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Dive into the research topics where Latifa Karim is active.

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Featured researches published by Latifa Karim.


Nature Genetics | 1999

An imprinted QTL with major effect on muscle mass and fat deposition maps to the IGF2 locus in pigs.

Carine Nezer; Laurence Moreau; Benoît Brouwers; Wouter Coppieters; Johann Detilleux; R Hanset; Latifa Karim; Alex Kvasz; Pascal Leroy; Michel Georges

An imprinted QTL with major effect on muscle mass and fat deposition maps to the IGF2 locus in pigs


Nature Genetics | 2008

Highly effective SNP-based association mapping and management of recessive defects in livestock

Carole Charlier; Wouter Coppieters; Frédéric Rollin; Daniel Desmecht; Jørgen S. Agerholm; Nadine Cambisano; Eloisa Carta; Sabrina Dardano; Marc Dive; Jean-Claude Frennet; R Hanset; Xavier Hubin; Claus B. Jørgensen; Latifa Karim; Matthew Kent; Kirsten Harvey; Brian R. Pearce; Patricia Simon; Nico Tama; Haisheng Nie; Sébastien Vandeputte; Sigbjørn Lien; Maria Longeri; Merete Fredholm; Robert J. Harvey; Michel Georges

The widespread use of elite sires by means of artificial insemination in livestock breeding leads to the frequent emergence of recessive genetic defects, which cause significant economic and animal welfare concerns. Here we show that the availability of genome-wide, high-density SNP panels, combined with the typical structure of livestock populations, markedly accelerates the positional identification of genes and mutations that cause inherited defects. We report the fine-scale mapping of five recessive disorders in cattle and the molecular basis for three of these: congenital muscular dystony (CMD) types 1 and 2 in Belgian Blue cattle and ichthyosis fetalis in Italian Chianina cattle. Identification of these causative mutations has an immediate translation into breeding practice, allowing marker assisted selection against the defects through avoidance of at-risk matings.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Variants modulating the expression of a chromosome domain encompassing PLAG1 influence bovine stature

Latifa Karim; Haruko Takeda; Li Lin; Tom Druet; Juan A C Arias; Denis Baurain; Nadine Cambisano; Stephen R. Davis; Frédéric Farnir; Bernard Grisart; Bevin Harris; Michael Keehan; Mathew Littlejohn; Richard Spelman; Michel Georges; Wouter Coppieters

We report mapping of a quantitative trait locus (QTL) with a major effect on bovine stature to a ∼780-kb interval using a Hidden Markov Model–based approach that simultaneously exploits linkage and linkage disequilibrium. We re-sequenced the interval in six sires with known QTL genotype and identified 13 clustered candidate quantitative trait nucleotides (QTNs) out of >9,572 discovered variants. We eliminated five candidate QTNs by studying the phenotypic effect of a recombinant haplotype identified in a breed diversity panel. We show that the QTL influences fetal expression of seven of the nine genes mapping to the ∼780-kb interval. We further show that two of the eight candidate QTNs, mapping to the PLAG1-CHCHD7 intergenic region, influence bidirectional promoter strength and affect binding of nuclear factors. By performing expression QTL analyses, we identified a splice site variant in CHCHD7 and exploited this naturally occurring null allele to exclude CHCHD7 as single causative gene.


Nature Genetics | 2001

The callipyge mutation enhances the expression of coregulated imprinted genes in cis without affecting their imprinting status

Carole Charlier; Karin Segers; Latifa Karim; T. L. Shay; Gabor Gyapay; Noelle E. Cockett; Michel Georges

The callipyge (CLPG) phenotype (from καλι, “beautiful,” and πιγɛ, “buttocks”) described in sheep is an inherited muscular hypertrophy that is subject to an unusual parent-of-origin effect referred to as polar overdominance: only heterozygous individuals having inherited the CLPG mutation from their sire exhibit the muscular hypertrophy. The callipyge (clpg) locus was mapped to a chromosome segment of approximately 400 kb (refs. 2–4), which was shown to contain four genes (DLK1, GTL2, PEG11 and MEG8) that are preferentially expressed in skeletal muscle and subject to parental imprinting in this tissue. Here we describe the effect of the CLPG mutation on the expression of these four genes, and demonstrate that callipyge individuals have a unique expression profile that may account for the observed polar overdominance.


Mammalian Genome | 1998

A QTL with major effect on milk yield and composition maps to bovine Chromosome 14

Wouter Coppieters; Juliette Riquet; Juan-José Arranz; Paulette Berzi; Nadine Cambisano; Bernard Grisart; Latifa Karim; Fabienne Marcq; Laurence Moreau; Carine Nezer; Patricia Simon; Pascal Vanmanshoven; Danny Wagenaar; Michel Georges

Abstract. A whole genome scan was undertaken in a granddaughter design comprising 1158 progeny-tested bulls in order to map QTL influencing milk yield and composition. In this paper we report the identification of a locus on the centromeric end of bovine Chromosome (Chr) 14, with major effect on fat and protein percentage as well as milk yield. The genuine nature of this QTL was verified using the grand2-daughter design, that is, by tracing the segregating QTL alleles from heterozygous grandsires to their maternal grandsons and confirming the predicted QTL allele substitution effect.


Nature | 2012

Serial translocation by means of circular intermediates underlies colour sidedness in cattle

Keith Durkin; Wouter Coppieters; Cord Drögemüller; Naima Ahariz; Nadine Cambisano; Tom Druet; Aynalem Haile; Petr Horin; Lusheng Huang; Yohichiro Kamatani; Latifa Karim; Mark Lathrop; Simon Moser; Kor Oldenbroek; Stefan Rieder; Arnaud Sartelet; Johann Sölkner; Hans Stålhammar; Diana Zelenika; Zhiyan Zhang; Tosso Leeb; Michel Georges; Carole Charlier

Colour sidedness is a dominantly inherited phenotype of cattle characterized by the polarization of pigmented sectors on the flanks, snout and ear tips. It is also referred to as ‘lineback’ or ‘witrik’ (which means white back), as colour-sided animals typically display a white band along their spine. Colour sidedness is documented at least since the Middle Ages and is presently segregating in several cattle breeds around the globe, including in Belgian blue and brown Swiss. Here we report that colour sidedness is determined by a first allele on chromosome 29 (Cs29), which results from the translocation of a 492-kilobase chromosome 6 segment encompassing KIT to chromosome 29, and a second allele on chromosome 6 (Cs6), derived from the first by repatriation of fused 575-kilobase chromosome 6 and 29 sequences to the KIT locus. We provide evidence that both translocation events involved circular intermediates. This is the first example, to our knowledge, of a phenotype determined by homologous yet non-syntenic alleles that result from a novel copy-number-variant-generating mechanism.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

A 660-Kb Deletion with Antagonistic Effects on Fertility and Milk Production Segregates at High Frequency in Nordic Red Cattle: Additional Evidence for the Common Occurrence of Balancing Selection in Livestock

Naveen K. Kadri; Goutam Sahana; Carole Charlier; Terhi Iso-Touru; Bernt Guldbrandtsen; Latifa Karim; U.S. Nielsen; Frank Panitz; Gert Pedersen Aamand; Nina Schulman; Michel Georges; Johanna Vilkki; Mogens Sandø Lund; Tom Druet

In dairy cattle, the widespread use of artificial insemination has resulted in increased selection intensity, which has led to spectacular increase in productivity. However, cow fertility has concomitantly severely declined. It is generally assumed that this reduction is primarily due to the negative energy balance of high-producing cows at the peak of lactation. We herein describe the fine-mapping of a major fertility QTL in Nordic Red cattle, and identify a 660-kb deletion encompassing four genes as the causative variant. We show that the deletion is a recessive embryonically lethal mutation. This probably results from the loss of RNASEH2B, which is known to cause embryonic death in mice. Despite its dramatic effect on fertility, 13%, 23% and 32% of the animals carry the deletion in Danish, Swedish and Finnish Red Cattle, respectively. To explain this, we searched for favorable effects on other traits and found that the deletion has strong positive effects on milk yield. This study demonstrates that embryonic lethal mutations account for a non-negligible fraction of the decline in fertility of domestic cattle, and that associated positive effects on milk yield may account for part of the negative genetic correlation. Our study adds to the evidence that structural variants contribute to animal phenotypic variation, and that balancing selection might be more common in livestock species than previously appreciated.


Brain | 2013

Exome sequencing reveals a novel Moroccan founder mutation in SLC19A3 as a new cause of early-childhood fatal Leigh syndrome

Mike Gerards; R. Kamps; Jo van Oevelen; Iris B W Boesten; Eveline Jongen; Bart de Koning; H.R. Scholte; Isabel de Angst; Kees Schoonderwoerd; Ilham Ratbi; Wouter Coppieters; Latifa Karim; René de Coo; Bianca van den Bosch; Hubert J.M. Smeets

Leigh syndrome is an early onset, often fatal progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the mitochondrial or nuclear DNA. Until now, mutations in more than 35 genes have been reported to cause Leigh syndrome, indicating an extreme genetic heterogeneity for this disorder, but still only explaining part of the cases. The possibility of whole exome sequencing enables not only mutation detection in known candidate genes, but also the identification of new genes associated with Leigh syndrome in small families and isolated cases. Exome sequencing was combined with homozygosity mapping to identify the genetic defect in a Moroccan family with fatal Leigh syndrome in early childhood and specific magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities in the brain. We detected a homozygous nonsense mutation (c.20C>A; p.Ser7Ter) in the thiamine transporter SLC19A3. In vivo overexpression of wild-type SLC19A3 showed an increased thiamine uptake, whereas overexpression of mutant SLC19A3 did not, confirming that the mutation results in an absent or non-functional protein. Seventeen additional patients with Leigh syndrome were screened for mutations in SLC19A3 using conventional Sanger sequencing. Two unrelated patients, both from Moroccan origin and one from consanguineous parents, were homozygous for the same p.Ser7Ter mutation. One of these patients showed the same MRI abnormalities as the patients from the first family. Strikingly, patients receiving thiamine had an improved life-expectancy. One patient in the third family deteriorated upon interruption of the thiamine treatment and recovered after reinitiating. Although unrelated, all patients came from the province Al Hoceima in Northern Morocco. Based on the recombination events the mutation was estimated to have occurred 1250-1750 years ago. Our data shows that SLC19A3 is a new candidate for mutation screening in patients with Leigh syndrome, who might benefit from high doses of thiamine and/or biotin. Especially, Moroccan patients with Leigh syndrome should be tested for the c.20C>A founder mutation in SLC19A3.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A Deletion in the Bovine FANCI Gene Compromises Fertility by Causing Fetal Death and Brachyspina

Carole Charlier; Jørgen S. Agerholm; Wouter Coppieters; Wanbo Li; Gerben de Jong; Latifa Karim; Susanna Cirera; Nadine Cambisano; Naima Ahariz; Erik Mullaart; Michel Georges; Merete Fredholm

Fertility is one of the most important traits in dairy cattle, and has been steadily declining over the last decades. We herein use state-of-the-art genomic tools, including high-throughput SNP genotyping and next-generation sequencing, to identify a 3.3 Kb deletion in the FANCI gene causing the brachyspina syndrome (BS), a rare recessive genetic defect in Holstein dairy cattle. We determine that despite the very low incidence of BS (<1/100,000), carrier frequency is as high as 7.4% in the Holstein breed. We demonstrate that this apparent discrepancy is likely due to the fact that a large proportion of homozygous mutant calves die during pregnancy. We postulate that several other embryonic lethals may segregate in livestock and significantly compromise fertility, and propose a genotype-driven screening strategy to detect the corresponding deleterious mutations.


bioRxiv | 2016

Frequency of mosaicism points towards mutation-prone early cleavage cell divisions.

Chad Harland; Carole Charlier; Latifa Karim; Nadine Cambisano; Manon Deckers; Erik Mullaart; Wouter Coppieters; Michel Georges

It has recently become possible to directly estimate the germ-line de novo mutation (DNM) rate by sequencing the whole genome of father-mother-offspring trios, and this has been conducted in human1–5, chimpanzee6, birds7 and fish8. In these studies DNMs are defined as variants that are heterozygous in the offspring while being absent in both parents. They are assumed to have occurred in the germ-line of a parent and to have been transmitted to the offspring via the sperm or oocyte. This definition assumes that detectable mosaïcism in the individual in which the mutation occurred is negligible. However, instances of mosaïcism are well-documented in humans and other organisms, including ruminants9,10. We herein take advantage of the unique pedigree structure of cattle to show that mosaïcism associated with DNMs is a common occurrence, and that this should be taken into account to accurately estimate the mutation rate in this and possibly other species. It suggests that early cleavage cell divisions are particularly mutation-prone, and that the recurrence risk of DNM-dependent disorders in sibs may be higher than generally assumed.

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