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Featured researches published by Lucile Pinson.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2013

Phenotypic Spectrum of Simpson–Golabi–Behmel Syndrome in a Series of 42 Cases With a Mutation in GPC3 and Review of the Literature

Edouard Cottereau; Isabelle Mortemousque; Marie-Pierre Moizard; Lydie Burglen; Didier Lacombe; Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier; Sabine Sigaudy; Odile Boute; Albert David; Laurence Faivre; Jeanne Amiel; Robert Robertson; Fabiana Viana Ramos; Eric Bieth; Sylvie Odent; Bénédicte Demeer; Michèle Mathieu; Dominique Gaillard; Lionel Van Maldergem; Geneviève Baujat; Isabelle Maystadt; Delphine Héron; Alain Verloes; Nicole Philip; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Marie-Françoise Frouté; Lucile Pinson; Patricia Blanchet; Pierre Sarda; Marjolaine Willems

Simpson–Golabi–Behmel syndrome (SGBS) is a rare X‐linked multiple congenital abnormality/intellectual disability syndrome characterized by pre‐ and post‐natal overgrowth, distinctive craniofacial features, macrocephaly, variable congenital malformations, organomegaly, increased risk of tumor and mild/moderate intellectual deficiency. In 1996, Glypican 3 (GPC3) was identified as the major gene causing SGBS but the mutation detection rate was only 28–70%, suggesting either genetic heterogeneity or that some patients could have alternative diagnoses. This was particularly suggested by some reports of atypical cases with more severe prognoses. In the family reported by Golabi and Rosen, a duplication of GPC4 was recently identified, suggesting that GPC4 could be the second gene for SGBS but no point mutations within GPC4 have yet been reported. In the genetics laboratory in Tours Hospital, GPC3 molecular testing over more than a decade has detected pathogenic mutations in only 8.7% of individuals with SGBS. In addition, GPC4 mutations have not been identified thus raising the question of frequent misdiagnosis. In order to better delineate the phenotypic spectrum of SGBS caused by GPC3 mutations, and to try to define specific clinical criteria for GPC3 molecular testing, we reviewed the clinical features of all male cases with a GPC3 mutation identified in the two molecular laboratories providing this test in France (Tours and Paris). We present here the results of the analysis of 42 patients belonging to 31 families and including five fetuses and three deceased neonates.


Genetics in Medicine | 2016

Treacher Collins syndrome: a clinical and molecular study based on a large series of patients

Marie Vincent; David Geneviève; Agnès Ostertag; Sandrine Marlin; Didier Lacombe; Dominique Martin-Coignard; Christine Coubes; Albert David; Stanislas Lyonnet; Catheline Vilain; Anne Dieux-Coeslier; Sylvie Manouvrier; Bertrand Isidor; Marie-Line Jacquemont; Sophie Julia; Valérie Layet; Sophie Naudion; Sylvie Odent; Laurent Pasquier; Sybille Pelras; Nicole Philip; Geneviève Pierquin; Fabienne Prieur; Nisrine Aboussair; Tania Attie-Bitach; Geneviève Baujat; Patricia Blanchet; Catherine Blanchet; Hélène Dollfus; Bérénice Doray

Purpose:Treacher Collins/Franceschetti syndrome (TCS; OMIM 154500) is a disorder of craniofacial development belonging to the heterogeneous group of mandibulofacial dysostoses. TCS is classically characterized by bilateral mandibular and malar hypoplasia, downward-slanting palpebral fissures, and microtia. To date, three genes have been identified in TCS:,TCOF1, POLR1D, and POLR1C.Methods:We report a clinical and extensive molecular study, including TCOF1, POLR1D, POLR1C, and EFTUD2 genes, in a series of 146 patients with TCS. Phenotype–genotype correlations were investigated for 19 clinical features, between TCOF1 and POLR1D, and the type of mutation or its localization in the TCOF1 gene.Results:We identified 92/146 patients (63%) with a molecular anomaly within TCOF1, 9/146 (6%) within POLR1D, and none within POLR1C. Among the atypical negative patients (with intellectual disability and/or microcephaly), we identified four patients carrying a mutation in EFTUD2 and two patients with 5q32 deletion encompassing TCOF1 and CAMK2A in particular. Congenital cardiac defects occurred more frequently among patients with TCOF1 mutation (7/92, 8%) than reported in the literature.Conclusion:Even though TCOF1 and POLR1D were associated with extreme clinical variability, we found no phenotype–genotype correlation. In cases with a typical phenotype of TCS, 6/146 (4%) remained with an unidentified molecular defect.Genet Med 18 1, 49–56.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2013

Nevus anemicus in neurofibromatosis type 1: a potential new diagnostic criterion.

M. Marque; Agathe Roubertie; Audrey Jaussent; Maryline Carneiro; Laurent Meunier; Bernard Guillot; Lucile Pinson; Stéphane Pinson; D. Bessis

BACKGROUND Children with multiple café-au-lait macules (CALMs) may be followed for years before a second National Institutes of Health clinical criterion of neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) develops to confirm the diagnosis. OBJECTIVE We sought to assess the prevalence of nevus anemicus (NA) in NF1 and its association with neuro-ophthalmologic complications. METHODS This was a prospective multicenter case-control study of 210 consecutive patients with multiple CALMs. Patients with NF1 were matched for age, sex, and center with control subjects. We documented the number, location, and morphologic appearance of NA; dermatologic features of NF1; magnetic resonance imaging results; and family history. RESULTS In all, 77 (51%) patients with NF1 had NA compared with 6 (2%) control subjects. NA was not detected in 26 patients with other genodermatoses associated with CALMs. Patients with NF1 and NA were younger than those without NA (median age: 17 years) (P = .002). NA was mostly localized to the upper anterior aspect of the chest. NA was not significantly linked with other clinical manifestations of NF1, including optic glioma and unidentified bright objects. LIMITATIONS A potential referral bias associated with tertiary care centers is a limitation. CONCLUSIONS NA appears to have a high prevalence and specificity in NF1 and might serve as a marker for NF1 in children with multiple CALMs.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2015

Phenotype-Genotype Correlations in 17 New Patients with an Xp11.23p11.22 Microduplication and Review of the Literature

Mathilde Nizon; Joris Andrieux; Caroline Rooryck; Marie-Christine de Blois; Emilie Bourel-Ponchel; Béatrice Bourgois; Odile Boute; Albert David; Bruno Delobel; Bénédicte Duban-Bedu; Fabienne Giuliano; Alice Goldenberg; Sarah Grotto; Delphine Héron; Houda Karmous-Benailly; Boris Keren; Didier Lacombe; Jean-Michel Lapierre; Cédric Le Caignec; Eric Le Galloudec; Martine Le Merrer; Anne-Gaëlle Le Moing; Michèle Mathieu-Dramard; Sylvie Nusbaum; Olivier Pichon; Lucile Pinson; O Raoul; Marlène Rio; Serge Romana; Agnès Roubertie

Array comparative genomic hybridization (array CGH) has proven its utility in uncovering cryptic rearrangements in patients with X‐linked intellectual disability. In 2009, Giorda et al. identified inherited and de novo recurrent Xp11.23p11.22 microduplications in two males and six females from a wide cohort of patients presenting with syndromic intellectual disability. To date, 14 females and 5 males with an overlapping microduplication have been reported in the literature. To further characterize this emerging syndrome, we collected clinical and microarray data from 17 new patients, 10 females, and 7 males. The Xp11.23p11.2 microduplications detected by array CGH ranged in size from 331 Kb to 8.9 Mb. Five patients harbored 4.5 Mb recurrent duplications mediated by non‐allelic homologous recombination between segmental duplications and 12 harbored atypical duplications. The chromosomal rearrangement occurred de novo in eight patients and was inherited in six affected males from three families. Patients shared several common major characteristics including moderate to severe intellectual disability, early onset of puberty, language impairment, and age related epileptic syndromes such as West syndrome and focal epilepsy with activation during sleep evolving in some patients to continuous spikes‐and‐waves during slow sleep. Atypical microduplications allowed us to identify minimal critical regions that might be responsible for specific clinical findings of the syndrome and to suggest possible candidate genes: FTSJ1 and SHROOM4 for intellectual disability along with PQBP1 and SLC35A2 for epilepsy. Xp11.23p11.22 microduplication is a recently‐recognized syndrome associated with intellectual disability, epilepsy, and early onset of puberty in females. In this study, we propose several genes that could contribute to the phenotype.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

The expanding spectrum of COL2A1 gene variants IN 136 patients with a skeletal dysplasia phenotype.

Mouna Barat-Houari; Bruno Dumont; Aurelie J Fabre; Frédéric Tm Them; Yves Alembik; Jean-Luc Alessandri; Jeanne Amiel; Séverine Audebert; Clarisse Baumann-Morel; Patricia Blanchet; Eric Bieth; Marie Brechard; Tiffany Busa; Patrick Calvas; Yline Capri; François Cartault; Nicolas Chassaing; Vidrica Ciorca; Christine Coubes; Albert David; Anne-Lise Delezoide; Delphine Dupin-Deguine; Salima El Chehadeh; Laurence Faivre; Fabienne Giuliano; Alice Goldenberg; Bertrand Isidor; Marie-Line Jacquemont; Sophie Julia; Josseline Kaplan

Heterozygous COL2A1 variants cause a wide spectrum of skeletal dysplasia termed type II collagenopathies. We assessed the impact of this gene in our French series. A decision tree was applied to select 136 probands (71 Stickler cases, 21 Spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia congenita cases, 11 Kniest dysplasia cases, and 34 other dysplasia cases) before molecular diagnosis by Sanger sequencing. We identified 66 different variants among the 71 positive patients. Among those patients, 18 belonged to multiplex families and 53 were sporadic. Most variants (38/44, 86%) were located in the triple helical domain of the collagen chain and glycine substitutions were mainly observed in severe phenotypes, whereas arginine to cysteine changes were more often encountered in moderate phenotypes. This series of skeletal dysplasia is one of the largest reported so far, adding 44 novel variants (15%) to published data. We have confirmed that about half of our Stickler patients (46%) carried a COL2A1 variant, and that the molecular spectrum was different across the phenotypes. To further address the question of genotype–phenotype correlation, we plan to screen our patients for other candidate genes using a targeted next-generation sequencing approach.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2017

Application of whole‐exome sequencing to unravel the molecular basis of undiagnosed syndromic congenital neutropenia with intellectual disability

Alexandra Gauthier-Vasserot; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Ange-Line Bruel; Yannis Duffourd; Judith St-Onge; Thibaud Jouan; Jean-Baptiste Rivière; Delphine Héron; Jean Donadieu; Christine Bellanné-Chantelot; Claire Briandet; Frédéric Huet; Paul Kuentz; Daphné Lehalle; Laurence Duplomb-Jego; Elodie Gautier; Isabelle Maystadt; Lucile Pinson; Daniel Amram; Salima El Chehadeh; Judith Melki; Sophia Julia; Laurence Faivre; Julien Thevenon

Neutropenia can be qualified as congenital when of neonatal onset or when associated with extra‐hematopoietic manifestations. Overall, 30% of patients with congenital neutropenia (CN) remain without a molecular diagnosis after a multidisciplinary consultation and tedious diagnostic strategy. In the rare situations when neutropenia is identified and associated with intellectual disability (ID), there are few diagnostic hypotheses to test. This retrospective multicenter study reports on a clinically heterogeneous cohort of 10 unrelated patients with CN associated with ID and no molecular diagnosis prior to whole‐exome sequencing (WES). WES provided a diagnostic yield of 40% (4/10). The results suggested that in many cases neutropenia and syndromic manifestations could not be assigned to the same molecular alteration. Three sub‐groups of patients were highlighted: (i) severe, symptomatic chronic neutropenia, detected early in life, and related to a known mutation in the CN spectrum (ELANE); (ii) mild to moderate benign intermittent neutropenia, detected later, and associated with mutations in genes implicated in neurodevelopmental disorders (CHD2, HUWE1); and (iii) moderate to severe intermittent neutropenia as a probably undiagnosed feature of a newly reported syndrome (KAT6A). Unlike KAT6A, which seems to be associated with a syndromic form of CN, the other reported mutations may not explain the entire clinical picture. Although targeted gene sequencing can be discussed for the primary diagnosis of severe CN, we suggest that performing WES for the diagnosis of disorders associating CN with ID will not only provide the etiological diagnosis but will also pave the way towards personalized care and follow‐up.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Mosaic parental germline mutations causing recurrent forms of malformations of cortical development

Julia Lauer Zillhardt; Karine Poirier; Loïc Broix; Nicolas Lebrun; Adrienne Elmorjani; Jelena Martinovic; Yoann Saillour; Giuseppe Muraca; Juliette Nectoux; Bettina Bessières; Catherine Fallet-Bianco; Stanislas Lyonnet; Olivier Dulac; Sylvie Odent; Imen Rejeb; Lamia Ben Jemaa; François Rivier; Lucile Pinson; David Geneviève; Yuri Musizzano; Nicole Bigi; Nicolas Leboucq; Fabienne Giuliano; Nicole Philip; Catheline Vilain; Patrick Van Bogaert; Hélène Maurey; Cherif Beldjord; François Artiguenave; Anne Boland

To unravel missing genetic causes underlying monogenic disorders with recurrence in sibling, we explored the hypothesis of parental germline mosaic mutations in familial forms of malformation of cortical development (MCD). Interestingly, four families with parental germline variants, out of 18, were identified by whole-exome sequencing (WES), including a variant in a new candidate gene, syntaxin 7. In view of this high frequency, revision of diagnostic strategies and reoccurrence risk should be considered not only for the recurrent forms, but also for the sporadic cases of MCD.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014

CEP57 mutation in a girl with mosaic variegated aneuploidy syndrome

Lucile Pinson; Linda Mannini; Marjolaine Willems; Francesco Cucco; Nicolas Sirvent; Thierry Frebourg; Valentina Quarantotti; Corinne Collet; Anouck Schneider; Pierre Sarda; David Geneviève; Jacques Puechberty; Geneviève Lefort; Antonio Musio

Mosaic variegated aneuploidy (MVA) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by constitutional aneuploidies. Mutations in BUB1B and CEP57 genes, which are involved in mitotic spindle and microtubule stabilization, respectively, are responsible for a subset of patients with MVA. To date, CEP57 mutations have been reported only in four probands. We report on a girl with this disorder due to c.915‐925dup11 mutation in CEP57, which predicts p.Leu309ProfsX9 and review the literature in order to facilitate genotype–phenotype correlation. Rhizomelic shortening of the upper limbs, skull anomalies with conserved head circumference, and absence of tumor development could be features suggesting a need for molecular screening of the CEP57 gene in patients with this disorder.


European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Finger creases lend a hand in Kabuki syndrome

Caroline Michot; Carole Corsini; Damien Sanlaville; Clarisse Baumann; Annick Toutain; Nicole Philip; Tiffany Busa; Muriel Holder; Laurence Faivre; Sylvie Odent; Marie-Ange Delrue; Marianne Till; Marie-Line Jacquemont; Marie-Pierre Cordier; Alice Goldenberg; Elodie Sanchez; Eudeline Alix; Sylvain Poisson; Honorine Kayirangwa; Didier Lacombe; Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier; Anna Pelet; Joëlle Roume; Aurélia Jacquette; Bertrand Isidor; Fabienne Giuliano; Lydie Burglen; Mélanie Fradin; Elise Schaefer; Yves Alembick

Kabuki syndrome (KS) is a rare syndrome associating malformations with intellectual deficiency and numerous visceral, orthopedic, endocrinological, immune and autoimmune complications. The early establishment of a diagnostic of KS leads to better care of the patients and therefore prevents complications such as perception deafness, severe complications of auto-immune diseases or obesity. However, the diagnosis of KS remains difficult because based on the appreciation of facial features combined with other highly variable features. We describe a novel sign, namely the attenuation and/or congenital absence of the IPD crease of the third and fourth fingers associated with limitation of flexion of the corresponding joints, which seems to be specific of KS and could help the clinician to diagnose KS.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2017

Phenotype and genotype analysis of a French cohort of 119 patients with CHARGE syndrome

Marine Legendre; Véronique Abadie; Tania Attié-Bitach; Nicole Philip; Tiffany Busa; Dominique Bonneau; Estelle Colin; Hélène Dollfus; Didier Lacombe; Annick Toutain; Sophie Blesson; Sophie Julia; Dominique Martin-Coignard; David Geneviève; Bruno Leheup; Sylvie Odent; Pierre-Simon Jouk; Sandra Mercier; Laurence Faivre; Catherine Vincent-Delorme; Christine Francannet; Sophie Naudion; Michèle Mathieu-Dramard; Marie-Ange Delrue; Alice Goldenberg; Delphine Héron; Philippe Parent; Renaud Touraine; Valérie Layet; Damien Sanlaville

CHARGE syndrome (CS) is a genetic disorder whose first description included Coloboma, Heart disease, Atresia of choanae, Retarded growth and development, Genital hypoplasia, and Ear anomalies and deafness, most often caused by a genetic mutation in the CHD7 gene. Two features were then added: semicircular canal anomalies and arhinencephaly/olfactory bulb agenesis, with classification of typical, partial, or atypical forms on the basis of major and minor clinical criteria. The detection rate of a pathogenic variant in the CHD7 gene varies from 67% to 90%. To try to have an overview of this heterogenous clinical condition and specify a genotype–phenotype relation, we conducted a national study of phenotype and genotype in 119 patients with CS. Selected clinical diagnostic criteria were from Verloes (2005), updated by Blake & Prasad ( ). Besides obtaining a detailed clinical description, when possible, patients underwent a full ophthalmologic examination, audiometry, temporal bone CT scan, gonadotropin analysis, and olfactory‐bulb MRI. All patients underwent CHD7 sequencing and MLPA analysis. We found a pathogenic CHD7 variant in 83% of typical CS cases and 58% of atypical cases. Pathogenic variants in the CHD7 gene were classified by the expected impact on the protein. In all, 90% of patients had a typical form of CS and 10% an atypical form. The most frequent features were deafness/semicircular canal hypoplasia (94%), pituitary defect/hypogonadism (89%), external ear anomalies (87%), square‐shaped face (81%), and arhinencephaly/anosmia (80%). Coloboma (73%), heart defects (65%), and choanal atresia (43%) were less frequent.

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Alice Goldenberg

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Nicole Philip

Aix-Marseille University

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Marie-Line Jacquemont

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Tiffany Busa

Aix-Marseille University

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