Kamila Janusz
University of Salamanca
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kamila Janusz.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Mónica del Rey; Rocío Benito; Celia Fontanillo; Francisco J. Campos-Laborie; Kamila Janusz; Talía Velasco-Hernández; María Abáigar; Maria Isabel González Hernández; Rebeca Cuello; Daniel Borrego; Dionisio Martin-Zanca; Javier De Las Rivas; Ken I. Mills; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas
The presence of SF3B1 gene mutations is a hallmark of refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (RARS). However, the mechanisms responsible for iron accumulation that characterize the Myelodysplastic Syndrome with ring sideroblasts (MDS-RS) are not completely understood. In order to gain insight in the molecular basis of MDS-RS, an integrative study of the expression and mutational status of genes related to iron and mitochondrial metabolism was carried out. A total of 231 low-risk MDS patients and 81 controls were studied. Gene expression analysis revealed that iron metabolism and mitochondrial function had the highest number of genes deregulated in RARS patients compared to controls and the refractory cytopenias with unilineage dysplasia (RCUD). Thus mitochondrial transporters SLC25 (SLC25A37 and SLC25A38) and ALAD genes were over-expressed in RARS. Moreover, significant differences were observed between patients with SF3B1 mutations and patients without the mutations. The deregulation of genes involved in iron and mitochondrial metabolism provides new insights in our knowledge of MDS-RS. New variants that could be involved in the pathogenesis of these diseases have been identified.
Haematologica | 2018
J. M. Bastida; María L. Lozano; Rocío Benito; Kamila Janusz; Verónica Palma-Barqueros; Mónica del Rey; Anna E. Marneth; B.A. van der Reijden; José Rivera; José Ramón González-Porras
Inherited platelet disorders are a heterogeneous group of rare diseases, caused by inherited defects in platelet production and/or function. Their genetic diagnosis would benefit clinical care, prognosis and preventative treatments. Until recently, this diagnosis has usually been performed via Sanger sequencing of a limited number of candidate genes. High-throughput sequencing is revolutionizing the genetic diagnosis of diseases, including bleeding disorders. We have designed a novel high-throughput sequencing platform to investigate the unknown molecular pathology in a cohort of 82 patients with inherited platelet disorders. Thirty-four (41.5%) patients presented with a phenotype strongly indicative of a particular type of platelet disorder. The other patients had clinical bleeding indicative of platelet dysfunction, but with no identifiable features. The high-throughput sequencing test enabled a molecular diagnosis in 70% of these patients. This sensitivity increased to 90% among patients suspected of having a defined platelet disorder. We found 57 different candidate variants in 28 genes, of which 70% had not previously been described. Following consensus guidelines, we qualified 68.4% and 26.3% of the candidate variants as being pathogenic and likely pathogenic, respectively. In addition to establishing definitive diagnoses of well-known inherited platelet disorders, high-throughput sequencing also identified rarer disorders such as sitosterolemia, filamin and actinin deficiencies, and G protein-coupled receptor defects. This included disease-causing variants in DIAPH1 (n=2) and RASGRP2 (n=3). Our study reinforces the feasibility of introducing high-throughput sequencing technology into the mainstream laboratory for the genetic diagnostic practice in inherited platelet disorders.
Platelets | 2017
J. M. Bastida; Mónica del Rey; Nuria Revilla; Rocío Benito; Martin Perez-Andres; Berta González; Susana Riesco; Kamila Janusz; J. Padilla; Ana Hortal Benito-Sendin; David Bueno; Elena Blanco; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; Vicente Vicente; Jose A. Rivera; José Ramón González-Porras; María L. Lozano
Abstract Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is a rare X-linked recessive disease resulting from variants in the WAS gene, characterized by a triad of immunodeficiency, eczema, and thrombocytopenia. Despite the fact that WAS is traditionally differentiated from immune thrombocytopenia (ITP) by small size of WAS platelets, in practice, microthrombocytopenia may occasionally not be present, and in certain cases, WAS patients exhibit some parallelism to ITP patients. We characterized one patient presenting with the classic form of the disease but increased mean platelet volume. Molecular studies revealed a novel hemizygous 1-bp deletion in WAS gene, c.802delC, leading to a frameshift and stop codon at amino acid 308 (p.Arg268Glyfs*40). Next-generation sequencing of a total of 70 additional genes known to harbor variants implicated in inherited platelet disorders did not identify additional defects. The pathogenesis of macrothrombocytopenia in this case is not known, but probably the coexistence of a still unidentified additional genetic variant might be involved.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2017
J. M. Bastida; Rocío Benito; Kamila Janusz; María Díez-Campelo; Jm Hernández-Sánchez; S. Marcellini; M. Girós; José Rivera; María L. Lozano; A. Hortal; Jesús-María Hernández-Rivas; José Ramón González-Porras
Essentials Diagnosis of sitosterolemia, a rare recessive or syndromic disorder, is usually delayed. Peripheral blood smear is extremely useful for establishing the suspicion of sitosterolemia. High‐throughput sequencing technology enables the molecular diagnosis of inherited thrombocytopenias. Accurate characterization of sitosterolemia helps us determine appropriate management.
Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2016
J. M. Bastida; José Ramón González-Porras; C. Jiménez; Rocío Benito; G. R. Ordoñez; M. T. Álvarez-Román; M. E. Fontecha; Kamila Janusz; D. Castillo; Rosa Fisac; L. J. García-Frade; Carlos Aguilar; M. P. Martínez; N. Bermejo; S. Herrero; A. Balanzategui; J. M. Martin-Antorán; R. Ramos; M. J. Cebeiro; E. Pardal; C. Aguilera; B. Pérez-Gutierrez; M. Prieto; Susana Riesco; M. C. Mendoza; A. Benito; A. Hortal Benito-Sendin; V. Jiménez-Yuste; Jesús-María Hernández-Rivas; R. García-Sanz
Currently, molecular diagnosis of haemophilia A and B (HA and HB) highlights the excess risk-inhibitor development associated with specific mutations, and enables carrier testing of female relatives and prenatal or preimplantation genetic diagnosis. Molecular testing for HA also helps distinguish it from von Willebrand disease (VWD). Next-generation sequencing (NGS) allows simultaneous investigation of several complete genes, even though they may span very extensive regions. This study aimed to evaluate the usefulness of a molecular algorithm employing an NGS approach for sequencing the complete F8, F9 and VWF genes. The proposed algorithm includes the detection of inversions of introns 1 and 22, an NGS custom panel (the entire F8, F9 and VWF genes), and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) analysis. A total of 102 samples (97 FVIII- and FIX-deficient patients, and five female carriers) were studied. IVS-22 screening identified 11 out of 20 severe HA patients and one female carrier. IVS-1 analysis did not reveal any alterations. The NGS approach gave positive results in 88 cases, allowing the differential diagnosis of mild/moderate HA and VWD in eight cases. MLPA confirmed one large exon deletion. Only one case did have no pathogenic variants. The proposed algorithm had an overall success rate of 99 %. In conclusion, our evaluation demonstrates that this algorithm can reliably identify pathogenic variants and diagnose patients with HA, HB or VWD.
Leukemia Research | 2017
Kamila Janusz; Mónica del Rey; María Abáigar; Rosa Collado; David Ivars; María Hernández-Sánchez; Alberto Valiente; Cristina Robledo; Rocío Benito; María Díez-Campelo; Fernando Ramos; Alexander Kohlmann; Consuelo del Cañizo; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas
Our study aimed to analyze the presence of mutations in SF3B1 and other spliceosome-related genes in myelodysplastic syndromes with ringed sideroblasts (MDS-RS) by combining conventional Sanger and next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods, and to determine the feasibility of this approach in a clinical setting. 122 bone marrow samples from MDS-RS patients were studied. Initially, exons 14 and 15 of the SF3B1 gene were analyzed by Sanger sequencing. Secondly, they were studied by NGS covering besides SF3B1, SRSF2, U2AF1 and ZRSR2 genes. An 86% of all patients showed mutations in the SF3B1 gene. Six of them, which were not identifiable by conventional sequencing in the first diagnostic step, were revealed by NGS. In addition, 19.5% of cases showed mutations in other splicing genes: SRSF2, U2AF1, and ZRSR2. Furthermore, 8.7% of patients had two mutations in SF3B1, SF3B1 and SRSF2, and SF3B1 and U2AF1, while 5.7% showed no mutations in the four spliceosome-related genes analyzed. The combined use of conventional Sanger and NGS allows the identification of mutations in spliceosome-related genes in almost all MDS patients with RS. This two-step approach is affordable and could be useful as a complementary technique in cases with an unclear diagnosis.
Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2018
José María Bastida; Maria Luisa Giros; Rocío Benito; Kamila Janusz; Jesús María Hernández-Rivas; José Ramón González-Porras
Sitosterolemia is a recessive inherited metabolic disorder of unknown prevalence, characterized by increased levels of plasma plant sterols. It is caused by 28 and 31 variants in ABCG5 and ABCG8 genes, respectively, and is characterized by a predisposition to hyperabsorption and accumulation of toxic levels of plant sterols in plasma. Its clinical picture is extremely heterogeneous. The main clinical features are tendinous and cutaneous xanthomas, arthritis or arthralgia, premature cardiovascular disease and atherosclerosis. These characteristics are shared with familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), making it possible for sitosterolemia to be misdiagnosed as homozygous FH, especially in pediatric patients. In such cases, a specific chromatography-based laboratory method is essential to differentiate sitosterol and cholesterol. Hematological abnormalities (hemolytic anemia and macrothrombocytopenia) may be present in 25-35% of patients, in whom it is usually associated with the main clinical features, as occurs in the 70% of the cases. In this context, the peripheral blood smear is essential and reveals giant platelets and stomatocytes. Only 21 causative variants in ABCG5/ABCG8 are associated with macrothrombocytopenia. Most physicians still do not recognize these hematological abnormalities or relate them to sitosterolemia. Patients may suffer long-term misdiagnosis of immune thrombocytopenia and be at high risk of receiving harmful therapies or of not benefitting from a low-cholesterol diet and/or from the gold standard treatment with ezetimibe. This drug reduces levels of plasma plant sterols, provokes regression of xanthomas, and can alleviate hematological abnormalities. Finally, to identify genetic defects, recent advances in high-throughput sequencing, especially in the use of targeted sequencing of pre-specified genes, have begun to be incorporated into the first-line approach in the field of genetic disorders.
Leukemia Research | 2017
Kamila Janusz; S. Muntion; J.M. Hernández-Sánchez; M. Martín Izquierdo; María Hernández-Sánchez; María Abáigar; Cristina Robledo; F. López-Cadenas; M. Del Rey; Juan Carlos Caballero; Rocío Benito; A. Redondo Guijo; T. Jimenez; F.M. Sanchez-Guijo; C. del Cañzo; M. Diez-Campelo; Jesús-María Hernández-Rivas
Leukemia Research | 2017
J.C. Caballero Berrocal; M. Sánchez Barba; J.M. Hernández Sánchez; M. Del Rey; Kamila Janusz; C. Chillón; Esperanza Such; G. Sanz; Ana María Hurtado; C. Calderón Cabrera; David Valcárcel; Eva Lumbreras; Cristina Robledo; María Abáigar; F. López Cadenas; Monica Cabrero; A. Redondo-Guijo; J.M. Hernández Rivas; M.C. del Cañizo; M. Díez Campelo
Leukemia Research | 2015
M. Díez Campelo; Juan Carlos Caballero; M. Sánchez Barba; M. Del Rey; Kamila Janusz; Eva Lumbreras; María Abáigar; Cristina Robledo; Andres Jerez; C. Calderón-Cabrera; Esperanza Such; José Cervera; G. Sanz; David Valcárcel; Jesús-María Hernández-Rivas; C. del Cañizo