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Dive into the research topics where Lenka Dvorakova is active.

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Featured researches published by Lenka Dvorakova.


Brain | 2009

Mutations in CLN7/MFSD8 are a common cause of variant late-infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis

Maria Kousi; Eija Siintola; Lenka Dvorakova; Hana Vlaskova; Julie Turnbull; Meral Topçu; Deniz Yüksel; Sarenur Gokben; Berge A. Minassian; Milan Elleder; Sara E. Mole; Anna-Elina Lehesjoki

The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs), the most common neurodegenerative disorders of childhood, are characterized by the accumulation of autofluorescent storage material mainly in neurons. Although clinically rather uniform, variant late-infantile onset NCL (vLINCL) is genetically heterogeneous with four major underlying genes identified so far. We evaluated the genetic background underlying vLINCL in 119 patients, and specifically analysed the recently reported CLN7/MFSD8 gene for mutations in 80 patients. Clinical data were collected from the CLN7/MFSD8 mutation positive patients. Eight novel CLN7/MFSD8 mutations and seven novel mutations in the CLN1/PPT1, CLN2/TPP1, CLN5, CLN6 and CLN8 genes were identified in patients of various ethnic origins. A significant group of Roma patients originating from the former Czechoslovakia was shown to bear the c.881C>A (p.Thr294Lys) mutation in CLN7/MFSD8, possibly due to a founder effect. With one exception, the CLN7/MFSD8 mutation positive patients present a phenotype indistinguishable from the other vLINCL forms. In one patient with an in-frame amino acid substitution mutation in CLN7/MFSD8, the disease onset was later and the disease course less aggressive than in variant late-infantile NCL. Our findings raise the total number of CLN7/MFSD8 mutations to 14 with the majority of families having private mutations. Our study confirms that CLN7/MFSD8 defects are not restricted to the Turkish population, as initially anticipated, but are a relatively common cause of NCL in different populations. CLN7/MFSD8 should be considered a diagnostic alternative not only in variant late-infantile but also later onset NCL forms with a more protracted disease course. A significant number of NCL patients in Turkey exist, in which the underlying genetic defect remains to be determined.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2014

Observational, retrospective study of a large cohort of patients with Niemann-Pick disease type C in the Czech Republic: a surprisingly stable diagnostic rate spanning almost 40 years

Helena Jahnová; Lenka Dvorakova; Hana Vlaskova; Helena Hulkova; Helena Poupetova; Martin Hrebicek; Pavel Ješina

BackgroundNiemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a rare, fatal neurovisceral disorder with autosomal recessive inheritance, and featuring striking clinical variability dependent on the age at onset of neurological symptoms. We report data from a large cohort of 56 Czech patients with NPC diagnosed over a period of 37 years.MethodsAn observational, retrospective analysis of historic and current clinical and laboratory information was performed among all NPC patients originating from the area of the contemporary Czech Republic and diagnosed between 1975 and 2012. All patients with ≥1 positive diagnostic test and relevant clinical information were included. Data on diagnostic methods (histopathological and/or ultrastructural; biochemical; genetic), clinical status and general information on treatment were collated. Data were examined in accordance with international guidelines for the management of NPC.ResultsBetween 1975 and 1985 diagnoses were based exclusively on specific histopathological findings, often at autopsy. Bone marrow smear (BMS) analyses have proved to be a very specific indicator for NPC and have become an important part of our diagnostic algorithm. Filipin staining and cholesterol esterification assays became the definitive diagnostic tests after 1985 and were applied in 24 of our patients. Since 2005, more and more patients have been assessed using NPC1/NPC2 gene sequencing. Twelve patients were diagnosed with neonatal/early-infantile onset NPC, 13 with the late-infantile onset form, 20 with the juvenile onset form, and nine with the adolescent/adult onset form. Two diagnosed patients remained neurologically asymptomatic at study completion. Nineteen patients were siblings. Causal NPC1 mutations were determined in 38 patients; two identical NPC2 mutations were identified in one patient. In total, 30 different mutations were identified, 14 of which have been confirmed as novel. The frequency of individual mutated NPC1 alleles in our cohort differs compared with previous published data: the most frequent mutant NPC1 allele was p.R1186H (n = 13), followed by p.P1007A (n = 8), p.S954L (n = 8) and p.I1061T (n = 4).ConclusionsThese data demonstrate the evolution of the diagnostic process in NPC over the last four decades. We estimate the contemporary birth prevalence of NPC in the Czech Republic at 0.93 per 100,000.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2006

Subclinical course of adult visceral Niemann-Pick type C1 disease. A rare or underdiagnosed disorder?

Lenka Dvorakova; Jakub Sikora; Martin Hrebicek; Helena Hulkova; M. Bouckova; L. Stolnaja; Milan Elleder

SummaryWe present the third case of Niemann–Pick disease type C without neurological symptoms. The patient was a 53-year-old woman without significant prior health problems who died of acute pulmonary embolism. Autopsy findings of hepatosplenomegaly, lymphadenopathy and ceroid-rich foam cells raised the suspicion of the visceral form of acid sphingomyelinase deficiency (Niemann–Pick disease type B; NPB) or a much rarer disorder, variant adult visceral form of Niemann–Pick disease type C (NPC). To verify the histopathological findings, SMPD1, NPC1 and NPC2 genes were analysed. Two novel sequence variants, c.1997G>A (S666N) and c.2882A>G (N961S) were detected in the NPC1 gene. No pathogenic sequence variants were found either in the SMPD1 gene mutated in NPB or in NPC2 gene. The pathogenicity of both NPC1 variants was supported by their location in regions important for the protein function. Both variations were not found in more than 300 control alleles. Identified sequence variations confirm the diagnosis of the extremely rare adult visceral form of Niemann–Pick disease type C, which is otherwise dominated by neurovisceral symptoms. Although only three patients have been reported, this (most probably underdiagnosed) form of NPC should be considered in differential diagnosis of isolated hepatosplenomegaly with foam cells in adulthood.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2003

New polymorphic sites within ornithine transcarbamylase gene: population genetics studies and implications for diagnosis

Luísa Azevedo; Larisa Stolnaja; Evzenie Tietzeova; Martin Hrebicek; Eva Hruba; Laura Vilarinho; António Amorim; Lenka Dvorakova

Ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, transmitted as an X-linked trait, is the most common disorder of the urea cycle. At least 3.5% out of more than 230 mutations consist of large gene deletions, involving one or more exons. Only in 78% of OTC patients the diagnosis was confirmed on DNA level. We analysed OTC intragenic polymorphisms and haplotypes, in an attempt to contribute to the clarification of unresolved cases, in three populations (Czech, Portuguese, and Mozambican) and identified six novel nucleotide changes, all of them occurring with frequency higher than 12.5% in Europeans. Five of these polymorphisms occur with a significant frequency also in Africans. The number and frequency of haplotypes defined with the newly reported markers differ in individual populations.


PLOS ONE | 2012

X-Linked Adrenoleukodystrophy: Molecular and Functional Analysis of the ABCD1 Gene in Argentinean Patients

Cyntia Anabel Amorosi; Helena Myskóva; Mariela R. Monti; Carlos E. Argaraña; Masashi Morita; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Lenka Dvorakova; Ana María Oller de Ramirez

X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is an inherited metabolic disease associated with mutations in the ABCD1 gene that encodes an ATP-binding cassette transporter protein, ALDP. The disease is characterized by increased concentrations of very long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) in plasma and in adrenal, testicular and nervous tissues, due to a defect in peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation. In the present study, we analyzed 10 male patients and 17 female carriers from 10 unrelated pedigrees with X-ALD from Argentina. By sequencing the ABCD1 we detected 9 different mutations, 8 of which were novel. These new mutations were verified by a combination of methods that included both functional (western blot and peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation) and bioinformatics analysis. The spectrum of novel mutations consists of 3 frameshift (p.Ser284fs*16, p.Glu380Argfs*21 and p.Thr254Argfs*82); a deletion (p.Ser572_Asp575del); a splicing mutation (c.1081+5G>C) and 3 missense mutations (p.Ala341Asp, p.His420Pro and p.Tyr547Cys). In one patient 2 changes were found: a known missense (p.His669Arg) and an unpublished amino acid substitution (p.Ala19Ser). In vitro studies suggest that p.Ala19Ser is a polymorphism. Moreover, we identified two novel intronic polymorphisms and two amino acid polymorphisms. In conclusion, this study extends the spectrum of mutation in X-ALD and facilitates the identification of heterozygous females.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2011

Treatment of cataplexy in Niemann-Pick disease type C with the use of miglustat.

Marcin Zarowski; Barbara Steinborn; Barbara Gurda; Lenka Dvorakova; Hana Vlaskova; Sanjeev V. Kothare


Human Mutation | 2001

Eight novel ABCD1 gene mutations and three polymorphisms in patients with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy: The first polymorphism causing an amino acid exchange

Lenka Dvorakova; Gabriela Storkanova; Gertraud Unterrainer; J. Hujová; Stanislav Kmoch; Jiri Zeman; Martin Hrebicek; Johannes Berger


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2007

Genetic and clinical features of patients with Gaucher disease in Hungary.

Melinda Erdős; Katerina Hodanova; Szilvia Taskó; Anita Palicz; Larisa Stolnaja; Lenka Dvorakova; Martin Hrebicek; László Maródi


Human Mutation | 2010

Disruption of OTC promoter‐enhancer interaction in a patient with symptoms of ornithine carbamoyltransferase deficiency

Ondrej Luksan; Milan Jirsa; Jitka Eberová; Jakub Minks; Helena Treslova; Michaela Bouckova; Gabriela Storkanova; Hana Vlaskova; Martin Hrebicek; Lenka Dvorakova


Blood Cells Molecules and Diseases | 2015

Identification of novel informative loci for DNA-based X-inactivation analysis.

Dita Musalkova; Jakub Minks; Gabriela Storkanova; Lenka Dvorakova; Martin Hrebicek

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Martin Hrebicek

Charles University in Prague

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Milan Elleder

Charles University in Prague

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Milan Jirsa

Charles University in Prague

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Bohdan Kousal

Charles University in Prague

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Filip Majer

Charles University in Prague

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