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Dive into the research topics where Helen Roper is active.

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Featured researches published by Helen Roper.


Annals of Neurology | 2008

De novo LMNA mutations cause a new form of congenital muscular dystrophy

Susana Quijano-Roy; Blaise Mbieleu; Carsten G. Bönnemann; Pierre-Yves Jeannet; J. Colomer; Nigel F. Clarke; Jean‐Marie Cuisset; Helen Roper; Linda De Meirleir; Adele D'Amico; Rabah Ben Yaou; A. Nascimento; Annie Barois; Laurence Demay; Enrico Bertini; Ana Ferreiro; C. Sewry; Norma B. Romero; Monique M. Ryan; Francesco Muntoni; Pascale Guicheney; Pascale Richard; Gisèle Bonne; Brigitte Estournet

To describe a new entity of congenital muscular dystrophies caused by de novo LMNA mutations.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Loss-of-function mutations in MICU1 cause a brain and muscle disorder linked to primary alterations in mitochondrial calcium signaling

Clare V. Logan; Gyorgy Szabadkai; Jenny A. Sharpe; David A. Parry; Silvia Torelli; Anne-Marie Childs; Marjolein Kriek; Rahul Phadke; Colin A. Johnson; Nicola Roberts; David T. Bonthron; Karen A. Pysden; Tamieka Whyte; Iulia Munteanu; A. Reghan Foley; Gabrielle Wheway; Katarzyna Szymanska; Subaashini Natarajan; Zakia Abdelhamed; J.E. Morgan; Helen Roper; Gijs W.E. Santen; Erik H. Niks; W. Ludo van der Pol; Dick Lindhout; Anna Raffaello; Diego De Stefani; Johan T. den Dunnen; Yu Sun; Ieke B. Ginjaar

Mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake has key roles in cell life and death. Physiological Ca2+ signaling regulates aerobic metabolism, whereas pathological Ca2+ overload triggers cell death. Mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake is mediated by the Ca2+ uniporter complex in the inner mitochondrial membrane, which comprises MCU, a Ca2+-selective ion channel, and its regulator, MICU1. Here we report mutations of MICU1 in individuals with a disease phenotype characterized by proximal myopathy, learning difficulties and a progressive extrapyramidal movement disorder. In fibroblasts from subjects with MICU1 mutations, agonist-induced mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake at low cytosolic Ca2+ concentrations was increased, and cytosolic Ca2+ signals were reduced. Although resting mitochondrial membrane potential was unchanged in MICU1-deficient cells, the mitochondrial network was severely fragmented. Whereas the pathophysiology of muscular dystrophy and the core myopathies involves abnormal mitochondrial Ca2+ handling, the phenotype associated with MICU1 deficiency is caused by a primary defect in mitochondrial Ca2+ signaling, demonstrating the crucial role of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake in humans.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2002

Fracture prevalence in Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Denise G M McDonald; Maria Kinali; Andrew C Gallagher; Eugenio Mercuri; Francesco Muntoni; Helen Roper; Philip Jardine; David Hilton Jones; Mike Pike

The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence, circumstances, and outcome of fractures in males with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) attending neuromuscular clinics. Three hundred and seventy-eight males (median age 12 years, range 1 to 25 years) attending four neuromuscular centres were studied by case-note review supplemented by GP letter or by interview at the time of clinic attendance. Seventy-nine (20.9%) of these patients had experienced fractures. Forty-one percent of fractures were in patients aged 8 to 11 years and 48% in independently ambulant patients. Falling was the most common mechanism of fracture. Upper-limb fractures were most common in males using knee-ankle-foot orthoses (65%) while lower-limb fractures predominated in independently mobile and wheelchair dependent males (54% and 68% respectively). Twenty percent of ambulant males and 27% of those using orthoses lost mobility permanently as a result of the fracture. In a substantial proportion of males, the occurrence of a fracture had a significant impact on subsequent mobility.


Neurology | 2002

Autosomal recessive inheritance of RYR1 mutations in a congenital myopathy with cores

Heinz Jungbluth; Clemens R. Müller; B. Halliger-Keller; Martin Brockington; Susan C. Brown; L. Feng; Arijit Chattopadhyay; E. Mercuri; Adnan Y. Manzur; A. Ferreiro; Nigel G. Laing; Mark R. Davis; Helen Roper; Victor Dubowitz; Graeme M. Bydder; C. Sewry; Francesco Muntoni

Abstract—Central core disease (CCD) is a congenital myopathy due to dominant mutations in the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor gene (RYR1). The authors report three patients from two consanguineous families with symptoms of a congenital myopathy, cores on muscle biopsy, and confirmed linkage to the RYR1 locus. Molecular genetic studies in one family identified a V4849I homozygous missense mutation in the RYR1 gene. This report suggests a congenital myopathy associated with recessive RYR1 mutations.


Brain Pathology | 2009

A comparative study of α-dystroglycan glycosylation in dystroglycanopathies suggests that the hypoglycosylation of α-dystroglycan does not consistently correlate with clinical severity

Cecilia Jimenez-Mallebrera; Silvia Torelli; L. Feng; Jihee Kim; Caroline Godfrey; Emma Clement; Rachael Mein; Stephen Abbs; Susan C. Brown; Kevin P. Campbell; Stephan Kröger; Beril Talim; Haluk Topaloglu; R. Quinlivan; Helen Roper; Anne Marie Childs; Maria Kinali; C. Sewry; Francesco Muntoni

Hypoglycosylation of α‐dystroglycan underpins a subgroup of muscular dystrophies ranging from congenital onset of weakness, severe brain malformations and death in the perinatal period to mild weakness in adulthood without brain involvement. Mutations in six genes have been identified in a proportion of patients. POMT1, POMT2 and POMGnT1 encode for glycosyltransferases involved in the mannosylation of α‐dystroglycan but the function of fukutin, FKRP and LARGE is less clear. The pathological hallmark is reduced immunolabeling of skeletal muscle with antibodies recognizing glycosylated epitopes on α‐dystroglycan. If the common pathway of these conditions is the hypoglycosyation of α‐dystroglycan, one would expect a correlation between clinical severity and the extent of hypoglycosylation. By studying 24 patients with mutations in these genes, we found a good correlation between reduced α‐dystroglycan staining and clinical course in patients with mutations in POMT1, POMT2 and POMGnT1. However, this was not always the case in patients with defects in fukutin and FKRP, as we identified patients with mild limb–girdle phenotypes without brain involvement with profound depletion of α‐dystroglycan. These data indicate that it is not always possible to correlate clinical course and α‐dystroglycan labeling and suggest that there might be differences in α‐dystroglycan processing in these disorders.


Human Mutation | 2012

Clinical and genetic findings in a large cohort of patients with ryanodine receptor 1 gene-associated myopathies.

Andrea Klein; Suzanne Lillis; Iulia Munteanu; M. Scoto; Haiyan Zhou; R. Quinlivan; Volker Straub; Adnan Y. Manzur; Helen Roper; Pierre-Yves Jeannet; Wojtek Rakowicz; David Hilton Jones; Uffe Birk Jensen; Elizabeth Wraige; Natalie Trump; Ulrike Schara; Hanns Lochmüller; Anna Sarkozy; Helen Kingston; Fiona Norwood; Maxwell S Damian; Janbernd Kirschner; Cheryl Longman; Mark Roberts; Michaela Auer-Grumbach; Imelda Hughes; Kate Bushby; C. Sewry; S. Robb; Stephen Abbs

Ryanodine receptor 1 (RYR1) mutations are a common cause of congenital myopathies associated with both dominant and recessive inheritance. Histopathological findings frequently feature central cores or multi‐minicores, more rarely, type 1 predominance/uniformity, fiber‐type disproportion, increased internal nucleation, and fatty and connective tissue. We describe 71 families, 35 associated with dominant RYR1 mutations and 36 with recessive inheritance. Five of the dominant mutations and 35 of the 55 recessive mutations have not been previously reported. Dominant mutations, typically missense, were frequently located in recognized mutational hotspot regions, while recessive mutations were distributed throughout the entire coding sequence. Recessive mutations included nonsense and splice mutations expected to result in reduced RyR1 protein. There was wide clinical variability. As a group, dominant mutations were associated with milder phenotypes; patients with recessive inheritance had earlier onset, more weakness, and functional limitations. Extraocular and bulbar muscle involvement was almost exclusively observed in the recessive group. In conclusion, our study reports a large number of novel RYR1 mutations and indicates that recessive variants are at least as frequent as the dominant ones. Assigning pathogenicity to novel mutations is often difficult, and interpretation of genetic results in the context of clinical, histological, and muscle magnetic resonance imaging findings is essential. Hum Mutat 33:981–988, 2012.


Brain | 2013

ISPD gene mutations are a common cause of congenital and limb-girdle muscular dystrophies

Sebahattin Cirak; Aileen Reghan Foley; Ralf Herrmann; Tobias Willer; Shu Ching Yau; Elizabeth Stevens; Silvia Torelli; Lina Brodd; Alisa Kamynina; Petr Vondráček; Helen Roper; Cheryl Longman; Rudolf Korinthenberg; Gianni Marrosu; Peter Nürnberg; Daniel E. Michele; Vincent Plagnol; Steven A. Moore; C. Sewry; Kevin P. Campbell; Thomas Voit; Francesco Muntoni

Dystroglycanopathies are a clinically and genetically diverse group of recessively inherited conditions ranging from the most severe of the congenital muscular dystrophies, Walker–Warburg syndrome, to mild forms of adult-onset limb-girdle muscular dystrophy. Their hallmark is a reduction in the functional glycosylation of α-dystroglycan, which can be detected in muscle biopsies. An important part of this glycosylation is a unique O-mannosylation, essential for the interaction of α-dystroglycan with extracellular matrix proteins such as laminin-α2. Mutations in eight genes coding for proteins in the glycosylation pathway are responsible for ∼50% of dystroglycanopathy cases. Despite multiple efforts using traditional positional cloning, the causative genes for unsolved dystroglycanopathy cases have escaped discovery for several years. In a recent collaborative study, we discovered that loss-of-function recessive mutations in a novel gene, called isoprenoid synthase domain containing (ISPD), are a relatively common cause of Walker–Warburg syndrome. In this article, we report the involvement of the ISPD gene in milder dystroglycanopathy phenotypes ranging from congenital muscular dystrophy to limb-girdle muscular dystrophy and identified allelic ISPD variants in nine cases belonging to seven families. In two ambulant cases, there was evidence of structural brain involvement, whereas in seven, the clinical manifestation was restricted to a dystrophic skeletal muscle phenotype. Although the function of ISPD in mammals is not yet known, mutations in this gene clearly lead to a reduction in the functional glycosylation of α-dystroglycan, which not only causes the severe Walker–Warburg syndrome but is also a common cause of the milder forms of dystroglycanopathy.


Human Mutation | 2013

MTO1 Mutations are Associated with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy and Lactic Acidosis and Cause Respiratory Chain Deficiency in Humans and Yeast

Enrico Baruffini; Cristina Dallabona; Federica Invernizzi; John W. Yarham; Laura Melchionda; Emma L. Blakely; Eleonora Lamantea; Claudia Donnini; Saikat Santra; Suresh Vijayaraghavan; Helen Roper; Alberto Burlina; Robert Kopajtich; Anett Walther; Tim M. Strom; Tobias B. Haack; Holger Prokisch; Robert W. Taylor; Ileana Ferrero; Massimo Zeviani; Daniele Ghezzi

We report three families presenting with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and multiple defects of mitochondrial respiratory chain (MRC) activities. By direct sequencing of the candidate gene MTO1, encoding the mitochondrial‐tRNA modifier 1, or whole exome sequencing analysis, we identified novel missense mutations. All MTO1 mutations were predicted to be deleterious on MTO1 function. Their pathogenic role was experimentally validated in a recombinant yeast model, by assessing oxidative growth, respiratory activity, mitochondrial protein synthesis, and complex IV activity. In one case, we also demonstrated that expression of wt MTO1 could rescue the respiratory defect in mutant fibroblasts. The severity of the yeast respiratory phenotypes partly correlated with the different clinical presentations observed in MTO1 mutant patients, although the clinical outcome was highly variable in patients with the same mutation and seemed also to depend on timely start of pharmacological treatment, centered on the control of lactic acidosis by dichloroacetate. Our results indicate that MTO1 mutations are commonly associated with a presentation of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and MRC deficiency, and that ad hoc recombinant yeast models represent a useful system to test the pathogenic potential of uncommon variants, and provide insight into their effects on the expression of a biochemical phenotype.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2010

Implementation of “the consensus statement for the standard of care in spinal muscular atrophy” when applied to infants with severe type 1 SMA in the UK

Helen Roper; R. Quinlivan

The diagnosis of severe type 1 spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) should be confirmed by an expert in paediatric neuromuscular disease. Invasive investigations are not usually necessary as the diagnosis is confirmed with a DNA blood test. Care thereafter should be delivered close to home by a multidisciplinary team with a clear point of access during times of crisis. The aim of care is to keep the infant as well as possible with the best possible quality of life. There are many forms of active respiratory management which can help maintain the well-being of infants with severe type 1 SMA. These include approaches to reduce the risk of infection and aspiration and appropriate techniques of airway and secretion clearance. The use of non-invasive ventilation may be helpful for some, usually less-severely affected infants, particularly to assist extubation. Long-term invasive ventilation is not recommended. Active assessment of feeding and nutrition is vital, and most babies can be managed well with nasogastric feeds. Gastrostomy may be considered for some infants, but the benefits should be carefully weighed against the risks. It is vital to share information and formulate an anticipatory care plan with the infants parents from the point of diagnosis.


Neurology | 2011

SEPN1-related myopathies: clinical course in a large cohort of patients.

M. Scoto; Sebahattin Cirak; Rachael Mein; L. Feng; A. Manzur; S. Robb; Anne-Marie Childs; R. Quinlivan; Helen Roper; David Hilton Jones; Cheryl Longman; G. Chow; Marika Pane; M. Main; Michael G. Hanna; K. Bushby; C. Sewry; Steve Abbs; Eugenio Mercuri; Francesco Muntoni

Objective: To assess the clinical course and genotype–phenotype correlations in patients with selenoprotein-related myopathy (SEPN1-RM) due to selenoprotein N1 gene (SEPN1) mutations for a retrospective cross-sectional study. Methods: Forty-one patients aged 1–60 years were included. Clinical data including scoliosis, respiratory function, and growth measurements were collected by case note review. Results: Mean age at onset was 2.7 years, ranging from birth to the second decade of life. All but 2 remained independently ambulant: one lost ambulation at age 5 years and another in his late 50s. The mean age of starting nocturnal noninvasive ventilation (NIV) was 13.9 years. One child required full-time NIV at the age of 1 year while in 2 cases NIV was started at 33 years. Two patients died from respiratory failure at the age of 10 and 22 years, respectively. The mean age at scoliosis onset was 10 years, in most cases preceded by rigidity of the spine. Fourteen patients had successful spinal surgery (mean age 13.9 years). Twenty-one were underweight; however, overt feeding difficulties were not a feature. Conclusions: This study describes the largest population affected by SEPN1-RM reported so far. Our findings show that the spectrum of severity is wider than previously reported. Respiratory insufficiency generally develops by 14 years but may occur as early as in infancy or not until the fourth decade. Motor abilities remain essentially static over time even in patients with early presentation. Most adult patients remain ambulant and fully employed.

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Francesco Muntoni

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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C. Sewry

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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R. Quinlivan

University College London

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Imelda Hughes

Boston Children's Hospital

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Adnan Y. Manzur

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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Stefan Spinty

Boston Children's Hospital

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Cheryl Longman

Southern General Hospital

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