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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer J. Johnston is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer J. Johnston.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

A Mosaic Activating Mutation in AKT1 Associated with the Proteus Syndrome

Marjorie J. Lindhurst; Julie C. Sapp; Jamie K. Teer; Jennifer J. Johnston; Erin M. Finn; Kathryn F. Peters; Joyce T. Turner; Jennifer L. Cannons; David P. Bick; Laurel Blakemore; Catherine Blumhorst; Knut Brockmann; Peter Calder; Natasha Cherman; Matthew A. Deardorff; David B. Everman; Gretchen Golas; Robert M. Greenstein; B. Maya Kato; Kim M. Keppler-Noreuil; Sergei A. Kuznetsov; Richard T. Miyamoto; Kurt Newman; David Ng; Kevin O'brien; Steven Rothenberg; Douglas J. Schwartzentruber; Virender Singhal; Roberto Tirabosco; Joseph Upton

BACKGROUND The Proteus syndrome is characterized by the overgrowth of skin, connective tissue, brain, and other tissues. It has been hypothesized that the syndrome is caused by somatic mosaicism for a mutation that is lethal in the nonmosaic state. METHODS We performed exome sequencing of DNA from biopsy samples obtained from patients with the Proteus syndrome and compared the resultant DNA sequences with those of unaffected tissues obtained from the same patients. We confirmed and extended an observed association, using a custom restriction-enzyme assay to analyze the DNA in 158 samples from 29 patients with the Proteus syndrome. We then assayed activation of the AKT protein in affected tissues, using phosphorylation-specific antibodies on Western blots. RESULTS Of 29 patients with the Proteus syndrome, 26 had a somatic activating mutation (c.49G→A, p.Glu17Lys) in the oncogene AKT1, encoding the AKT1 kinase, an enzyme known to mediate processes such as cell proliferation and apoptosis. Tissues and cell lines from patients with the Proteus syndrome harbored admixtures of mutant alleles that ranged from 1% to approximately 50%. Mutant cell lines showed greater AKT phosphorylation than did control cell lines. A pair of single-cell clones that were established from the same starting culture and differed with respect to their mutation status had different levels of AKT phosphorylation. CONCLUSIONS The Proteus syndrome is caused by a somatic activating mutation in AKT1, proving the hypothesis of somatic mosaicism and implicating activation of the PI3K-AKT pathway in the characteristic clinical findings of overgrowth and tumor susceptibility in this disorder. (Funded by the Intramural Research Program of the National Human Genome Research Institute.).


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

A Novel Nemaline Myopathy in the Amish Caused by a Mutation in Troponin T1

Jennifer J. Johnston; Richard I. Kelley; Thomas O. Crawford; D. Holmes Morton; Richa Agarwala; Thorsten Koch; Alejandro A. Schäffer; Clair A. Francomano; Leslie G. Biesecker

The nemaline myopathies are characterized by weakness and eosinophilic, rodlike (nemaline) inclusions in muscle fibers. Amish nemaline myopathy is a form of nemaline myopathy common among the Old Order Amish. In the first months of life, affected infants have tremors with hypotonia and mild contractures of the shoulders and hips. Progressive worsening of the proximal contractures, weakness, and a pectus carinatum deformity develop before the children die of respiratory insufficiency, usually in the second year. The disorder has an incidence of approximately 1 in 500 among the Amish, and it is inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern. Using a genealogy database, automated pedigree software, and linkage analysis of DNA samples from four sibships, we identified an approximately 2-cM interval on chromosome 19q13.4 that was homozygous in all affected individuals. The gene for the sarcomeric thin-filament protein, slow skeletal muscle troponin T (TNNT1), maps to this interval and was sequenced. We identified a stop codon in exon 11, predicted to truncate the protein at amino acid 179, which segregates with the disease. We conclude that Amish nemaline myopathy is a distinct, heritable, myopathic disorder caused by a mutation in TNNT1.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Secondary Variants in Individuals Undergoing Exome Sequencing: Screening of 572 Individuals Identifies High-Penetrance Mutations in Cancer-Susceptibility Genes

Jennifer J. Johnston; Wendy S. Rubinstein; Flavia M. Facio; David Ng; Larry N. Singh; Jamie K. Teer; James C. Mullikin; Leslie G. Biesecker

Genome- and exome-sequencing costs are continuing to fall, and many individuals are undergoing these assessments as research participants and patients. The issue of secondary (so-called incidental) findings in exome analysis is controversial, and data are needed on methods of detection and their frequency. We piloted secondary variant detection by analyzing exomes for mutations in cancer-susceptibility syndromes in subjects ascertained for atherosclerosis phenotypes. We performed exome sequencing on 572 ClinSeq participants, and in 37 genes, we interpreted variants that cause high-penetrance cancer syndromes by using an algorithm that filtered results on the basis of mutation type, quality, and frequency and that filtered mutation-database entries on the basis of defined categories of causation. We identified 454 sequence variants that differed from the human reference. Exclusions were made on the basis of sequence quality (26 variants) and high frequency in the cohort (77 variants) or dbSNP (17 variants), leaving 334 variants of potential clinical importance. These were further filtered on the basis of curation of literature reports. Seven participants, four of whom were of Ashkenazi Jewish descent and three of whom did not meet family-history-based referral criteria, had deleterious BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations. One participant had a deleterious SDHC mutation, which causes paragangliomas. Exome sequencing, coupled with multidisciplinary interpretation, detected clinically important mutations in cancer-susceptibility genes; four of such mutations were in individuals without a significant family history of disease. We conclude that secondary variants of high clinical importance will be detected at an appreciable frequency in exomes, and we suggest that priority be given to the development of more efficient modes of interpretation with trials in larger patient groups.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Using VAAST to identify an X-linked disorder resulting in lethality in male infants due to N-terminal acetyltransferase deficiency.

Alan F. Rope; Kai Wang; Rune Evjenth; Jinchuan Xing; Jennifer J. Johnston; Jeffrey Swensen; W. Evan Johnson; Barry Moore; Chad D. Huff; Lynne M. Bird; John C. Carey; John M. Opitz; Cathy A. Stevens; Tao Jiang; Christa Schank; Heidi D. Fain; Reid J. Robison; Brian Dalley; Steven S. Chin; Sarah T. South; Theodore J. Pysher; Lynn B. Jorde; Hakon Hakonarson; Johan R. Lillehaug; Leslie G. Biesecker; Mark Yandell; Thomas Arnesen; Gholson J. Lyon

We have identified two families with a previously undescribed lethal X-linked disorder of infancy; the disorder comprises a distinct combination of an aged appearance, craniofacial anomalies, hypotonia, global developmental delays, cryptorchidism, and cardiac arrhythmias. Using X chromosome exon sequencing and a recently developed probabilistic algorithm aimed at discovering disease-causing variants, we identified in one family a c.109T>C (p.Ser37Pro) variant in NAA10, a gene encoding the catalytic subunit of the major human N-terminal acetyltransferase (NAT). A parallel effort on a second unrelated family converged on the same variant. The absence of this variant in controls, the amino acid conservation of this region of the protein, the predicted disruptive change, and the co-occurrence in two unrelated families with the same rare disorder suggest that this is the pathogenic mutation. We confirmed this by demonstrating a significantly impaired biochemical activity of the mutant hNaa10p, and from this we conclude that a reduction in acetylation by hNaa10p causes this disease. Here we provide evidence of a human genetic disorder resulting from direct impairment of N-terminal acetylation, one of the most common protein modifications in humans.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1997

Mutation Characterization and Genotype-Phenotype Correlation in Barth Syndrome

Jennifer J. Johnston; Richard I. Kelley; Annette Feigenbaum; Gerald F. Cox; Geeta S. Iyer; Vicky L. Funanage; Roy Proujansky

Barth syndrome is an X-linked cardiomyopathy with neutropenia and 3-methylglutaconic aciduria. Recently, mutations in the G4.5 gene, located in Xq28, have been described in four probands with Barth syndrome. We have now evaluated 14 Barth syndrome pedigrees for mutations in G4.5 and have identified unique mutations in all, including four splice-site mutations, three deletions, one insertion, five missense mutations, and one nonsense mutation. Nine of the 14 mutations are predicted to significantly disrupt the protein products of G4.5. The occurrence of missense mutations in exons 3 and 8 suggests that these exons encode essential portions of the G4. 5 proteins, whose functions remain unknown. We found no correlation between the location or type of mutation and any of the clinical or laboratory abnormalities of Barth syndrome, which suggests that additional factors modify the expression of the Barth phenotype. The characterization of mutations of the G4.5 gene will be useful for carrier detection, genetic counseling, and the identification of patients with Barth syndrome who do not manifest all of the cardinal features of this disorder.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Performance of ACMG-AMP Variant-Interpretation Guidelines among Nine Laboratories in the Clinical Sequencing Exploratory Research Consortium

Laura M. Amendola; Gail P. Jarvik; Michael C. Leo; Heather M. McLaughlin; Yassmine Akkari; Michelle D. Amaral; Jonathan S. Berg; Sawona Biswas; Kevin M. Bowling; Laura K. Conlin; Greg M. Cooper; Michael O. Dorschner; Matthew C. Dulik; Arezou A. Ghazani; Rajarshi Ghosh; Robert C. Green; Ragan Hart; Carrie Horton; Jennifer J. Johnston; Matthew S. Lebo; Aleksandar Milosavljevic; Jeffrey Ou; Christine M. Pak; Ronak Y. Patel; Sumit Punj; Carolyn Sue Richards; Joseph Salama; Natasha T. Strande; Yaping Yang; Sharon E. Plon

Evaluating the pathogenicity of a variant is challenging given the plethora of types of genetic evidence that laboratories consider. Deciding how to weigh each type of evidence is difficult, and standards have been needed. In 2015, the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) and the Association for Molecular Pathology (AMP) published guidelines for the assessment of variants in genes associated with Mendelian diseases. Nine molecular diagnostic laboratories involved in the Clinical Sequencing Exploratory Research (CSER) consortium piloted these guidelines on 99 variants spanning all categories (pathogenic, likely pathogenic, uncertain significance, likely benign, and benign). Nine variants were distributed to all laboratories, and the remaining 90 were evaluated by three laboratories. The laboratories classified each variant by using both the laboratorys own method and the ACMG-AMP criteria. The agreement between the two methods used within laboratories was high (K-alpha = 0.91) with 79% concordance. However, there was only 34% concordance for either classification system across laboratories. After consensus discussions and detailed review of the ACMG-AMP criteria, concordance increased to 71%. Causes of initial discordance in ACMG-AMP classifications were identified, and recommendations on clarification and increased specification of the ACMG-AMP criteria were made. In summary, although an initial pilot of the ACMG-AMP guidelines did not lead to increased concordance in variant interpretation, comparing variant interpretations to identify differences and having a common framework to facilitate resolution of those differences were beneficial for improving agreement, allowing iterative movement toward increased reporting consistency for variants in genes associated with monogenic disease.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Massively Parallel Sequencing of Exons on the X Chromosome Identifies RBM10 as the Gene that Causes a Syndromic Form of Cleft Palate

Jennifer J. Johnston; Jamie K. Teer; Praveen F. Cherukuri; Nancy F. Hansen; Stacie K. Loftus; Karen Chong; James C. Mullikin; Leslie G. Biesecker

Micrognathia, glossoptosis, and cleft palate comprise one of the most common malformation sequences, Robin sequence. It is a component of the TARP syndrome, talipes equinovarus, atrial septal defect, Robin sequence, and persistent left superior vena cava. This disorder is X-linked and severe, with apparently 100% pre- or postnatal lethality in affected males. Here we characterize a second family with TARP syndrome, confirm linkage to Xp11.23-q13.3, perform massively parallel sequencing of X chromosome exons, filter the results via a number of criteria including the linkage region, use a unique algorithm to characterize sequence changes, and show that TARP syndrome is caused by mutations in the RBM10 gene, which encodes RNA binding motif 10. We further show that this previously uncharacterized gene is expressed in midgestation mouse embryos in the branchial arches and limbs, consistent with the human phenotype. We conclude that massively parallel sequencing is useful to characterize large candidate linkage intervals and that it can be used successfully to allow identification of disease-causing gene mutations.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

The Phenotype of a Germline Mutation in PIGA: The Gene Somatically Mutated in Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria

Jennifer J. Johnston; Andrea Gropman; Julie C. Sapp; Jamie K. Teer; Jodie M. Martin; Cyndi F. Liu; Xuan Yuan; Zhaohui Ye; Linzhao Cheng; Robert A. Brodsky; Leslie G. Biesecker

Phosphatidylinositol glycan class A (PIGA) is involved in the first step of glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) biosynthesis. Many proteins, including CD55 and CD59, are anchored to the cell by GPI. Loss of CD55 and CD59 on erythrocytes causes complement-mediated lysis in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH), a disease that manifests after clonal expansion of hematopoietic cells with somatic PIGA mutations. Although somatic PIGA mutations have been identified in many PNH patients, it has been proposed that germline mutations are lethal. We report a family with an X-linked lethal disorder involving cleft palate, neonatal seizures, contractures, central nervous system (CNS) structural malformations, and other anomalies. An X chromosome exome next-generation sequencing screen identified a single nonsense PIGA mutation, c.1234C>T, which predicts p.Arg412(∗). This variant segregated with disease and carrier status in the family, is similar to mutations known to cause PNH as a result of PIGA dysfunction, and was absent in 409 controls. PIGA-null mutations are thought to be embryonic lethal, suggesting that p.Arg412(∗) PIGA has residual function. Transfection of a mutant p.Arg412(∗) PIGA construct into PIGA-null cells showed partial restoration of GPI-anchored proteins. The genetic data show that the c.1234C>T (p.Arg412(∗)) mutation is present in an affected child, is linked to the affected chromosome in this family, is rare in the population, and results in reduced, but not absent, biosynthesis of GPI anchors. We conclude that c.1234C>T in PIGA results in the lethal X-linked phenotype recognized in the reported family.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Targeting the Intrinsically Disordered Structural Ensemble of α-Synuclein by Small Molecules as a Potential Therapeutic Strategy for Parkinson’s Disease

Gergely Toth; Shyra J. Gardai; Wagner Zago; Carlos W. Bertoncini; Nunilo Cremades; Susan L. Roy; Mitali A. Tambe; Jean-Christophe Rochet; Céline Galvagnion; Gaia Skibinski; Steven Finkbeiner; Michael P. Bova; Karin Regnstrom; San-San Chiou; Jennifer J. Johnston; Kari Callaway; John P. Anderson; Michael F. Jobling; Alexander K. Buell; Ted Yednock; Tuomas P. J. Knowles; Michele Vendruscolo; John Christodoulou; Christopher M. Dobson; Dale Schenk; Lisa McConlogue

The misfolding of intrinsically disordered proteins such as α-synuclein, tau and the Aβ peptide has been associated with many highly debilitating neurodegenerative syndromes including Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases. Therapeutic targeting of the monomeric state of such intrinsically disordered proteins by small molecules has, however, been a major challenge because of their heterogeneous conformational properties. We show here that a combination of computational and experimental techniques has led to the identification of a drug-like phenyl-sulfonamide compound (ELN484228), that targets α-synuclein, a key protein in Parkinson’s disease. We found that this compound has substantial biological activity in cellular models of α-synuclein-mediated dysfunction, including rescue of α-synuclein-induced disruption of vesicle trafficking and dopaminergic neuronal loss and neurite retraction most likely by reducing the amount of α-synuclein targeted to sites of vesicle mobilization such as the synapse in neurons or the site of bead engulfment in microglial cells. These results indicate that targeting α-synuclein by small molecules represents a promising approach to the development of therapeutic treatments of Parkinson’s disease and related conditions.


Human Mutation | 2010

Molecular Analysis Expands the Spectrum of Phenotypes Associated with GLI3 Mutations

Jennifer J. Johnston; Julie C. Sapp; Joyce T. Turner; David J. Amor; Salim Aftimos; Kyrieckos A. Aleck; Maureen Bocian; Joann Bodurtha; Gerald F. Cox; Cynthia J. Curry; Ruth Day; Dian Donnai; Michael Field; Ikuma Fujiwara; Michael T. Gabbett; Moran Gal; John M. Graham; Peter Hedera; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Joseph H. Hersh; Robert J. Hopkin; Hülya Kayserili; Alexa Kidd; Virginia E. Kimonis; Angela E. Lin; Sally Ann Lynch; Melissa Maisenbacher; Sahar Mansour; Julie McGaughran; Lakshmi Mehta

A range of phenotypes including Greig cephalopolysyndactyly and Pallister‐Hall syndromes (GCPS, PHS) are caused by pathogenic mutation of the GLI3 gene. To characterize the clinical variability of GLI3 mutations, we present a subset of a cohort of 174 probands referred for GLI3 analysis. Eighty‐one probands with typical GCPS or PHS were previously reported, and we report the remaining 93 probands here. This includes 19 probands (12 mutations) who fulfilled clinical criteria for GCPS or PHS, 48 probands (16 mutations) with features of GCPS or PHS but who did not meet the clinical criteria (sub‐GCPS and sub‐PHS), 21 probands (6 mutations) with features of PHS or GCPS and oral‐facial‐digital syndrome, and 5 probands (1 mutation) with nonsyndromic polydactyly. These data support previously identified genotype–phenotype correlations and demonstrate a more variable degree of severity than previously recognized. The finding of GLI3 mutations in patients with features of oral–facial–digital syndrome supports the observation that GLI3 interacts with cilia. We conclude that the phenotypic spectrum of GLI3 mutations is broader than that encompassed by the clinical diagnostic criteria, but the genotype–phenotype correlation persists. Individuals with features of either GCPS or PHS should be screened for mutations in GLI3 even if they do not fulfill clinical criteria. Hum Mutat 31:1142–1154, 2010.

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Leslie G. Biesecker

National Institutes of Health

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Julie C. Sapp

National Institutes of Health

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David Ng

National Institutes of Health

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Katie L. Lewis

National Institutes of Health

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Jamie K. Teer

University of South Florida

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Joyce T. Turner

National Institutes of Health

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James C. Mullikin

National Institutes of Health

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Lynne M. Bird

University of California

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