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Dive into the research topics where Jill Urquhart is active.

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Featured researches published by Jill Urquhart.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Biallelic Mutation of BEST1 Causes a Distinct Retinopathy in Humans

Rosemary Burgess; I. D. Millar; Bart P. Leroy; Jill Urquhart; Ian M. Fearon; Elfrida De Baere; Peter D. Brown; Anthony G. Robson; Genevieve A. Wright; Philippe Kestelyn; Graham E. Holder; Andrew R. Webster; Forbes D.C. Manson; Graeme C.M. Black

We describe a distinct retinal disorder, autosomal-recessive bestrophinopathy (ARB), that is consequent upon biallelic mutation in BEST1 and is associated with central visual loss, a characteristic retinopathy, an absent electro-oculogram light rise, and a reduced electroretinogram. Heterozygous mutations in BEST1 have previously been found to cause the two dominantly inherited disorders, Best macular dystrophy and autosomal-dominant vitreoretinochoroidopathy. The transmembrane protein bestrophin-1, encoded by BEST1, is located at the basolateral membrane of the retinal pigment epithelium in which it probably functions as a Cl(-) channel. We sequenced BEST1 in five families, identifying DNA variants in each of ten alleles. These encoded six different missense variants and one nonsense variant. The alleles segregated appropriately for a recessive disorder in each family. No clinical or electrophysiological abnormalities were identified in any heterozygotes. We conducted whole-cell patch-clamping of HEK293 cells transfected with bestrophin-1 to measure the Cl(-) current. Two ARB missense isoforms severely reduced channel activity. However, unlike two other alleles previously associated with Best disease, cotransfection with wild-type bestrophin-1 did not impair the formation of active wild-type bestrophin-1 channels, consistent with the recessive nature of the condition. We propose that ARB is the null phenotype of bestrophin-1 in humans.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase deficiency causes a bone dysplasia with autoimmunity and a type I interferon expression signature

Tracy A. Briggs; Gillian I. Rice; Sarah B. Daly; Jill Urquhart; Hannah Gornall; Brigitte Bader-Meunier; Kannan Baskar; Shankar Baskar; Veronique Baudouin; Michael W. Beresford; Graeme C.M. Black; Rebecca J. Dearman; Francis de Zegher; Emily S. Foster; Camille Frances; Alison R. Hayman; Emma Hilton; Chantal Job-Deslandre; M. L. Kulkarni; Martine Le Merrer; Agnès Linglart; Simon C. Lovell; Kathrin Maurer; L. Musset; Vincent Navarro; Capucine Picard; Anne Puel; Frédéric Rieux-Laucat; Chaim M. Roifman; Sabine Scholl-Bürgi

We studied ten individuals from eight families showing features consistent with the immuno-osseous dysplasia spondyloenchondrodysplasia. Of particular note was the diverse spectrum of autoimmune phenotypes observed in these individuals (cases), including systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögrens syndrome, hemolytic anemia, thrombocytopenia, hypothyroidism, inflammatory myositis, Raynauds disease and vitiligo. Haplotype data indicated the disease gene to be on chromosome 19p13, and linkage analysis yielded a combined multipoint log10 odds (LOD) score of 3.6. Sequencing of ACP5, encoding tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase, identified biallelic mutations in each of the cases studied, and in vivo testing confirmed a loss of expressed protein. All eight cases assayed showed elevated serum interferon alpha activity, and gene expression profiling in whole blood defined a type I interferon signature. Our findings reveal a previously unrecognized link between tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase activity and interferon metabolism and highlight the importance of type I interferon in the genesis of autoimmunity.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Mutations in CTC1, encoding conserved telomere maintenance component 1, cause Coats plus

Beverley Anderson; Paul R. Kasher; Josephine Mayer; Marcin Szynkiewicz; Emma M. Jenkinson; Sanjeev Bhaskar; Jill Urquhart; Sarah B. Daly; Jonathan E. Dickerson; James O'Sullivan; Elisabeth Oppliger Leibundgut; Joanne Muter; Ghada M H Abdel-Salem; Riyana Babul-Hirji; Peter Baxter; Andrea Berger; Luisa Bonafé; Janice E Brunstom-Hernandez; Johannes A Buckard; David Chitayat; Wk Chong; Duccio Maria Cordelli; Patrick Ferreira; Joel Victor Fluss; Ewan H. Forrest; Emilio Franzoni; Caterina Garone; Simon Hammans; Gunnar Houge; Imelda Hughes

Coats plus is a highly pleiotropic disorder particularly affecting the eye, brain, bone and gastrointestinal tract. Here, we show that Coats plus results from mutations in CTC1, encoding conserved telomere maintenance component 1, a member of the mammalian homolog of the yeast heterotrimeric CST telomeric capping complex. Consistent with the observation of shortened telomeres in an Arabidopsis CTC1 mutant and the phenotypic overlap of Coats plus with the telomeric maintenance disorders comprising dyskeratosis congenita, we observed shortened telomeres in three individuals with Coats plus and an increase in spontaneous γH2AX-positive cells in cell lines derived from two affected individuals. CTC1 is also a subunit of the α-accessory factor (AAF) complex, stimulating the activity of DNA polymerase-α primase, the only enzyme known to initiate DNA replication in eukaryotic cells. Thus, CTC1 may have a function in DNA metabolism that is necessary for but not specific to telomeric integrity.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

LRP4 Mutations Alter Wnt/β-Catenin Signaling and Cause Limb and Kidney Malformations in Cenani-Lenz Syndrome

Yun Li; Barbara Pawlik; Nursel Elcioglu; Mona Aglan; Hülya Kayserili; Gökhan Yigit; Ferda E. Percin; Frances Goodman; Gudrun Nürnberg; Asim Cenani; Jill Urquhart; Boi Dinh Chung; Samira Ismail; Khalda Amr; Ayca D. Aslanger; Christian Becker; Christian Netzer; Peter J. Scambler; Wafaa Eyaid; Hanan Hamamy; Jill Clayton-Smith; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Peter Nürnberg; Joachim Herz; Samia A. Temtamy; Bernd Wollnik

Cenani-Lenz syndrome (CLS) is an autosomal-recessive congenital disorder affecting distal limb development. It is characterized mainly by syndactyly and/or oligodactyly and is now shown to be commonly associated with kidney anomalies. We used a homozygosity-mapping approach to map the CLS1 locus to chromosome 11p11.2-q13.1. By sequencing candidate genes, we identified recessive LRP4 mutations in 12 families with CLS. LRP4 belongs to the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-related proteins (LRPs), which are essential for various developmental processes. LRP4 is known to antagonize LRP6-mediated activation of canonical Wnt signaling, a function that is lost by the identified mutations. Our findings increase the spectrum of congenital anomalies associated with abnormal lipoprotein receptor-dependent signaling.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Missense Mutations in a Retinal Pigment Epithelium Protein, Bestrophin-1, Cause Retinitis Pigmentosa

Alice E. Davidson; I. D. Millar; Jill Urquhart; Rosemary Burgess-Mullan; Yusrah Shweikh; Neil R. A. Parry; James O'Sullivan; Geoffrey J. Maher; Martin McKibbin; Susan M. Downes; Andrew J. Lotery; Samuel G. Jacobson; Peter D. Brown; Graeme C.M. Black; Forbes D.C. Manson

Bestrophin-1 is preferentially expressed at the basolateral membrane of the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) of the retina. Mutations in the BEST1 gene cause the retinal dystrophies vitelliform macular dystrophy, autosomal-dominant vitreochoroidopathy, and autosomal-recessive bestrophinopathy. Here, we describe four missense mutations in bestrophin-1, three that we believe are previously unreported, in patients diagnosed with autosomal-dominant and -recessive forms of retinitis pigmentosa (RP). The physiological function of bestrophin-1 remains poorly understood although its heterologous expression induces a Cl--specific current. We tested the effect of RP-causing variants on Cl- channel activity and cellular localization of bestrophin-1. Two (p.L140V and p.I205T) produced significantly decreased chloride-selective whole-cell currents in comparison to those of wild-type protein. In a model system of a polarized epithelium, two of three mutations (p.L140V and p.D228N) caused mislocalization of bestrophin-1 from the basolateral membrane to the cytoplasm. Mutations in bestrophin-1 are increasingly recognized as an important cause of inherited retinal dystrophy.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2013

Protein kinase Cδ deficiency causes mendelian systemic lupus erythematosus with B cell-defective apoptosis and hyperproliferation

Alexandre Belot; Paul R. Kasher; Eleanor W. Trotter; Anne Perrine Foray; Anne Laure Debaud; Gillian I. Rice; Marcin Szynkiewicz; Marie Thérèse Zabot; Isabelle Rouvet; Sanjeev Bhaskar; Sarah B. Daly; Jonathan E. Dickerson; Josephine Mayer; James O'Sullivan; Laurent Juillard; Jill Urquhart; Shameem Fawdar; Anna A. Marusiak; Natalie L. Stephenson; Bohdan Waszkowycz; Michael W. Beresford; Leslie G. Biesecker; Graeme C.M. Black; Céline René; Jean François Eliaou; Nicole Fabien; Bruno Ranchin; Pierre Cochat; Patrick M. Gaffney; Flore Rozenberg

OBJECTIVE Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a prototype autoimmune disease that is assumed to occur via a complex interplay of environmental and genetic factors. Rare causes of monogenic SLE have been described, providing unique insights into fundamental mechanisms of immune tolerance. The aim of this study was to identify the cause of an autosomal-recessive form of SLE. METHODS We studied 3 siblings with juvenile-onset SLE from 1 consanguineous kindred and used next-generation sequencing to identify mutations in the disease-associated gene. We performed extensive biochemical, immunologic, and functional assays to assess the impact of the identified mutations on B cell biology. RESULTS We identified a homozygous missense mutation in PRKCD, encoding protein kinase δ (PKCδ), in all 3 affected siblings. Mutation of PRKCD resulted in reduced expression and activity of the encoded protein PKCδ (involved in the deletion of autoreactive B cells), leading to resistance to B cell receptor- and calcium-dependent apoptosis and increased B cell proliferation. Thus, as for mice deficient in PKCδ, which exhibit an SLE phenotype and B cell expansion, we observed an increased number of immature B cells in the affected family members and a developmental shift toward naive B cells with an immature phenotype. CONCLUSION Our findings indicate that PKCδ is crucial in regulating B cell tolerance and preventing self-reactivity in humans, and that PKCδ deficiency represents a novel genetic defect of apoptosis leading to SLE.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Germline Mutations in SUFU Cause Gorlin Syndrome–Associated Childhood Medulloblastoma and Redefine the Risk Associated With PTCH1 Mutations

Miriam J. Smith; Christian Beetz; Simon G Williams; Sanjeev Bhaskar; James O'Sullivan; Beverley Anderson; Sarah B. Daly; Jill Urquhart; Zaynab Bholah; Deemesh Oudit; Edmund Cheesman; Anna Kelsey; Martin McCabe; William G. Newman; D. Gareth Evans

PURPOSE Heterozygous germline PTCH1 mutations are causative of Gorlin syndrome (naevoid basal cell carcinoma), but detection rates > 70% have rarely been reported. We aimed to define the causative mutations in individuals with Gorlin syndrome without PTCH1 mutations. METHODS We undertook exome sequencing on lymphocyte DNA from four unrelated individuals from families with Gorlin syndrome with no PTCH1 mutations found by Sanger sequencing, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA), or RNA analysis. RESULTS A germline heterozygous nonsense mutation in SUFU was identified in one of four exomes. Sanger sequencing of SUFU in 23 additional PTCH1-negative Gorlin syndrome families identified a SUFU mutation in a second family. Copy-number analysis of SUFU by MLPA revealed a large heterozygous deletion in a third family. All three SUFU-positive families fulfilled diagnostic criteria for Gorlin syndrome, although none had odontogenic jaw keratocysts. Each SUFU-positive family included a single case of medulloblastoma, whereas only two (1.7%) of 115 individuals with Gorlin syndrome and a PTCH1 mutation developed medulloblastoma. CONCLUSION We demonstrate convincing evidence that SUFU mutations can cause classical Gorlin syndrome. Our study redefines the risk of medulloblastoma in Gorlin syndrome, dependent on the underlying causative gene. Previous reports have found a 5% risk of medulloblastoma in Gorlin syndrome. We found a < 2% risk in PTCH1 mutation-positive individuals, with a risk up to 20× higher in SUFU mutation-positive individuals. Our data suggest childhood brain magnetic resonance imaging surveillance is justified in SUFU-related, but not PTCH1-related, Gorlin syndrome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Perrault syndrome is caused by recessive mutations in CLPP, encoding a mitochondrial ATP-dependent chambered protease.

Emma M. Jenkinson; Atteeq U. Rehman; Tom Walsh; Jill Clayton-Smith; Kwanghyuk Lee; Robert J. Morell; Meghan C. Drummond; Shaheen N. Khan; Muhammad Asif Naeem; Bushra Rauf; Neil Billington; Julie M. Schultz; Jill Urquhart; Ming K. Lee; Andrew Berry; Neil A. Hanley; Sarju G. Mehta; Deirdre Cilliers; Peter Clayton; Helen Kingston; Miriam J. Smith; Thomas T. Warner; Graeme C.M. Black; Dorothy Trump; Julian R.E. Davis; Wasim Ahmad; Suzanne M. Leal; Sheikh Riazuddin; Mary Claire King; Thomas B. Friedman

Perrault syndrome is a genetically and clinically heterogeneous autosomal-recessive condition characterized by sensorineural hearing loss and ovarian failure. By a combination of linkage analysis, homozygosity mapping, and exome sequencing in three families, we identified mutations in CLPP as the likely cause of this phenotype. In each family, affected individuals were homozygous for a different pathogenic CLPP allele: c.433A>C (p.Thr145Pro), c.440G>C (p.Cys147Ser), or an experimentally demonstrated splice-donor-site mutation, c.270+4A>G. CLPP, a component of a mitochondrial ATP-dependent proteolytic complex, is a highly conserved endopeptidase encoded by CLPP and forms an element of the evolutionarily ancient mitochondrial unfolded-protein response (UPR(mt)) stress signaling pathway. Crystal-structure modeling suggests that both substitutions would alter the structure of the CLPP barrel chamber that captures unfolded proteins and exposes them to proteolysis. Together with the previous identification of mutations in HARS2, encoding mitochondrial histidyl-tRNA synthetase, mutations in CLPP expose dysfunction of mitochondrial protein homeostasis as a cause of Perrault syndrome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Exome sequencing identifies CCDC8 mutations in 3-M syndrome, suggesting that CCDC8 contributes in a pathway with CUL7 and OBSL1 to control human growth

Dan Hanson; Philip G. Murray; James O'Sullivan; Jill Urquhart; Sarah B. Daly; Sanjeev Bhaskar; Leslie G. Biesecker; Mars Skae; Claire Smith; Trevor Cole; Jeremy Kirk; Kate Chandler; Helen Kingston; Dian Donnai; Peter Clayton; Graeme C.M. Black

3-M syndrome, a primordial growth disorder, is associated with mutations in CUL7 and OBSL1. Exome sequencing now identifies mutations in CCDC8 as a cause of 3-M syndrome. CCDC8 is a widely expressed gene that is transcriptionally associated to CUL7 and OBSL1, and coimmunoprecipitation indicates a physical interaction between CCDC8 and OBSL1 but not CUL7. We propose that CUL7, OBSL1, and CCDC8 are members of a pathway controlling mammalian growth.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Mutations in PRDM5 in Brittle Cornea Syndrome Identify a Pathway Regulating Extracellular Matrix Development and Maintenance

Emma Burkitt Wright; Helen L. Spencer; Sarah B. Daly; Forbes D.C. Manson; Leo Zeef; Jill Urquhart; Nicoletta Zoppi; Richard Bonshek; Ioannis Tosounidis; Meyyammai Mohan; Colm Madden; Annabel Dodds; Kate Chandler; Siddharth Banka; Leon Au; Jill Clayton-Smith; Naz Khan; Leslie G. Biesecker; Meredith Wilson; Marianne Rohrbach; Marina Colombi; Cecilia Giunta; Graeme C.M. Black

Extreme corneal fragility and thinning, which have a high risk of catastrophic spontaneous rupture, are the cardinal features of brittle cornea syndrome (BCS), an autosomal-recessive generalized connective tissue disorder. Enucleation is frequently the only management option for this condition, resulting in blindness and psychosocial distress. Even when the cornea remains grossly intact, visual function could also be impaired by a high degree of myopia and keratoconus. Deafness is another common feature and results in combined sensory deprivation. Using autozygosity mapping, we identified mutations in PRDM5 in families with BCS. We demonstrate that regulation of expression of extracellular matrix components, particularly fibrillar collagens, by PRDM5 is a key molecular mechanism that underlies corneal fragility in BCS and controls normal corneal development and maintenance. ZNF469, encoding a zinc finger protein of hitherto undefined function, has been identified as a quantitative trait locus for central corneal thickness, and mutations in this gene have been demonstrated in Tunisian Jewish and Palestinian kindreds with BCS. We show that ZNF469 and PRDM5, two genes that when mutated cause BCS, participate in the same regulatory pathway.

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Sanjeev Bhaskar

Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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Emma Hilton

University of Manchester

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