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Featured researches published by Katta M. Girisha.


Blood | 2016

Heterozygous STAT1 gain-of-function mutations underlie an unexpectedly broad clinical phenotype

Julie Toubiana; Satoshi Okada; Julia Hiller; Matías Oleastro; Macarena Lagos Gomez; Juan Carlos Aldave Becerra; Marie Ouachée-Chardin; Fanny Fouyssac; Katta M. Girisha; Amos Etzioni; Joris M. van Montfrans; Yildiz Camcioglu; Leigh Ann Kerns; Bernd H. Belohradsky; Stéphane Blanche; Aziz Bousfiha; Carlos Rodríguez-Gallego; Isabelle Meyts; Kai Kisand; Janine Reichenbach; Ellen D. Renner; Sergio D. Rosenzweig; Bodo Grimbacher; Frank L. van de Veerdonk; Claudia Traidl-Hoffmann; Capucine Picard; László Maródi; Tomohiro Morio; Masao Kobayashi; Desa Lilic

Since their discovery in patients with autosomal dominant (AD) chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) in 2011, heterozygous STAT1 gain-of-function (GOF) mutations have increasingly been identified worldwide. The clinical spectrum associated with them needed to be delineated. We enrolled 274 patients from 167 kindreds originating from 40 countries from 5 continents. Demographic data, clinical features, immunological parameters, treatment, and outcome were recorded. The median age of the 274 patients was 22 years (range, 1-71 years); 98% of them had CMC, with a median age at onset of 1 year (range, 0-24 years). Patients often displayed bacterial (74%) infections, mostly because of Staphylococcus aureus (36%), including the respiratory tract and the skin in 47% and 28% of patients, respectively, and viral (38%) infections, mostly because of Herpesviridae (83%) and affecting the skin in 32% of patients. Invasive fungal infections (10%), mostly caused by Candida spp. (29%), and mycobacterial disease (6%) caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, environmental mycobacteria, or Bacille Calmette-Guérin vaccines were less common. Many patients had autoimmune manifestations (37%), including hypothyroidism (22%), type 1 diabetes (4%), blood cytopenia (4%), and systemic lupus erythematosus (2%). Invasive infections (25%), cerebral aneurysms (6%), and cancers (6%) were the strongest predictors of poor outcome. CMC persisted in 39% of the 202 patients receiving prolonged antifungal treatment. Circulating interleukin-17A-producing T-cell count was low for most (82%) but not all of the patients tested. STAT1 GOF mutations underlie AD CMC, as well as an unexpectedly wide range of other clinical features, including not only a variety of infectious and autoimmune diseases, but also cerebral aneurysms and carcinomas that confer a poor prognosis.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2014

Genetic heterogeneity in Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) and CdLS-like phenotypes with observed and predicted levels of mosaicism

Morad Ansari; G Poke; Quentin Rv Ferry; Kathleen A. Williamson; R. B. Aldridge; Alison Meynert; Hemant Bengani; C Y Chan; Hülya Kayserili; Ş Avci; Hennekam Rcm.; Anne K. Lampe; Egbert J. W. Redeker; Tessa Homfray; Allyson Ross; M F Smeland; Sahar Mansour; Michael J. Parker; Jackie Cook; Miranda Splitt; Robert B. Fisher; Alan Fryer; Alex Magee; Andrew O.M. Wilkie; A. Barnicoat; Angela F. Brady; Nicola S. Cooper; Catherine Mercer; Charu Deshpande; Christopher Bennett

Background Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a multisystem disorder with distinctive facial appearance, intellectual disability and growth failure as prominent features. Most individuals with typical CdLS have de novo heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in NIPBL with mosaic individuals representing a significant proportion. Mutations in other cohesin components, SMC1A, SMC3, HDAC8 and RAD21 cause less typical CdLS. Methods We screened 163 affected individuals for coding region mutations in the known genes, 90 for genomic rearrangements, 19 for deep intronic variants in NIPBL and 5 had whole-exome sequencing. Results Pathogenic mutations [including mosaic changes] were identified in: NIPBL 46 [3] (28.2%); SMC1A 5 [1] (3.1%); SMC3 5 [1] (3.1%); HDAC8 6 [0] (3.6%) and RAD21 1 [0] (0.6%). One individual had a de novo 1.3 Mb deletion of 1p36.3. Another had a 520 kb duplication of 12q13.13 encompassing ESPL1, encoding separase, an enzyme that cleaves the cohesin ring. Three de novo mutations were identified in ANKRD11 demonstrating a phenotypic overlap with KBG syndrome. To estimate the number of undetected mosaic cases we used recursive partitioning to identify discriminating features in the NIPBL-positive subgroup. Filtering of the mutation-negative group on these features classified at least 18% as ‘NIPBL-like’. A computer composition of the average face of this NIPBL-like subgroup was also more typical in appearance than that of all others in the mutation-negative group supporting the existence of undetected mosaic cases. Conclusions Future diagnostic testing in ‘mutation-negative’ CdLS thus merits deeper sequencing of multiple DNA samples derived from different tissues.


JAMA Neurology | 2016

Association of MTOR Mutations With Developmental Brain Disorders, Including Megalencephaly, Focal Cortical Dysplasia, and Pigmentary Mosaicism

Ghayda M. Mirzaa; Catarina D. Campbell; Nadia Solovieff; Carleton Goold; Laura A. Jansen; Suchithra Menon; Andrew E. Timms; Valerio Conti; Jonathan D. Biag; Carissa Olds; Evan A. Boyle; Sarah Collins; Gisele Ishak; Sandra L. Poliachik; Katta M. Girisha; Kit San Yeung; Brian Hon-Yin Chung; Elisa Rahikkala; Sonya A. Gunter; Sharon S. McDaniel; Colleen Forsyth Macmurdo; Jonathan A. Bernstein; Beth Martin; Rebecca J. Leary; Scott Mahan; Shanming Liu; Molly Weaver; Michael O. Dorschner; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Donna M. Muzny

IMPORTANCE Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), hemimegalencephaly, and megalencephaly constitute a spectrum of malformations of cortical development with shared neuropathologic features. These disorders are associated with significant childhood morbidity and mortality. OBJECTIVE To identify the underlying molecular cause of FCD, hemimegalencephaly, and diffuse megalencephaly. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS Patients with FCD, hemimegalencephaly, or megalencephaly (mean age, 11.7 years; range, 2-32 years) were recruited from Pediatric Hospital A. Meyer, the University of Hong Kong, and Seattle Childrens Research Institute from June 2012 to June 2014. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed on 8 children with FCD or hemimegalencephaly using standard-depth (50-60X) sequencing in peripheral samples (blood, saliva, or skin) from the affected child and their parents and deep (150-180X) sequencing in affected brain tissue. Targeted sequencing and WES were used to screen 93 children with molecularly unexplained diffuse or focal brain overgrowth. Histopathologic and functional assays of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-AKT (serine/threonine kinase)-mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway activity in resected brain tissue and cultured neurons were performed to validate mutations. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Whole-exome sequencing and targeted sequencing identified variants associated with this spectrum of developmental brain disorders. RESULTS Low-level mosaic mutations of MTOR were identified in brain tissue in 4 children with FCD type 2a with alternative allele fractions ranging from 0.012 to 0.086. Intermediate-level mosaic mutation of MTOR (p.Thr1977Ile) was also identified in 3 unrelated children with diffuse megalencephaly and pigmentary mosaicism in skin. Finally, a constitutional de novo mutation of MTOR (p.Glu1799Lys) was identified in 3 unrelated children with diffuse megalencephaly and intellectual disability. Molecular and functional analysis in 2 children with FCD2a from whom multiple affected brain tissue samples were available revealed a mutation gradient with an epicenter in the most epileptogenic area. When expressed in cultured neurons, all MTOR mutations identified here drive constitutive activation of mTOR complex 1 and enlarged neuronal size. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE In this study, mutations of MTOR were associated with a spectrum of brain overgrowth phenotypes extending from FCD type 2a to diffuse megalencephaly, distinguished by different mutations and levels of mosaicism. These mutations may be sufficient to cause cellular hypertrophy in cultured neurons and may provide a demonstration of the pattern of mosaicism in brain and substantiate the link between mosaic mutations of MTOR and pigmentary mosaicism in skin.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012

Analysis of the WISP3 gene in Indian families with progressive pseudorheumatoid dysplasia.

Ashwin Dalal; Sri Lakshmi Bhavani G; Padma Priya Togarrati; Tatjana Bierhals; Madhusudan R. Nandineni; Sumita Danda; Debashish Danda; Hitesh Shah; Sandeep Vijayan; Kalpana Gowrishankar; Shubha R. Phadke; Abdul Mueed Bidchol; Anand Prahalad Rao; Sheela Nampoothiri; Kerstin Kutsche; Katta M. Girisha

Progressive pseudorheumatoid dysplasia (PPD) is a progressive skeletal syndrome characterized by stiffness, swelling and pain in multiple joints with associated osteoporosis in affected patients. Radiographically, the predominant features resemble a spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia. Mutations in the WISP3 gene are known to cause this autosomal recessive condition. To date, only a limited number of studies have looked into the spectrum of mutations causing PPD. We report on clinical features and WISP3 mutations in a large series of Indian patients with this rare skeletal dysplasia. Families with at least one member showing clinical and radiologic features of PPD were recruited for the study. Symptoms, signs and radiographic findings were documented in 35 patients from 25 unrelated families. Swelling of small joints of hands and contractures are the most common presenting features. Mutation analysis was carried out by bidirectional sequencing of the WISP3 gene in all 35 patients. We summarize the clinical features of 35 patients with PPD and report on 11 different homozygous mutations and one instance of compound heterozygosity. Eight (c.233G>A, c.340T>C, c.348C>A, c.433T>C, c.682T>C, c.802T>G, c.947_951delAATTT, and c.1010G>A) are novel mutations and three (c.156C>A, c.248G>A, and c.739_740delTG) have been reported previously. One missense mutation (c.1010G>A; p.Cys337Tyr) appears to be the most common in our population being seen in 10 unrelated families. This is the largest cohort of patients with PPD in the literature and the first report from India on mutation analysis of WISP3. We also review all the mutations reported in WISP3 till date.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

A homozygous nonsense variant in IFT52 is associated with a human skeletal ciliopathy

Katta M. Girisha; Anju Shukla; Daniel Trujillano; Gandham SriLakshmi Bhavani; Malavika Hebbar; Rajagopal Kadavigere; Arndt Rolfs

Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is vital for the functioning of primary cilia. Defects in several components of IFT complexes cause a spectrum of ciliopathies with variable involvement of skeleton, brain, eyes, ectoderm and kidneys. We examined a child from a consanguineous family who had short stature, narrow thorax, short hands and feet, postaxial polydactyly of hands, pigmentary retinopathy, small teeth and skeletal dysplasia. The clinical phenotype of the child shows significant overlap with cranioectodermal dysplasia type I (Sensenbrenner syndrome). Whole‐exome sequencing revealed a homozygous nonsense variant p.R142* in IFT52 encoding an IFT‐B core complex protein as the probable cause of her condition. This is the first report of a human disease associated with IFT52.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2013

Genotype-phenotype spectrum of PYCR1-related autosomal recessive cutis laxa

Aikaterini Dimopoulou; Björn Fischer; Thatjana Gardeitchik; Phillipe Schröter; Hülya Kayserili; Claire Schlack; Yun Li; Jaime Moritz Brum; Ingeborg Barisic; Marco Castori; Christiane Spaich; Elaine Fletcher; Zeina Mahayri; Meenakshi Bhat; Katta M. Girisha; Katherine Lachlan; Diana Johnson; Shubha R. Phadke; Neerja Gupta; Martina Simandlova; Madhulika Kabra; Albert David; Leo Nijtmans; David Chitayat; Beyhan Tüysüz; Francesco Brancati; Stefan Mundlos; Lionel Van Maldergem; Eva Morava; Bernd Wollnik

Autosomal recessive cutis laxa type 2B (ARCL2B; OMIM # 612940) is a segmental progeroid disorder caused by mutations in PYCR1 encoding pyrroline-5-carboxylate reductase 1, which is part of the conserved proline de novo synthesis pathway. Here we describe 33 patients with PYCR1-related ARCL from 27 families with initial diagnoses varying between wrinkly skin syndrome, gerodermia osteodysplastica, De Barsy syndrome or more severe progeria syndromes. Given the difficult differential diagnosis of ARCL syndromes we performed a systematic comparison of clinical features of PYCR1-related ARCL. Intrauterine growth retardation, a characteristic triangular facial gestalt, psychomotor retardation, and hypotonia were the most relevant distinctive hallmarks of ARCL due to proline de novo synthesis defects. Corneal clouding or cataracts, athetoid movements, and finger contractures were rather rare features, but had a high predictive value. In our cohort we identified 20 different PYCR1 mutations of which seven were novel. Most of the mutations accumulated in exons 4 to 6. Missense alterations of highly conserved residues were most frequent followed by splice site changes and a single nonsense mutation. Analysis of genotype-phenotype correlation revealed that patients with mutations in the first two exons had lower average clinical scores and absent or only mild intellectual disability. Structural analyses predicted interference with PYCR1 multimerization for a subset of missense mutations. These findings have implications for the clinics as well as the pathomechanism of PYCR1-related ARCL.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Cortical-Bone Fragility — Insights from sFRP4 Deficiency in Pyle’s Disease

Pelin Özlem Simsek Kiper; Hiroaki Saito; Francesca Gori; Sheila Unger; Eric Hesse; Kei Yamana; Riku Kiviranta; Nicolas Solban; Jeff Liu; Robert Brommage; Koray Boduroglu; Luisa Bonafé; Belinda Campos-Xavier; Esra Dikoglu; Richard Eastell; Fatma Gossiel; Keith Harshman; Gen Nishimura; Katta M. Girisha; Brian J. Stevenson; Hiroyuki Takita; Carlo Rivolta; Andrea Superti-Furga; Roland Baron

BACKGROUND Cortical-bone fragility is a common feature in osteoporosis that is linked to nonvertebral fractures. Regulation of cortical-bone homeostasis has proved elusive. The study of genetic disorders of the skeleton can yield insights that fuel experimental therapeutic approaches to the treatment of rare disorders and common skeletal ailments. METHODS We evaluated four patients with Pyles disease, a genetic disorder that is characterized by cortical-bone thinning, limb deformity, and fractures; two patients were examined by means of exome sequencing, and two were examined by means of Sanger sequencing. After a candidate gene was identified, we generated a knockout mouse model that manifested the phenotype and studied the mechanisms responsible for altered bone architecture. RESULTS In all affected patients, we found biallelic truncating mutations in SFRP4, the gene encoding secreted frizzled-related protein 4, a soluble Wnt inhibitor. Mice deficient in Sfrp4, like persons with Pyles disease, have increased amounts of trabecular bone and unusually thin cortical bone, as a result of differential regulation of Wnt and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling in these two bone compartments. Treatment of Sfrp4-deficient mice with a soluble Bmp2 receptor (RAP-661) or with antibodies to sclerostin corrected the cortical-bone defect. CONCLUSIONS Our study showed that Pyles disease was caused by a deficiency of sFRP4, that cortical-bone and trabecular-bone homeostasis were governed by different mechanisms, and that sFRP4-mediated cross-regulation between Wnt and BMP signaling was critical for achieving proper cortical-bone thickness and stability. (Funded by the Swiss National Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.).


European Radiology | 2000

Progressive Pseudorheumatoid Dysplasia

Gandham SriLakshmi Bhavani; Hitesh Shah; Anju Shukla; Ashwin Dalal; Katta M. Girisha

Abstract. A rare case of progressive pseudorheumatoid dysplasia (PPD) in a 9-year-old girl is presented. Clinically, chronic painless swollen joints, accompanied by progressive motion restriction and progressive walking difficulties, were found. Radiologically, there was enlargement of the epimetaphyseal portions of the large joints, metacarpal heads, and phalanges, and generalized platyspondyly with irregular delineation of the endplates of the vertebral bodies. The radioclinical features at the peripheral joints were originally misdiagnosed as juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA), and the structural spinal abnormalities were neglected and interpreted as Scheuermanns disease. However, the absence of active inflammatory parameters argues against JRA, whereas the low age of onset of the irregularities at the vertebral endplates is an argument against the diagnosis of Scheuermanns disease. The combination of the dysplastic abnormalities of the spine, with platyspondyly and Scheuermann-like lesions at an unusually low age of onset, and radiological features mimicking JRA of the peripheral joints, is the clue to the diagnosis of this rare autosomal-recessive disease. This case is the first to document the MRI features of PPD of the spine.


Clinical Genetics | 2014

Microduplications encompassing the Sonic hedgehog limb enhancer ZRS are associated with Haas‐type polysyndactyly and Laurin‐Sandrow syndrome

S. Lohan; Malte Spielmann; Sandra C. Doelken; Ricarda Flöttmann; F. Muhammad; Shahid Mahmood Baig; M. Wajid; Wiebke Hülsemann; Rolf Habenicht; Klaus W. Kjaer; S. J. Patil; Katta M. Girisha; H. H. Abarca-Barriga; Stefan Mundlos; Eva Klopocki

Laurin‐Sandrow syndrome (LSS) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by polysyndactyly of hands and/or feet, mirror image duplication of the feet, nasal defects, and loss of identity between fibula and tibia. The genetic basis of LSS is currently unknown. LSS shows phenotypic overlap with Haas‐type polysyndactyly (HTS) regarding the digital phenotype. Here we report on five unrelated families with overlapping microduplications encompassing the Sonic hedgehog (SHH) limb enhancer ZPA regulatory sequence (ZRS) on chromosome 7q36. Clinically, the patients show polysyndactyly phenotypes and various types of lower limb malformations ranging from syndactyly to mirror image polydactyly with duplications of the fibulae. We show that larger duplications of the ZRS region (>80 kb) are associated with HTS, whereas smaller duplications (<80 kb) result in the LSS phenotype. On the basis of our data, the latter can be clearly distinguished from HTS by the presence of mirror image polysyndactyly of the feet with duplication of the fibula. Our results expand the clinical phenotype of the ZRS‐associated syndromes and suggest that smaller duplications (<80 kb) are associated with a more severe phenotype. In addition, we show that these small microduplications within the ZRS region are the underlying genetic cause of Laurin‐Sandrow syndrome.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2015

Mutations in patients with osteogenesis imperfecta from consanguineous Indian families

Joshi Stephen; Katta M. Girisha; Ashwin Dalal; Anju Shukla; Hitesh Shah; Priyanka Srivastava; Uwe Kornak; Shubha R. Phadke

Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a spectrum of genetic disorders with decreased bone density and bone fragility. Most of the cases of OI are inherited in autosomal dominant fashion with mutations in COL1A1 or COL1A2 genes. Over last few years, twelve genes for autosomal recessive OI have been identified. In this study we have evaluated seven patients with OI from consanguineous Indian families. Homozygosity mapping using SNP microarray was done and selected candidate genes were sequenced. Candidate genes were identified in four out of seven patients studied. Four mutations, namely; a homozygous non-sense (p.Q178*) and a deletion (p.F277del) mutations in SERPINF1 gene, a missense mutation (p.M101K) in PPIB gene and a nonsense mutation (p.E45*) in CRTAP gene were identified. In three patients for whom the regions of homozygosity did not reveal any known autosomal recessive OI genes, exome sequencing was performed and we identified a known missense mutation (p.G1012S) in COL1A2 gene in one of the patients. As WNT1 gene was not properly covered in exome sequencing in one patient, the gene was sequenced and a homozygous in-frame deletion of four amino acids (p.Phe176_Leu179del) was identified. In one of the three cases the exome sequencing did not reveal a mutation in any known OI genes, suggesting the possibility of mutations in an unidentified gene. The phenotypes of all the cases are described. This work proves the power of homozygosity mapping followed by candidate gene sequencing approach for clinical application in consanguineous families.

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Anju Shukla

Kasturba Medical College

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Hitesh Shah

Kasturba Medical College

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Shubha R. Phadke

Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences

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Ashwin Dalal

Centre for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics

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Sheela Nampoothiri

Amrita Institute of Medical Sciences and Research Centre

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