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Featured researches published by Gordon C. Gowans.


Nature Genetics | 2010

A recurrent 16p12.1 microdeletion supports a two-hit model for severe developmental delay

Santhosh Girirajan; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Gregory M. Cooper; Francesca Antonacci; Priscillia Siswara; Andy Itsara; Laura Vives; Tom Walsh; Shane McCarthy; Carl Baker; Mefford Hc; Jeffrey M. Kidd; Sharon R. Browning; Brian L. Browning; Diane E. Dickel; Deborah L. Levy; Blake C. Ballif; Kathryn Platky; Darren M. Farber; Gordon C. Gowans; Jessica J. Wetherbee; Alexander Asamoah; David D. Weaver; Paul R. Mark; Jennifer N. Dickerson; Bhuwan P. Garg; Sara Ellingwood; Rosemarie Smith; Valerie Banks; Wendy Smith

We report the identification of a recurrent, 520-kb 16p12.1 microdeletion associated with childhood developmental delay. The microdeletion was detected in 20 of 11,873 cases compared with 2 of 8,540 controls (P = 0.0009, OR = 7.2) and replicated in a second series of 22 of 9,254 cases compared with 6 of 6,299 controls (P = 0.028, OR = 2.5). Most deletions were inherited, with carrier parents likely to manifest neuropsychiatric phenotypes compared to non-carrier parents (P = 0.037, OR = 6). Probands were more likely to carry an additional large copy-number variant when compared to matched controls (10 of 42 cases, P = 5.7 × 10−5, OR = 6.6). The clinical features of individuals with two mutations were distinct from and/or more severe than those of individuals carrying only the co-occurring mutation. Our data support a two-hit model in which the 16p12.1 microdeletion both predisposes to neuropsychiatric phenotypes as a single event and exacerbates neurodevelopmental phenotypes in association with other large deletions or duplications. Analysis of other microdeletions with variable expressivity indicates that this two-hit model might be more generally applicable to neuropsychiatric disease.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

Phenotypic Heterogeneity of Genomic Disorders and Rare Copy-Number Variants

Santhosh Girirajan; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Bradley P. Coe; Sumit Parikh; Neil R. Friedman; Amy Goldstein; Robyn A. Filipink; Juliann S. McConnell; Brad Angle; Wendy S. Meschino; Marjan M. Nezarati; Alexander Asamoah; Kelly E. Jackson; Gordon C. Gowans; Judith Martin; Erin P. Carmany; David W. Stockton; Rhonda E. Schnur; Lynette S. Penney; Donna M. Martin; Salmo Raskin; Kathleen A. Leppig; Heidi Thiese; Rosemarie Smith; Erika Aberg; Dmitriy Niyazov; Luis F. Escobar; Dima El-Khechen; Kisha Johnson; Robert Roger Lebel

BACKGROUND Some copy-number variants are associated with genomic disorders with extreme phenotypic heterogeneity. The cause of this variation is unknown, which presents challenges in genetic diagnosis, counseling, and management. METHODS We analyzed the genomes of 2312 children known to carry a copy-number variant associated with intellectual disability and congenital abnormalities, using array comparative genomic hybridization. RESULTS Among the affected children, 10.1% carried a second large copy-number variant in addition to the primary genetic lesion. We identified seven genomic disorders, each defined by a specific copy-number variant, in which the affected children were more likely to carry multiple copy-number variants than were controls. We found that syndromic disorders could be distinguished from those with extreme phenotypic heterogeneity on the basis of the total number of copy-number variants and whether the variants are inherited or de novo. Children who carried two large copy-number variants of unknown clinical significance were eight times as likely to have developmental delay as were controls (odds ratio, 8.16; 95% confidence interval, 5.33 to 13.07; P=2.11×10(-38)). Among affected children, inherited copy-number variants tended to co-occur with a second-site large copy-number variant (Spearman correlation coefficient, 0.66; P<0.001). Boys were more likely than girls to have disorders of phenotypic heterogeneity (P<0.001), and mothers were more likely than fathers to transmit second-site copy-number variants to their offspring (P=0.02). CONCLUSIONS Multiple, large copy-number variants, including those of unknown pathogenic significance, compound to result in a severe clinical presentation, and secondary copy-number variants are preferentially transmitted from maternal carriers. (Funded by the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative and the National Institutes of Health.).


Nature Genetics | 2007

Discovery of a previously unrecognized microdeletion syndrome of 16p11.2–p12.2

Blake C. Ballif; Sara A Hornor; Elizabeth A. Jenkins; Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal; Urvashi Surti; Kelly E. Jackson; Alexander Asamoah; Pamela Brock; Gordon C. Gowans; Robert Conway; John M. Graham; Livija Medne; Elaine H. Zackai; Tamim H. Shaikh; Joel Geoghegan; Rebecca R. Selzer; Peggy S. Eis; Bassem A. Bejjani; Lisa G. Shaffer

We have identified a recurrent de novo pericentromeric deletion in 16p11.2–p12.2 in four individuals with developmental disabilities by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization analysis. The identification of common clinical features in these four individuals along with the characterization of complex segmental duplications flanking the deletion regions suggests that nonallelic homologous recombination mediated these rearrangements and that deletions in 16p11.2–p12.2 constitute a previously undescribed syndrome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Haploinsufficiency of HDAC4 Causes Brachydactyly Mental Retardation Syndrome, with Brachydactyly Type E, Developmental Delays, and Behavioral Problems

Stephen R. Williams; Micheala A. Aldred; Vazken M. Der Kaloustian; Fahed Halal; Gordon C. Gowans; D. Ross McLeod; Sara Zondag; Helga V. Toriello; R. Ellen Magenis; Sarah H. Elsea

Brachydactyly mental retardation syndrome (BDMR) is associated with a deletion involving chromosome 2q37. BDMR presents with a range of features, including intellectual disabilities, developmental delays, behavioral abnormalities, sleep disturbance, craniofacial and skeletal abnormalities (including brachydactyly type E), and autism spectrum disorder. To date, only large deletions of 2q37 have been reported, making delineation of a critical region and subsequent identification of candidate genes difficult. We present clinical and molecular analysis of six individuals with overlapping deletions involving 2q37.3 that refine the critical region, reducing the candidate genes from >20 to a single gene, histone deacetylase 4 (HDAC4). Driven by the distinct hand and foot anomalies and similar cognitive features, we identified other cases with clinical findings consistent with BDMR but without a 2q37 deletion, and sequencing of HDAC4 identified de novo mutations, including one intragenic deletion probably disrupting normal splicing and one intragenic insertion that results in a frameshift and premature stop codon. HDAC4 is a histone deacetylase that regulates genes important in bone, muscle, neurological, and cardiac development. Reportedly, Hdac4(-/-) mice have severe bone malformations resulting from premature ossification of developing bones. Data presented here show that deletion or mutation of HDAC4 results in reduced expression of RAI1, which causes Smith-Magenis syndrome when haploinsufficient, providing a link to the overlapping findings in these disorders. Considering the known molecular function of HDAC4 and the mouse knockout phenotype, taken together with deletion or mutation of HDAC4 in multiple subjects with BDMR, we conclude that haploinsufficiency of HDAC4 results in brachydactyly mental retardation syndrome.


Molecular Cytogenetics | 2008

Expanding the clinical phenotype of the 3q29 microdeletion syndrome and characterization of the reciprocal microduplication

Blake C. Ballif; Aaron Theisen; Justine Coppinger; Gordon C. Gowans; Joseph H. Hersh; Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal; Karen Schmidt; Raymond Tervo; Luis F. Escobar; Christopher A. Friedrich; Marie McDonald; Lindsey Campbell; Jeffrey E. Ming; Elaine H. Zackai; Bassem A. Bejjani; Lisa G. Shaffer

BackgroundInterstitial deletions of 3q29 have been recently described as a microdeletion syndrome mediated by nonallelic homologous recombination between low-copy repeats resulting in an ~1.6 Mb common-sized deletion. Given the molecular mechanism causing the deletion, the reciprocal duplication is anticipated to occur with equal frequency, although only one family with this duplication has been reported.ResultsIn this study we describe 14 individuals with microdeletions of 3q29, including one family with a mildly affected mother and two affected children, identified among 14,698 individuals with idiopathic mental retardation who were analyzed by array CGH. Eleven individuals had typical 1.6-Mb deletions. Three individuals had deletions that flank, span, or partially overlap the commonly deleted region. Although the clinical presentations of individuals with typical-sized deletions varied, several features were present in multiple individuals, including mental retardation and microcephaly. We also identified 19 individuals with duplications of 3q29, five of which appear to be the reciprocal duplication product of the 3q29 microdeletion and 14 of which flank, span, or partially overlap the common deletion region. The clinical features of individuals with microduplications of 3q29 also varied with few common features. De novo and inherited abnormalities were found in both the microdeletion and microduplication cohorts illustrating the need for parental samples to fully characterize these abnormalities.ConclusionOur report demonstrates that array CGH is especially suited to identify chromosome abnormalities with unclear or variable presentations.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Identification of a Recurrent Microdeletion at 17q23.1q23.2 Flanked by Segmental Duplications Associated with Heart Defects and Limb Abnormalities

Blake C. Ballif; Aaron Theisen; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Ryan Traylor; Julie M. Gastier-Foster; Devon Lamb Thrush; Caroline Astbury; Dennis Bartholomew; Kim L. McBride; Robert E. Pyatt; Kate P. Shane; Wendy Smith; Valerie Banks; William B. Gallentine; Pamela Brock; M. Katharine Rudd; Margaret P Adam; Julia Keene; John A. Phillips; Jean Pfotenhauer; Gordon C. Gowans; Pawel Stankiewicz; Bassem A. Bejjani; Lisa G. Shaffer

Segmental duplications, which comprise approximately 5%-10% of the human genome, are known to mediate medically relevant deletions, duplications, and inversions through nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR) and have been suggested to be hot spots in chromosome evolution and human genomic instability. We report seven individuals with microdeletions at 17q23.1q23.2, identified by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH). Six of the seven deletions are approximately 2.2 Mb in size and flanked by large segmental duplications of >98% sequence identity and in the same orientation. One of the deletions is approximately 2.8 Mb in size and is flanked on the distal side by a segmental duplication, whereas the proximal breakpoint falls between segmental duplications. These characteristics suggest that NAHR mediated six out of seven of these rearrangements. These individuals have common features, including mild to moderate developmental delay (particularly speech delay), microcephaly, postnatal growth retardation, heart defects, and hand, foot, and limb abnormalities. Although all individuals had at least mild dysmorphic facial features, there was no characteristic constellation of features that would elicit clinical suspicion of a specific disorder. The identification of common clinical features suggests that microdeletions at 17q23.1q23.2 constitute a novel syndrome. Furthermore, the inclusion in the minimal deletion region of TBX2 and TBX4, transcription factors belonging to a family of genes implicated in a variety of developmental pathways including those of heart and limb, suggests that these genes may play an important role in the phenotype of this emerging syndrome.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2011

Case series: 2q33.1 microdeletion syndrome—further delineation of the phenotype

M. Balasubramanian; K. Smith; Lina Basel-Vanagaite; M. F. Feingold; Pamela Brock; Gordon C. Gowans; Pradeep Vasudevan; L. Cresswell; E. J. Taylor; C. J. Harris; N. Friedman; Rocio Moran; Holly Feret; Elaine H. Zackai; Aaron Theisen; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Michael J. Parker

Recurrent deletions of 2q32q33 have recently been reported as a new microdeletion syndrome, clinical features of which include significant learning difficulties, growth retardation, dysmorphic features, thin and sparse hair, feeding difficulties, and cleft or high palate. Haploinsufficiency of one gene within the deleted region, SATB2, has been suggested to be responsible for most of the features of the syndrome. This article describes seven previously unreported patients with deletions at 2q33.1, all partially overlapping the previously described critical region for the 2q33.1 microdeletion syndrome. The deletions ranged in size from 35 kb to 10.4 Mb, with the smallest deletion entirely within the SATB2 gene. Patients demonstrated significant developmental delay and challenging behaviour, a particular behavioural phenotype that seems to be emerging with more reported patients with this condition. One patient in this cohort has a deletion entirely within SATB2 and has a cleft palate, whereas several patients with larger deletions have a high arched palate. In addition, one other patient has significant orthopaedic problems with ligamentous laxity. Interestingly, this patient has a deletion that lies just distal to SATB2. The orthopaedic problems have not been reported previously and are possibly an additional feature of this syndrome. Overall, this report provides further evidence that the SATB2 gene is the critical gene in this microdeletion syndrome. In addition, because the individuals in this study range in age from 3–19 years, these patients will help define the natural progression of the phenotype in patients with this microdeletion.


Genetics in Medicine | 2012

NF1 microduplications: identification of seven nonrelated individuals provides further characterization of the phenotype

Kimberly J. Moles; Gordon C. Gowans; Satyanarayana Gedela; David Beversdorf; Arthur Yu; Laurie H. Seaver; Roger A. Schultz; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Beth S. Torchia; Lisa G. Shaffer

Purpose:Neurofibromatosis, type 1 (NF1) is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by mutations of the neurofibromin 1 (NF1) gene at 17q11.2. Approximately 5% of individuals with NF1 have a 1.4-Mb heterozygous 17q11.2 deletion encompassing NF1, formed through nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR) between the low-copy repeats that flank this region. NF1 microdeletion syndrome is more severe than NF1 caused by gene mutations, with individuals exhibiting facial dysmorphisms, developmental delay (DD), intellectual disability (ID), and excessive neurofibromas. Although NAHR can also cause reciprocal microduplications, reciprocal NF1 duplications have been previously reported in just one multigenerational family and a second unrelated proband.Methods:We analyzed the clinical features in seven individuals with NF1 microduplications, identified among 48,817 probands tested in our laboratory by array-based comparative genomic hybridization.Results:The only clinical features present in more than one individual were variable DD/ID, facial dysmorphisms, and seizures. No neurofibromas were present. Three sets of parents were tested: one duplication was apparently de novo, one inherited from an affected mother, and one inherited from a clinically normal father.Conclusion:This is the first report comparing the phenotypes of nonrelated individuals with NF1 microduplications. This comparison will allow for further definition of this emerging microduplication syndrome.Genet Med 2012:14(5):508–514


PLOS ONE | 2010

Genome Rearrangements Detected by SNP Microarrays in Individuals with Intellectual Disability Referred with Possible Williams Syndrome

Ariel M. Pani; Holly H. Hobart; Colleen A. Morris; Carolyn B. Mervis; Patricia Bray-Ward; Kendra W. Kimberley; Cecilia M. Rios; Robin C. Clark; Maricela D. Gulbronson; Gordon C. Gowans; Ronald G. Gregg

Background Intellectual disability (ID) affects 2–3% of the population and may occur with or without multiple congenital anomalies (MCA) or other medical conditions. Established genetic syndromes and visible chromosome abnormalities account for a substantial percentage of ID diagnoses, although for ∼50% the molecular etiology is unknown. Individuals with features suggestive of various syndromes but lacking their associated genetic anomalies pose a formidable clinical challenge. With the advent of microarray techniques, submicroscopic genome alterations not associated with known syndromes are emerging as a significant cause of ID and MCA. Methodology/Principal Findings High-density SNP microarrays were used to determine genome wide copy number in 42 individuals: 7 with confirmed alterations in the WS region but atypical clinical phenotypes, 31 with ID and/or MCA, and 4 controls. One individual from the first group had the most telomeric gene in the WS critical region deleted along with 2 Mb of flanking sequence. A second person had the classic WS deletion and a rearrangement on chromosome 5p within the Cri du Chat syndrome (OMIM:123450) region. Six individuals from the ID/MCA group had large rearrangements (3 deletions, 3 duplications), one of whom had a large inversion associated with a deletion that was not detected by the SNP arrays. Conclusions/Significance Combining SNP microarray analyses and qPCR allowed us to clone and sequence 21 deletion breakpoints in individuals with atypical deletions in the WS region and/or ID or MCA. Comparison of these breakpoints to databases of genomic variation revealed that 52% occurred in regions harboring structural variants in the general population. For two probands the genomic alterations were flanked by segmental duplications, which frequently mediate recurrent genome rearrangements; these may represent new genomic disorders. While SNP arrays and related technologies can identify potentially pathogenic deletions and duplications, obtaining sequence information from the breakpoints frequently provides additional information.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003

Patient with terminal duplication 3q and terminal deletion 5q: Comparison with the 3q duplication syndrome and distal 5q deletion syndrome

Brad Angle; Frank Yen; Joseph H. Hersh; Gordon C. Gowans

Partial duplication of chromosome 3q is a well‐described condition of multiple congenital anomalies and developmental delay that resembles the Brachmann‐de Lange syndrome. Similarly, an emerging phenotype of a distal 5q deletion syndrome has recently been described. The combination of both chromosome abnormalities has not been previously described. We report on a child with both a de novo duplication of distal 3q (q27 → qter) and terminal deletion of 5q (q35.2 → qter). The patient had facial anomalies, hypoplastic toenails, lymphedema of the dorsum of the feet, type I Chiari malformation, a seizure disorder, and moderate developmental delays. The phenotype is compared and contrasted to the few reports of patients with similar terminal 3q duplications and 5q deletions. Our patient did not have the characteristic phenotype of the 3q duplication syndrome, suggesting that the chromosome region responsible for this phenotype is more proximal than the terminal 3q27 region. In addition, comparison with three other reported cases of terminal 5q35 deletions suggests a possible association of terminal 5q deletions with central nervous system (CNS) structural abnormalities.

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Jill A. Rosenfeld

Baylor College of Medicine

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Bassem A. Bejjani

Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center and Children's Hospital

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Brad Angle

Northwestern University

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Pamela Brock

University of Louisville

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Aaron Theisen

Washington State University Spokane

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Elaine H. Zackai

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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