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Dive into the research topics where Kari Branham is active.

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Featured researches published by Kari Branham.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

A variant of mitochondrial protein LOC387715/ARMS2, not HTRA1, is strongly associated with age-related macular degeneration

Atsuhiro Kanda; Wei Chen; Mohammad Othman; Kari Branham; Matthew Brooks; Ritu Khanna; Shirley He; Robert H. Lyons; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Anand Swaroop

Genetic variants at chromosomes 1q31-32 and 10q26 are strongly associated with susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a common blinding disease of the elderly. We demonstrate, by evaluating 45 tag SNPs spanning HTRA1, PLEKHA1, and predicted gene LOC387715/ARMS2, that rs10490924 SNP alone, or a variant in strong linkage disequilibrium, can explain the bulk of association between the 10q26 chromosomal region and AMD. A previously suggested causal SNP, rs11200638, and other examined SNPs in the region are only indirectly associated with the disease. Contrary to previous reports, we show that rs11200638 SNP has no significant impact on HTRA1 promoter activity in three different cell lines, and HTRA1 mRNA expression exhibits no significant change between control and AMD retinas. However, SNP rs10490924 shows the strongest association with AMD (P = 5.3 × 10−30), revealing an estimated relative risk of 2.66 for GT heterozygotes and 7.05 for TT homozygotes. The rs10490924 SNP results in nonsynonymous A69S alteration in the predicted protein LOC387715/ARMS2, which has a highly conserved ortholog in chimpanzee, but not in other vertebrate sequences. We demonstrate that LOC387715/ARMS2 mRNA is detected in the human retina and various cell lines and encodes a 12-kDa protein, which localizes to the mitochondrial outer membrane when expressed in mammalian cells. We propose that rs10490924 represents a major susceptibility variant for AMD at 10q26. A likely biological mechanism is that the A69S change in the LOC387715/ARMS2 protein affects its presumptive function in mitochondria.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Genetic variants near TIMP3 and high-density lipoprotein–associated loci influence susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration

Wei Chen; Dwight Stambolian; Albert O. Edwards; Kari Branham; Mohammad Othman; Johanna Jakobsdottir; Nirubol Tosakulwong; Margaret A. Pericak-Vance; Peter A. Campochiaro; Michael L. Klein; Perciliz L. Tan; Yvette P. Conley; Atsuhiro Kanda; Laura J. Kopplin; Yanming Li; Katherine J. Augustaitis; Athanasios J. Karoukis; William K. Scott; Anita Agarwal; Jaclyn L. Kovach; Stephen G. Schwartz; Eric A. Postel; Matthew Brooks; Keith H. Baratz; William L. Brown; Alexander J. Brucker; Anton Orlin; Gary C. Brown; Allen C. Ho; Carl D. Regillo

We executed a genome-wide association scan for age-related macular degeneration (AMD) in 2,157 cases and 1,150 controls. Our results validate AMD susceptibility loci near CFH (P < 10−75), ARMS2 (P < 10−59), C2/CFB (P < 10−20), C3 (P < 10−9), and CFI (P < 10−6). We compared our top findings with the Tufts/Massachusetts General Hospital genome-wide association study of advanced AMD (821 cases, 1,709 controls) and genotyped 30 promising markers in additional individuals (up to 7,749 cases and 4,625 controls). With these data, we identified a susceptibility locus near TIMP3 (overall P = 1.1 × 10−11), a metalloproteinase involved in degradation of the extracellular matrix and previously implicated in early-onset maculopathy. In addition, our data revealed strong association signals with alleles at two loci (LIPC, P = 1.3 × 10−7; CETP, P = 7.4 × 10−7) that were previously associated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-c) levels in blood. Consistent with the hypothesis that HDL metabolism is associated with AMD pathogenesis, we also observed association with AMD of HDL-c—associated alleles near LPL (P = 3.0 × 10−3) and ABCA1 (P = 5.6 × 10−4). Multilocus analysis including all susceptibility loci showed that 329 of 331 individuals (99%) with the highest-risk genotypes were cases, and 85% of these had advanced AMD. Our studies extend the catalog of AMD associated loci, help identify individuals at high risk of disease, and provide clues about underlying cellular pathways that should eventually lead to new therapies.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Strong association of the Y402H variant in complement factor H at 1q32 with susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration

Sepideh Zareparsi; Kari Branham; Mingyao Li; Sapna Shah; Robert J. Klein; Jurg Ott; Josephine Hoh; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Anand Swaroop

Using a large sample of cases and controls from a single center, we show that a T-->C substitution in exon 9 (Y402H) of the complement factor H gene is strongly associated with susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration, the most common cause of blindness in the elderly. Frequency of the C allele was 0.61 in cases, versus 0.34 in age-matched controls (P<1x10(-24)). Genotype frequencies also differ markedly between cases and controls (chi2=112.68 [2 degrees of freedom]; P<1x10(-24)). A multiplicative model fits the data well, and we estimate the population frequency of the high-risk C allele to be 0.39 (95% confidence interval 0.36-0.42) and the genotype relative risk to be 2.44 (95% confidence interval 2.08-2.83) for TC heterozygotes and 5.93 (95% confidence interval 4.33-8.02) for CC homozygotes.


Nature Genetics | 2006

CFH haplotypes without the Y402H coding variant show strong association with susceptibility to age-related macular degeneration

Mingyao Li; Pelin Atmaca-Sonmez; Mohammad Othman; Kari Branham; Ritu Khanna; Michael S Wade; Yun Li; Liming Liang; Sepideh Zareparsi; Anand Swaroop; Gonçalo R. Abecasis

In developed countries, age-related macular degeneration is a common cause of blindness in the elderly. A common polymorphism, encoding the sequence variation Y402H in complement factor H (CFH), has been strongly associated with disease susceptibility. Here, we examined 84 polymorphisms in and around CFH in 726 affected individuals (including 544 unrelated individuals) and 268 unrelated controls. In this sample, 20 of these polymorphisms showed stronger association with disease susceptibility than the Y402H variant. Further, no single polymorphism could account for the contribution of the CFH locus to disease susceptibility. Instead, multiple polymorphisms defined a set of four common haplotypes (of which two were associated with disease susceptibility and two seemed to be protective) and multiple rare haplotypes (associated with increased susceptibility in aggregate). Our results suggest that there are multiple disease susceptibility alleles in the region and that noncoding CFH variants play a role in disease susceptibility.


Human Mutation | 2012

Next-generation genetic testing for retinitis pigmentosa

Kornelia Neveling; Rob W.J. Collin; Christian Gilissen; Ramon A.C. van Huet; Linda Visser; Michael P. Kwint; Sabine Gijsen; Marijke N. Zonneveld; Nienke Wieskamp; Joep de Ligt; Anna M. Siemiatkowska; Lies H. Hoefsloot; Michael F. Buckley; Ulrich Kellner; Kari Branham; Anneke I. den Hollander; Alexander Hoischen; Carel B. Hoyng; B. Jeroen Klevering; L. Ingeborgh van den Born; Joris A. Veltman; Frans P.M. Cremers; Hans Scheffer

Molecular diagnostics for patients with retinitis pigmentosa (RP) has been hampered by extreme genetic and clinical heterogeneity, with 52 causative genes known to date. Here, we developed a comprehensive next‐generation sequencing (NGS) approach for the clinical molecular diagnostics of RP. All known inherited retinal disease genes (n = 111) were captured and simultaneously analyzed using NGS in 100 RP patients without a molecular diagnosis. A systematic data analysis pipeline was developed and validated to prioritize and predict the pathogenicity of all genetic variants identified in each patient, which enabled us to reduce the number of potential pathogenic variants from approximately 1,200 to zero to nine per patient. Subsequent segregation analysis and in silico predictions of pathogenicity resulted in a molecular diagnosis in 36 RP patients, comprising 27 recessive, six dominant, and three X‐linked cases. Intriguingly, De novo mutations were present in at least three out of 28 isolated cases with causative mutations. This study demonstrates the enormous potential and clinical utility of NGS in molecular diagnosis of genetically heterogeneous diseases such as RP. De novo dominant mutations appear to play a significant role in patients with isolated RP, having major implications for genetic counselling. Hum Mutat 33:963–972, 2012.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2010

E2-2 protein and Fuchs's corneal dystrophy

Keith H. Baratz; Nirubol Tosakulwong; Euijung Ryu; William L. Brown; Kari Branham; Wei Chen; Khoa Tran; Katharina E. Schmid-Kubista; John R. Heckenlively; Anand Swaroop; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Kent R. Bailey; Albert O. Edwards

BACKGROUND Fuchss corneal dystrophy (FCD) is a leading cause of corneal transplantation and affects 5% of persons in the United States who are over the age of 40 years. Clinically visible deposits called guttae develop under the corneal endothelium in patients with FCD. A loss of endothelial cells and deposition of an abnormal extracellular matrix are observed microscopically. In advanced disease, the cornea swells and becomes cloudy because the remaining endothelial cells are not sufficient to keep the cornea dehydrated and clear. Although rare genetic variation that contributes to both early-onset and typical late-onset forms of FCD has been identified, to our knowledge, no common variants have been reported. METHODS We performed a genomewide association study and replicated the most significant observations in a second, independent group of subjects. RESULTS Alleles in the transcription factor 4 gene (TCF4), encoding a member of the E-protein family (E2-2), were associated with typical FCD (P=2.3x10(-26)). The association increased the odds of having FCD by a factor of 30 for persons with two copies of the disease variants (homozygotes) and discriminated between case subjects and control subjects with about 76% accuracy. At least two regions of the TCF4 locus were associated independently with FCD. Alleles in the gene encoding protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type G (PTPRG) were associated with FCD (P=4.0x10(-7)), but the association did not reach genomewide significance. CONCLUSIONS Genetic variation in TCF4 contributes to the development of FCD. (Funded by the National Eye Institute and others.)


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Age-related macular degeneration: a high-resolution genome scan for susceptibility loci in a population enriched for late-stage disease.

Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Beverly M. Yashar; Yu Zhao; Noor M. Ghiasvand; Sepideh Zareparsi; Kari Branham; Adam C. Reddick; Edward H. Trager; Shigeo Yoshida; John Bahling; E. Filippova; Susan G. Elner; Mark W. Johnson; Andrew K. Vine; Paul A. Sieving; Samuel G. Jacobson; Julia E. Richards; Anand Swaroop

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a complex multifactorial disease that affects the central region of the retina. AMD is clinically heterogeneous, leading to geographic atrophy (GA) and/or choroidal neovascularization (CNV) at advanced stages. Considerable data exists in support of a genetic predisposition for AMD. Recent linkage studies have provided evidence in favor of several AMD susceptibility loci. We have performed a high-resolution (5-cM) genome scan of 412 affected relative pairs that were enriched for late-stage disease (GA and/or CNV). Nonparametric linkage analysis was performed using two different diagnostic criteria and also by dividing the affected individuals according to GA or CNV phenotype. Our results demonstrate evidence of linkage in regions that were suggested in at least one previous study at chromosomes 1q (236–240 cM in the Marshfield genetic map), 5p (40–50 cM), and 9q (111 cM). Multipoint analysis of affected relatives with CNV provided evidence of additional susceptibility loci on chromosomes 2p (10 cM) and 22q (25 cM). A recently identified Gln5345Arg change in HEMICENTIN-1 on chromosome 1q25 was not detected in 274 affected members in the restricted group with AMD, 346 additional patients with AMD, and 237 unaffected controls. Our results consolidate the chromosomal locations of several AMD susceptibility loci and, together with previous reports, should facilitate the search for disease-associated sequence variants.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Identification of a rare coding variant in complement 3 associated with age-related macular degeneration

Xiaowei Zhan; David E. Larson; Chaolong Wang; Daniel C. Koboldt; Yuri V. Sergeev; Robert S. Fulton; Lucinda Fulton; Catrina C. Fronick; Kari Branham; Jennifer L. Bragg-Gresham; Goo Jun; Youna Hu; Hyun Min Kang; Dajiang J. Liu; Mohammad Othman; Matthew Brooks; Rinki Ratnapriya; Alexis Boleda; Felix Grassmann; Claudia N. von Strachwitz; Lana M. Olson; Gabriëlle H.S. Buitendijk; Albert Hofman; Cornelia M. van Duijn; Valentina Cipriani; Anthony T. Moore; Humma Shahid; Yingda Jiang; Yvette P. Conley; Denise J. Morgan

Macular degeneration is a common cause of blindness in the elderly. To identify rare coding variants associated with a large increase in risk of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), we sequenced 2,335 cases and 789 controls in 10 candidate loci (57 genes). To increase power, we augmented our control set with ancestry-matched exome-sequenced controls. An analysis of coding variation in 2,268 AMD cases and 2,268 ancestry-matched controls identified 2 large-effect rare variants: previously described p.Arg1210Cys encoded in the CFH gene (case frequency (fcase) = 0.51%; control frequency (fcontrol) = 0.02%; odds ratio (OR) = 23.11) and newly identified p.Lys155Gln encoded in the C3 gene (fcase = 1.06%; fcontrol = 0.39%; OR = 2.68). The variants suggest decreased inhibition of C3 by complement factor H, resulting in increased activation of the alternative complement pathway, as a key component of disease biology.


Human Genetics | 2014

Next generation sequencing-based molecular diagnosis of retinitis pigmentosa: identification of a novel genotype-phenotype correlation and clinical refinements

Feng Wang; Hui Wang; Han Fang Tuan; Duy Nguyen; Vincent Sun; Vafa Keser; Sara J. Bowne; Lori S. Sullivan; Hongrong Luo; Ling Zhao; Xia Wang; Jacques Zaneveld; Jason S. Salvo; Sorath Noorani Siddiqui; Louise Mao; Dianna K. Wheaton; David G. Birch; Kari Branham; John R. Heckenlively; Cindy Wen; Ken Flagg; Henry A. Ferreyra; Jacqueline Pei; Ayesha Khan; Huanan Ren; Keqing Wang; Irma Lopez; Raheel Qamar; Juan Carlos Zenteno; Raul Ayala-Ramirez

Abstract Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is a devastating form of retinal degeneration, with significant social and professional consequences. Molecular genetic information is invaluable for an accurate clinical diagnosis of RP due to its high genetic and clinical heterogeneity. Using a gene capture panel that covers 163 of the currently known retinal disease genes, including 48 RP genes, we performed a comprehensive molecular screening in a collection of 123 RP unsettled probands from a wide variety of ethnic backgrounds, including 113 unrelated simplex and 10 autosomal recessive RP (arRP) cases. As a result, 61 mutations were identified in 45 probands, including 38 novel pathogenic alleles. Interestingly, we observed that phenotype and genotype were not in full agreement in 21 probands. Among them, eight probands were clinically reassessed, resulting in refinement of clinical diagnoses for six of these patients. Finally, recessive mutations in CLN3 were identified in five retinal degeneration patients, including four RP probands and one cone-rod dystrophy patient, suggesting that CLN3 is a novel non-syndromic retinal disease gene. Collectively, our results underscore that, due to the high molecular and clinical heterogeneity of RP, comprehensive screening of all retinal disease genes is effective in identifying novel pathogenic mutations and provides an opportunity to discover new genotype-phenotype correlations. Information gained from this genetic screening will directly aid in patient diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment, as well as allowing appropriate family planning and counseling.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

Premature Truncation of a Novel Protein, RD3, Exhibiting Subnuclear Localization Is Associated with Retinal Degeneration

James S. Friedman; Bo Chang; Chitra Kannabiran; Christina Chakarova; Hardeep Pal Singh; Subhadra Jalali; Norman L. Hawes; Kari Branham; Mohammad Othman; E. Filippova; Debra A. Thompson; Andrew R. Webster; Sten Andréasson; Samuel G. Jacobson; Shomi S. Bhattacharya; John R. Heckenlively; Anand Swaroop

The rd3 mouse is one of the oldest identified models of early-onset retinal degeneration. Using the positional candidate approach, we have identified a C-->T substitution in a novel gene, Rd3, that encodes an evolutionarily conserved protein of 195 amino acids. The rd3 mutation results in a predicted stop codon after residue 106. This change is observed in four rd3 lines derived from the original collected mice but not in the nine wild-type mouse strains that were examined. Rd3 is preferentially expressed in the retina and exhibits increasing expression through early postnatal development. In transiently transfected COS-1 cells, the RD3-fusion protein shows subnuclear localization adjacent to promyelocytic leukemia-gene-product bodies. The truncated mutant RD3 protein is detectable in COS-1 cells but appears to get degraded rapidly. To explore potential association of the human RD3 gene at chromosome 1q32 with retinopathies, we performed a mutation screen of 881 probands from North America, India, and Europe. In addition to several alterations of uncertain significance, we identified a homozygous alteration in the invariant G nucleotide of the RD3 exon 2 donor splice site in two siblings with Leber congenital amaurosis. This mutation is predicted to result in premature truncation of the RD3 protein, segregates with the disease, and is not detected in 121 ethnically matched control individuals. We suggest that the retinopathy-associated RD3 protein is part of subnuclear protein complexes involved in diverse processes, such as transcription and splicing.

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Anand Swaroop

National Institutes of Health

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David G. Birch

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Stephen P. Daiger

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Paul A. Sieving

National Institutes of Health

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