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Dive into the research topics where Katherine R. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine R. Smith.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Strikingly Different Clinicopathological Phenotypes Determined by Progranulin-Mutation Dosage

Katherine R. Smith; John A. Damiano; Silvana Franceschetti; Stirling Carpenter; Laura Canafoglia; Michela Morbin; Giacomina Rossi; Davide Pareyson; Sara E. Mole; John F. Staropoli; Katherine B. Sims; Jada Lewis; Wen Lang Lin; Dennis W. Dickson; Hans Henrik M Dahl; Melanie Bahlo; Samuel F. Berkovic

We performed hypothesis-free linkage analysis and exome sequencing in a family with two siblings who had neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL). Two linkage peaks with maximum LOD scores of 3.07 and 2.97 were found on chromosomes 7 and 17, respectively. Unexpectedly, we found these siblings to be homozygous for a c.813_816del (p.Thr272Serfs∗10) mutation in the progranulin gene (GRN, granulin precursor) in the latter peak. Heterozygous mutations in GRN are a major cause of frontotemporal lobar degeneration with TDP-43 inclusions (FTLD-TDP), the second most common early-onset dementia. Reexamination of progranulin-deficient mice revealed rectilinear profiles typical of NCL. The age-at-onset and neuropathology of FTLD-TDP and NCL are markedly different. Our findings reveal an unanticipated link between a rare and a common neurological disorder and illustrate pleiotropic effects of a mutation in the heterozygous or homozygous states.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Missense mutations in the sodium-gated potassium channel gene KCNT1 cause severe autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy

Sarah E. Heron; Katherine R. Smith; Melanie Bahlo; Lino Nobili; Esther Kahana; Laura Licchetta; Karen L. Oliver; Aziz Mazarib; Zaid Afawi; Amos D. Korczyn; Giuseppe Plazzi; Steven Petrou; Samuel F. Berkovic; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Leanne M. Dibbens

We performed genomic mapping of a family with autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (ADNFLE) and intellectual and psychiatric problems, identifying a disease-associated region on chromosome 9q34.3. Whole-exome sequencing identified a mutation in KCNT1, encoding a sodium-gated potassium channel subunit. KCNT1 mutations were identified in two additional families and a sporadic case with severe ADNFLE and psychiatric features. These findings implicate the sodium-gated potassium channel complex in ADNFLE and, more broadly, in the pathogenesis of focal epilepsies.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Kufs Disease, the Major Adult Form of Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis, Caused by Mutations in CLN6

Todor Arsov; Katherine R. Smith; John A. Damiano; Silvana Franceschetti; Laura Canafoglia; Catherine J. Bromhead; Eva Andermann; Danya F. Vears; Patrick Cossette; Sulekha Rajagopalan; Alan McDougall; Vito Sofia; Michael Farrell; Umberto Aguglia; Andrea Zini; Stefano Meletti; Michela Morbin; Saul A. Mullen; Frederick Andermann; Sara E. Mole; Melanie Bahlo; Samuel F. Berkovic

The molecular basis of Kufs disease is unknown, whereas a series of genes accounting for most of the childhood-onset forms of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) have been identified. Diagnosis of Kufs disease is difficult because the characteristic lipopigment is largely confined to neurons and can require a brain biopsy or autopsy for final diagnosis. We mapped four families with Kufs disease for whom there was good evidence of autosomal-recessive inheritance and found two peaks on chromosome 15. Three of the families were affected by Kufs type A disease and presented with progressive myoclonus epilepsy, and one was affected by type B (presenting with dementia and motor system dysfunction). Sequencing of a candidate gene in one peak shared by all four families identified no mutations, but sequencing of CLN6, found in the second peak and shared by only the three families affected by Kufs type A disease, revealed pathogenic mutations in all three families. We subsequently sequenced CLN6 in eight other families, three of which were affected by recessive Kufs type A disease. Mutations in both CLN6 alleles were found in the three type A cases and in one family affected by unclassified Kufs disease. Mutations in CLN6 are the major cause of recessive Kufs type A disease. The phenotypic differences between variant late-infantile NCL, previously found to be caused by CLN6, and Kufs type A disease are striking; there is a much later age at onset and lack of visual involvement in the latter. Sequencing of CLN6 will provide a simple diagnostic strategy in this disorder, in which definitive identification usually requires invasive biopsy.


Genome Medicine | 2011

Identification of improved IL28B SNPs and haplotypes for prediction of drug response in treatment of hepatitis C using massively parallel sequencing in a cross-sectional European cohort

Katherine R. Smith; Vijayaprakash Suppiah; Kate S. O'Connor; T. Berg; Martin Weltman; Maria Lorena Abate; Ulrich Spengler; Margaret F. Bassendine; Gail V. Matthews; William L. Irving; Elizabeth E. Powell; Stephen M. Riordan; Golo Ahlenstiel; Graeme J. Stewart; Melanie Bahlo; Jacob George; David R. Booth

BackgroundThe hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects nearly 3% of the Worlds population, causing severe liver disease in many. Standard of care therapy is currently pegylated interferon alpha and ribavirin (PegIFN/R), which is effective in less than half of those infected with the most common viral genotype. Two IL28B single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), rs8099917 and rs12979860, predict response to (PegIFN/R) therapy in treatment of HCV infection. These SNPs were identified in genome wide analyses using Illumina genotyping chips. In people of European ancestry, there are 6 common (more than 1%) haplotypes for IL28B, one tagged by the rs8099917 minor allele, four tagged by rs12979860.MethodsWe used massively parallel sequencing of the IL28B and IL28A gene regions generated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from pooled DNA samples from 100 responders and 99 non-responders to therapy, to identify common variants. Variants that had high odds ratios and were validated were then genotyped in a cohort of 905 responders and non-responders. Their predictive power was assessed, alone and in combination with HLA-C.ResultsOnly SNPs in the IL28B linkage disequilibrium block predicted drug response. Eighteen SNPs were identified with evidence for association with drug response, and with a high degree of confidence in the sequence call. We found that two SNPs, rs4803221 (homozygote minor allele positive predictive value (PPV) of 77%) and rs7248668 (PPV 78%), predicted failure to respond better than the current best, rs8099917 (PPV 73%) and rs12979860 (PPV 68%) in this cross-sectional cohort. The best SNPs tagged a single common haplotype, haplotype 2. Genotypes predicted lack of response better than alleles. However, combination of IL28B haplotype 2 carrier status with the HLA-C C2C2 genotype, which has previously been reported to improve prediction in combination with IL28B, provides the highest PPV (80%). The haplotypes present alternative putative transcription factor binding and methylation sites.ConclusionsMassively parallel sequencing allowed identification and comparison of the best common SNPs for identifying treatment failure in therapy for HCV. SNPs tagging a single haplotype have the highest PPV, especially in combination with HLA-C. The functional basis for the association may be due to altered regulation of the gene. These approaches have utility in improving diagnostic testing and identifying causal haplotypes or SNPs.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Cathepsin F mutations cause Type B Kufs disease, an adult-onset neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis

Katherine R. Smith; Hans Henrik M Dahl; Laura Canafoglia; Eva Andermann; John A. Damiano; Michela Morbin; A. Bruni; Giorgio Giaccone; Patrick Cossette; Paul Saftig; Joachim Grötzinger; Michael Schwake; Frederick Andermann; John F. Staropoli; Katherine B. Sims; Sara E. Mole; Silvana Franceschetti; Noreen A. Alexander; Jonathan D. Cooper; Harold A. Chapman; Stirling Carpenter; Samuel F. Berkovic; Melanie Bahlo

Kufs disease, an adult-onset neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, is challenging to diagnose and genetically heterogeneous. Mutations in CLN6 were recently identified in recessive Kufs disease presenting as progressive myoclonus epilepsy (Type A), whereas the molecular basis of cases presenting with dementia and motor features (Type B) is unknown. We performed genome-wide linkage mapping of two families with recessive Type B Kufs disease and identified a single region on chromosome 11 to which both families showed linkage. Exome sequencing of five samples from the two families identified homozygous and compound heterozygous missense mutations in CTSF within this linkage region. We subsequently sequenced CTSF in 22 unrelated individuals with suspected recessive Kufs disease, and identified an additional patient with compound heterozygous mutations. CTSF encodes cathepsin F, a lysosomal cysteine protease, dysfunction of which is a highly plausible candidate mechanism for a storage disorder like ceroid lipofuscinosis. In silico modeling suggested the missense mutations would alter protein structure and function. Moreover, re-examination of a previously published mouse knockout of Ctsf shows that it recapitulates the light and electron-microscopic pathological features of Kufs disease. Although CTSF mutations account for a minority of cases of type B Kufs, CTSF screening should be considered in cases with early-onset dementia and may avoid the need for invasive biopsies.


Genome Biology | 2011

Reducing the exome search space for Mendelian diseases using genetic linkage analysis of exome genotypes

Katherine R. Smith; Catherine J. Bromhead; Michael S. Hildebrand; A. Eliot Shearer; Paul J. Lockhart; Hossein Najmabadi; Richard J. Leventer; George McGillivray; David J. Amor; Richard J.H. Smith; Melanie Bahlo

Many exome sequencing studies of Mendelian disorders fail to optimally exploit family information. Classical genetic linkage analysis is an effective method for eliminating a large fraction of the candidate causal variants discovered, even in small families that lack a unique linkage peak. We demonstrate that accurate genetic linkage mapping can be performed using SNP genotypes extracted from exome data, removing the need for separate array-based genotyping. We provide software to facilitate such analyses.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Mutations in SPRTN cause early onset hepatocellular carcinoma, genomic instability and progeroid features

Davor Lessel; Bruno Vaz; Swagata Halder; Paul J. Lockhart; Ivana Marinović-Terzić; Jaime Lopez-Mosqueda; Melanie Philipp; Joe C H Sim; Katherine R. Smith; Judith Oehler; Elisa Cabrera; Raimundo Freire; Kate Pope; Amsha Nahid; Fiona Norris; Richard J. Leventer; Martin B. Delatycki; Gotthold Barbi; Simon von Ameln; Josef Högel; Marina Degoricija; Regina Fertig; Martin D. Burkhalter; Kay Hofmann; Holger Thiele; Janine Altmüller; Gudrun Nürnberg; Peter Nürnberg; Melanie Bahlo; George M. Martin

Age-related degenerative and malignant diseases represent major challenges for health care systems. Elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying carcinogenesis and age-associated pathologies is thus of growing biomedical relevance. We identified biallelic germline mutations in SPRTN (also called C1orf124 or DVC1) in three patients from two unrelated families. All three patients are affected by a new segmental progeroid syndrome characterized by genomic instability and susceptibility toward early onset hepatocellular carcinoma. SPRTN was recently proposed to have a function in translesional DNA synthesis and the prevention of mutagenesis. Our in vivo and in vitro characterization of identified mutations has uncovered an essential role for SPRTN in the prevention of DNA replication stress during general DNA replication and in replication-related G2/M-checkpoint regulation. In addition to demonstrating the pathogenicity of identified SPRTN mutations, our findings provide a molecular explanation of how SPRTN dysfunction causes accelerated aging and susceptibility toward carcinoma.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Autosomal-Recessive Congenital Cerebellar Ataxia Is Caused by Mutations in Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor 1

Velina Guergueltcheva; Dimitar N. Azmanov; Dora Angelicheva; Katherine R. Smith; Teodora Chamova; Laura Florez; Michael Bynevelt; Thai Nguyen; Sylvia Cherninkova; Veneta Bojinova; Ara Kaprelyan; Lyudmila Angelova; Bharti Morar; David Chandler; Radka Kaneva; Melanie Bahlo; Ivailo Tournev; Luba Kalaydjieva

Autosomal-recessive congenital cerebellar ataxia was identified in Roma patients originating from a small subisolate with a known strong founder effect. Patients presented with global developmental delay, moderate to severe stance and gait ataxia, dysarthria, mild dysdiadochokinesia, dysmetria and tremors, intellectual deficit, and mild pyramidal signs. Brain imaging revealed progressive generalized cerebellar atrophy, and inferior vermian hypoplasia and/or a constitutionally small brain were observed in some patients. Exome sequencing, used for linkage analysis on extracted SNP genotypes and for mutation detection, identified two novel (i.e., not found in any database) variants located 7 bp apart within a unique 6q24 linkage region. Both mutations cosegregated with the disease in five affected families, in which all ten patients were homozygous. The mutated gene, GRM1, encodes metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR1, which is highly expressed in cerebellar Purkinje cells and plays an important role in cerebellar development and synaptic plasticity. The two mutations affect a gene region critical for alternative splicing and the generation of receptor isoforms; they are a 3 bp exon 8 deletion and an intron 8 splicing mutation (c.2652_2654del and c.2660+2T>G, respectively [RefSeq accession number NM_000838.3]). The functional impact of the deletion is unclear and is overshadowed by the splicing defect. Although ataxia lymphoblastoid cell lines expressed GRM1 at levels comparable to those of control cells, the aberrant transcripts skipped exon 8 or ended in intron 8 and encoded various species of nonfunctional receptors either lacking the transmembrane domain and containing abnormal intracellular tails or completely missing the tail. The study implicates mGluR1 in human hereditary ataxia. It also illustrates the potential of the Roma founder populations for mutation identification by exome sequencing.


Malaria Journal | 2012

Assessing the utility of an anti-malarial pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic model for aiding drug clinical development

Sophie Zaloumis; Andrew J Humberstone; Susan A. Charman; Ric N. Price; Joerg J. Moehrle; Javier Gamo-Benito; James M. McCaw; Kris M Jamsen; Katherine R. Smith; Julie A. Simpson

BackgroundMechanistic within-host models relating blood anti-malarial drug concentrations with the parasite-time profile help in assessing dosing schedules and partner drugs for new anti-malarial treatments. A comprehensive simulation study to assess the utility of a stage-specific pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PK-PD) model for predicting within-host parasite response was performed.MethodsThree anti-malarial combination therapies were selected: artesunate-mefloquine, dihydroartemisinin-piperaquine, and artemether-lumefantrine. The PK-PD model included parameters to represent the concentration-time profiles of both drugs, the initial parasite burden and distribution across the parasite life cycle, and the parasite multiplication factor due to asexual reproduction. The model also included the maximal killing rate of each drug, and the blood drug concentration associated with half of that killing effect (in vivo EC50), derived from the in vitro IC50, the extent of binding to 0.5% Albumax present in the in vitro testing media, and the drugs plasma protein binding and whole blood to plasma partitioning ratio. All stochastic simulations were performed using a Latin-Hypercube-Sampling approach.ResultsThe simulations demonstrated that the proportion of patients cured was highly sensitive to the in vivo EC50 and the maximal killing rate of the partner drug co-administered with the artemisinin derivative. The in vivo EC50 values that corresponded to on average 95% of patients cured were much higher than the adjusted values derived from the in vitro IC50. The proportion clinically cured was not strongly influenced by changes in the parameters defining the age distribution of the initial parasite burden (mean age of 4 to 16 hours) and the parasite multiplication factor every life cycle (ranging from 8 to 12 fold/cycle). The median parasite clearance times, however, lengthened as the standard deviation of the initial parasite burden increased (i.e. the infection became more asynchronous).ConclusionsThis simulation study demonstrates that the PD effect predicted from in vitro growth inhibition assays does not accord well with the PD effect of the anti-malarials observed within the patient. This simulation-based PK-PD modelling approach should not be considered as a replacement to conducting clinical trials but instead as a decision tool to improve the design of a clinical trial during drug development.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Structurally conserved erythrocyte-binding domain in Plasmodium provides a versatile scaffold for alternate receptor engagement.

Jakub Gruszczyk; Nicholas T. Y. Lim; Alicia Arnott; Wen-Qiang He; Wang Nguitragool; Wanlapa Roobsoong; Yee-Foong Mok; James M. Murphy; Katherine R. Smith; Stuart Lee; Melanie Bahlo; Ivo Mueller; Alyssa E. Barry; Wai-Hong Tham

Significance Plasmodium vivax is responsible for the most widely distributed recurring human malaria infections whereas Plasmodium falciparum inflicts the most mortality and morbidity in human populations. Malaria parasites enter our blood cells by making proteins that recognize and bind to their cognate receptors on the red blood cell surface. Our research describes, to our knowledge, the first crystal structure of PvRBP2a, an erythrocyte-binding protein from P. vivax, which revealed a structural scaffold similar to that of PfRh5, the essential erythrocyte-binding protein in P. falciparum. Structural comparisons between PvRBP2a and PfRh5 provide an important foundation toward understanding how P. vivax and P. falciparum parasites use a homologous erythrocyte-binding protein family to engage alternate erythrocyte receptors and ultimately govern host cell specificity. Understanding how malaria parasites gain entry into human red blood cells is essential for developing strategies to stop blood stage infection. Plasmodium vivax preferentially invades reticulocytes, which are immature red blood cells. The organism has two erythrocyte-binding protein families: namely, the Duffy-binding protein (PvDBP) and the reticulocyte-binding protein (PvRBP) families. Several members of the PvRBP family bind reticulocytes, specifically suggesting a role in mediating host cell selectivity of P. vivax. Here, we present, to our knowledge, the first high-resolution crystal structure of an erythrocyte-binding domain from PvRBP2a, solved at 2.12 Å resolution. The monomeric molecule consists of 10 α-helices and one short β-hairpin, and, although the structural fold is similar to that of PfRh5—the essential invasion ligand in Plasmodium falciparum—its surface properties are distinct and provide a possible mechanism for recognition of alternate receptors. Sequence alignments of the crystallized fragment of PvRBP2a with other PvRBPs highlight the conserved placement of disulfide bonds. PvRBP2a binds mature red blood cells through recognition of an erythrocyte receptor that is neuraminidase- and chymotrypsin-resistant but trypsin-sensitive. By examining the patterns of sequence diversity within field isolates, we have identified and mapped polymorphic residues to the PvRBP2a structure. Using mutagenesis, we have also defined the critical residues required for erythrocyte binding. Characterization of the structural features that govern functional erythrocyte binding for the PvRBP family provides a framework for generating new tools that block P. vivax blood stage infection.

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Melanie Bahlo

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Catherine J. Bromhead

Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research

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Sara E. Mole

University College London

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