre; Constantin Polychronakos; Christian Dina; Robert Sladek; Philippe Froguel

Several studies have shown that healthy individuals with fasting plasma glucose (FPG) levels at the high end of the normal range have an increased risk of mortality. To identify genetic determinants that contribute to interindividual variation in FPG, we tested 392,935 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 654 normoglycemic participants for association with FPG, and we replicated the most strongly associated SNP (rs560887, P = 4 × 10–7) in 9353 participants. SNP rs560887 maps to intron 3 of the G6PC2 gene, which encodes glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit–related protein (also known as IGRP), a protein selectively expressed in pancreatic islets. This SNP was associated with FPG (linear regression coefficient β = –0.06 millimoles per liter per A allele, combined P = 4 × 10–23) and with pancreatic β cell function (Homa-B model, combined P = 3 × 10–13) in three populations; however, it was not associated with type 2 diabetes risk. We speculate that G6PC2 regulates FPG by modulating the set point for glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in pancreatic β cells.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Post Genome-Wide Association Studies of Novel Genes Associated with Type 2 Diabetes Show Gene-Gene Interaction and High Predictive Value

Stéphane Cauchi; David Meyre; Emmanuelle Durand; Christine Proença; Michel Marre; Samy Hadjadj; Hélène Choquet; Franck De Graeve; Stefan Gaget; Frederic Allegaert; Jérôme Delplanque; M. A. Permutt; Jon Wasson; Ilana Blech; Guillaume Charpentier; Beverley Balkau; Anne Claire Vergnaud; Sébastien Czernichow; Wolfgang Patsch; Mohamed Chikri; Benjamin Glaser; Robert Sladek; Philippe Froguel

Background Recently, several Genome Wide Association (GWA) studies in populations of European descent have identified and validated novel single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), highly associated with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Our aims were to validate these markers in other European and non-European populations, then to assess their combined effect in a large French study comparing T2D and normal glucose tolerant (NGT) individuals. Methodology/Principal Findings In the same French population analyzed in our previous GWA study (3,295 T2D and 3,595 NGT), strong associations with T2D were found for CDKAL1 (ORrs7756992 = 1.30[1.19–1.42], P = 2.3×10−9), CDKN2A/2B (ORrs10811661 = 0.74[0.66–0.82], P = 3.5×10−8) and more modestly for IGFBP2 (ORrs1470579 = 1.17[1.07–1.27], P = 0.0003) SNPs. These results were replicated in both Israeli Ashkenazi (577 T2D and 552 NGT) and Austrian (504 T2D and 753 NGT) populations (except for CDKAL1) but not in the Moroccan population (521 T2D and 423 NGT). In the overall group of French subjects (4,232 T2D and 4,595 NGT), IGFBP2 and CXCR4 synergistically interacted with (LOC38776, SLC30A8, HHEX) and (NGN3, CDKN2A/2B), respectively, encoding for proteins presumably regulating pancreatic endocrine cell development and function. The T2D risk increased strongly when risk alleles, including the previously discovered T2D-associated TCF7L2 rs7903146 SNP, were combined (8.68-fold for the 14% of French individuals carrying 18 to 30 risk alleles with an allelic OR of 1.24). With an area under the ROC curve of 0.86, only 15 novel loci were necessary to discriminate French individuals susceptible to develop T2D. Conclusions/Significance In addition to TCF7L2, SLC30A8 and HHEX, initially identified by the French GWA scan, CDKAL1, IGFBP2 and CDKN2A/2B strongly associate with T2D in French individuals, and mostly in populations of Central European descent but not in Moroccan subjects. Genes expressed in the pancreas interact together and their combined effect dramatically increases the risk for T2D, opening avenues for the development of genetic prediction tests.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Molecular Diagnosis of Neonatal Diabetes Mellitus Using Next-Generation Sequencing of the Whole Exome

Amélie Bonnefond; Emmanuelle Durand; Olivier Sand; Franck De Graeve; Sophie Gallina; Kanetee Busiah; Stéphane Lobbens; Albane Simon; Christine Bellanné-Chantelot; Louis Letourneau; Raphael Scharfmann; Jérôme Delplanque; Robert Sladek; Michel Polak; Martine Vaxillaire; Philippe Froguel

Background Accurate molecular diagnosis of monogenic non-autoimmune neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM) is critical for patient care, as patients carrying a mutation in KCNJ11 or ABCC8 can be treated by oral sulfonylurea drugs instead of insulin therapy. This diagnosis is currently based on Sanger sequencing of at least 42 PCR fragments from the KCNJ11, ABCC8, and INS genes. Here, we assessed the feasibility of using the next-generation whole exome sequencing (WES) for the NDM molecular diagnosis. Methodology/Principal Findings We carried out WES for a patient presenting with permanent NDM, for whom mutations in KCNJ11, ABCC8 and INS and abnormalities in chromosome 6q24 had been previously excluded. A solution hybridization selection was performed to generate WES in 76 bp paired-end reads, by using two channels of the sequencing instrument. WES quality was assessed using a high-resolution oligonucleotide whole-genome genotyping array. From our WES with high-quality reads, we identified a novel non-synonymous mutation in ABCC8 (c.1455G>C/p.Q485H), despite a previous negative sequencing of this gene. This mutation, confirmed by Sanger sequencing, was not present in 348 controls and in the patients mother, father and young brother, all of whom are normoglycemic. Conclusions/Significance WES identified a novel de novo ABCC8 mutation in a NDM patient. Compared to the current Sanger protocol, WES is a comprehensive, cost-efficient and rapid method to identify mutations in NDM patients. We suggest WES as a near future tool of choice for further molecular diagnosis of NDM cases, negative for chr6q24, KCNJ11 and INS abnormalities.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Whole-Exome Sequencing and High Throughput Genotyping Identified KCNJ11 as the Thirteenth MODY Gene

Amélie Bonnefond; Julien Philippe; Emmanuelle Durand; Aurélie Dechaume; Marlène Huyvaert; Louise Montagne; Michel Marre; Beverley Balkau; Isabelle Fajardy; A. Vambergue; Vincent Vatin; Jérôme Delplanque; David Le Guilcher; Franck De Graeve; Cécile Lecoeur; Olivier Sand; Martine Vaxillaire; Philippe Froguel

Background Maturity-onset of the young (MODY) is a clinically heterogeneous form of diabetes characterized by an autosomal-dominant mode of inheritance, an onset before the age of 25 years, and a primary defect in the pancreatic beta-cell function. Approximately 30% of MODY families remain genetically unexplained (MODY-X). Here, we aimed to use whole-exome sequencing (WES) in a four-generation MODY-X family to identify a new susceptibility gene for MODY. Methodology WES (Agilent-SureSelect capture/Illumina-GAIIx sequencing) was performed in three affected and one non-affected relatives in the MODY-X family. We then performed a high-throughput multiplex genotyping (Illumina-GoldenGate assay) of the putative causal mutations in the whole family and in 406 controls. A linkage analysis was also carried out. Principal Findings By focusing on variants of interest (i.e. gains of stop codon, frameshift, non-synonymous and splice-site variants not reported in dbSNP130) present in the three affected relatives and not present in the control, we found 69 mutations. However, as WES was not uniform between samples, a total of 324 mutations had to be assessed in the whole family and in controls. Only one mutation (p.Glu227Lys in KCNJ11) co-segregated with diabetes in the family (with a LOD-score of 3.68). No KCNJ11 mutation was found in 25 other MODY-X unrelated subjects. Conclusions/Significance Beyond neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM), KCNJ11 is also a MODY gene (‘MODY13’), confirming the wide spectrum of diabetes related phenotypes due to mutations in NDM genes (i.e. KCNJ11, ABCC8 and INS). Therefore, the molecular diagnosis of MODY should include KCNJ11 as affected carriers can be ideally treated with oral sulfonylureas.


Diabetes Care | 2014

Highly Sensitive Diagnosis of 43 Monogenic Forms of Diabetes or Obesity Through One-Step PCR-Based Enrichment in Combination With Next-Generation Sequencing

Amélie Bonnefond; Julien Philippe; Emmanuelle Durand; Jean Muller; Sadia Saeed; Muhammad Arslan; Rosa Martínez; Franck De Graeve; Véronique Dhennin; Iandry Rabearivelo; Michel Polak; Hélène Cavé; Luis Castaño; Martine Vaxillaire; Jean-Louis Mandel; Olivier Sand; Philippe Froguel

OBJECTIVE Accurate etiological diagnosis of monogenic forms of diabetes and obesity is useful as it can lead to marked improvements in patient care and genetic counseling. Currently, molecular diagnosis based on Sanger sequencing is restricted to only a few genes, as this technology is expensive, time-consuming, and labor-intensive. High-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) provides an opportunity to develop innovative cost-efficient methods for sensitive diabetes and obesity multigene screening. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We assessed a new method based on PCR enrichment in microdroplets (RainDance Technologies) and NGS using the Illumina HiSeq2000 for the molecular diagnosis of 43 forms of monogenic diabetes or obesity. Forty patients carrying a known causal mutation for those subtypes according to diagnostic laboratories were blindly reanalyzed. RESULTS Except for one variant, we reidentified all causal mutations in each patient associated with an almost-perfect sequencing of the targets (mean of 98.6%). We failed to call one highly complex indel, although we identified a dramatic drop of coverage at this locus. In three patients, we detected other mutations with a putatively deleterious effect in addition to those reported by the genetic diagnostic laboratories. CONCLUSIONS Our NGS approach provides an efficient means of highly sensitive screening for mutations in genes associated with monogenic forms of diabetes and obesity. As cost and time to deliver results have been key barriers to uncovering a molecular cause in the many undiagnosed cases likely to exist, the present methodology should be considered in patients displaying features of monogenic diabetes or obesity.


Obesity | 2011

Lack of association of CD36 SNPs with early onset obesity: a meta-analysis in 9,973 European subjects

Hélène Choquet; Yann Labrune; Franck De Graeve; Anke Hinney; Johannes Hebebrand; André Scherag; Cécile Lecoeur; Maithe Tauber; Beverley Balkau; Paul Elliot; M.R. Jarvelin; Andrew Walley; Philippe Besnard; Philippe Froguel; David Meyre

A recent study suggested that four CD36 polymorphisms (namely rs3211867, rs3211883, rs3211908, and rs1527483) were associated with an increased risk of obesity, an increased BMI and percentage of body fat in European adolescents. We first attempted to confirm these results in three independent case‐control genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) data totaling 3,509 subjects of French and German origin, but we were unable to find any association of these variants with early onset obesity risk. We then genotyped the four CD36 single‐nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a large population‐based study of 4,667 Finnish subjects and we did not replicate any of the recently reported associations with BMI. By combining all available data in a meta‐analysis (N = 9,973), we found no evidence for an association of the reported four variants in CD36 with increased obesity risk or increased BMI (0.07 ≤ P values ≤ 0.93). Finally, we assessed the contribution of the full CD36 locus gene variation to obesity risk in 3,509 subjects and we did not detect any significant association with obesity after correction for multiple testing. In summary, we were unable to confirm the recently reported association of variants in CD36 with early onset obesity in populations of European ancestry.


Obesity | 2008

INS VNTR Is Not Associated With Childhood Obesity in 1,023 Families: A Family-based Study

Nabila Bouatia-Naji; Franck De Graeve; Günter Brönner; Cécile Lecoeur; Vincent Vatin; Emmanuelle Durand; Peter Lichtner; Thuy Trang Nguyen; Barbara Heude; Jacques Weill; Claire Levy-Marchal; Johannes Hebebrand; Philippe Froguel; David Meyre

Previous studies have described genetic associations of the insulin gene variable number tandem repeat (INS VNTR) variant with childhood obesity and associated phenotypes. We aimed to assess the contribution of INS VNTR genotypes to childhood obesity and variance of insulin resistance, insulin secretion, and birth weight using family‐based design. Participants were either French or German whites. We used transmission disequilibrium tests (TDTs) for assessing binary traits and quantitative pedigree disequilibrium tests for assessing continuous traits. In contrast to previous findings, we did not observe any familial association with childhood obesity (T = 50%, P = 0.77) in the 1,023 families tested. In French obese children, INS VNTR did not associate with fasting insulin levels (P = 0.23) and class I allele showed only borderline association with increased insulin secretion index at 30 min (P = 0.03). INS VNTR did not associate with birth weight in obese children (P = 0.98) and TDT analyses in 350 French families with history of low birth weight (LBW) showed no association with this condition (P = 0.92). In summary, our study, the largest performed so far, does not support the previously reported associations between INS VNTR and childhood obesity, insulin resistance, or birth weight, and does not suggest any major role for this variant in modulating these traits.


PLOS ONE | 2015

What Is the Best NGS Enrichment Method for the Molecular Diagnosis of Monogenic Diabetes and Obesity

Julien Philippe; Mehdi Derhourhi; Emmanuelle Durand; Emmanuel Vaillant; Aurélie Dechaume; Iandry Rabearivelo; Véronique Dhennin; Martine Vaxillaire; Franck De Graeve; Olivier Sand; Philippe Froguel; Amélie Bonnefond

Molecular diagnosis of monogenic diabetes and obesity is of paramount importance for both the patient and society, as it can result in personalized medicine associated with a better life and it eventually saves health care spending. Genetic clinical laboratories are currently switching from Sanger sequencing to next-generation sequencing (NGS) approaches but choosing the optimal protocols is not easy. Here, we compared the sequencing coverage of 43 genes involved in monogenic forms of diabetes and obesity, and variant detection rates, resulting from four enrichment methods based on the sonication of DNA (Agilent SureSelect, RainDance technologies), or using enzymes for DNA fragmentation (Illumina Nextera, Agilent HaloPlex). We analyzed coding exons and untranslated regions of the 43 genes involved in monogenic diabetes and obesity. We found that none of the methods achieves yet full sequencing of the gene targets. Nonetheless, the RainDance, SureSelect and HaloPlex enrichment methods led to the best sequencing coverage of the targets; while the Nextera method resulted in the poorest sequencing coverage. Although the sequencing coverage was high, we unexpectedly found that the HaloPlex method missed 20% of variants detected by the three other methods and Nextera missed 10%. The question of which NGS technique for genetic diagnosis yields the highest diagnosis rate is frequently discussed in the literature and the response is still unclear. Here, we showed that the RainDance enrichment method as well as SureSelect, which are both based on the sonication of DNA, resulted in a good sequencing quality and variant detection, while the use of enzymes to fragment DNA (HaloPlex or Nextera) might not be the best strategy to get an accurate sequencing.


Pediatric Diabetes | 2018

A novel NEUROG3 mutation in neonatal diabetes associated with a neuro-intestinal syndrome

Suna Hancili; Amélie Bonnefond; Julien Philippe; Emmanuel Vaillant; Franck De Graeve; Olivier Sand; Kanetee Busiah; Jean-Jacques Robert; Michel Polak; Philippe Froguel; Ayla Güven; Martine Vaxillaire

Neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM) is a rare form of non‐autoimmune diabetes usually diagnosed in the first 6 months of life. Various genetic defects have been shown to cause NDM with diverse clinical presentations and variable severity. Among transcriptional factor genes associated with isolated or syndromic NDM, a few cases of homozygous mutations in the NEUROG3 gene have been reported, all mutated patients presenting with congenital malabsorptive diarrhea with or without diabetes at a variable age of onset from early life to childhood. Through a targeted next‐generation sequencing assay for monogenic diabetes genes, we aimed to search for pathogenic deleterious mutation in a Turkish patient with NDM, severe malabsorptive diarrhea, neurointestinal dysplasia and other atypical features. In this patient, we identified a novel homozygous nonsense mutation (p.Q4*) in NEUROG3. The same biallelic mutation was found in another affected family member. Of note, the study proband presents with abnormalities of the intrahepatic biliary tract, thyroid gland and central nervous system, which has never been reported before in NEUROG3 mutation carriers. Our findings extend the usually described clinical features associated with NEUROG3 deficiency in humans, and question the extent to which a complete lack of NEUROG3 expression may affect pancreas endocrine function in humans.

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Jérôme Delplanque

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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