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Featured researches published by Irenaeus F.M. de Coo.


Annals of Neurology | 2000

An out-of-frame cytochrome b gene deletion from a patient with parkinsonism is associated with impaired complex III assembly and an increase in free radical production

Michele Rana; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Francisca Diaz; H.J.M. Smeets; Carlos T. Moraes

We have isolated transmitochondrial cybrids containing a mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b 4–base pair deletion previously identified in a patient with parkinsonism. This presentation is in contrast to that of most patients with cytochrome b mutations, who present with exercise intolerance. Clones containing different levels of the cytochrome b 4–base pair deletion showed that high levels of the mutation were associated with a respiratory deficiency and a specific complex III defect. Newly synthesized full‐length cytochrome b was undetectable by metabolic labeling of mutant cells, and these cells were unable to grow in media that restricts proliferation of cells with defective oxidative phosphorylation. Steady state levels of some subunits previously found to be in close association with cytochrome b by crystallography and biochemical analysis (ie, Rieske [2Fe‐2S] protein and subunit VI) were drastically reduced in clones containing high levels of the mutation, whereas the reduction in the core‐1 subunit was milder. The absence of cytochrome b and complex III activity was also associated with increased hydrogen peroxide production. These findings, together with the variable tissue distribution of pathogenic mitochondrial DNA molecules, provide clues to the heterogeneous phenotypes associated with mitochondrial DNA mutations and establish a link between different forms of parkinsonism and oxidative phosphorylation defects. Ann Neurol 2000;48:774–781


Brain | 2011

Riboflavin-responsive oxidative phosphorylation complex I deficiency caused by defective ACAD9: new function for an old gene

Mike Gerards; Bianca van den Bosch; Katharina Danhauser; Valérie Serre; Michel van Weeghel; Gerry A. F. Nicolaes; Wim Sluiter; Kees Schoonderwoerd; H.R. Scholte; Holger Prokisch; Agnès Rötig; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; H.J.M. Smeets

Mitochondrial complex I deficiency is the most common oxidative phosphorylation defect. Mutations have been detected in mitochondrial and nuclear genes, but the genetics of many patients remain unresolved and new genes are probably involved. In a consanguineous family, patients presented easy fatigability, exercise intolerance and lactic acidosis in blood from early childhood. In muscle, subsarcolemmal mitochondrial proliferation and a severe complex I deficiency were observed. Exercise intolerance and complex I activity was improved by a supplement of riboflavin at high dosage. Homozygosity mapping revealed a candidate region on chromosome three containing six mitochondria-related genes. Four genes were screened for mutations and a homozygous substitution was identified in ACAD9 (c.1594 C>T), changing the highly conserved arginine-532 into tryptophan. This mutation was absent in 188 ethnically matched controls. Protein modelling suggested a functional effect due to the loss of a stabilizing hydrogen bond in an α-helix and a local flexibility change. To test whether the ACAD9 mutation caused the complex I deficiency, we transduced fibroblasts of patients with wild-type and mutant ACAD9. Wild-type, but not mutant, ACAD9 restored complex I activity. An unrelated patient with the same phenotype was compound heterozygous for c.380 G>A and c.1405 C>T, changing arginine-127 into glutamine and arginine-469 into tryptophan, respectively. These amino acids were highly conserved and the substitutions were not present in controls, making them very probably pathogenic. Our data support a new function for ACAD9 in complex I function, making this gene an important new candidate for patients with complex I deficiency, which could be improved by riboflavin treatment.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Mutations in DARS Cause Hypomyelination with Brain Stem and Spinal Cord Involvement and Leg Spasticity

Ryan J. Taft; Adeline Vanderver; Richard J. Leventer; Stephen Damiani; Cas Simons; Sean M. Grimmond; David Miller; Johanna L. Schmidt; Paul J. Lockhart; Kate Pope; Kelin Ru; Joanna Crawford; Tena Rosser; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Monica Juneja; Ishwar C. Verma; Prab Prabhakar; Susan Blaser; Julian Raiman; Petra J. W. Pouwels; Marianna R. Bevova; Truus E. M. Abbink; Marjo S. van der Knaap; Nicole I. Wolf

Inherited white-matter disorders are a broad class of diseases for which treatment and classification are both challenging. Indeed, nearly half of the children presenting with a leukoencephalopathy remain without a specific diagnosis. Here, we report on the application of high-throughput genome and exome sequencing to a cohort of ten individuals with a leukoencephalopathy of unknown etiology and clinically characterized by hypomyelination with brain stem and spinal cord involvement and leg spasticity (HBSL), as well as the identification of compound-heterozygous and homozygous mutations in cytoplasmic aspartyl-tRNA synthetase (DARS). These mutations cause nonsynonymous changes to seven highly conserved amino acids, five of which are unchanged between yeast and man, in the DARS C-terminal lobe adjacent to, or within, the active-site pocket. Intriguingly, HBSL bears a striking resemblance to leukoencephalopathy with brain stem and spinal cord involvement and elevated lactate (LBSL), which is caused by mutations in the mitochondria-specific DARS2, suggesting that these two diseases might share a common underlying molecular pathology. These findings add to the growing body of evidence that mutations in tRNA synthetases can cause a broad range of neurologic disorders.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Mutation in the AP4M1 Gene Provides a Model for Neuroaxonal Injury in Cerebral Palsy

Annemieke J. M. H. Verkerk; Rachel Schot; Belinda Dumee; Karlijn Schellekens; Sigrid Swagemakers; Aida M. Bertoli-Avella; Maarten H. Lequin; Jeroen Dudink; Paul Govaert; A.L. van Zwol; Jennifer Hirst; Marja W. Wessels; Coriene E. Catsman-Berrevoets; Frans W. Verheijen; Esther de Graaff; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Johan M. Kros; Rob Willemsen; Patrick J. Willems; Peter J. van der Spek; Grazia M.S. Mancini

Cerebral palsy due to perinatal injury to cerebral white matter is usually not caused by genetic mutations, but by ischemia and/or inflammation. Here, we describe an autosomal-recessive type of tetraplegic cerebral palsy with mental retardation, reduction of cerebral white matter, and atrophy of the cerebellum in an inbred sibship. The phenotype was recorded and evolution followed for over 20 years. Brain lesions were studied by diffusion tensor MR tractography. Homozygosity mapping with SNPs was performed for identification of the chromosomal locus for the disease. In the 14 Mb candidate region on chromosome 7q22, RNA expression profiling was used for selecting among the 203 genes in the area. In postmortem brain tissue available from one patient, histology and immunohistochemistry were performed. Disease course and imaging were mostly reminiscent of hypoxic-ischemic tetraplegic cerebral palsy, with neuroaxonal degeneration and white matter loss. In all five patients, a donor splice site pathogenic mutation in intron 14 of the AP4M1 gene (c.1137+1G-->T), was identified. AP4M1, encoding for the mu subunit of the adaptor protein complex-4, is involved in intracellular trafficking of glutamate receptors. Aberrant GluRdelta2 glutamate receptor localization and dendritic spine morphology were observed in the postmortem brain specimen. This disease entity, which we refer to as congenital spastic tetraplegia (CST), is therefore a genetic model for congenital cerebral palsy with evidence for neuroaxonal damage and glutamate receptor abnormality, mimicking perinatally acquired hypoxic-ischemic white matter injury.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2016

Human USP18 deficiency underlies type 1 interferonopathy leading to severe pseudo-TORCH syndrome

Marije Meuwissen; Rachel Schot; Sofija Buta; Grétel Oudesluijs; Sigrid Tinschert; Scott D. Speer; Zhi Li; Leontine van Unen; Daphne Heijsman; Tobias Goldmann; Maarten H. Lequin; Johan M. Kros; Wendy Stam; Mark Hermann; Rob Willemsen; Rutger W. W. Brouwer; Wilfred van IJcken; Marta Martin-Fernandez; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Jeroen Dudink; Femke A.T. de Vries; Aida Bertoli Avella; Marco Prinz; Yanick J. Crow; Frans W. Verheijen; Sandra Pellegrini; Dusan Bogunovic; Grazia M.S. Mancini

Meuwissen and collaborators define a novel genetic cause of pseudo-TORCH syndrome, which resembles the sequelae of congenital infection and represents a novel type I interferonopathy.


Brain | 2015

Allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation for mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy

Joerg Halter; W. Michael; Michael Schüpbach; Hanna Mandel; Carlo Casali; Kim H. Orchard; Matthew Collin; David Valcárcel; Attilio Rovelli; Massimiliano Filosto; Maria Teresa Dotti; Giuseppe Marotta; Guillem Pintos; Pere Barba; Anna Accarino; Christelle Ferrà; Isabel Illa; Yves Beguin; Jaap A. Bakker; Jaap Jan Boelens; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Keith Fay; Carolyn M. Sue; David Nachbaur; Heinz Zoller; Claudia Sobreira; Belinda Pinto Simões; Simon Hammans; David G. Savage; Ramon Martí

Haematopoietic stem cell transplantation has been proposed as treatment for mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy, a rare fatal autosomal recessive disease due to TYMP mutations that result in thymidine phosphorylase deficiency. We conducted a retrospective analysis of all known patients suffering from mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy who underwent allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation between 2005 and 2011. Twenty-four patients, 11 males and 13 females, median age 25 years (range 10-41 years) treated with haematopoietic stem cell transplantation from related (n = 9) or unrelated donors (n = 15) in 15 institutions worldwide were analysed for outcome and its associated factors. Overall, 9 of 24 patients (37.5%) were alive at last follow-up with a median follow-up of these surviving patients of 1430 days. Deaths were attributed to transplant in nine (including two after a second transplant due to graft failure), and to mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy in six patients. Thymidine phosphorylase activity rose from undetectable to normal levels (median 697 nmol/h/mg protein, range 262-1285) in all survivors. Seven patients (29%) who were engrafted and living more than 2 years after transplantation, showed improvement of body mass index, gastrointestinal manifestations, and peripheral neuropathy. Univariate statistical analysis demonstrated that survival was associated with two defined pre-transplant characteristics: human leukocyte antigen match (10/10 versus <10/10) and disease characteristics (liver disease, history of gastrointestinal pseudo-obstruction or both). Allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation can restore thymidine phosphorylase enzyme function in patients with mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy and improve clinical manifestations of mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy in the long term. Allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation should be considered for selected patients with an optimal donor.


Epilepsia | 2010

The EEG response to pyridoxine-IV neither identifies nor excludes pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy

Levinus A. Bok; Natasha Maurits; M.A.A.P. Willemsen; Cornelis Jakobs; Laura K. Teune; Bwee Tien Poll-The; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Mona C. Toet; Eveline E. O. Hagebeuk; Oebele F. Brouwer; Johannes H. van der Hoeven; Deborah A. Sival

Purpose:  Pyridoxine‐dependent epilepsy (PDE) is characterized by therapy‐resistant seizures (TRS) responding to intravenous (IV) pyridoxine. PDE can be identified by increased urinary alpha‐aminoadipic semialdehyde (α‐AASA) concentrations and mutations in the ALDH7A1 (antiquitin) gene. Prompt recognition of PDE is important for treatment and prognosis of seizures. We aimed to determine whether immediate electroencephalography (EEG) alterations by pyridoxine‐IV can identify PDE in neonates with TRS.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Compound heterozygous or homozygous truncating MYBPC3 mutations cause lethal cardiomyopathy with features of noncompaction and septal defects

Marja W. Wessels; Johanna C. Herkert; Ingrid M.E. Frohn-Mulder; Michiel Dalinghaus; Arthur van den Wijngaard; Ronald R. de Krijger; Michelle Michels; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Yvonne M. Hoedemaekers; Dennis Dooijes

Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is usually caused by autosomal dominant pathogenic mutations in genes encoding sarcomeric or sarcomere-associated cardiac muscle proteins. The disease mainly affects adults, although young children with severe HCM have also been reported. We describe four unrelated neonates with lethal cardiomyopathy, and performed molecular studies to identify the genetic defect. We also present a literature overview of reported patients with compound heterozygous or homozygous pathogenic MYBPC3 mutations and describe their clinical characteristics. All four children presented with feeding difficulties, failure to thrive, and dyspnea. They died from cardiac failure before age 13 weeks. Features of left ventricular noncompaction were diagnosed in three patients. In the fourth, hypertrabeculation was not a clear feature, but could not be excluded. All of them had septal defects. Two patients were compound heterozygotes for the pathogenic c.2373dup p.(Trp792fs) and c.2827C>T p.(Arg943*) mutations, and two were homozygous for the c.2373dup and c.2827C>T mutations. All patients with biallelic truncating pathogenic mutations in MYBPC3 reported so far (n=21) were diagnosed with severe cardiomyopathy and/or died within the first few months of life. In 62% (13/21), septal defects or a patent ductus arteriosus accompanied cardiomyopathy. In contrast to heterozygous pathogenic mutations, homozygous or compound heterozygous truncating pathogenic MYBPC3 mutations cause severe neonatal cardiomyopathy with features of left ventricular noncompaction and septal defects in approximately 60% of patients.


Clinical Research in Cardiology | 2011

Combined cardiological and neurological abnormalities due to filamin A gene mutation

Marie Claire Y. de Wit; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Maarten H. Lequin; Dicky Halley; Jolien W. Roos-Hesselink; Grazia M.S. Mancini

BackgroundCardiac defects can be the presenting symptom in patients with mutations in the X-linked gene FLNA. Dysfunction of this gene is associated with cardiac abnormalities, especially in the left ventricular outflow tract, but can also cause a congenital malformation of the cerebral cortex. We noticed that some patients diagnosed at the neurogenetics clinic had first presented to a cardiologist, suggesting that earlier recognition may be possible if the diagnosis is suspected.Methods and resultsFrom the Erasmus MC cerebral malformations database 24 patients were identified with cerebral bilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia (PNH) without other cerebral cortical malformations. In six of these patients, a pathogenic mutation in FLNA was present. In five a cardiac defect was also found in the outflow tract. Four had presented to a cardiologist before the cerebral abnormalities were diagnosed.ConclusionsThe cardiological phenotype typically consists of aortic or mitral regurgitation, coarctation of the aorta or other left-sided cardiac malformations. Most patients in this category will not have a FLNA mutation, but the presence of neurological complaints, hyperlaxity of the skin or joints and/or a family history with similar cardiac or neurological problems in a possibly X-linked pattern may alert the clinician to the possibility of a FLNA mutation.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2014

Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy with late disease onset: clinical and molecular characteristics of 20 patients

Konstantin Dimitriadis; Miriam Leonhardt; Patrick Yu-Wai-Man; Matthew Anthony Kirkman; Alex Korsten; Irenaeus F.M. de Coo; Patrick F. Chinnery; Thomas Klopstock

BackgroundLeber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrial disease that typically causes bilateral blindness in young men. Here we describe the clinical and molecular characteristics of 20 patients with disease onset after the age of 50 years (late onset-LHON).MethodsFrom a cohort of 251 affected and 277 unaffected LHON carriers, we identified 20 patients with onset of visual loss after the age of 50 years. Using structured questionnaires, data including basic demographic details, age of onset, progression of visual loss and severity as well as exposure to possible environmental triggers including alcohol, smoking and illicit drugs were retrospectively collected. Groups were compared using the Mann–Whitney-U-Test for two independent groups of sampled data.ResultsThe proportion of late onset-LHON in our cohort was 8% (20 patients, 15 males, 5 females). The mtDNA mutations m.11778G > A and m.3460G > A were found in 16 and 4 patients, respectively. Among 89 asymptomatic carriers above the age of 50 years (28 males, 61 females), the mtDNA mutations m.11778G > A, m.3460G > A and m.14484 T > C were found in 60, 12 and 17 carriers, respectively. Late onset-LHON patients had significantly higher mean cumulative tobacco and alcohol consumption compared with unaffected carriers. However, there was no significant difference between late onset- and typical LHON patients with regard to daily tobacco and weekly alcohol consumption before disease onset.ConclusionAs already shown for typical LHON, alcohol consumption and smoking are important trigger factors also for the late manifestation. LHON should be considered in the differential diagnosis of subacute blindness even in older patients.

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Grazia M.S. Mancini

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Rachel Schot

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Hubert J.M. Smeets

Maastricht University Medical Centre

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Kees Schoonderwoerd

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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