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Dive into the research topics where Krystyna Szymańska is active.

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Featured researches published by Krystyna Szymańska.


Annals of Neurology | 2012

Sepiapterin reductase deficiency: A Treatable Mimic of Cerebral Palsy

Jennifer Friedman; Emmanuel Roze; Jose E. Abdenur; Richard Chang; Serena Gasperini; Veronica Saletti; Gurusidheshwar M. Wali; Hernan Eiroa; Brian Neville; Alex E. Felice; Ray Parascandalo; Dimitrios I. Zafeiriou; Luisa Arrabal‐Fernandez; Patricia Dill; Florian Eichler; Bernard Echenne; Luis González Gutiérrez-Solana; Georg F. Hoffmann; Keith Hyland; Katarzyna Kusmierska; Marina A. J. Tijssen; Thomas A. Lutz; Michel Mazzuca; Johann Penzien; Bwee Tien Poll-The; Jolanta Sykut-Cegielska; Krystyna Szymańska; Beat Thöny; Nenad Blau

Sepiapterin reductase deficiency (SRD) is an under‐recognized levodopa‐responsive disorder. We describe clinical, biochemical, and molecular findings in a cohort of patients with this treatable condition. We aim to improve awareness of the phenotype and available diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to reduce delayed diagnosis or misdiagnosis, optimize management, and improve understanding of pathophysiologic mechanisms.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2010

Severe mental retardation, seizures, and hypotonia due to deletions of MEF2C

Beata Nowakowska; Ewa Obersztyn; Krystyna Szymańska; Monika Bekiesińska-Figatowska; Zhilian Xia; Christian B. Ricks; Ewa Bocian; David W. Stockton; Krzysztof Szczałuba; Magdalena Nawara; Ankita Patel; Daryl A. Scott; Sau Wai Cheung; Timothy P. Bohan; Pawel Stankiewicz

We present four patients, in whom we identified overlapping deletions in 5q14.3 involving MEF2C using a clinical oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA). In case 1, CMA revealed an ∼140 kb deletion encompassing the first three exons of MEF2C in a 3‐year‐old patient with severe psychomotor retardation, periodic tremor, and an abnormal motor pattern with mirror movement of the upper limbs observed during infancy, hypotonia, abnormal EEG, epilepsy, absence of speech, autistic behavior, bruxism, and mild dysmorphic features. MRI of the brain showed mild thinning of the corpus callosum and delay of white matter myelination in the occipital lobes. In case 2, an ∼1.8 Mb deletion of TMEM161B and MEF2C was found in a child with severe developmental delay, hypotonia, and seizures. Patient 3 had epilepsy, hypotonia, thinning of the corpus callosum, and developmental delay associated with a de novo ∼2.4 Mb deletion in 5q14.3 including MEF2C and five other genes. In case 4, a de novo ∼5.7 Mb deletion of MEF2C and five other genes was found in a child with truncal hypotonia, intractable seizures, profound developmental delay, and shortening of the corpus callosum on brain MRI. These deletions further support that haploinsufficiency of MEF2C is responsible for severe mental retardation, seizures, and hypotonia. Our results, in combination with previous reports, imply that exon‐targeted oligo array CGH, which is more efficient in identifying exonic copy number variants, should improve the detection of clinically significant deletions and duplications over arrays with probes spaced evenly throughout the genome.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Biallelic Mutations of VAC14 in Pediatric-Onset Neurological Disease

Guy M. Lenk; Krystyna Szymańska; Grazyna Debska-Vielhaber; Małgorzata Rydzanicz; Anna Walczak; Monika Bekiesinska-Figatowska; Stefan Vielhaber; Kerstin Hallmann; Piotr Stawiński; Sonja Buehring; David A. Hsu; Wolfram S. Kunz; Miriam H. Meisler; Rafał Płoski

In the PI(3,5)P2 biosynthetic complex, the lipid kinase PIKFYVE and the phosphatase FIG4 are bound to the dimeric scaffold protein VAC14, which is composed of multiple heat-repeat domains. Mutations of FIG4 result in the inherited disorders Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 4J, Yunis-Varón syndrome, and polymicrogyria with seizures. We here describe inherited variants of VAC14 in two unrelated children with sudden onset of a progressive neurological disorder and regression of developmental milestones. Both children developed impaired movement with dystonia, became nonambulatory and nonverbal, and exhibited striatal abnormalities on MRI. A diagnosis of Leigh syndrome was rejected due to normal lactate profiles. Exome sequencing identified biallelic variants of VAC14 that were inherited from unaffected heterozygous parents in both families. Proband 1 inherited a splice-site variant that results in skipping of exon 13, p.Ile459Profs(∗)4 (not reported in public databases), and the missense variant p.Trp424Leu (reported in the ExAC database in a single heterozygote). Proband 2 inherited two missense variants in the dimerization domain of VAC14, p.Ala582Ser and p.Ser583Leu, that have not been previously reported. Cultured skin fibroblasts exhibited the accumulation of vacuoles that is characteristic of PI(3,5)P2 deficiency. Vacuolization of fibroblasts was rescued by transfection of wild-type VAC14 cDNA. The similar age of onset and neurological decline in the two unrelated children define a recessive disorder resulting from compound heterozygosity for deleterious variants of VAC14.


BioMed Research International | 2014

The analysis of genetic aberrations in children with inherited neurometabolic and neurodevelopmental disorders.

Krystyna Szymańska; Krzysztof Szczałuba; Agnieszka Ługowska; Ewa Obersztyn; Marek Radkowski; Beata Nowakowska; Katarzyna Kuśmierska; Jolanta Tryfon; Urszula Demkow

Inherited encephalopathies include a broad spectrum of heterogeneous disorders. To provide a correct diagnosis, an integrated approach including genetic testing is warranted. We report seven patients with difficult to diagnose inborn paediatric encephalopathies. The diagnosis could not be attained only by means of clinical and laboratory investigations and MRI. Additional genetic testing was required. Cytogenetics, PCR based tests, and array-based comparative genome hybridization were performed. In 4 patients with impaired language abilities we found the presence of microduplication in the region 16q23.1 affecting two dose-sensitive genes: WWOX (OMIM 605131) and MAF (OMIM 177075) (1 case), an interstitial deletion of the 17p11.2 region (2 patients further diagnosed as Smith-Magenis syndrome), and deletion encompassing first three exons of Myocyte Enhancer Factor gene 2MEF2C (1 case). The two other cases represented progressing dystonia. Characteristic GAG deletion in DYT1 consistently with the diagnosis of torsion dystonia was confirmed in 1 case. Last enrolled patient presented with clinical picture consistent with Krabbe disease confirmed by finding of two pathogenic variants of GALC gene and the absence of mutations in PSAP. The integrated diagnostic approach including genetic testing in selected examples of complicated hereditary diseases of the brain is largely discussed in this paper.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2016

Further evidence for GRIN2B mutation as the cause of severe epileptic encephalopathy.

Robert Smigiel; Grażyna Kostrzewa; Joanna Kosińska; Agnieszka Pollak; Piotr Stawiński; Elzbieta Szmida; Krystyna Szymańska; Pawel Karpinski; Maria M. Sasiadek; Rafał Płoski

Epileptic encephalopathies (EE) include a range of severe epilepsies in which intractable seizures or severe sub‐clinical epileptiform activity are accompanied by impairment of motor and cognitive functions. Mutations in several genes including ion channels and other genes whose function is not completely understood have been associated to some EE. In this report, we provide a detailed clinical description of a sporadic male patient with early‐onset epilepsy and epileptic encephalopathy in whom we performed complete exome sequencing (WES) and identified a GRIN2B mutation. The GRIN2B splicing mutation in intron 10 (c.2011‐1G>A) was revealed in a WES study. The result was confirmed by Sanger sequencing. No mutation was found in both parents. Our finding confirms that early‐onset EE may be caused not only by gain‐of‐function variants but also by splice site mutations—in particular those affecting the splice acceptor site of the 10th intron of the GRIN2B gene.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2015

Phenotypic features of children with neurodevelopmental diseases in relation to biogenic amines.

Krystyna Szymańska; Katarzyna Kuśmierska; Maria Nowacka; Jolanta Sykut-Cegielska; Urszula Demkow

Disruption of monoamines metabolism leads to diverse manifestations, including developmental, movement and respiratory dysfunctions. We aimed to correlate clinical phenotypes of 55 children with neurodevelopmental disorders with dopamine (HVA) and serotonin (5-HIIA) metabolites in CSF. Decreased level of at least one metabolite was documented in 49.1% patients. Both metabolites were significantly lower in progressive disorder and extrapyramidal syndrome (p<0.05). HVA was significantly lower in hypokinetic and regulatory disorders (p<0.05). In univariate analysis, only progressive course, extrapyramidal syndrome and dystonia were significantly associated with decreased 5-HIAA. In multivariate regression only progressive course remained significant (p=0.005). Progressive disease, extrapyramidal syndrome, dystonia, tremor and rigidity were positively associated with low HVA. In multivariate analysis only: progressive course and rigidity remained significant. Progressive/rigid phenotype carries a high risk of monoamines deficiency, strongly implying need for their analysis. Psychomotor delay with epilepsy and hypotonia is rarely linked to low monoamines level. Irrespective of final diagnosis, different clinical presentations may be associated with impaired monoamines turnover.


Psychiatria Polska | 2016

The role of genetic factors and pre- and perinatal influences in the etiology of autism spectrum disorders - indications for genetic referral.

Filip Rybakowski; Izabela Chojnicka; Piotr Dziechciarz; Andrea Horvath; Małgorzata Janas-Kozik; Anetta Jeziorek; Ewa Pisula; Anna Piwowarczyk; Agnieszka Slopien; Joanna Sykut-Cegielska; H. Szajewska; Krzysztof Szczałuba; Krystyna Szymańska; Anna Waligórska; Aneta Wojciechowska; Michał Wroniszewski; Anna Dunajska

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are caused by disruptions in early stages of central nervous system development and are usually diagnosed in first years of life. Despite common features such as impairment of socio-communicative development and stereotypical behaviours, ASD are characterised by heterogeneous course and clinical picture. The most important aetiological factors comprise genetic and environmental influences acting at prenatal, perinatal and neonatal period. The role of rare variants with large effect i.e. copy number variants in genes regulating synapse formation and intrasynaptic connections is emphasised. Common variants with small effect may also be involved, i.e. polymorphisms in genes encoding prosocial peptides system - oxytocin and vasopressin. The environmental factors may include harmful effects acting during pregnancy and labour, however their specificity until now is not confirmed, and in some of them a primary genetic origin cannot be excluded. In several instances, especially with comorbid disorders - intellectual disability, epilepsy and dysmorphias - a detailed molecular diagnostics is warranted, which currently may elucidate the genetic background of disorder in about 20% of cases.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2015

Age and Gender-Related Changes in Biogenic Amine Metabolites in Cerebrospinal Fluid in Children

Katarzyna Kuśmierska; Krystyna Szymańska; Dariusz Rokicki; Katarzyna Kotulska; Sergiusz Jóźwiak; Jolanta Sykut-Cegielska; Hanna Mierzewska; Elżbieta Szczepanik; Ewa Pronicka; Urszula Demkow

Metabolites of cerebrospinal biogenic amines (dopamine and serotonin)are an important tool in clinical research and diagnosis of children with neurotransmitter disorders. In this article we focused on finding relationships between the concentration of biogenic amine metabolites, age, and gender. We analyzed 148 samples from children with drug resistant seizures of unknown etiology and children with mild stable encephalopathy aged 0-18 years. A normal profile of biogenic amineswas found in 107 children and those children were enrolled to the study group. The CSF samples were analyzed by HPLC with an electrochemical detector. The concentrations of the dopamine and serotonin metabolites homovanillic acid (HVA) and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), respectively, were high at birth, gradually decreasing afterward until the 18 years of age. Nevertheless, the HVA/5-HIAA ratio did not vary with age, except in the children below 1 year of age. In the youngest group we observed a strong relationship between the HVA/5-HIAA ratio and age (r = 0.69, p < 0.001). There were no statistical differences in the level of both dopamine and serotonin metabolites between boys and girls, although a tread toward lower HVA and 5-HIAA in the boys was noticeable. Significant inter-gender differences in the level of HVA and 5-HIAA were noted only in the age-group of 1-4 years, with 5-HIAA being higher in the girls than boys (p = 0.004). In conclusion, the study revealed that the concentration of biogenic amine metabolites is age and sex dependent.


Archive | 2017

Proteomics in the Diagnosis of Inborn Encephalopathies of Unknown Origin: A Myth or Reality

Anna Kupniewska; Krystyna Szymańska; Urszula Demkow

Synaptopathy underlies a great variety of neurological or neurodevelopmental disorders, including neurodegenerative diseases and the highly complex neuropsychiatric syndromes. Standard diagnostic assays in the majority of synaptopathies are insufficient to make an appropriate and fast diagnosis, which has spurred a search for more accurate diagnostic methods using recent technological advances. As synaptopathy phenotypes strictly depend on genetics and environmental factors, the best way to approach these diseases is the investigation of entire sets of protein characteristics. Thus, proteomics has emerged as a mainstay in the studies on synaptopathies, with mass spectrometry as a technology of choice. This review is an update on the proteomic methods and achievements in the understanding, diagnostics, and novel biomarkers of synaptopathies. The article also provides a critical point of view and future perspectives on the application of neuroproteomics in clinical practice.


Archive | 2017

Isolated Hearing Impairment Caused by SPATA5 Mutations in a Family with Variable Phenotypic Expression

Krzysztof Szczałuba; Krystyna Szymańska; Joanna Kosińska; Agnieszka Pollak; Victor Murcia; Anna Kędra; Piotr Stawiński; Małgorzata Rydzanicz; Urszula Demkow; Rafał Płoski

Biallelic mutations in the SPATA5 gene, encoding ATPase family protein, are an important cause of newly recognized epileptic encephalopathy classified as epilepsy, hearing loss, and mental retardation syndrome (EHLMRS, OMIM: 616577). Herein we describe a family in which two SPATA5 mutations with established pathogenicity (p.Thr330del and c.1714+1G>A) were found in the proband and her younger sister. The proband had a similar clinical picture to the previous descriptions of EHLMRS. In the sister, the only manifestation was an isolated sensorineural hearing loss. Our findings extend the phenotypic spectrum of SPATA5-associated diseases and indicate that SPATA5 defects may account for a fraction of isolated sensorineural hearing impairment cases.

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Krzysztof Szczałuba

Medical University of Warsaw

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Urszula Demkow

Medical University of Warsaw

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Piotr Stawiński

Medical University of Warsaw

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Rafał Płoski

Medical University of Warsaw

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Filip Rybakowski

University of Social Sciences and Humanities

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Agnieszka Pollak

Medical University of Warsaw

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Agnieszka Slopien

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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