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Dive into the research topics where Grant A. Mitchell is active.

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Featured researches published by Grant A. Mitchell.


The Lancet | 2004

A combined syndrome of juvenile polyposis and hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia associated with mutations in MADH4 (SMAD4).

Carol J. Gallione; Gabriela M. Repetto; Eric Legius; Anil K. Rustgi; Susan Schelley; Sabine Tejpar; Grant A. Mitchell; Éric Drouin; Cornelius J.J. Westermann; Douglas A. Marchuk

BACKGROUND Juvenile polyposis and hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia are autosomal dominant disorders with distinct and non-overlapping clinical features. The former, an inherited gastrointestinal malignancy predisposition, is caused by mutations in MADH4 (encoding SMAD4) or BMPR1A, and the latter is a vascular malformation disorder caused by mutations in ENG (endoglin) or ACVRL1 (ALK1). All four genes encode proteins involved in the transforming-growth-factor-beta signalling pathway. Although there are reports of patients and families with phenotypes of both disorders combined, the genetic aetiology of this association is unknown. METHODS Blood samples were collected from seven unrelated families segregating both phenotypes. DNA from the proband of each family was sequenced for the ACVRL1, ENG, and MADH4 genes. Mutations were examined for familial cosegregation with phenotype and presence or absence in population controls. Findings No patient had mutations in the ENG or ACVRL1 genes; all had MADH4 mutations. Three cases of de-novo MADH4 mutations were found. In one, the mutation was passed on to a similarly affected child. Each mutation cosegregated with the syndromic phenotype in other affected family members. INTERPRETATION Mutations in MADH4 can cause a syndrome consisting of both juvenile polyposis and hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia phenotypes. Since patients with these disorders are generally ascertained through distinct medical specialties, genetic testing is recommended for patients presenting with either phenotype to identify those at risk of this syndrome. Patients with juvenile polyposis who have an MADH4 mutation should be screened for the vascular lesions associated with hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia, especially occult arteriovenous malformations in visceral organs that may otherwise present suddenly with serious medical consequences.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Identification of a gene causing human cytochrome c oxidase deficiency by integrative genomics

Vamsi K. Mootha; Pierre Lepage; Kathleen Miller; Jakob Bunkenborg; Michael R. Reich; Majbrit Hjerrild; Terrye A. Delmonte; Amelie Villeneuve; Robert Sladek; Fenghao Xu; Grant A. Mitchell; Charles Morin; Matthias Mann; Thomas J. Hudson; Brian E. Robinson; John D. Rioux; Eric S. Lander

Identifying the genes responsible for human diseases requires combining information about gene position with clues about biological function. The recent availability of whole-genome data sets of RNA and protein expression provides powerful new sources of functional insight. Here we illustrate how such data sets can expedite disease-gene discovery, by using them to identify the gene causing Leigh syndrome, French-Canadian type (LSFC, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man no. 220111), a human cytochrome c oxidase deficiency that maps to chromosome 2p16-21. Using four public RNA expression data sets, we assigned to all human genes a “score” reflecting their similarity in RNA-expression profiles to known mitochondrial genes. Using a large survey of organellar proteomics, we similarly classified human genes according to the likelihood of their protein product being associated with the mitochondrion. By intersecting this information with the relevant genomic region, we identified a single clear candidate gene, LRPPRC. Resequencing identified two mutations on two independent haplotypes, providing definitive genetic proof that LRPPRC indeed causes LSFC. LRPPRC encodes an mRNA-binding protein likely involved with mtDNA transcript processing, suggesting an additional mechanism of mitochondrial pathophysiology. Similar strategies to integrate diverse genomic information can be applied likewise to other disease pathways and will become increasingly powerful with the growing wealth of diverse, functional genomics data.


Nature Medicine | 2008

The succinate receptor GPR91 in neurons has a major role in retinal angiogenesis

Przemyslaw Sapieha; Mirna Sirinyan; David Hamel; Karine Zaniolo; Jean Sébastien Joyal; Jang Hyeon Cho; Jean Claude Honoré; Elsa Kermorvant-Duchemin; Daya R. Varma; Sophie Tremblay; Martin Leduc; Lenka Rihakova; Pierre Hardy; William H. Klein; Xiuqian Mu; Orval Mamer; Pierre Lachapelle; Adriana Di Polo; Christian M. Beauséjour; Gregor Andelfinger; Grant A. Mitchell; Florian Sennlaub; Sylvain Chemtob

Vascularization is essential for tissue development and in restoration of tissue integrity after an ischemic injury. In studies of vascularization, the focus has largely been placed on vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), yet other factors may also orchestrate this process. Here we show that succinate accumulates in the hypoxic retina of rodents and, via its cognate receptor G protein–coupled receptor-91 (GPR91), is a potent mediator of vessel growth in the settings of both normal retinal development and proliferative ischemic retinopathy. The effects of GPR91 are mediated by retinal ganglion neurons (RGCs), which, in response to increased succinate levels, regulate the production of numerous angiogenic factors including VEGF. Accordingly, succinate did not have proangiogenic effects in RGC-deficient rats. Our observations show a pathway of metabolite signaling where succinate, acting through GPR91, governs retinal angiogenesis and show the propensity of RGCs to act as sensors of ischemic stress. These findings provide a new therapeutic target for modulating revascularization.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Excess of De Novo Deleterious Mutations in Genes Associated with Glutamatergic Systems in Nonsyndromic Intellectual Disability

Fadi F. Hamdan; Julie Gauthier; Yoichi Araki; Da-Ting Lin; Yuhki Yoshizawa; Kyohei Higashi; A-Reum Park; Dan Spiegelman; Amélie Piton; Hideyuki Tomitori; Hussein Daoud; Christine Massicotte; Edouard Henrion; Ousmane Diallo; Masoud Shekarabi; Claude Marineau; Michael Shevell; Bruno Maranda; Grant A. Mitchell; Amélie Nadeau; Guy D'Anjou; Michel Vanasse; Myriam Srour; Ronald G. Lafrenière; Pierre Drapeau; Jean Claude Lacaille; Eunjoon Kim; Jae-Ran Lee; Kazuei Igarashi; Richard L. Huganir

Little is known about the genetics of nonsyndromic intellectual disability (NSID). We hypothesized that de novo mutations (DNMs) in synaptic genes explain an important fraction of sporadic NSID cases. In order to investigate this possibility, we sequenced 197 genes encoding glutamate receptors and a large subset of their known interacting proteins in 95 sporadic cases of NSID. We found 11 DNMs, including ten potentially deleterious mutations (three nonsense, two splicing, one frameshift, four missense) and one neutral mutation (silent) in eight different genes. Calculation of point-substitution DNM rates per functional and neutral site showed significant excess of functional DNMs compared to neutral ones. De novo truncating and/or splicing mutations in SYNGAP1, STXBP1, and SHANK3 were found in six patients and are likely to be pathogenic. De novo missense mutations were found in KIF1A, GRIN1, CACNG2, and EPB41L1. Functional studies showed that all these missense mutations affect protein function in cell culture systems, suggesting that they may be pathogenic. Sequencing these four genes in 50 additional sporadic cases of NSID identified a second DNM in GRIN1 (c.1679_1681dup/p.Ser560dup). This mutation also affects protein function, consistent with structural predictions. None of these mutations or any other DNMs were identified in these genes in 285 healthy controls. This study highlights the importance of the glutamate receptor complexes in NSID and further supports the role of DNMs in this disorder.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Hyperornithinaemia-hyperammonaemia-homocitrullinuria syndrome is caused by mutations in a gene encoding a mitochondrial ornithine transporter.

Jose A. Camacho; Cassandra Obie; Barbara Biery; Barbara K. Goodman; Chien An Hu; Shlomo Almashanu; Gary Steel; Robin Casey; Marie Lambert; Grant A. Mitchell; David Valle

Neurospora crassa ARG13 and Saccharomyces cerevisiae ARG11 encode mitochondrial carrier family (MCF) proteins that transport ornithine across the mitochondrial inner membrane. We used their sequences to identify EST candidates that partially encode orthologous mammalian transporters. We thereby identified such a gene (ORNT1) that maps to 13q14 and whose expression, similar to that of other urea cycle (UC) components, was high in liver and varied with changes in dietary protein. ORNT1 expression restores ornithine metabolism in fibroblasts from patients with hyperammonaemia-hyperornithinaemia-homocitrullinuria (HHH) syndrome. In a survey of 11 HHH probands, we identified 3 ORNT1 mutant alleles that account for 21 of 22 possible mutant ORNT1 genes in our patients: F188Δ, which is common in French-Canadian HHH patients and encodes an unstable protein; E180K, which encodes a stable, properly targeted protein that is inactive; and a 13q14 microdeletion. Our results show that ORNT1 encodes the mitochondrial ornithine transporter involved in UC function and is defective in HHH syndrome.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1990

Neurologic Crises in Hereditary Tyrosinemia

Grant A. Mitchell; Jean Larochelle; Marie Lambert; Jean Michaud; André Grenier; Hélène Ogier; Marie Gauthier; Jacques Lacroix; Michel Vanasse; Albert Larbrisseau; Khazal Paradis; Andrée Weber; Yolande Lefevre; Serge B. Melançon; Louis Dallaire

Hereditary tyrosinemia results from an inborn error in the final step of tyrosine metabolism. The disease is known to cause acute and chronic liver failure, renal Fanconis syndrome, and hepatocellular carcinoma. Neurologic manifestations have been reported but not emphasized as a common problem. In this paper, we describe neurologic crises that occurred among children identified as having tyrosinemia on neonatal screening since 1970. Of the 48 children with tyrosinemia, 20 (42 percent) had neurologic crises that began at a mean age of one year and led to 104 hospital admissions. These abrupt episodes of peripheral neuropathy were characterized by severe pain with extensor hypertonia (in 75 percent), vomiting or paralytic ileus (69 percent), muscle weakness (29 percent), and self-mutilation (8 percent). Eight children required mechanical ventilation because of paralysis, and 14 of the 20 children have died. Between crises, most survivors regained normal function. We found no reliable biochemical marker for the crises (those we evaluated included blood levels of tyrosine, succinylacetone, and hepatic aminotransferases). Urinary excretion of delta-aminolevulinic acid, a neurotoxic intermediate of porphyrin biosynthesis, was elevated during crises but also during the asymptomatic periods. Electrophysiologic studies in seven patients and neuromuscular biopsies in three patients showed axonal degeneration and secondary demyelination. We conclude that episodes of acute, severe peripheral neuropathy are common in hereditary tyrosinemia and resemble the crises of the neuropathic porphyrias.


Clinical Genetics | 2005

Population history and its impact on medical genetics in Quebec

Anne Marie Laberge; Jacques L. Michaud; Andrea Richter; Emmanuelle Lemyre; Marie Lambert; Bernard Brais; Grant A. Mitchell

Knowledge of the genetic demography of Quebec is useful for gene mapping, diagnosis, treatment, community genetics and public health. The French‐Canadian population of Quebec, currently about 6 million people, descends from about 8500 French settlers who arrived in Nouvelle‐France between 1608 and 1759. The migrations of those settlers and their descendants led to a series of regional founder effects, reflected in the geographical distribution of genetic diseases in Quebec. This review describes elements of population history and clinical genetics pertinent to the treatment of French Canadians and other population groups from Quebec and summarizes the cardinal features of over 30 conditions reported in French Canadians. Some were discovered in French Canadians, such as autosomal recessive ataxia of the Charlevoix–Saguenay (MIM 270550), agenesis of corpus callosum and peripheral neuropathy (MIM 218000) and French‐Canadian‐type Leigh syndrome (MIM 220111). Other conditions are particularly frequent or have special genetic characteristics in French Canadians, including oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, hepatorenal tyrosinaemia, cystic fibrosis, Leber hereditary optic neuropathy and familial hypercholesterolaemia. Three genetic diseases of Quebec First Nations children are also discussed: Cree encephalitis (MIM 608505), Cree leukoencephalopathy (MIM 603896) and North American Indian childhood cirrhosis (MIM 604901).


Pediatric and Developmental Pathology | 2001

Tyrosinemia: a review.

Pierre Russo; Grant A. Mitchell; Robert M. Tanguay

Hypertyrosinemia encompasses several entities, of which tyrosinemia type I (or hepatorenal tyrosinemia, HT1) results in the most extensive clinical and pathological manifestations involving mainly the liver, kidney, and peripheral nerves. The clinical findings range from a severe hepatopathy of early infancy to chronic liver disease and rickets in the older child; gradual refinements in the diagnosis and medical management of this disorder have greatly altered its natural course, mirroring recent advances in the field of metabolic diseases in the past quarter century. Hepatorenal tyrosinemia is the inborn error with the highest incidence of progression to hepatocellular carcinoma, likely due to profound mutagenic effects and influences on the cell cycle by accumulated metabolites. The appropriate follow-up of patients with cirrhosis, the proper timing of liver transplantation in the prevention of carcinoma, and the long-term evolution of chronic renal disease remain important unresolved issues. The introduction of a new pharmacologic agent, NTBC, holds the hope of significantly alleviating some of the burdens of this disease. Mouse models of this disease have permitted the exploration of newer treatment modalities, such as gene therapy by viral vectors, including ex vivo and in utero methods. Finally, recent observations on spontaneous genetic reversion of the mutation in HT1 livers challenge conventional concepts in human genetics.


Biochemical Journal | 2004

The role of the LRPPRC (leucine-rich pentatricopeptide repeat cassette) gene in cytochrome oxidase assembly: mutation causes lowered levels of COX (cytochrome c oxidase) I and COX III mRNA.

Fenghao Xu; Charles Morin; Grant A. Mitchell; Cameron Ackerley; Brian H. Robinson

Leigh syndrome French Canadian (LSFC) is a variant of cytochrome oxidase deficiency found in Québec and caused by mutations in the LRPPRC (leucine-rich pentatricopeptide repeat cassette) gene. Northern blots showed that the LRPPRC mRNA levels seen in skeletal muscle>heart>placenta>kidney>liver>lung=brain were proportionally almost opposite in strength to the severity of the enzymic cytochrome oxidase defect. The levels of COX (cytochrome c oxidase) I and COX III mRNA visible on Northern blots were reduced in LSFC patients due to the common (A354V, Ala354-->Val) founder mutation. The amount of LRPPRC protein found in both fibroblast and liver mitochondria from LSFC patients was consistently reduced to <30% of control levels. Import of [(35)S]methionine LRPPRC into rat liver mitochondria was slower for the mutant (A354V) protein. A titre of LRPPRC protein was also found in nuclear fractions that could not be easily accounted for by mitochondrial contamination. [35S]Methionine labelling of mitochondrial translation products showed that the translation of COX I, and perhaps COX III, was specifically reduced in the presence of the mutation. These results suggest that the gene product of LRPPRC, like PET 309p, has a role in the translation or stability of the mRNA for mitochondrially encoded COX subunits. A more diffuse distribution of LRPPRC in LSFC cells compared with controls was evident when viewed by immunofluorescence microscopy, with less LRPPRC present in peripheral mitochondria.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2008

Lipolysis and the integrated physiology of lipid energy metabolism

Shupei Wang; Krishnakant G. Soni; Meriem Semache; Stéphanie Casavant; Mélanie Fortier; Grant A. Mitchell

Fat cell lipolysis, the cleavage of triglycerides and release of fatty acids and glycerol, evolved to enable survival during prolonged food deprivation but is paradoxically increased in obesity, in which a surfeit of all energy metabolites is found. Essential, previously-unsuspected components have been discovered in the lipolytic machinery, at the protective interface of the lipid droplet surface and in the signaling pathways that control lipolysis. At least two adipocyte lipases are important for controlling lipolysis, hormone-sensitive lipase (HSL) and adipocyte triglyceride lipase (ATGL). Perilipin (PLIN) and possibly other proteins of the lipid droplet surface are master regulators of lipolysis, protecting or exposing the triglyceride core of the droplet to lipases. The prototypes for hormonal lipolytic control are beta adrenergic stimulation and suppression by insulin, both of which affect cyclic AMP levels and hence the protein kinase A-mediated phosphorylation of HSL and PLIN. Newly-recognized mediators of lipolysis include atrial natriuretic peptide, cyclic GMP, the ketone body 3-hydroxybutyrate, AMP kinase and mitogen-activated kinases. Lipolysis must be interpreted in its physiological context since similar rates of basal or stimulated lipolysis occur under different conditions and by different mechanisms. Age, sex, anatomical site, genotype and species differences are each important variables. Manipulation of lipolysis has therapeutic potential in several inborn errors and in the metabolic syndrome that frequently complicates obesity.

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Marie Lambert

Université de Montréal

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Shu Pei Wang

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine

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Bruno Maranda

Université de Sherbrooke

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Catherine Brunel-Guitton

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Shupei Wang

Université de Montréal

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Hao Yang

Université de Montréal

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