Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John D. Overton is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John D. Overton.


PLOS Genetics | 2008

Positional Cloning of “Lisch-like”, a Candidate Modifier of Susceptibility to Type 2 Diabetes in Mice

Marija Dokmanovic-Chouinard; Wendy K. Chung; Jean-Claude Chevre; Elizabeth Watson; Jason Yonan; Beebe Wiegand; Yana Bromberg; Nao Wakae; Christopher V.E. Wright; John D. Overton; Sujoy Ghosh; Ganesh M. Sathe; Carina Ammala; Kathleen K. Brown; Rokuro Ito; Charles A. LeDuc; Keely Solomon; Stuart G. Fischer; Rudolph L. Leibel

In 404 Lepob/ob F2 progeny of a C57BL/6J (B6) x DBA/2J (DBA) intercross, we mapped a DBA-related quantitative trait locus (QTL) to distal Chr1 at 169.6 Mb, centered about D1Mit110, for diabetes-related phenotypes that included blood glucose, HbA1c, and pancreatic islet histology. The interval was refined to 1.8 Mb in a series of B6.DBA congenic/subcongenic lines also segregating for Lepob. The phenotypes of B6.DBA congenic mice include reduced β-cell replication rates accompanied by reduced β-cell mass, reduced insulin/glucose ratio in blood, reduced glucose tolerance, and persistent mild hypoinsulinemic hyperglycemia. Nucleotide sequence and expression analysis of 14 genes in this interval identified a predicted gene that we have designated “Lisch-like” (Ll) as the most likely candidate. The gene spans 62.7 kb on Chr1qH2.3, encoding a 10-exon, 646–amino acid polypeptide, homologous to Lsr on Chr7qB1 and to Ildr1 on Chr16qB3. The largest isoform of Ll is predicted to be a transmembrane molecule with an immunoglobulin-like extracellular domain and a serine/threonine-rich intracellular domain that contains a 14-3-3 binding domain. Morpholino knockdown of the zebrafish paralog of Ll resulted in a generalized delay in endodermal development in the gut region and dispersion of insulin-positive cells. Mice segregating for an ENU-induced null allele of Ll have phenotypes comparable to the B.D congenic lines. The human ortholog, C1orf32, is in the middle of a 30-Mb region of Chr1q23-25 that has been repeatedly associated with type 2 diabetes.


The FASEB Journal | 2009

In silico mutagenesis: a case study of the melanocortin 4 receptor

Yana Bromberg; John D. Overton; Christian Vaisse; Rudolph L. Leibel; Burkhard Rost

The melanocortin 4 receptor (MC4R) is a G‐protein‐coupled receptor (GPCR) and a key molecule in the regulation of energy homeostasis. At least 159 substitutions in the coding region of human MC4R (hMC4R) have been described experimentally;over 80 of those occur naturally, and many have been implicated in obesity. However, assessment of the presumably functionally essential residues remains incomplete. Here we have performed a complete in silico mutagenesis analysis to assess the functional essentiality of all possible nonnative point mutants in the entire hMC4R protein (332 residues). We applied SNAP, which is a method for quantifying functional consequences of single amino acid (AA) substitutions, to calculate the effects of all possible substitutions at each position in the hMC4R AA sequence. We compiled a mutability score that reflects the degree to which a particular residue is likely to be functionally important. We performed the same experiment for a paralogue human melanocortin receptor (hMC1R) and a mouse orthologue (mMC4R) in order to compare computational evaluations of highly related sequences. Three results are most salient: 1) our predictions largely agree with the available experimental annotations;2) this analysis identified several AAs that are likely to be functionally critical, but have not yet been studied experimentally; and 3) the differential analysis of the receptors implicates a number of residues as specifically important to MC4Rs vs. other GPCRs, such as hMC1R.—Bromberg, Y., Overton, J., Vaisse, C., Leibel, R. L., Rost, B. In silico mutagenesis: a case study of the melanocortin 4 receptor. FASEB J. 23, 3059–3069 (2009). www.fasebj.org


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Mahoganoid and Mahogany Mutations Rectify the Obesity of the Yellow Mouse by Effects on Endosomal Traffic of MC4R Protein

John D. Overton; Rudolph L. Leibel

The ubiquitous overexpression of agouti-signaling protein (ASP), a paracrine-signaling molecule that regulates pigment-type switching in the hair follicle of the mouse, is responsible for the obesity and yellow pelage of the Yellow mouse (Ay). Mahogany (Attractin, Atrn/mg) and mahoganoid (Mahogunin Ring Finger-1, Mgrn1/md) are mutations epistatic to Ay. These mutations have been described as suppressors of ASP action, blocking its antagonizing effects on the melanocortin 1 and 4 receptors (MC1R and MC4R) in the skin and the brain, respectively, via unknown mechanisms. Here, we describe the molecular bases for the md- and mg-dependent rescue of the Ay phenotype at the MC4R. We show that overexpression of ASP inhibits the rise in cAMP levels in response to α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, an MC4R agonist, by blocking ligand binding and by directing MC4R trafficking to the lysosome. Loss-of-function of either attractin or MGRN1 blocks ASP-dependent MC4R degradation and promotes increased trafficking of internalized MC4R to the cell surface, but it does not restore α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone-dependent cAMP signaling. We propose that MGRN1 and attractin are components of an evolutionarily conserved receptor trafficking pathway and that the md and mg mutations rescue the Ay phenotypes by a primarily cAMP-independent mechanism promoting trafficking of MC4R and likely MC1R away from the lysosome toward the cell surface.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2018

A Protein-Truncating HSD17B13 Variant and Protection from Chronic Liver Disease

Noura S. Abul-Husn; Xiping Cheng; Alexander H. Li; Yurong Xin; Claudia Schurmann; Panayiotis Stevis; Y. Liu; Julia Kozlitina; Stefan Stender; G. Craig Wood; Ann N. Stepanchick; Matthew D. Still; Shane McCarthy; Colm O’Dushlaine; Jonathan S. Packer; Suganthi Balasubramanian; Nehal Gosalia; David Esopi; Sun Y. Kim; Semanti Mukherjee; Alexander E. Lopez; Erin D. Fuller; John Penn; Xin Chu; Jonathan Z. Luo; Uyenlinh L. Mirshahi; David J. Carey; Christopher D. Still; Michael Feldman; Aeron Small

BACKGROUND Elucidation of the genetic factors underlying chronic liver disease may reveal new therapeutic targets. METHODS We used exome sequence data and electronic health records from 46,544 participants in the DiscovEHR human genetics study to identify genetic variants associated with serum levels of alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST). Variants that were replicated in three additional cohorts (12,527 persons) were evaluated for association with clinical diagnoses of chronic liver disease in DiscovEHR study participants and two independent cohorts (total of 37,173 persons) and with histopathological severity of liver disease in 2391 human liver samples. RESULTS A splice variant (rs72613567:TA) in HSD17B13, encoding the hepatic lipid droplet protein hydroxysteroid 17‐beta dehydrogenase 13, was associated with reduced levels of ALT (P=4.2×10‐12) and AST (P=6.2×10‐10). Among DiscovEHR study participants, this variant was associated with a reduced risk of alcoholic liver disease (by 42% [95% confidence interval {CI}, 20 to 58] among heterozygotes and by 53% [95% CI, 3 to 77] among homozygotes), nonalcoholic liver disease (by 17% [95% CI, 8 to 25] among heterozygotes and by 30% [95% CI, 13 to 43] among homozygotes), alcoholic cirrhosis (by 42% [95% CI, 14 to 61] among heterozygotes and by 73% [95% CI, 15 to 91] among homozygotes), and nonalcoholic cirrhosis (by 26% [95% CI, 7 to 40] among heterozygotes and by 49% [95% CI, 15 to 69] among homozygotes). Associations were confirmed in two independent cohorts. The rs72613567:TA variant was associated with a reduced risk of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, but not steatosis, in human liver samples. The rs72613567:TA variant mitigated liver injury associated with the risk‐increasing PNPLA3 p.I148M allele and resulted in an unstable and truncated protein with reduced enzymatic activity. CONCLUSIONS A loss‐of‐function variant in HSD17B13 was associated with a reduced risk of chronic liver disease and of progression from steatosis to steatohepatitis. (Funded by Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and others.)


Diabetes | 2017

Familial Hypercholesterolemia and Type 2 Diabetes in the Old Order Amish

Huichun Xu; Kathleen A. Ryan; Thomas Jaworek; Lorraine Southam; Jeffrey G. Reid; John D. Overton; Aris Baras; Marja K. Puurunen; Eleftheria Zeggini; Simeon I Taylor; Alan R. Shuldiner; Braxton D. Mitchell

Alleles associated with lower levels of LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) have recently been associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D), highlighting the complex relationship between LDL-C and diabetes. This observation begs the question of whether LDL-C–raising alleles are associated with a decreased risk of T2D. This issue was recently addressed in a large familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) screening study, which reported a lower prevalence of self-reported diabetes in FH subjects than in age-matched relatives without FH. To extend this observation, we tested the association of FH with diabetes status and glycemia in a large Amish population enriched for the FH-associated APOB R3527Q variant that included 640 APOB R3527Q carriers and 4,683 noncarriers. Each copy of the R3527Q T allele was associated with a 74.9 mg/dL increase in LDL-C. There was little difference in T2D prevalence between subjects with (5.2%) and without (4.5%) the R3527Q allele (P = 0.23), and there was no association between R3527Q variant and impaired fasting glucose, fasting glucose or insulin, or oral glucose tolerance test–derived measures. Our data provide no evidence supporting an association between the APOB R3527Q variant and T2D or glycemia and highlight the asymmetry of the LDL-C–T2D relationship and/or the gene/variant-dependent specificity of the LDL-C–T2D association.


Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine | 2018

Exome Sequencing in Children With Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Demonstrates Differences Compared With Adults

Na Zhu; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Carrie L. Welch; Lijiang Ma; Hongjian Qi; Alejandra King; Usha Krishnan; Erika B. Rosenzweig; D. Dunbar Ivy; Eric D. Austin; Rizwan Hamid; William C. Nichols; Michael W. Pauciulo; Katie Lutz; Ashley Sawle; Jeffrey G. Reid; John D. Overton; Aris Baras; Frederick E. Dewey; Yufeng Shen; Wendy K. Chung

Background: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare disease characterized by pulmonary arteriole remodeling, elevated arterial pressure and resistance, and subsequent heart failure. Compared with adult-onset disease, pediatric-onset PAH is more heterogeneous and often associated with worse prognosis. Although BMPR2 mutations underlie ≈70% of adult familial PAH (FPAH) cases, the genetic basis of PAH in children is less understood. Methods: We performed genetic analysis of 155 pediatric- and 257 adult-onset PAH patients, including both FPAH and sporadic, idiopathic PAH (IPAH). After screening for 2 common PAH risk genes, mutation-negative FPAH and all IPAH cases were evaluated by exome sequencing. Results: We observed similar frequencies of rare, deleterious BMPR2 mutations in pediatric- and adult-onset patients: ≈55% in FPAH and 10% in IPAH patients in both age groups. However, there was significant enrichment of TBX4 mutations in pediatric- compared with adult-onset patients (IPAH: 10/130 pediatric versus 0/178 adult-onset), and TBX4 carriers had younger mean age-of-onset compared with BMPR2 carriers. Mutations in other known PAH risk genes were infrequent in both age groups. Notably, among pediatric IPAH patients without mutations in known risk genes, exome sequencing revealed a 2-fold enrichment of de novo likely gene-damaging and predicted deleterious missense variants. Conclusions: Mutations in known PAH risk genes accounted for ≈70% to 80% of FPAH in both age groups, 21% of pediatric-onset IPAH, and 11% of adult-onset IPAH. Rare, predicted deleterious variants in TBX4 are enriched in pediatric patients and de novo variants in novel genes may explain ≈19% of pediatric-onset IPAH cases.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2018

Profiling and Leveraging Relatedness in a Precision Medicine Cohort of 92,455 Exomes

Jeffrey Staples; Evan Maxwell; Nehal Gosalia; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Christopher W. Snyder; Alicia Hawes; John Penn; Ricardo Ulloa; Xiaodong Bai; Alexander E. Lopez; Cristopher V. Van Hout; Colm O’Dushlaine; Tanya M. Teslovich; Shane McCarthy; Suganthi Balasubramanian; H. Lester Kirchner; Joseph B. Leader; Michael F. Murray; David H. Ledbetter; Alan R. Shuldiner; George D. Yancoupolos; Frederick E. Dewey; David J. Carey; John D. Overton; Aris Baras; Lukas Habegger; Jeffrey G. Reid

Large-scale human genetics studies are ascertaining increasing proportions of populations as they continue growing in both number and scale. As a result, the amount of cryptic relatedness within these study cohorts is growing rapidly and has significant implications on downstream analyses. We demonstrate this growth empirically among the first 92,455 exomes from the DiscovEHR cohort and, via a custom simulation framework we developed called SimProgeny, show that these measures are in line with expectations given the underlying population and ascertainment approach. For example, within DiscovEHR we identified ∼66,000 close (first- and second-degree)xa0relationships, involving 55.6% of study participants. Our simulation results project that >70% of the cohort will be involved in these close relationships, given that DiscovEHR scales to 250,000 recruited individuals. We reconstructed 12,574 pedigrees by using these relationships (including 2,192 nuclear families) and leveraged them for multiple applications. The pedigrees substantially improved the phasing accuracy of 20,947 rare, deleterious compound heterozygous mutations. Reconstructed nuclear families were critical for identifying 3,415 de novo mutations in ∼1,783 genes. Finally, we demonstrate the segregation of known and suspected disease-causing mutations, including a tandem duplication that occurs in LDLR and causes familial hypercholesterolemia, through reconstructed pedigrees. In summary, this work highlights the prevalence of cryptic relatedness expected among large healthcare population-genomic studies and demonstrates several analyses that are uniquely enabled by large amounts of cryptic relatedness.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2018

Establishing the role of PLVAP in protein-losing enteropathy: a homozygous missense variant leads to an attenuated phenotype

Alina Kurolap; Orly Eshach-Adiv; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Katya Dolnikov; Adi Mory; Tamar Paperna; Tova Hershkovitz; John D. Overton; Marielle Kaplan; Fabian Glaser; Yaniv Zohar; Alan R. Shuldiner; Gidon Berger; Hagit Baris

Background Intestinal integrity is essential for proper nutrient absorption and tissue homeostasis, with damage leading to enteric protein loss, that is, protein-losing enteropathy (PLE). Recently, homozygous nonsense variants in the plasmalemma vesicle-associated protein gene (PLVAP) were reported in two patients with severe congenital PLE. PLVAP is the building block of endothelial cell (EC) fenestral diaphragms; its importance in barrier function is supported by mouse models of Plvap deficiency. Objective To genetically diagnose two first-degree cousins once removed, who presented with PLE at ages 22 and 2.5 years. Methods Family-based whole exome sequencing was performed based on an autosomal recessive inheritance model. In silico analyses were used to predict variant impact on protein structure and function. Results We identified a rare homozygous variant (NM_031310.2:c.101T>C;p.Leu34Pro) in PLVAP, which co-segregated with the disease. Leu34 is predicted to be located in a highly conserved, hydrophobic, α-helical region within the protein’s transmembrane domain, suggesting Leu34Pro is likely to disrupt protein function and/or structure. Electron microscopy and PLVAP immunohistochemistry demonstrated apparently normal diaphragm morphology, predicted to be functionally affected. Conclusions Biallelic missense variants in PLVAP can cause an attenuated form of the PLE and hypertriglyceridaemia syndrome. Our findings support the role of PLVAP in the pathophysiology of PLE, expand the phenotypic and mutation spectrums and underscore PLVAP’s importance in EC barrier function in the gut.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2018

Homozygosity for a mutation affecting the catalytic domain of tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (YARS) causes multisystem disease

Katie Williams; Karlla W Brigatti; Erik G. Puffenberger; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Laurie B. Griffin; Erick D Martinez; Olivia K Wenger; Mark Yoder; Vinay Kandula; Michael D Fox; Matthew M Demczko; Laura Poskitt; Katryn N. Furuya; Jeffrey G. Reid; John D. Overton; Aris Baras; Lili Miles; Kadakkal Radhakrishnan; Vincent J. Carson; Anthony Antonellis; Robert N. Jinks; Kevin A. Strauss

Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs) are critical for protein translation. Pathogenic variants of ARSs have been previously associated with peripheral neuropathy and multisystem disease in heterozygotes and homozygotes, respectively. We report seven related children homozygous for a novel mutation in tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase (YARS, c.499Cxa0>xa0A, p.Pro167Thr) identified by whole exome sequencing. This variant lies within a highly conserved interface required for protein homodimerization, an essential step in YARS catalytic function. Affected children expressed a more severe phenotype than previously reported, including poor growth, developmental delay, brain dysmyelination, sensorineural hearing loss, nystagmus, progressive cholestatic liver disease, pancreatic insufficiency, hypoglycemia, anemia, intermittent proteinuria, recurrent bloodstream infections and chronic pulmonary disease. Related adults heterozygous for YARS p.Pro167Thr showed no evidence of peripheral neuropathy on electromyography, in contrast to previous reports for other YARS variants. Analysis of YARS p.Pro167Thr in yeast complementation assays revealed a loss-of-function, hypomorphic allele that significantly impaired growth. Recombinant YARS p.Pro167Thr demonstrated normal subcellular localization, but greatly diminished ability to homodimerize in human embryonic kidney cells. This work adds to a rapidly growing body of research emphasizing the importance of ARSs in multisystem disease and significantly expands the allelic and clinical heterogeneity of YARS-associated human disease. A deeper understanding of the role of YARS in human disease may inspire innovative therapies and improve care of affected patients.


Genome Medicine | 2018

Rare variants in SOX17 are associated with pulmonary arterial hypertension with congenital heart disease

Na Zhu; Carrie L. Welch; Jiayao Wang; Philip M. Allen; Claudia Gonzaga-Jauregui; Lijiang Ma; Alejandra King; Usha Krishnan; Erika B. Rosenzweig; D. Dunbar Ivy; Eric D. Austin; Rizwan Hamid; Michael W. Pauciulo; Katie Lutz; William C. Nichols; Jeffrey G. Reid; John D. Overton; Aris Baras; Frederick E. Dewey; Yufeng Shen; Wendy K. Chung

BackgroundPulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a rare disease characterized by distinctive changes in pulmonary arterioles that lead to progressive pulmonary arterial pressures, right-sided heart failure, and a high mortality rate. Up to 30% of adult and 75% of pediatric PAH cases are associated with congenital heart disease (PAH-CHD), and the underlying etiology is largely unknown. There are no known major risk genes for PAH-CHD.MethodsTo identify novel genetic causes of PAH-CHD, we performed whole exome sequencing in 256 PAH-CHD patients. We performed a case-control gene-based association test of rare deleterious variants using 7509 gnomAD whole genome sequencing population controls. We then screened a separate cohort of 413 idiopathic and familial PAH patients without CHD for rare deleterious variants in the top association gene.ResultsWe identified SOX17 as a novel candidate risk gene (pu2009=u20095.5e−7). SOX17 is highly constrained and encodes a transcription factor involved in Wnt/β-catenin and Notch signaling during development. We estimate that rare deleterious variants contribute to approximately 3.2% of PAH-CHD cases. The coding variants identified include likely gene-disrupting (LGD) and deleterious missense, with most of the missense variants occurring in a highly conserved HMG-box protein domain. We further observed an enrichment of rare deleterious variants in putative targets of SOX17, many of which are highly expressed in developing heart and pulmonary vasculature. In the cohort of PAH without CHD, rare deleterious variants of SOX17 were observed in 0.7% of cases.ConclusionsThese data strongly implicate SOX17 as a new risk gene contributing to PAH-CHD as well as idiopathic/familial PAH. Replication in other PAH cohorts and further characterization of the clinical phenotype will be important to confirm the precise role of SOX17 and better estimate the contribution of genes regulated by SOX17.

Collaboration


Dive into the John D. Overton's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Na Zhu

Columbia University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge