Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Juan Pié is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Juan Pié.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Mutations in Cohesin Complex Members SMC3 and SMC1A Cause a Mild Variant of Cornelia de Lange Syndrome with Predominant Mental Retardation

Matthew A. Deardorff; Maninder Kaur; Dinah Yaeger; Abhinav Rampuria; Sergey Korolev; Juan Pié; Concepcion Gil-Rodríguez; María Teresa Echeverría Arnedo; Bart Loeys; Antonie D. Kline; Meredith Wilson; Kaj Lillquist; Victoria M. Siu; Feliciano J. Ramos; Antonio Musio; Laird S. Jackson; Dale Dorsett; Ian D. Krantz

Mutations in the cohesin regulators NIPBL and ESCO2 are causative of the Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) and Roberts or SC phocomelia syndrome, respectively. Recently, mutations in the cohesin complex structural component SMC1A have been identified in two probands with features of CdLS. Here, we report the identification of a mutation in the gene encoding the complementary subunit of the cohesin heterodimer, SMC3, and 14 additional SMC1A mutations. All mutations are predicted to retain an open reading frame, and no truncating mutations were identified. Structural analysis of the mutant SMC3 and SMC1A proteins indicate that all are likely to produce functional cohesin complexes, but we posit that they may alter their chromosome binding dynamics. Our data indicate that SMC3 and SMC1A mutations (1) contribute to approximately 5% of cases of CdLS, (2) result in a consistently mild phenotype with absence of major structural anomalies typically associated with CdLS, and (3) in some instances, result in a phenotype that approaches that of apparently nonsyndromic mental retardation.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2010

Mutations and Variants in the Cohesion Factor Genes NIPBL, SMC1A, and SMC3 in a Cohort of 30 Unrelated Patients With Cornelia de Lange Syndrome

Juan Pié; María Concepción Gil-Rodríguez; Milagros Ciero; Eduardo López-Viñas; María Pilar Ribate; María Teresa Echeverría Arnedo; Matthew A. Deardorff; Beatriz Puisac; Jesús Legarreta; Juan Carlos de Karam; Encarnación Rubio; Inés Bueno; Antonio Baldellou; Mª Teresa Calvo; Núria Casals; José L. Olivares; Ana Losada; Fausto G. Hegardt; Ian D. Krantz; Paulino Gómez-Puertas; Feliciano J. Ramos

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) manifests facial dysmorphic features, growth and cognitive impairment, and limb malformations. Mutations in three genes (NIPBL, SMC1A, and SMC3) of the cohesin complex and its regulators have been found in affected patients. Here, we present clinical and molecular characterization of 30 unrelated patients with CdLS. Eleven patients had mutations in NIPBL (37%) and three patients had mutations in SMC1A (10%), giving an overall rate of mutations of 47%. Several patients shared the same mutation in NIPBL (p.R827GfsX2) but had variable phenotypes, indicating the influence of modifiers in CdLS. Patients with NIPBL mutations had a more severe phenotype than those with mutations in SMC1A or those without identified mutations. However, a high incidence of palate defects was noted in patients with SMC1A mutations. In addition, we observed a similar phenotype in both male and female patients with SMC1A mutations. Finally, we report the first patient with an SMC1A mutation and the Sandifer complex.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Loss-of-function HDAC8 mutations cause a phenotypic spectrum of Cornelia de Lange syndrome-like features, ocular hypertelorism, large fontanelle and X-linked inheritance

Frank J. Kaiser; Morad Ansari; Diana Braunholz; María Concepción Gil-Rodríguez; Christophe Decroos; Jonathan Wilde; Christopher T. Fincher; Maninder Kaur; Masashige Bando; David J. Amor; Paldeep Singh Atwal; Melanie Bahlo; Christine M. Bowman; Jacquelyn J. Bradley; Han G. Brunner; Dinah Clark; Miguel del Campo; Nataliya Di Donato; Peter Diakumis; Holly Dubbs; David A. Dyment; Juliane Eckhold; Sarah Ernst; Jose Carlos Ferreira; Lauren J. Francey; Ulrike Gehlken; Encarna Guillén-Navarro; Yolanda Gyftodimou; Bryan D. Hall; Raoul C. M. Hennekam

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a multisystem genetic disorder with distinct facies, growth failure, intellectual disability, distal limb anomalies, gastrointestinal and neurological disease. Mutations in NIPBL, encoding a cohesin regulatory protein, account for >80% of cases with typical facies. Mutations in the core cohesin complex proteins, encoded by the SMC1A, SMC3 and RAD21 genes, together account for ∼5% of subjects, often with atypical CdLS features. Recently, we identified mutations in the X-linked gene HDAC8 as the cause of a small number of CdLS cases. Here, we report a cohort of 38 individuals with an emerging spectrum of features caused by HDAC8 mutations. For several individuals, the diagnosis of CdLS was not considered prior to genomic testing. Most mutations identified are missense and de novo. Many cases are heterozygous females, each with marked skewing of X-inactivation in peripheral blood DNA. We also identified eight hemizygous males who are more severely affected. The craniofacial appearance caused by HDAC8 mutations overlaps that of typical CdLS but often displays delayed anterior fontanelle closure, ocular hypertelorism, hooding of the eyelids, a broader nose and dental anomalies, which may be useful discriminating features. HDAC8 encodes the lysine deacetylase for the cohesin subunit SMC3 and analysis of the functional consequences of the missense mutations indicates that all cause a loss of enzymatic function. These data demonstrate that loss-of-function mutations in HDAC8 cause a range of overlapping human developmental phenotypes, including a phenotypically distinct subgroup of CdLS.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2010

Facial Diagnosis of Mild and Variant CdLS: Insights from a Dysmorphologist Survey

Sarika Rohatgi; Dinah Clark; Antonie D. Kline; Laird G. Jackson; Juan Pié; Victoria M. Siu; Feliciano J. Ramos; Ian D. Krantz; Matthew A. Deardorff

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a dominant disorder with classic severe forms and milder atypical variants. Central to making the diagnosis is identification of diagnostic facial features. With the recognition that patients with SMC1A and SMC3 mutations have milder, atypical features, we surveyed 65 dysmorphologists using facial photographs from 32 CdLS patients with the goals of (1) Illustrating examples of milder patients with SMC1A mutations and (2) Obtaining objective data to determine which facial features were useful and misleading in making a diagnosis of CdLS. Clinicians were surveyed whether the patient had CdLS or another diagnosis, the certainty of response and the clinical features used to support each response. Using only facial photographs, an average of 24 cases (75%) were accurately diagnosed per clinician. Correct diagnoses were made in 90% of classic CdLS and 87% of non‐CdLS cases, however, only 54% of mild or variant CdLS were correctly diagnosed by respondents. We confirmed that CdLS is most accurately diagnosed in childhood and the diagnosis becomes increasingly difficult with age. This survey demonstrated that emphasis is placed on the eyebrows, nasal features, prominent upper lip and micrognathia. In addition, the presence of fuller, atypical eyebrows, a prominent nasal bridge and significant prognathism with age dissuaded survey takers from arriving at a diagnosis of CdLS in individuals with mild NIPBL and SMC1A mutations. This work underscores the difficulty in diagnosing patients with mild and variant CdLS and serves to objectively classify both useful and misleading features in the diagnosis of CdLS.


Human Mutation | 2015

De novo heterozygous mutations in SMC3 cause a range of Cornelia de Lange syndrome-overlapping phenotypes.

María Concepción Gil-Rodríguez; Matthew A. Deardorff; Morad Ansari; Christopher A. Tan; Ilaria Parenti; Carolina Baquero-Montoya; Lilian Bomme Ousager; Beatriz Puisac; María Hernández-Marcos; María Esperanza Teresa-Rodrigo; Íñigo Marcos-Alcalde; Jan Jaap Wesselink; Silvia Lusa-Bernal; Emilia K. Bijlsma; Diana Braunholz; Inés Bueno-Martínez; Dinah Clark; Nicola S. Cooper; Cynthia J. Curry; Richard Fisher; Alan Fryer; Jaya Ganesh; Cristina Gervasini; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Yiran Guo; Hakon Hakonarson; Robert J. Hopkin; Maninder Kaur; Brendan J. Keating; Maria Kibæk

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is characterized by facial dysmorphism, growth failure, intellectual disability, limb malformations, and multiple organ involvement. Mutations in five genes, encoding subunits of the cohesin complex (SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21) and its regulators (NIPBL, HDAC8), account for at least 70% of patients with CdLS or CdLS‐like phenotypes. To date, only the clinical features from a single CdLS patient with SMC3 mutation has been published. Here, we report the efforts of an international research and clinical collaboration to provide clinical comparison of 16 patients with CdLS‐like features caused by mutations in SMC3. Modeling of the mutation effects on protein structure suggests a dominant‐negative effect on the multimeric cohesin complex. When compared with typical CdLS, many SMC3‐associated phenotypes are also characterized by postnatal microcephaly but with a less distinctive craniofacial appearance, a milder prenatal growth retardation that worsens in childhood, few congenital heart defects, and an absence of limb deficiencies. While most mutations are unique, two unrelated affected individuals shared the same mutation but presented with different phenotypes. This work confirms that de novo SMC3 mutations account for ∼1%–2% of CdLS‐like phenotypes.


Human Genetics | 2001

Genetic basis of mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase deficiency

Rosa Aledo; Johannes Zschocke; Juan Pié; Cecilia Mir; Sonja Fiesel; Ertan Mayatepek; Georg F. Hoffmann; Núria Casals; Fausto G. Hegardt

Abstract. Deficiency of mitochondrial 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-CoA synthase (mHMGS) is a recessive disorder of ketogenesis that has been previously diagnosed in two children with hypoglycaemic hypoketotic coma during fasting periods. Here, we report the results of molecular investigations in a third patient affected by this disease. Sequencing of the entire coding region of the HMGCS2 gene revealed two missense mutations, G212R and R500H. Mendelian inheritance was confirmed by the analysis of parental samples and neither of the mutations was found on 200 control chromosomes. Functional relevance was confirmed by in vitro expression studies in cytosolic HMGS-deficient cells. Whereas wild-type cDNA of the HMGCS2 gene reverted the auxotrophy for mevalonate, the cDNAs of the mutants did not. The disease may be recognised by specific clinical and biochemical features but it is difficult to confirm enzymatically since the gene is expressed only in liver and testis. Molecular studies may facilitate or confirm future diagnoses in affected patients.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

A regulatory role for the cohesin loader NIPBL in nonhomologous end joining during immunoglobulin class switch recombination

Elin Enervald; Likun Du; Torkild Visnes; Andrea Björkman; Emma Lindgren; Josephine Wincent; Guntram Borck; Laurence Colleaux; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Dik C. van Gent; Juan Pié; Beatriz Puisac; Noel Fcc de Miranda; Sven Kracker; Lennart Hammarström; Jean-Pierre de Villartay; Anne Durandy; Jacqueline Schoumans; Lena Ström; Qiang Pan-Hammarström

The cohesin loading protein is required for nonhomologous end joining of double-strand DNA breaks


Human Mutation | 2009

Ten novel HMGCL mutations in 24 patients of different origin with 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaric aciduria.

Sebastián Menao; Eduardo López-Viñas; Cecilia Mir; Beatriz Puisac; Esther Gratacós; María Teresa Echeverría Arnedo; Patricia Carrasco; Susana Moreno; Mónica Ramos; María Concepción Gil; Ángeles Pié; Antonia Ribes; Celia Pérez-Cerdá; Magdalena Ugarte; Peter Clayton; Stanley H. Korman; Dolors Serra; Guillermina Asins; Feliciano J. Ramos; Paulino Gómez-Puertas; Fausto G. Hegardt; Núria Casals; Juan Pié

3‐Hydroxy‐3‐methylglutaric aciduria is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder that affects ketogenesis and L‐leucine catabolism. The clinical acute symptoms include vomiting, convulsions, metabolic acidosis, hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and lethargy. To date, 33 mutations in 100 patients have been reported in the HMGCL gene. In this study 10 new mutations in 24 patients are described. They include: 5 missense mutations: c.109G>A, c.425C>T, c.521G>A, c.575T>C and c.598A>T, 2 nonsense mutations: c.242G>A and c.559G>T, one small deletion: c.853delC, and 2 mutations in intron regions: c.497+4A>G and c.750+1G>A. Two prevalent mutations were detected, 109G>T (E37X) in 38% of disease alleles analyzed and c.504_505delCT in 10% of them. Although patients are mainly of European origin (71%) and mostly Spanish (54%), the group is ethnically diverse and includes, for the first time, patients from Pakistan, Palestine and Ecuador. We also present a simple, efficient method to express the enzyme and we analyze the possible functional effects of missense mutations. The finding that all identified missense mutations cause a >95% decrease in the enzyme activity, indicates that the disease appears only in very severe genotypes.”


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2006

Refining the diagnosis of mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase deficiency.

R. Aledo; Cecilia Mir; R. N. Dalton; C. Turner; Juan Pié; Fausto G. Hegardt; Núria Casals; Michael Champion

SummaryMitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase deficiency is an inherited metabolic disorder caused by a defect in the enzyme that regulates the formation of ketone bodies. Patients present with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, encephalopathy and hepatomegaly, usually precipitated by an intercurrent infection or prolonged fasting. The diagnosis may easily be missed as previously reported results of routine metabolic investigations, urinary organic acids and plasma acylcarnitines may be nonspecific or normal, and a high index of suspicion is required to proceed to further confirmatory tests. We describe a further acute case in which the combination of urinary organic acids, low free carnitine and changes in the plasma acylcarnitine profile on carnitine supplementation were very suggestive of a defect in ketone synthesis. The diagnosis of mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase deficiency was confirmed on genotyping, revealing two novel mutations: c.614G > A (R188H) and c.971T > C (M307T). A further sibling, in whom the diagnosis had not been made acutely, was also found to be affected. The possible effects of these mutations on enzyme activity are discussed.


Molecular Biology Reports | 2012

Characterization of splice variants of the genes encoding human mitochondrial HMG-CoA lyase and HMG-CoA synthase, the main enzymes of the ketogenesis pathway

Beatriz Puisac; Mónica Ramos; María Teresa Echeverría Arnedo; Sebastián Menao; María Concepción Gil-Rodríguez; María Esperanza Teresa-Rodrigo; Ángeles Pié; Juan Carlos de Karam; Jan-Jaap Wesselink; Ignacio Gimenez; Feliciano J. Ramos; Núria Casals; Paulino Gómez-Puertas; Fausto G. Hegardt; Juan Pié

The genes HMGCS2 and HMGCL encode the two main enzymes for ketone-body synthesis, mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase and HMG-CoA lyase. Here, we identify and describe possible splice variants of these genes in human tissues. We detected an alternative transcript of HMGCS2 carrying a deletion of exon 4, and two alternative transcripts of HMGCL with deletions of exons 5 and 6, and exons 5, 6 and 7, respectively. All splice variants maintained the reading frame. However, Western blot studies and overexpression measurements in eukaryotic or prokaryotic cell models did not reveal HL or mHS protein variants. Both genes showed a similar distribution of the inactive variants in different tissues. Surprisingly, the highest percentages were found in tissues where almost no ketone bodies are synthesized: heart, skeletal muscle and brain. Our results suggest that alternative splicing might coordinately block the two main enzymes of ketogenesis in specific human tissues.

Collaboration


Dive into the Juan Pié's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Núria Casals

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paulino Gómez-Puertas

Spanish National Research Council

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cesar H. Casale

National University of Río Cuarto

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge