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Featured researches published by Laila C. Schenkel.


Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences | 2016

DNA methylation analysis in constitutional disorders: Clinical implications of the epigenome.

Laila C. Schenkel; David I. Rodenhiser; Peter Ainsworth; Guillaume Paré; Bekim Sadikovic

Abstract Genomic, chromosomal, and gene-specific changes in the DNA sequence underpin both phenotypic variations in populations as well as disease associations, and the application of genomic technologies for the identification of constitutional (inherited) or somatic (acquired) alterations in DNA sequence forms a cornerstone of clinical and molecular genetics. In addition to the disruption of primary DNA sequence, the modulation of DNA function by epigenetic phenomena, in particular by DNA methylation, has long been known to play a role in the regulation of gene expression and consequent pathogenesis. However, these epigenetic factors have been identified only in a handful of pediatric conditions, including imprinting disorders. Technological advances in the past decade that have revolutionized clinical genomics are now rapidly being applied to the emerging discipline of clinical epigenomics. Here, we present an overview of epigenetic mechanisms with a focus on DNA modifications, including the molecular mechanisms of DNA methylation and subtypes of DNA modifications, and we describe the classic and emerging genomic technologies that are being applied to this study. This review focuses primarily on constitutional epigenomic conditions associated with a spectrum of developmental and intellectual disabilities. Epigenomic disorders are discussed in the context of global genomic disorders, imprinting disorders, and single gene disorders. We include a section focused on integration of genetic and epigenetic mechanisms together with their effect on clinical phenotypes. Finally, we summarize emerging epigenomic technologies and their impact on diagnostic aspects of constitutional genetic and epigenetic disorders.


Scientific Reports | 2016

The defining DNA methylation signature of Floating-Harbor Syndrome

Rebecca L. Hood; Laila C. Schenkel; Sarah M. Nikkel; Peter Ainsworth; Guillaume Paré; Kym M. Boycott; Dennis E. Bulman; Bekim Sadikovic

Floating-Harbor syndrome (FHS) is an autosomal dominant genetic condition characterized by short stature, delayed osseous maturation, expressive language impairment, and unique facial dysmorphology. We previously identified mutations in the chromatin remodeling protein SRCAP (SNF2-related CBP Activator Protein) as the cause of FHS. SRCAP has multiple roles in chromatin and transcriptional regulation; however, specific epigenetic consequences of SRCAP mutations remain to be described. Using high resolution genome-wide DNA methylation analysis, we identified a unique and highly specific DNA methylation “epi-signature” in the peripheral blood of individuals with FHS. Both hyper and hypomethylated loci are distributed across the genome, preferentially occurring in CpG islands. Clonal bisulfite sequencing of two hypermethylated (FIGN and STPG2) and two hypomethylated (MYO1F and RASIP1) genes confirmed these findings. The identification of a unique methylation signature in FHS provides further insight into the biological function of SRCAP and provides a unique biomarker for this disorder.


Epigenetics & Chromatin | 2017

Identification of epigenetic signature associated with alpha thalassemia/mental retardation X-linked syndrome

Laila C. Schenkel; Kristin D. Kernohan; Arran McBride; Ditta Reina; Amanda Hodge; Peter Ainsworth; David I. Rodenhiser; Guillaume Paré; Nathalie G. Bérubé; Cindy Skinner; Kym M. Boycott; Charles E. Schwartz; Bekim Sadikovic

BackgroundAlpha thalassemia/mental retardation X-linked syndrome (ATR-X) is caused by a mutation at the chromatin regulator gene ATRX. The mechanisms involved in the ATR-X pathology are not completely understood, but may involve epigenetic modifications. ATRX has been linked to the regulation of histone H3 and DNA methylation, while mutations in the ATRX gene may lead to the downstream epigenetic and transcriptional effects. Elucidating the underlying epigenetic mechanisms altered in ATR-X will provide a better understanding about the pathobiology of this disease, as well as provide novel diagnostic biomarkers.ResultsWe performed genome-wide DNA methylation assessment of the peripheral blood samples from 18 patients with ATR-X and compared it to 210 controls. We demonstrated the evidence of a unique and highly specific DNA methylation “epi-signature” in the peripheral blood of ATRX patients, which was corroborated by targeted bisulfite sequencing experiments. Although genomically represented, differentially methylated regions showed evidence of preferential clustering in pericentromeric and telometric chromosomal regions, areas where ATRX has multiple functions related to maintenance of heterochromatin and genomic integrity.ConclusionMost significant methylation changes in the 14 genomic loci provide a unique epigenetic signature for this syndrome that may be used as a highly sensitive and specific diagnostic biomarker to support the diagnosis of ATR-X, particularly in patients with phenotypic complexity and in patients with ATRX gene sequence variants of unknown significance.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2017

Clinical Validation of Copy Number Variant Detection from Targeted Next-Generation Sequencing Panels

Jennifer Kerkhof; Laila C. Schenkel; Jack Reilly; Sheri McRobbie; Erfan Aref-Eshghi; Alan Stuart; C. Anthony Rupar; Paul C. Adams; Robert A. Hegele; Hanxin Lin; David I. Rodenhiser; Joan H. M. Knoll; Peter Ainsworth; Bekim Sadikovic

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology has rapidly replaced Sanger sequencing in the assessment of sequence variations in clinical genetics laboratories. One major limitation of current NGS approaches is the ability to detect copy number variations (CNVs) approximately >50 bp. Because these represent a major mutational burden in many genetic disorders, parallel CNV assessment using alternate supplemental methods, along with the NGS analysis, is normally required, resulting in increased labor, costs, and turnaround times. The objective of this study was to clinically validate a novel CNV detection algorithm using targeted clinical NGS gene panel data. We have applied this approach in a retrospective cohort of 391 samples and a prospective cohort of 2375 samples and found a 100% sensitivity (95% CI, 89%-100%) for 37 unique events and a high degree of specificity to detect CNVs across nine distinct targeted NGS gene panels. This NGS CNV pipeline enables stand-alone first-tier assessment for CNV and sequence variants in a clinical laboratory setting, dispensing with the need for parallel CNV analysis using classic techniques, such as microarray, long-range PCR, or multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. This NGS CNV pipeline can also be applied to the assessment of complex genomic regions, including pseudogenic DNA sequences, such as the PMS2CL gene, and to mitochondrial genome heteroplasmy detection.


The Journal of Molecular Diagnostics | 2017

Clinical Validation of a Genome-Wide DNA Methylation Assay for Molecular Diagnosis of Imprinting Disorders

Erfan Aref-Eshghi; Laila C. Schenkel; Hanxin Lin; Cindy Skinner; Peter Ainsworth; Guillaume Paré; Victoria M. Siu; David I. Rodenhiser; Charles E. Schwartz; Bekim Sadikovic

Genomic imprinting involves a DNA methylation-dependent and parent-of-origin-specific regulation of gene expression. Clinical assays for imprinting disorders are genomic locus, disorder, and molecular defect specific. We aimed to clinically validate a genome-wide approach for simultaneous testing of common imprinting disorders in a single assay. Using genome-wide DNA methylation arrays, epigenetic profiles from peripheral blood of patients with Angelman, Prader-Willi, Beckwith-Wiedemann, or Silver-Russell syndromes were compared to a reference cohort of 361 unaffected individuals. The analysis was of developmental delay and intellectual disabilities. This approach has allowed 100% sensitivity and specificity in detecting imprinting defects in all 28 patients and enabled identification of defects beyond the classically tested imprinted loci. Analysis of the cohort of patients with developmental delay and intellectual disabilities identified two patients with Prader-Willi syndrome, one with Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, and several other patients with DNA methylation defects in novel putative imprinting loci. These findings demonstrate clinical validation of a sensitive and specific genome-wide DNA methylation array-based approach for molecular testing of imprinting disorders to allow simultaneous assessment of genome-wide epigenetic defects in a single analytical procedure, enabling replacement of multiple locus-specific molecular tests while allowing discovery of novel clinical epigenomic associations and differential diagnosis of other epigenomic disorders.


Epigenetics | 2017

The defining DNA methylation signature of Kabuki syndrome enables functional assessment of genetic variants of unknown clinical significance

Erfan Aref-Eshghi; Laila C. Schenkel; Hanxin Lin; Cindy Skinner; Peter Ainsworth; Guillaume Paré; David I. Rodenhiser; Charles E. Schwartz; Bekim Sadikovic

ABSTRACT Kabuki syndrome (KS) is caused by mutations in KMT2D, which is a histone methyltransferase involved in methylation of H3K4, a histone marker associated with DNA methylation. Analysis of >450,000 CpGs in 24 KS patients with pathogenic mutations in KMT2D and 216 controls, identified 24 genomic regions, along with 1,504 CpG sites with significant DNA methylation changes including a number of Hox genes and the MYO1F gene. Using the most differentiating and significant probes and regions we developed a “methylation variant pathogenicity (MVP) score,” which enables 100% sensitive and specific identification of individuals with KS, which was confirmed using multiple public and internal patient DNA methylation databases. We also demonstrated the ability of the MVP score to accurately reclassify variants of unknown significance in subjects with apparent clinical features of KS, enabling its potential use in molecular diagnostics. These findings provide novel insights into the molecular etiology of KS and illustrate that DNA methylation patterns can be interpreted as ‘epigenetic echoes’ in certain clinical disorders.


Clinical Epigenetics | 2018

Peripheral Blood Epi-Signature of Claes-Jensen Syndrome Enables Sensitive and Specific Identification of Patients and Healthy Carriers with Pathogenic Mutations in KDM5C.

Laila C. Schenkel; Erfan Aref-Eshghi; Cindy Skinner; Peter Ainsworth; Hanxin Lin; Guillaume Paré; David I. Rodenhiser; Charles E. Schwartz; Bekim Sadikovic

BackgroundClaes-Jensen syndrome is an X-linked inherited intellectual disability caused by mutations in the KDM5C gene. Kdm5c is a histone lysine demethylase involved in histone modifications and chromatin remodeling. Males with hemizygous mutations in KDM5C present with intellectual disability and facial dysmorphism, while most heterozygous female carriers are asymptomatic. We hypothesized that loss of Kdm5c function may influence other components of the epigenomic machinery including DNA methylation in affected patients.ResultsGenome-wide DNA methylation analysis of 7 male patients affected with Claes-Jensen syndrome and 56 age- and sex-matched controls identified a specific DNA methylation defect (epi-signature) in the peripheral blood of these patients, including 1769 individual CpGs and 9 genomic regions. Six healthy female carriers showed less pronounced but distinctive changes in the same regions enabling their differentiation from both patients and controls. Highly specific computational model using the most significant methylation changes demonstrated 100% accuracy in differentiating patients, carriers, and controls in the training cohort, which was confirmed on a separate cohort of patients and carriers. The 100% specificity of this unique epi-signature was further confirmed on additional 500 unaffected controls and 600 patients with intellectual disability and developmental delay, including other patient cohorts with previously described epi-signatures.ConclusionPeripheral blood epi-signature in Claes-Jensen syndrome can be used for molecular diagnosis and carrier identification and assist with interpretation of genetic variants of unknown clinical significance in the KDM5C gene.


Archive | 2018

Epigenomic Mechanisms of Human Developmental Disorders

Erfan Aref-Eshghi; Laila C. Schenkel; Deanna Alexis Carere; David I. Rodenhiser; Bekim Sadikovic

Abstract Human development, which begins with gametogenesis and continues through post-zygotic, embryonic, fetal, and postnatal stages, is a complicated biological process orchestrated by a cascade of gene expression networks and regulatory signals that temporally and spatially control cellular differentiation and morphogenesis. Epigenetic regulatory processes are key elements of this system. Disruption of epigenetic regulatory networks, if compatible with life, can result in dysmorphology as well as neurological and intellectual abnormalities, commonly referred to as developmental delays and intellectual disabilities (DD/ID). This chapter describes epigenomic mechanisms of DD/ID, including imprinting defects, trinucleotide repeat expansions, and dysfunctions in genes encoding epigenomic machinery proteins. Epigenomic involvement in complex and multifactorial developmental conditions, as well as the interactions between the genome and epigenome in the establishment of such disorders, are discussed. The chapter concludes with a review of technological advances in epigenome-based molecular screening and diagnostics of developmental conditions.


Frontiers in Oncology | 2018

Genomic DNA Methylation-Derived Algorithm Enables Accurate Detection of Malignant Prostate Tissues.

Erfan Aref-Eshghi; Laila C. Schenkel; Peter Ainsworth; Hanxin Lin; David I. Rodenhiser; Jean-Claude Cutz; Bekim Sadikovic

Introduction The current methodology involving diagnosis of prostate cancer (PCa) relies on the pathology examination of prostate needle biopsies, a method with high false negative rates partly due to temporospatial, molecular, and morphological heterogeneity of prostate adenocarcinoma. It is postulated that molecular markers have a potential to assign diagnosis to a considerable portion of undetected prostate tumors. This study examines the genome-wide DNA methylation changes in PCa in search of genomic markers for the development of a diagnostic algorithm for PCa screening. Methods Archival PCa and normal tissues were assessed using genomic DNA methylation arrays. Differentially methylated sites and regions (DMRs) were used for functional assessment, gene-set enrichment and protein interaction analyses, and examination of transcription factor-binding patterns. Raw signal intensity data were used for identification of recurrent copy number variations (CNVs). Non-redundant fully differentiating cytosine-phosphate-guanine sites (CpGs), which did not overlap CNV segments, were used in an L1 regularized logistic regression model (LASSO) to train a classification algorithm. Validation of this algorithm was performed using a large external cohort of benign and tumor prostate arrays. Results Approximately 6,000 probes and 600 genomic regions showed significant DNA methylation changes, primarily involving hypermethylation. Gene-set enrichment and protein interaction analyses found an overrepresentation of genes related to cell communications, neurogenesis, and proliferation. Motif enrichment analysis demonstrated enrichment of tumor suppressor-binding sites nearby DMRs. Several of these regions were also found to contain copy number amplifications. Using four non-redundant fully differentiating CpGs, we trained a classification model with 100% accuracy in discriminating tumors from benign samples. Validation of this algorithm using an external cohort of 234 tumors and 92 benign samples yielded 96% sensitivity and 98% specificity. The model was found to be highly sensitive to detect metastatic lesions in bone, lymph node, and soft tissue, while being specific enough to differentiate the benign hyperplasia of prostate from tumor. Conclusion A considerable component of PCa DNA methylation profile represent driver events potentially established/maintained by disruption of tumor suppressor activity. As few as four CpGs from this profile can be used for screening of PCa.


Clinical Epigenetics | 2016

Identification of a methylation profile for DNMT1-associated autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia, deafness, and narcolepsy

Kristin D. Kernohan; Laila C. Schenkel; Lijia Huang; Amanda Smith; Guillaume Paré; Peter Ainsworth; Kym M. Boycott; Jodi Warman-Chardon; Bekim Sadikovic

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Bekim Sadikovic

University of Western Ontario

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Peter Ainsworth

University of Western Ontario

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David I. Rodenhiser

University of Western Ontario

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Erfan Aref-Eshghi

University of Western Ontario

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Hanxin Lin

London Health Sciences Centre

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Kym M. Boycott

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Kristin D. Kernohan

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Alan Stuart

London Health Sciences Centre

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