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Featured researches published by Jennifer Mueller.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Phenotypic spectrum and genotype–phenotype correlations of NRXN1 exon deletions

Christian P. Schaaf; Philip M. Boone; Srirangan Sampath; Charles A. Williams; Patricia I. Bader; Jennifer Mueller; Oleg A. Shchelochkov; Chester W. Brown; Heather P. Crawford; James A. Phalen; Nicole Tartaglia; Patricia Evans; William M. Campbell; Anne Chun-Hui Tsai; Lea Parsley; Stephanie W. Grayson; Angela Scheuerle; Carol D. Luzzi; Sandra K. Thomas; Patricia A. Eng; Sung Hae L Kang; Ankita Patel; Pawel Stankiewicz; Sau Wai Cheung

Copy number variants (CNVs) and intragenic rearrangements of the NRXN1 (neurexin 1) gene are associated with a wide spectrum of developmental and neuropsychiatric disorders, including intellectual disability, speech delay, autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), hypotonia and schizophrenia. We performed a detailed clinical and molecular characterization of 24 patients who underwent clinical microarray analysis and had intragenic deletions of NRXN1. Seventeen of these deletions involved exons of NRXN1, whereas seven deleted intronic sequences only. The patients with exonic deletions manifested developmental delay/intellectual disability (93%), infantile hypotonia (59%) and ASDs (56%). Congenital malformations and dysmorphic features appeared infrequently and inconsistently among this population of patients with NRXN1 deletions. The more C-terminal deletions, including those affecting the β isoform of neurexin 1, manifested increased head size and a high frequency of seizure disorder (88%) when compared with N-terminal deletions of NRXN1.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Recurrent Distal 7q11.23 Deletion Including HIP1 and YWHAG Identified in Patients with Intellectual Disabilities, Epilepsy, and Neurobehavioral Problems

Melissa B. Ramocki; Magdalena Bartnik; Przemyslaw Szafranski; Katarzyna E. Kolodziejska; Zhilian Xia; Jaclyn Bravo; G. Steve Miller; Diana L. Rodriguez; Charles A. Williams; Patricia I. Bader; Elżbieta Szczepanik; Mazurczak T; Dorota Antczak-Marach; James G. Coldwell; Cigdem I. Akman; Karen McAlmon; Melinda Cohen; James McGrath; Elizabeth Roeder; Jennifer Mueller; Sung-Hae L. Kang; Carlos A. Bacino; Ankita Patel; Ewa Bocian; Chad A. Shaw; Sau Wai Cheung; Tadeusz Mazurczak; Pawel Stankiewicz

We report 26 individuals from ten unrelated families who exhibit variable expression and/or incomplete penetrance of epilepsy, learning difficulties, intellectual disabilities, and/or neurobehavioral abnormalities as a result of a heterozygous microdeletion distally adjacent to the Williams-Beuren syndrome region on chromosome 7q11.23. In six families with a common recurrent ∼1.2 Mb deletion that includes the Huntingtin-interacting protein 1 (HIP1) and tyrosine 3-monooxygenase/tryptophan 5-monooxygenase activation protein gamma (YWHAG) genes and that is flanked by large complex low-copy repeats, we identified sites for nonallelic homologous recombination in two patients. There were no cases of this ∼1.2 Mb distal 7q11.23 deletion copy number variant identified in over 20,000 control samples surveyed. Three individuals with smaller, nonrecurrent deletions (∼180-500 kb) that include HIP1 but not YWHAG suggest that deletion of HIP1 is sufficient to cause neurological disease. Mice with targeted mutation in the Hip1 gene (Hip1⁻(/)⁻) develop a neurological phenotype characterized by failure to thrive, tremor, and gait ataxia. Overall, our data characterize a neurodevelopmental and epilepsy syndrome that is likely caused by recurrent and nonrecurrent deletions, including HIP1. These data do not exclude the possibility that YWHAG loss of function is also sufficient to cause neurological phenotypes. Based on the current knowledge of Hip1 protein function and its proposed role in AMPA and NMDA ionotropic glutamate receptor trafficking, we believe that HIP1 haploinsufficiency in humans will be amenable to rational drug design for improved seizure control and cognitive and behavioral function.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

ZC4H2, an XLID gene, is required for the generation of a specific subset of CNS interneurons

Melanie May; Kyu Seok Hwang; Judith H. Miles; Charlie Williams; Tejasvi Niranjan; Stephen G. Kahler; Pietro Chiurazzi; Katharina Steindl; Peter J. van der Spek; Sigrid Swagemakers; Jennifer Mueller; Shannon Stefl; Emil Alexov; Jeong Im Ryu; Jung Hwa Choi; Hyun Taek Kim; Patrick Tarpey; Giovanni Neri; Lynda Holloway; Cindy Skinner; Roger E. Stevenson; Richard I. Dorsky; Tao Wang; Charles E. Schwartz; Cheol-Hee Kim

Miles–Carpenter syndrome (MCS) was described in 1991 as an XLID syndrome with fingertip arches and contractures and mapped to proximal Xq. Patients had microcephaly, short stature, mild spasticity, thoracic scoliosis, hyperextendable MCP joints, rocker-bottom feet, hyperextended elbows and knees. A mutation, p.L66H, in ZC4H2, was identified in a XLID re-sequencing project. Additional screening of linked families and next generation sequencing of XLID families identified three ZC4H2 mutations: p.R18K, p.R213W and p.V75in15aa. The families shared some relevant clinical features. In silico modeling of the mutant proteins indicated all alterations would destabilize the protein. Knockout mutations in zc4h2 were created in zebrafish and homozygous mutant larvae exhibited abnormal swimming, increased twitching, defective eye movement and pectoral fin contractures. Because several of the behavioral defects were consistent with hyperactivity, we examined the underlying neuronal defects and found that sensory neurons and motoneurons appeared normal. However, we observed a striking reduction in GABAergic interneurons. Analysis of cell-type-specific markers showed a specific loss of V2 interneurons in the brain and spinal cord, likely arising from mis-specification of neural progenitors. Injected human wt ZC4H2 rescued the mutant phenotype. Mutant zebrafish injected with human p.L66H or p.R213W mRNA failed to be rescued, while the p.R18K mRNA was able to rescue the interneuron defect. Our findings clearly support ZC4H2 as a novel XLID gene with a required function in interneuron development. Loss of function of ZC4H2 thus likely results in altered connectivity of many brain and spinal circuits.


Skeletal Muscle | 2018

TRAPPC11 and GOSR2 mutations associate with hypoglycosylation of α-dystroglycan and muscular dystrophy

Austin Larson; Peter R. Baker; Miroslav P. Milev; Craig A. Press; Ronald J. Sokol; Mary O. Cox; Jacqueline K. Lekostaj; Aaron A. Stence; Aaron D. Bossler; Jennifer Mueller; Keshika Prematilake; Thierry Fotsing Tadjo; Charles A. Williams; Michael Sacher; Steven A. Moore

BackgroundTransport protein particle (TRAPP) is a supramolecular protein complex that functions in localizing proteins to the Golgi compartment. The TRAPPC11 subunit has been implicated in muscle disease by virtue of homozygous and compound heterozygous deleterious mutations being identified in individuals with limb girdle muscular dystrophy and congenital muscular dystrophy. It remains unclear how this protein leads to muscle disease. Furthermore, a role for this protein, or any other membrane trafficking protein, in the etiology of the dystroglycanopathy group of muscular dystrophies has yet to be found. Here, using a multidisciplinary approach including genetics, immunofluorescence, western blotting, and live cell analysis, we implicate both TRAPPC11 and another membrane trafficking protein, GOSR2, in α-dystroglycan hypoglycosylation.Case presentationSubject 1 presented with severe epileptic episodes and subsequent developmental deterioration. Upon clinical evaluation she was found to have brain, eye, and liver abnormalities. Her serum aminotransferases and creatine kinase were abnormally high. Subjects 2 and 3 are siblings from a family unrelated to subject 1. Both siblings displayed hypotonia, muscle weakness, low muscle bulk, and elevated creatine kinase levels. Subject 3 also developed a seizure disorder. Muscle biopsies from subjects 1 and 3 were severely dystrophic with abnormal immunofluorescence and western blotting indicative of α-dystroglycan hypoglycosylation. Compound heterozygous mutations in TRAPPC11 were identified in subject 1: c.851A>C and c.965+5G>T. Cellular biological analyses on fibroblasts confirmed abnormal membrane trafficking. Subject 3 was found to have compound heterozygous mutations in GOSR2: c.430G>T and c.2T>G. Cellular biological analyses on fibroblasts from subject 3 using two different model cargo proteins did not reveal defects in protein transport. No mutations were found in any of the genes currently known to cause dystroglycanopathy in either individual.ConclusionRecessive mutations in TRAPPC11 and GOSR2 are associated with congenital muscular dystrophy and hypoglycosylation of α-dystroglycan. This is the first report linking membrane trafficking proteins to dystroglycanopathy and suggests that these genes should be considered in the diagnostic evaluation of patients with congenital muscular dystrophy and dystroglycanopathy.


Rosenberg's Molecular and Genetic Basis of Neurological and Psychiatric Disease (Fifth Edition) | 2015

Chapter 20 – Angelman Syndrome

Charles A. Williams; Jennifer Mueller

Angelman syndrome (AS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by severe developmental delay and speech impairment, gait ataxia and/or tremulousness of limbs, microcephaly, seizures, and a unique behavior with a happy demeanor that includes frequent laughing, smiling, and excitability. AS is caused by disruption of UBE3A, which encodes E6AP ubiquitin protein ligase. UBE3A shows parent-specific differential expression, or imprinting, limited to brain and spinal cord neurons. AS results from several genetic mechanisms that disrupt the functional allele of UBE3A inherited from the mother. Analysis of parent specific DNA methylation imprints in the critical 15q11.2-q13 genomic region identifies approximately 75–80% of all individuals, including those with cytogenetic deletions, imprinting center defects, and paternal uniparental disomy (UPD). Accordingly, diagnosis may rely on several diagnostic genetic tests. Therapeutic approaches are now focused on the manipulation of related protein pathways of UBE3A and unsilencing of the paternal allele.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2015

A case of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome with Peters anomaly, congenital glaucoma, and heterozygous mutation in CYP1B1.

Linda M. Reis; Rebecca C. Tyler; Roberto T. Zori; Jennifer Burgess; Jennifer Mueller; Elena V. Semina

Abstract We read with interest the recent publication by Tarlan and colleagues1 describing a patient with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and ocular features of right microphthalmia and left anterior segment dysgenesis. While anterior segment dysgenesis disorders are occasionally reported with 22q11.2 deletions,2–5 this remains a rare association. We report here an 8-year-old patient with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome and bilateral Peters anomaly with congenital glaucoma; in addition, our patient was found to have a single heterozygous mutation in CYP1B1, c.83C > T, p.(Ser28Trp).


Clinical Dysmorphology | 2011

Facial dysmorphism and digit anomalies in three siblings with severe developmental delay

Jennifer Mueller; Aditi I Dagli; Heather J. Stalker; Nazneen Rahman; Roberto T. Zori; Charles A. Williams

R.C. Philips Unit, Division of Genetics and Metabolism, Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida, Gainesville, USA and Section of Cancer Genetics, Brookes Lawley Building, Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Surrey, UK Correspondence to Dr Charles A. Williams, MD, Division of Genetics and Metabolism, University of Florida, 1600 SW Archer Road, PO BOX 100296, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA Tel: + 1 352 294 5050; fax: + 1 352 392 3051; e-mail: [email protected]


Neurogenetics | 2013

Mutations in SLC20A2 are a major cause of familial idiopathic basal ganglia calcification

Sandy Chan Hsu; Renee Sears; R. R. Lemos; Beatriz Quintáns; Alden Y. Huang; Elizabeth Spiteri; Lisette Nevarez; Catherine Mamah; Mayana Zatz; Kerrie D. Pierce; Janice M. Fullerton; John C. Adair; Jon E. Berner; Matthew Bower; Henry Brodaty; Olga Carmona; Valerija Dobricic; Brent L. Fogel; Daniel García-Estevez; Jill S. Goldman; John L. Goudreau; Suellen Hopfer; Milena Janković; Serge Jaumà; Joanna C. Jen; Suppachok Kirdlarp; Joerg Klepper; Vladimir Kostic; Anthony E. Lang; Agnès Linglart


Archive | 2015

Figure 1. [Individuals depicted have a genetically...].

Aditi I Dagli; Jennifer Mueller; Charles A. Williams


Archive | 2015

Figure 3. [The pedigree illustrates imprinting inheritance...].

Aditi I Dagli; Jennifer Mueller; Charles A. Williams

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Ankita Patel

Baylor College of Medicine

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Patricia I. Bader

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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Pawel Stankiewicz

Baylor College of Medicine

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Sau Wai Cheung

Baylor College of Medicine

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Cheol-Hee Kim

Chungnam National University

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Jeong Im Ryu

Chungnam National University

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