Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John J. Alexander is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John J. Alexander.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Reassessment of Genomic Sequence Variation to Harmonize Interpretation for Personalized Medicine

Kathryn B. Garber; Lisa M. Vincent; John J. Alexander; Lora J. H. Bean; Sherri J. Bale; Madhuri Hegde

Accurate interpretation of DNA sequence variation is a prerequisite for implementing personalized medicine. Discrepancies in interpretation between testing laboratories impede the effective use of genetic test results in clinical medicine. To better understand the underpinnings of these discrepancies, we quantified differences in variant classification internally over time and those between our diagnostic laboratory and other laboratories and resources. We assessed the factors that contribute to these discrepancies and those that facilitate their resolution. Our process resolved 72% of nearly 300 discrepancies between pairs of laboratories to within a one-step classification difference and identified key sources of data that facilitate changes in variant interpretation. The identification and harmonization of variant discrepancies will maximize the clinical use of genetic information; these processes will be fostered by the accumulation of additional population data as well as the sharing of data between diagnostic laboratories.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2017

Early-life epilepsies and the emerging role of genetic testing

Anne T. Berg; Jason Coryell; Russell P. Saneto; Zachary M. Grinspan; John J. Alexander; Mariana Kekis; Joseph Sullivan; Elaine C. Wirrell; Renée A. Shellhaas; John R. Mytinger; William D. Gaillard; Eric H. Kossoff; Ignacio Valencia; Kelly G. Knupp; Courtney J. Wusthoff; Cynthia Keator; William B. Dobyns; Nicole Ryan; Tobias Loddenkemper; Catherine J. Chu; Edward J. Novotny; Sookyong Koh

Importance Early-life epilepsies are often a consequence of numerous neurodevelopmental disorders, most of which are proving to have genetic origins. The role of genetic testing in the initial evaluation of these epilepsies is not established. Objective To provide a contemporary account of the patterns of use and diagnostic yield of genetic testing for early-life epilepsies. Design, Setting, and Participants In this prospective cohort, children with newly diagnosed epilepsy with an onset at less than 3 years of age were recruited from March 1, 2012, to April 30, 2015, from 17 US pediatric hospitals and followed up for 1 year. Of 795 families approached, 775 agreed to participate. Clinical diagnosis of the etiology of epilepsy were characterized based on information available before genetic testing was performed. Added contributions of cytogenetic and gene sequencing investigations were determined. Exposures Genetic diagnostic testing. Main Outcomes and Measures Laboratory-confirmed pathogenic variant. Results Of the 775 patients in the study (367 girls and 408 boys; median age of onset, 7.5 months [interquartile range, 4.2-16.5 months]), 95 (12.3%) had acquired brain injuries. Of the remaining 680 patients, 327 (48.1%) underwent various forms of genetic testing, which identified pathogenic variants in 132 of 327 children (40.4%; 95% CI, 37%-44%): 26 of 59 (44.1%) with karyotyping, 32 of 188 (17.0%) with microarrays, 31 of 114 (27.2%) with epilepsy panels, 11 of 33 (33.3%) with whole exomes, 4 of 20 (20.0%) with mitochondrial panels, and 28 of 94 (29.8%) with other tests. Forty-four variants were identified before initial epilepsy presentation. Apart from dysmorphic syndromes, pathogenic yields were highest for children with tuberous sclerosis complex (9 of 11 [81.8%]), metabolic diseases (11 of 14 [78.6%]), and brain malformations (20 of 61 [32.8%]). A total of 180 of 446 children (40.4%), whose etiology would have remained unknown without genetic testing, underwent some testing. Pathogenic variants were identified in 48 of 180 children (26.7%; 95% CI, 18%-34%). Diagnostic yields were greater than 15% regardless of delay, spasms, and young age. Yields were greater for epilepsy panels (28 of 96 [29.2%]; Pu2009<u2009.001) and whole exomes (5 of 18 [27.8%]; Pu2009=u2009.02) than for chromosomal microarray (8 of 101 [7.9%]). Conclusions and Relevance Genetic investigations, particularly broad sequencing methods, have high diagnostic yields in newly diagnosed early-life epilepsies regardless of key clinical features. Thorough genetic investigation emphasizing sequencing tests should be incorporated into the initial evaluation of newly presenting early-life epilepsies and not just reserved for those with severe presentations and poor outcomes.


Molecular Therapy | 2017

Optimization of Retinal Gene Therapy for X-Linked Retinitis Pigmentosa Due to RPGR Mutations

William A. Beltran; Artur V. Cideciyan; Shannon E. Boye; Guo-jie Ye; Valerie Liliane Dufour; Luis Felipe Marinho; Malgorzata Swider; Mychajlo S. Kosyk; Jin Sha; Sanford L. Boye; James J. Peterson; C. Douglas Witherspoon; John J. Alexander; Gui-shuang Ying; Mark Shearman; Jeffrey D. Chulay; William W. Hauswirth; Paul D. Gamlin; Samuel G. Jacobson; Gustavo D. Aguirre

X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP) caused by mutations in the RPGR gene is an early onset and severe cause of blindness. Successful proof-of-concept studies in a canine model have recently shown that development of a corrective gene therapy for RPGR-XLRP may now be an attainable goal. In preparation for a future clinical trial, we have here optimized the therapeutic AAV vector construct by showing that GRK1 (rather than IRBP) is a more efficient promoter for targeting gene expression to both rods and cones in non-human primates. Two transgenes were used in RPGR mutant (XLPRA2) dogs under the control of the GRK1 promoter. First was the previously developed stabilized human RPGR (hRPGRstb). Second was a new full-length stabilized and codon-optimized human RPGR (hRPGRco). Long-term (>2 years) studies with an AAV2/5 vector carrying hRPGRstb under control of the GRK1 promoter showed rescue of rods and cones from degeneration and retention of vision. Shorter term (3xa0months) studies demonstrated comparable preservation of photoreceptors in canine eyes treated with an AAV2/5 vector carrying either transgene under the control of the GRK1 promoter. These results provide the critical molecular components (GRK1 promoter, hRPGRco transgene) to now construct a therapeutic viral vector optimized for RPGR-XLRP patients.


Pediatric Neurology | 2017

Diagnostic Yield From 339 Epilepsy Patients Screened on a Clinical Gene Panel

Kameryn M. Butler; Cristina da Silva; John J. Alexander; Madhuri Hegde; Andrew Escayg

BACKGROUNDnThe contribution of genetic factors to epilepsy has long been recognized and has been estimated to play a role in 70% to 80% of cases. Identification of a pathogenic variant can help families to better cope with the disorder, allows for genetic counseling to determine recurrence risk, and in some cases, can directly influence treatment options. In this study, we determined the diagnostic yield of a clinical gene panel applied to an unselected cohort of epilepsy patients.nnnMETHODSnVariant reports from 339 clinically referred epilepsy patients screened using a 110-gene panel were retrospectively reviewed. Variants were classified using the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics guidelines.nnnRESULTSnPathogenic or likely pathogenic variants were identified in 62 individuals (18%) and potentially causative variants were identified in an additional 21 individuals (6%). Causative and potentially causative variants were most frequently identified in SCN1A (nxa0=xa015) and KCNQ2 (nxa0=xa010). Other genes in which disease-causing variants were identified in multiple individuals included CDKL5, SCN2A, SCN8A, SCN1B, STXBP1, TPP1, PCDH19, CACNA1A, GABRA1, GRIN2A, SLC2A1, and TSC2. Sixteen additional genes had variants identified in single individuals.nnnCONCLUSIONSnWe identified 87 variants in 30 different genes that could explain disease, of which 54% were not previously reported. This study confirms the utility of targeted gene panel analysis in epilepsy and highlights several factors to improve the yield of diagnostic genetic testing, including the critical need for clinical phenotype information and parental samples, microarray analysis for whole exon deletions and duplications, and frequent update of panels to incorporate new disease genes.


Genetics in Medicine | 2018

Moonlighting newborn screening markers: the incidental discovery of a second-tier test for Pompe disease

Silvia Tortorelli; Jason S Eckerman; Joseph J. Orsini; Colleen Stevens; Jeremy Hart; Patricia L. Hall; John J. Alexander; Dimitar Gavrilov; Devin Oglesbee; Kimiyo Raymond; Dietrich Matern; Piero Rinaldo

PurposeTo describe a novel biochemical marker in dried blood spots suitable to improve the specificity of newborn screening for Pompe disease.MethodsThe new marker is a ratio calculated between the creatine/creatinine (Cre/Crn) ratio as the numerator and the activity of acid α-glucosidase (GAA) as the denominator. Using Collaborative Laboratory Integrated Reports (CLIR), the new marker was incorporated in a dual scatter plot that can achieve almost complete segregation between Pompe disease and false-positive cases.ResultsThe (Cre/Crn)/GAA ratio was measured in residual dried blood spots of five Pompe cases and was found to be elevated (range 4.41–13.26; 99%ile of neonatal controls: 1.10). Verification was by analysis of 39 blinded specimens that included 10 controls, 24 samples with a definitive classification (16 Pompe, 8 false positives), and 5 with genotypes of uncertain significance. The CLIR tool showed 100% concordance of classification for the 24 known cases. Of the remaining five cases, three p.V222M homozygotes, a benign variant, were classified by CLIR as false positives; two with genotypes of unknown significance, one likely informative, were categorized as Pompe disease.ConclusionThe CLIR tool inclusive of the new ratio could have prevented at least 12 of 13 (92%) false-positive outcomes.


Epilepsy Research | 2017

De novo and inherited SCN8A epilepsy mutations detected by gene panel analysis

Kameryn M. Butler; Cristina da Silva; Yuval Shafir; James D. Weisfeld-Adams; John J. Alexander; Madhuri Hegde; Andrew Escayg

OBJECTIVESnTo determine the incidence of pathogenic SCN8A variants in a cohort of epilepsy patients referred for clinical genetic testing. We also investigated the contribution of SCN8A to autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disability, and neuromuscular disorders in individuals referred for clinical genetic testing at the same testing laboratory.nnnMETHODSnSequence data from 275 epilepsy panels screened by Emory Genetics Laboratory were reviewed for variants in SCN8A. Two additional cases with variants in SCN8A were ascertained from other testing laboratories. Parental samples were tested for variant segregation and clinical histories were examined. SCN8A variants detected from gene panel analyses for autism spectrum disorder, intellectual disability, and neuromuscular disorders were also examined.nnnRESULTSnFive variants in SCN8A were identified in five individuals with epilepsy. Three variants were de novo, one was inherited from an affected parent, and one was inherited from an unaffected parent. Four of the individuals have epilepsy and developmental delay/intellectual disability. The remaining individual has a milder epilepsy presentation without cognitive impairment. We also identified an amino acid substitution at an evolutionarily conserved SCN8A residue in a patient who was screened on the autism spectrum disorder panel. Additionally, we examined the distribution of pathogenic SCN8A variants across the Nav1.6 channel and identified four distinct clusters of variants. These clusters are primarily located in regions of the channel that are important for the kinetics of channel inactivation.nnnCONCLUSIONSnVariants in SCN8A may be responsible for a spectrum of epilepsies as well as other neurodevelopmental disorders without seizures. The predominant pathogenic mechanism appears to involve disruption of channel inactivation, leading to gain-of-function effects.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2016

Novel Methodology for Creating Macaque Retinas with Sortable Photoreceptors and Ganglion Cells

Shreyasi Choudhury; Christianne E. Strang; John J. Alexander; Miranda L. Scalabrino; Julie Lynch Hill; Daniel T. Kasuga; C. Douglas Witherspoon; Sanford L. Boye; Paul Gamlin; Shannon E. Boye

Purpose: The ability to generate macaque retinas with sortable cell populations would be of great benefit to both basic and translational studies of the primate retina. The purpose of our study was therefore to develop methods to achieve this goal by selectively labeling, in life, photoreceptors (PRs) and retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) with separate fluorescent markers. Methods: Labeling of macaque (Macaca fascicularis) PRs and RGCs was accomplished by subretinal delivery of AAV5-hGRK1-GFP, and retrograde transport of micro-ruby™ from the lateral geniculate nucleus, respectively. Retinas were anatomically separated into different regions. Dissociation conditions were optimized, and cells from each region underwent fluorescent activated cell sorting (FACS). Expression of retinal cell type- specific genes was assessed by quantitative real-time PCR to characterize isolated cell populations. Results: We show that macaque PRs and RGCs can be simultaneously labeled in-life and enriched populations isolated by FACS. Recovery from different retinal regions indicated efficient isolation/enrichment for PRs and RGCs, with the macula being particularly amendable to this technique. Conclusions: The methods and materials presented here allow for the identification of novel reagents designed to target RGCs and/or photoreceptors in a species that is phylogenetically and anatomically similar to human. These techniques will enable screening of intravitreally-delivered AAV capsid libraries for variants with increased tropism for PRs and/or RGCs and the evaluation of vector tropism and/or cellular promoter activity of gene therapy vectors in a clinically relevant species.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2018

Urine oligosaccharide screening by MALDI-TOF for the identification of NGLY1 deficiency

Patricia L. Hall; Christina Lam; John J. Alexander; Ghazia Asif; Gerard T. Berry; Carlos Ferreira; Hudson H. Freeze; William A. Gahl; Kim K. Nickander; Jon D. Sharer; Caroline M. Watson; Lynne A. Wolfe; Kimiyo Raymond

N-glycanase deficiency (NGLY1 deficiency, NGLY1-CDDG), the first autosomal recessive congenital disorder of N-linked deglycosylation (CDDG), is caused by pathogenic variants in NGLY1. The majority of affected individuals have been identified using exome or genome sequencing. To date, no reliable, clinically available biomarkers have been identified. Urine oligosaccharide analysis was included as part of a routine evaluation for possible biomarkers in patients with confirmed NGLY1-CDDG. During the qualitative review of oligosaccharide profiles by an experienced laboratory director an abnormal analyte with a proposed structure of Neu5Ac1Hex1GlcNAc1-Asn was identified in NGLY1-CDDG patient urine samples. The same species has been observed in profiles from individuals affected with aspartylglucosaminuria, although the complete spectra are not identical. Additional studies using tandem mass spectrometry confirmed the analytes structure. In addition to the known NGLY1-CDDG patients identified by this analysis, a single case was identified in a population referred for clinical testing who subsequently had a diagnosis of NGLY1-CDDG confirmed by molecular testing. Urine oligosaccharide screening by MALDI-TOF MS can identify individuals with NGLY1-CDDG. In addition, this potential biomarker might also be used to monitor the effectiveness of therapeutic options as they become available.


Epilepsia | 2018

SLC6A1 variants identified in epilepsy patients reduce γ-aminobutyric acid transport

Kari A. Mattison; Kameryn M. Butler; George Andrew S. Inglis; Oshrat Dayan; Hanna Boussidan; Vikas Bhambhani; Bryan Philbrook; Cristina da Silva; John J. Alexander; Baruch I. Kanner; Andrew Escayg

Previous reports have identified SLC6A1 variants in patients with generalized epilepsies, such as myoclonic‐atonic epilepsy and childhood absence epilepsy. However, to date, none of the identified SLC6A1 variants has been functionally tested for an effect on GAT‐1 transporter activity. The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of SLC6A1 variants in 460 unselected epilepsy patients and to evaluate the impact of the identified variants on γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA)transport. Targeted resequencing was used to screen 460 unselected epilepsy patients for variants in SLC6A1. Five missense variants, one in‐frame deletion, one nonsense variant, and one intronic splice‐site variant were identified, representing a 1.7% diagnostic yield. Using a [3H]‐GABA transport assay, the seven identified exonic variants were found to reduce GABA transport activity. A minigene splicing assay revealed that the splice‐site variant disrupted canonical splicing of exon 9 in the mRNA transcript, leading to premature protein truncation. These findings demonstrate that SLC6A1 is an important contributor to childhood epilepsy and that reduced GAT‐1 function is a common consequence of epilepsy‐causing SLC6A1 variants.


Case reports in genetics | 2018

Epileptic Encephalopathy and Cerebellar Atrophy Resulting from Compound Heterozygous CACNA2D2 Variants

Kameryn M. Butler; Philip J. Holt; Sarah S. Milla; Cristina da Silva; John J. Alexander; Andrew Escayg

CACNA2D2 encodes an auxiliary subunit of the voltage-dependent calcium channel. To date, there have only been two reports of individuals with early-infantile epileptic encephalopathy due to CACNA2D2 mutations. In both reports, patients were homozygous for the identified variants. Here, we report a patient with epileptic encephalopathy and cerebellar atrophy who was found to have two novel variants in the CACNA2D2 gene: c.782C>T (p.Pro261Leu) and c.3137T>C (p.Leu1046Pro), by whole-exome sequencing. The variants were shown to be inherited in trans and the unaffected parents were confirmed to be heterozygous carriers. This is the third report of recessive CACNA2D2 variants associated with disease and the first report of compound heterozygous variants. The clinical description of this new case highlights the phenotypic similarities amongst individuals with CACNA2D2-related disease and suggests that CACNA2D2 should be considered as a differential diagnosis in individuals with cerebellar dysfunction and multiple seizure types that begin in the first year of life.

Collaboration


Dive into the John J. Alexander's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Douglas Witherspoon

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christianne E. Strang

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge