Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers
Radboud University Nijmegen
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Featured researches published by Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers.
Nature Genetics | 2006
David A. Koolen; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Rolph Pfundt; Nicole de Leeuw; Samantha J. L. Knight; Regina Regan; R. Frank Kooy; Edwin Reyniers; Corrado Romano; Marco Fichera; Albert Schinzel; Alessandra Baumer; Britt Marie Anderlid; Jacqueline Schoumans; N.V.A.M. Knoers; Ad Geurts van Kessel; Erik A. Sistermans; Joris A. Veltman; Han G. Brunner; Bert B.A. de Vries
Submicroscopic genomic copy number changes have been identified only recently as an important cause of mental retardation. We describe the detection of three interstitial, overlapping 17q21.31 microdeletions in a cohort of 1,200 mentally retarded individuals associated with a clearly recognizable clinical phenotype of mental retardation, hypotonia and a characteristic face. The deletions encompass the MAPT and CRHR1 genes and are associated with a common inversion polymorphism.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005
Marjolijn C.J. Jongmans; Ronald J.C. Admiraal; K van der Donk; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; A F Baas; Livia Kapusta; J M van Hagen; Dian Donnai; T. de Ravel; Joris A. Veltman; A. Geurts van Kessel; B. de Vries; Han G. Brunner; Lies H. Hoefsloot; C.M.A. van Ravenswaaij
Background: CHARGE syndrome is a non-random clustering of congenital anomalies including coloboma, heart defects, choanal atresia, retarded growth and development, genital hypoplasia, ear anomalies, and deafness. A consistent feature in CHARGE syndrome is semicircular canal hypoplasia resulting in vestibular areflexia. Other commonly associated congenital anomalies are facial nerve palsy, cleft lip/palate, and tracheo-oesophageal fistula. Specific behavioural problems, including autistic-like behaviour, have been described. The CHD7 gene on chromosome 8q12.1 was recently discovered as a major gene involved in the aetiology of this syndrome. Methods: The coding regions of CHD7 were screened for mutations in 107 index patients with clinical features suggestive of CHARGE syndrome. Clinical data of the mutation positive patients were sampled to study the phenotypic spectrum of mutations in the CHD7 gene. Results: Mutations were identified in 69 patients. Here we describe the clinical features of 47 of these patients, including two sib pairs. Most mutations were unique and were scattered throughout the gene. All patients but one fulfilled the current diagnostic criteria for CHARGE syndrome. No genotype-phenotype correlations were apparent in this cohort, which is best demonstrated by the differences in clinical presentation in sib pairs with identical mutations. Somatic mosaicism was detected in the unaffected mother of a sib pair, supporting the existence of germline mosaicism. Conclusions:CHD7 mutations account for the majority of the cases with CHARGE syndrome, with a broad clinical variability and without an obvious genotype-phenotype correlation. In one case evidence for germline mosaicism was provided.
Cell | 2014
Raphael Bernier; Christelle Golzio; Bo Xiong; Holly A.F. Stessman; Bradley P. Coe; Osnat Penn; Kali Witherspoon; Jennifer Gerdts; Carl Baker; Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Janneke H M Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; Marco Fichera; Paolo Bosco; Serafino Buono; Antonino Alberti; Pinella Failla; Hilde Peeters; Jean Steyaert; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Ludmila Francescatto; Mefford Hc; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Trygve E. Bakken; Brian J. O'Roak; Matthew Pawlus; Randall T. Moon; Jay Shendure; David G. Amaral; Ed Lein; Julia Rankin
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a heterogeneous disease in which efforts to define subtypes behaviorally have met with limited success. Hypothesizing that genetically based subtype identification may prove more productive, we resequenced the ASD-associated gene CHD8 in 3,730 children with developmental delay or ASD. We identified a total of 15 independent mutations; no truncating events were identified in 8,792 controls, including 2,289 unaffected siblings. In addition to a high likelihood of an ASD diagnosis among patients bearing CHD8 mutations, characteristics enriched in this group included macrocephaly, distinct faces, and gastrointestinal complaints. chd8 disruption in zebrafish recapitulates features of the human phenotype, including increased head size as a result of expansion of the forebrain/midbrain and impairment of gastrointestinal motility due to a reduction in postmitotic enteric neurons. Our findings indicate that CHD8 disruptions define a distinct ASD subtype and reveal unexpected comorbidities between brain development and enteric innervation.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Bradley P. Coe; Kali Witherspoon; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Bregje W.M. van Bon; Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Paolo Bosco; Kathryn Friend; Carl Baker; Serafino Buono; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Janneke H M Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; A Hoischen; Rolph Pfundt; Nik Krumm; Gemma L. Carvill; Deana Li; David G. Amaral; Natasha J Brown; Paul J. Lockhart; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Antonino Alberti; Marie Shaw; Rosa Pettinato; Raymond C. Tervo; Nicole de Leeuw; Margot R.F. Reijnders; Beth S. Torchia; Hilde Peeters; Elizabeth Thompson; Brian J. O'Roak
Copy number variants (CNVs) are associated with many neurocognitive disorders; however, these events are typically large, and the underlying causative genes are unclear. We created an expanded CNV morbidity map from 29,085 children with developmental delay in comparison to 19,584 healthy controls, identifying 70 significant CNVs. We resequenced 26 candidate genes in 4,716 additional cases with developmental delay or autism and 2,193 controls. An integrated analysis of CNV and single-nucleotide variant (SNV) data pinpointed 10 genes enriched for putative loss of function. Follow-up of a subset of affected individuals identified new clinical subtypes of pediatric disease and the genes responsible for disease-associated CNVs. These genetic changes include haploinsufficiency of SETBP1 associated with intellectual disability and loss of expressive language and truncations of ZMYND11 in individuals with autism, aggression and complex neuropsychiatric features. This combined CNV and SNV approach facilitates the rapid discovery of new syndromes and genes involved in neuropsychiatric disease despite extensive genetic heterogeneity.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008
David A. Koolen; Andrew J. Sharp; Jane Hurst; Helen V. Firth; Samantha J. L. Knight; A. Goldenberg; P. Saugier-Veber; Rolph Pfundt; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; A Destree; Bernard Grisart; Liesbeth Rooms; N. Van der Aa; Michael Field; Anna Hackett; Kathleen Bell; Małgorzata J.M. Nowaczyk; Grazia M. Mancini; Pino J. Poddighe; Charles E. Schwartz; E. Rossi; M. De Gregori; L. L. Antonacci-Fulton; Michael D. McLellan; J. M. Garrett; M. A. Wiechert; Tracie L. Miner; S. Crosby; Roberto Ciccone; Lionel Willatt
Background: The chromosome 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome is a novel genomic disorder that has originally been identified using high resolution genome analyses in patients with unexplained mental retardation. Aim: We report the molecular and/or clinical characterisation of 22 individuals with the 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome. Results: We estimate the prevalence of the syndrome to be 1 in 16u2009000 and show that it is highly underdiagnosed. Extensive clinical examination reveals that developmental delay, hypotonia, facial dysmorphisms including a long face, a tubular or pear-shaped nose and a bulbous nasal tip, and a friendly/amiable behaviour are the most characteristic features. Other clinically important features include epilepsy, heart defects and kidney/urologic anomalies. Using high resolution oligonucleotide arrays we narrow the 17q21.31 critical region to a 424 kb genomic segment (chr17: 41046729–41470954, hg17) encompassing at least six genes, among which is the gene encoding microtubule associated protein tau (MAPT). Mutation screening of MAPT in 122 individuals with a phenotype suggestive of 17q21.31 deletion carriers, but who do not carry the recurrent deletion, failed to identify any disease associated variants. In five deletion carriers we identify a <500 bp rearrangement hotspot at the proximal breakpoint contained within an L2 LINE motif and show that in every case examined the parent originating the deletion carries a common 900 kb 17q21.31 inversion polymorphism, indicating that this inversion is a necessary factor for deletion to occur (p<10−5). Conclusion: Our data establish the 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome as a clinically and molecularly well recognisable genomic disorder.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Céline Helsmoortel; Anneke T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Bradley P. Coe; Geert Vandeweyer; Liesbeth Rooms; Jenneke van den Ende; Janneke H M Schuurs-Hoeijmakers; Carlo Marcelis; Marjolein H. Willemsen; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Helger G. Yntema; Madhura Bakshi; Meredith Wilson; Kali Witherspoon; Helena Malmgren; Ann Nordgren; Göran Annerén; Marco Fichera; Paolo Bosco; Corrado Romano; Bert B.A. de Vries; Tjitske Kleefstra; R. Frank Kooy; Evan E. Eichler; Nathalie Van der Aa
Despite the high heritability of autism spectrum disorders (ASD), characterized by persistent deficits in social communication and interaction and restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests or activities, a genetic diagnosis can be established in only a minority of patients. Known genetic causes include chromosomal aberrations, such as the duplication of the 15q11-13 region, and monogenic causes, as in Rett and fragile-X syndromes. The genetic heterogeneity within ASD is striking, with even the most frequent causes responsible for only 1% of cases at the most. Even with the recent developments in next-generation sequencing, for the large majority of cases no molecular diagnosis can be established. Here, we report ten patients with ASD and other shared clinical characteristics, including intellectual disability and facial dysmorphisms caused by a mutation in ADNP, a transcription factor involved in the SWI/SNF remodeling complex. We estimate this gene to be mutated in at least 0.17% of ASD cases, making it one of the most frequent ASD-associated genes known to date.
Nature Genetics | 2012
David A. Koolen; Jamie M. Kramer; Kornelia Neveling; Willy M. Nillesen; Heather L. Moore-Barton; Frances Elmslie; Annick Toutain; Jeanne Amiel; Valérie Malan; Anne Chun Hui Tsai; Sau Wai Cheung; Christian Gilissen; Eugène T P Verwiel; Sarah Martens; Ton Feuth; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Petra de Vries; H. Scheffer; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Arjan P.M. de Brouwer; Han G. Brunner; Joris A. Veltman; Annette Schenck; Helger G. Yntema; Bert B.A. de Vries
We show that haploinsufficiency of KANSL1 is sufficient to cause the 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome, a multisystem disorder characterized by intellectual disability, hypotonia and distinctive facial features. The KANSL1 protein is an evolutionarily conserved regulator of the chromatin modifier KAT8, which influences gene expression through histone H4 lysine 16 (H4K16) acetylation. RNA sequencing studies in cell lines derived from affected individuals and the presence of learning deficits in Drosophila melanogaster mutants suggest a role for KANSL1 in neuronal processes.
Genome Research | 2015
Monika Karmin; Lauri Saag; Mário Vicente; Melissa A. Wilson Sayres; Mari Järve; Ulvi Gerst Talas; Siiri Rootsi; Anne-Mai Ilumäe; Reedik Mägi; Mario Mitt; Luca Pagani; Tarmo Puurand; Zuzana Faltyskova; Florian Clemente; Alexia Cardona; Ene Metspalu; Hovhannes Sahakyan; Bayazit Yunusbayev; Georgi Hudjashov; Michael DeGiorgio; Eva-Liis Loogväli; Christina A. Eichstaedt; Mikk Eelmets; Gyaneshwer Chaubey; Kristiina Tambets; S. S. Litvinov; Maru Mormina; Yali Xue; Qasim Ayub; Grigor Zoraqi
It is commonly thought that human genetic diversity in non-African populations was shaped primarily by an out-of-Africa dispersal 50-100 thousand yr ago (kya). Here, we present a study of 456 geographically diverse high-coverage Y chromosome sequences, including 299 newly reported samples. Applying ancient DNA calibration, we date the Y-chromosomal most recent common ancestor (MRCA) in Africa at 254 (95% CI 192-307) kya and detect a cluster of major non-African founder haplogroups in a narrow time interval at 47-52 kya, consistent with a rapid initial colonization model of Eurasia and Oceania after the out-of-Africa bottleneck. In contrast to demographic reconstructions based on mtDNA, we infer a second strong bottleneck in Y-chromosome lineages dating to the last 10 ky. We hypothesize that this bottleneck is caused by cultural changes affecting variance of reproductive success among males.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014
Ian M. Campbell; Bo Yuan; Caroline Robberecht; Rolph Pfundt; Przemyslaw Szafranski; Meriel McEntagart; Sandesh C.S. Nagamani; Ayelet Erez; Magdalena Bartnik; Barbara Wiśniowiecka-Kowalnik; Katie Plunkett; Amber N. Pursley; Sung-Hae L. Kang; Weimin Bi; Seema R. Lalani; Carlos A. Bacino; Mala Vast; Karen Marks; Michael A. Patton; Peter Olofsson; Ankita Patel; Joris A. Veltman; Sau Wai Cheung; Chad A. Shaw; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Joris Vermeesch; James R. Lupski; Pawel Stankiewicz
New human mutations are thought to originate in germ cells, thus making a recurrence of the same mutation in a sibling exceedingly rare. However, increasing sensitivity of genomic technologies has anecdotally revealed mosaicism for mutations in somatic tissues of apparently healthy parents. Such somatically mosaic parents might also have germline mosaicism that can potentially cause unexpected intergenerational recurrences. Here, we show that somatic mosaicism for transmitted mutations among parents of children with simplex genetic disease is more common than currently appreciated. Using the sensitivity of individual-specific breakpoint PCR, we prospectively screened 100 families with children affected by genomic disorders due to rare deletion copy-number variants (CNVs) determined to be de novo by clinical analysis of parental DNA. Surprisingly, we identified four cases of low-level somatic mosaicism for the transmitted CNV in DNA isolated from parental blood. Integrated probabilistic modeling of gametogenesis developed in response to our observations predicts that mutations in parental blood increase recurrence risk substantially more than parental mutations confined to the germline. Moreover, despite the fact that maternally transmitted mutations are the minority of alleles, our model suggests that sexual dimorphisms in gametogenesis result in a greater proportion of somatically mosaic transmitting mothers who are thus at increased risk of recurrence. Therefore, somatic mosaicism together with sexual differences in gametogenesis might explain a considerable fraction of unexpected recurrences of X-linked recessive disease. Overall, our results underscore an important role for somatic mosaicism and mitotic replicative mutational mechanisms in transmission genetics.
Nature Neuroscience | 2016
Stefan H. Lelieveld; Margot R.F. Reijnders; Rolph Pfundt; Helger G. Yntema; Erik-Jan Kamsteeg; Petra de Vries; Bert B.A. de Vries; Marjolein H. Willemsen; Tjitske Kleefstra; Katharina Löhner; Maaike Vreeburg; Servi J.C. Stevens; Ineke van der Burgt; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Alexander P.A. Stegmann; Patrick Rump; Tuula Rinne; Marcel R. Nelen; Joris A. Veltman; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Han G. Brunner; Christian Gilissen
To identify candidate genes for intellectual disability, we performed a meta-analysis on 2,637 de novo mutations, identified from the exomes of 2,104 patient–parent trios. Statistical analyses identified 10 new candidate ID genes: DLG4, PPM1D, RAC1, SMAD6, SON, SOX5, SYNCRIP, TCF20, TLK2 and TRIP12. In addition, we show that these genes are intolerant to nonsynonymous variation and that mutations in these genes are associated with specific clinical ID phenotypes.