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Dive into the research topics where Hasan O. Akman is active.

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Featured researches published by Hasan O. Akman.


Neurology | 2005

Coenzyme Q deficiency and cerebellar ataxia associated with an aprataxin mutation

Catarina M. Quinzii; A. G. Kattah; Ali Naini; Hasan O. Akman; Vamsi K. Mootha; Salvatore DiMauro; Michio Hirano

Primary muscle coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) deficiency is an apparently autosomal recessive condition with heterogeneous clinical presentations. Patients with these disorders improve with CoQ10 supplementation. In a family with ataxia and CoQ10 deficiency, analysis of genome-wide microsatellite markers suggested linkage of the disease to chromosome 9p13 and led to identification of an aprataxin gene (APTX) mutation that causes ataxia oculomotor apraxia (AOA1 [MIM606350]). The authors’ observations indicate that CoQ10 deficiency may contribute to the pathogenesis of AOA1.


Genomics | 2008

Glycogen synthase (GYS1) mutation causes a novel skeletal muscle glycogenosis

Molly E. McCue; Stephanie J. Valberg; Michael B. Miller; Claire M. Wade; Salvatore DiMauro; Hasan O. Akman; James R. Mickelson

Polysaccharide storage myopathy (PSSM) is a novel glycogenosis in horses characterized by abnormal glycogen accumulation in skeletal muscle and muscle damage with exertion. It is unlike glycogen storage diseases resulting from known defects in glycogenolysis, glycolysis, and glycogen synthesis that have been described in humans and domestic animals. A genome-wide association identified GYS1, encoding skeletal muscle glycogen synthase (GS), as a candidate gene for PSSM. DNA sequence analysis revealed a mutation resulting in an arginine-to-histidine substitution in a highly conserved region of GS. Functional analysis demonstrated an elevated GS activity in PSSM horses, and haplotype analysis and allele age estimation demonstrated that this mutation is identical by descent among horse breeds. This is the first report of a gain-of-function mutation in GYS1 resulting in a glycogenosis.


Nature | 2011

Pathogenic exon-trapping by SVA retrotransposon and rescue in Fukuyama muscular dystrophy.

Mariko Taniguchi-Ikeda; Kazuhiro Kobayashi; Motoi Kanagawa; Chih-Chieh Yu; Kouhei Mori; Tetsuya Oda; Atsushi Kuga; Hiroki Kurahashi; Hasan O. Akman; Salvatore DiMauro; Ryuji Kaji; Toshifumi Yokota; Shin'ichi Takeda; Tatsushi Toda

Fukuyama muscular dystrophy (FCMD; MIM253800), one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders in Japan, was the first human disease found to result from ancestral insertion of a SINE-VNTR-Alu (SVA) retrotransposon into a causative gene. In FCMD, the SVA insertion occurs in the 3′ untranslated region (UTR) of the fukutin gene. The pathogenic mechanism for FCMD is unknown, and no effective clinical treatments exist. Here we show that aberrant messenger RNA (mRNA) splicing, induced by SVA exon-trapping, underlies the molecular pathogenesis of FCMD. Quantitative mRNA analysis pinpointed a region that was missing from transcripts in patients with FCMD. This region spans part of the 3′ end of the fukutin coding region, a proximal part of the 3′ UTR and the SVA insertion. Correspondingly, fukutin mRNA transcripts in patients with FCMD and SVA knock-in model mice were shorter than the expected length. Sequence analysis revealed an abnormal splicing event, provoked by a strong acceptor site in SVA and a rare alternative donor site in fukutin exon 10. The resulting product truncates the fukutin carboxy (C) terminus and adds 129 amino acids encoded by the SVA. Introduction of antisense oligonucleotides (AONs) targeting the splice acceptor, the predicted exonic splicing enhancer and the intronic splicing enhancer prevented pathogenic exon-trapping by SVA in cells of patients with FCMD and model mice, rescuing normal fukutin mRNA expression and protein production. AON treatment also restored fukutin functions, including O-glycosylation of α-dystroglycan (α-DG) and laminin binding by α-DG. Moreover, we observe exon-trapping in other SVA insertions associated with disease (hypercholesterolemia, neutral lipid storage disease) and human-specific SVA insertion in a novel gene. Thus, although splicing into SVA is known, we have discovered in human disease a role for SVA-mediated exon-trapping and demonstrated the promise of splicing modulation therapy as the first radical clinical treatment for FCMD and other SVA-mediated diseases.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Unbalanced deoxynucleotide pools cause mitochondrial DNA instability in thymidine phosphorylase-deficient mice

Luis C. López; Hasan O. Akman; Angeles Garcia-Cazorla; Beatriz Dorado; Ramon Martí; Ichizo Nishino; Saba Tadesse; Giuseppe Pizzorno; Dikoma C. Shungu; Eduardo Bonilla; Kurenai Tanji; Michio Hirano

Replication and repair of DNA require equilibrated pools of deoxynucleoside triphosphate precursors. This concept has been proven by in vitro studies over many years, but in vivo models are required to demonstrate its relevance to multicellular organisms and to human diseases. Accordingly, we have generated thymidine phosphorylase (TP) and uridine phosphorylase (UP) double knockout (TP(-/-)UP(-/-)) mice, which show severe TP deficiency, increased thymidine and deoxyuridine in tissues and elevated mitochondrial deoxythymidine triphosphate. As consequences of the nucleotide pool imbalances, brains of mutant mice developed partial depletion of mtDNA, deficiencies of respiratory chain complexes and encephalopathy. These findings largely account for the pathogenesis of mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalopathy (MNGIE), the first inherited human disorder of nucleoside metabolism associated with somatic DNA instability.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2008

Thymidine kinase 2 (H126N) knockin mice show the essential role of balanced deoxynucleotide pools for mitochondrial DNA maintenance

Hasan O. Akman; Beatriz Dorado; Luis C. López; Angeles Garcia-Cazorla; Maya R. Vilà; Lauren M. Tanabe; William T. Dauer; Eduardo Bonilla; Kurenai Tanji; Michio Hirano

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion syndrome (MDS), an autosomal recessive condition, is characterized by variable organ involvement with decreased mtDNA copy number and activities of respiratory chain enzymes in affected tissues. MtDNA depletion has been associated with mutations in nine autosomal genes, including thymidine kinase (TK2), which encodes a ubiquitous mitochondrial protein. To study the pathogenesis of TK2-deficiency, we generated mice harboring an H126N Tk2 mutation. Homozygous Tk2 mutant (Tk2(-/-)) mice developed rapidly progressive weakness after age 10 days and died between ages 2 and 3 weeks. Tk2(-/-) animals showed Tk2 deficiency, unbalanced dNTP pools, mtDNA depletion and defects of respiratory chain enzymes containing mtDNA-encoded subunits that were most prominent in the central nervous system. Histopathology revealed an encephalomyelopathy with prominent vacuolar changes in the anterior horn of the spinal cord. The H126N TK2 mouse is the first knock-in animal model of human MDS and demonstrates that the severity of TK2 deficiency in tissues may determine the organ-specific phenotype.


Annals of Neurology | 2013

Polyglucosan body myopathy caused by defective ubiquitin ligase RBCK1.

Johanna Nilsson; Benedikt Schoser; P. Laforêt; Ognian Kalev; Christopher Lindberg; Norma B. Romero; Marcela Dávila López; Hasan O. Akman; Karim Wahbi; Stephan Iglseder; Christian Eggers; Andrew G. Engel; Salvatore DiMauro; Anders Oldfors

Glycogen storage diseases are important causes of myopathy and cardiomyopathy. We describe 10 patients from 8 families with childhood or juvenile onset of myopathy, 8 of whom also had rapidly progressive cardiomyopathy, requiring heart transplant in 4. The patients were homozygous or compound heterozygous for missense or truncating mutations in RBCK1, which encodes for a ubiquitin ligase, and had extensive polyglucosan accumulation in skeletal muscle and in the heart in cases of cardiomyopathy. We conclude that RBCK1 deficiency is a frequent cause of polyglucosan storage myopathy associated with progressive muscle weakness and cardiomyopathy. Ann Neurol 2013;74:914–919


Annals of Neurology | 2012

Adult polyglucosan body disease: Natural History and Key Magnetic Resonance Imaging Findings.

Fanny Mochel; Raphael Schiffmann; Marjan E. Steenweg; Hasan O. Akman; Mary Wallace; Frédéric Sedel; P. Laforêt; Richard Levy; J. Michael Powers; Sophie Demeret; Thierry Maisonobe; Roseline Froissart; Bruno Barcelos Da Nobrega; Brent L. Fogel; Marvin R. Natowicz; Catherine Lubetzki; Alexandra Durr; Alexis Brice; Hanna Rosenmann; Varda Barash; Or Kakhlon; J. Moshe Gomori; Marjo S. van der Knaap

Adult polyglucosan body disease (APBD) is an autosomal recessive leukodystrophy characterized by neurogenic bladder, progressive spastic gait, and peripheral neuropathy. Polyglucosan bodies accumulate in the central and peripheral nervous systems and are often associated with glycogen branching enzyme (GBE) deficiency. To improve clinical diagnosis and enable future evaluation of therapeutic strategies, we conducted a multinational study of the natural history and imaging features of APBD.


Pediatric Research | 2007

Fatal infantile cardiac glycogenosis with phosphorylase kinase deficiency and a mutation in the γ2-subunit of AMP-activated protein kinase

Hasan O. Akman; James N Sampayo; Fiona A. Ross; John W Scott; Gregory B. Wilson; Lee N. Benson; Claudio Bruno; Sara Shanske; D. Grahame Hardie; Salvatore DiMauro

A 10-wk-old infant girl with severe hypertrophy of the septal and atrial walls by cardiac ultrasound, developed progressive ventricular wall thickening and died of aspiration pneumonia at 5 mo of age. Postmortem examination revealed ventricular hypertrophy and massive atrial wall thickening due to glycogen accumulation. A skeletal muscle biopsy showed increased free glycogen and decreased activity of phosphorylase b kinase (PHK). The report of a pathogenic mutation (R531Q) in the gene (PRKAG2) encoding the γ2 subunit of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in three infants with congenital hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, glycogen storage, and “pseudo PHK deficiency” prompted us to screen this gene in our patient. We found a novel (R384T) heterozygous mutation in PRKAG2, affecting an arginine residue in the N-terminal AMP-binding domain. Like R531Q, this mutation reduces the binding of AMP and ATP to the isolated nucleotide-binding domains, and prevents activation of the heterotrimer by metabolic stress in intact cells. The mutation was not found in DNA from the patients father, the only available parent, and is likely to have arisen de novo. Our studies confirm that mutations in PRKAG2 can cause fatal infantile cardiomyopathy, often associated with apparent PHK deficiency.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2010

Neutral lipid storage disease with subclinical myopathy due to a retrotransposal insertion in the PNPLA2 gene

Hasan O. Akman; Guido Davidzon; Kurenai Tanji; Emma Jane MacDermott; Louann Larsen; Mercy M. Davidson; Ronald G. Haller; Lidia S. Szczepaniak; Thomas J. A. Lehman; Michio Hirano; Salvatore DiMauro

An 18-year-old girl referred to a rheumatologist with malar flush and Gottran papules was found to have a markedly elevated serum CK. She was a good student and an avid ballet dancer. A muscle biopsy showed massive triglyceride storage, which was also found in peripheral blood granulocytes (Jordan anomaly) and cultured skin fibroblasts. Assessment using computerized dynamometry and cycle ergometry showed normal strength and muscle energetics, but proton spectroscopy revealed severe triglyceride accumulation in both skeletal and cardiac muscle. Sequencing of PNPLA2, the gene responsible for neutral lipid storage disease with myopathy (NLSDM), revealed a retrotransposal insertion of about 1.8kb in exon 3 that abrogates transcription of PNPLA2. The sequences of CGI-58, the gene responsible for Chanarin-Dorfman syndrome (CDS), another multisystem triglyceride storage disease, and of two genes encoding lipid droplets-associated proteins, perilipin A and adipophilin, were normal. This case shows that NLSDM can be a transposon-associated disease and that massive lipid storage in muscle can present as asymptomatic hyperCKemia.


JAMA Neurology | 2008

Juvenile Alpers Disease

Esko Wiltshire; Guido Davidzon; Salvatore DiMauro; Hasan O. Akman; Lynette G. Sadleir; Lindsay Haas; Jane Zuccollo; Alison McEwen; David R. Thorburn

BACKGROUND Alpers disease is commonly associated with polymerase gamma deficiency and usually affects infants or young children. OBJECTIVE To report a juvenile case of Alpers disease due to mutations in the polymerase gamma gene (POLG1). DESIGN Clinical, pathologic, biochemical, and molecular analysis. SETTING Tertiary care university hospital and academic institutions. PATIENT A 17-year-old adolescent girl with intractable epilepsy and liver disease. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Clinical course and pathologic, biochemical, and molecular features. RESULTS Biochemical and pathologic evidence suggested a respiratory chain defect, which was confirmed by enzyme analysis of the liver. Mutational analysis of POLG1 showed 2 novel mutations: T851A and R1047W. CONCLUSION The POLG1 mutations can cause juvenile and childhood Alpers disease.

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Salvatore DiMauro

Columbia University Medical Center

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Michio Hirano

Columbia University Medical Center

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Valentina Emmanuele

Columbia University Medical Center

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Catarina M. Quinzii

Columbia University Medical Center

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Beatriz Garcia-Diaz

Columbia University Medical Center

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Saba Tadesse

Columbia University Medical Center

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Caterina Garone

Columbia University Medical Center

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Ali Naini

Columbia University Medical Center

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Beatriz Dorado

Columbia University Medical Center

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