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Dive into the research topics where Lysanne Patry is active.

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Featured researches published by Lysanne Patry.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

De novo mutations in moderate or severe intellectual disability.

Fadi F. Hamdan; Myriam Srour; José-Mario Capo-Chichi; Hussein Daoud; Christina Nassif; Lysanne Patry; Christine Massicotte; Amirthagowri Ambalavanan; Dan Spiegelman; Ousmane Diallo; Edouard Henrion; Alexandre Dionne-Laporte; Anne Fougerat; Alexey V. Pshezhetsky; Sunita Venkateswaran; Guy A. Rouleau; Jacques L. Michaud

Genetics is believed to have an important role in intellectual disability (ID). Recent studies have emphasized the involvement of de novo mutations (DNMs) in ID but the extent to which they contribute to its pathogenesis and the identity of the corresponding genes remain largely unknown. Here, we report a screen for DNMs in subjects with moderate or severe ID. We sequenced the exomes of 41 probands and their parents, and confirmed 81 DNMs affecting the coding sequence or consensus splice sites (1.98 DNMs/proband). We observed a significant excess of de novo single nucleotide substitutions and loss-of-function mutations in these cases compared to control subjects, suggesting that at least a subset of these variations are pathogenic. A total of 12 likely pathogenic DNMs were identified in genes previously associated with ID (ARID1B, CHD2, FOXG1, GABRB3, GATAD2B, GRIN2B, MBD5, MED13L, SETBP1, TBR1, TCF4, WDR45), resulting in a diagnostic yield of ∼29%. We also identified 12 possibly pathogenic DNMs in genes (HNRNPU, WAC, RYR2, SET, EGR1, MYH10, EIF2C1, COL4A3BP, CHMP2A, PPP1CB, VPS4A, PPP2R2B) that have not previously been causally linked to ID. Interestingly, no case was explained by inherited mutations. Protein network analysis indicated that the products of many of these known and candidate genes interact with each other or with products of other ID-associated genes further supporting their involvement in ID. We conclude that DNMs represent a major cause of moderate or severe ID.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Mutations in Centrosomal Protein CEP152 in Primary Microcephaly Families Linked to MCPH4

Duane L. Guernsey; Haiyan Jiang; Julie Hussin; Marc Arnold; Khalil Bouyakdan; Scott Perry; Tina Babineau-Sturk; Jill Beis; Nadine Dumas; Susan C. Evans; Meghan Ferguson; Makoto Matsuoka; Christine Macgillivray; Mathew Nightingale; Lysanne Patry; Andrea L. Rideout; Aidan Thomas; Andrew C. Orr; Ingrid Hoffmann; Jacques L. Michaud; David Meek; Mark Ludman; Mark E. Samuels

Primary microcephaly is a rare condition in which brain size is substantially diminished without other syndromic abnormalities. Seven autosomal loci have been genetically mapped, and the underlying causal genes have been identified for MCPH1, MCPH3, MCPH5, MCPH6, and MCPH7 but not for MCPH2 or MCPH4. The known genes play roles in mitosis and cell division. We ascertained three families from an Eastern Canadian subpopulation, each with one microcephalic child. Homozygosity analysis in two families using genome-wide dense SNP genotyping supported linkage to the published MCPH4 locus on chromosome 15q21.1. Sequencing of coding exons of candidate genes in the interval identified a nonconservative amino acid change in a highly conserved residue of the centrosomal protein CEP152. The affected children in these two families were both homozygous for this missense variant. The third affected child was compound heterozygous for the missense mutation plus a second, premature-termination mutation truncating a third of the protein and preventing its localization to centrosomes in transfected cells. CEP152 is the putative mammalian ortholog of Drosphila asterless, mutations in which affect mitosis in the fly. Published data from zebrafish are also consistent with a role of CEP152 in centrosome function. By RT-PCR, CEP152 is expressed in the embryonic mouse brain, similar to other MCPH genes. Like some other MCPH genes, CEP152 shows signatures of positive selection in the human lineage. CEP152 is a strong candidate for the causal gene underlying MCPH4 and may be an important gene in the evolution of human brain size.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

SYN1 loss-of-function mutations in autism and partial epilepsy cause impaired synaptic function

Anna Fassio; Lysanne Patry; Sonia Congia; Franco Onofri; Amélie Piton; Julie Gauthier; Davide Pozzi; Mirko Messa; Enrico Defranchi; Manuela Fadda; Anna Corradi; Pietro Baldelli; Line Lapointe; Judith St-Onge; Caroline Meloche; Laurent Mottron; Flavia Valtorta; Dang Khoa Nguyen; Guy A. Rouleau; Fabio Benfenati; Patrick Cossette

Several genes predisposing to autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) with or without epilepsy have been identified, many of which are implicated in synaptic function. Here we report a Q555X mutation in synapsin 1 (SYN1), an X-linked gene encoding for a neuron-specific phosphoprotein implicated in the regulation of neurotransmitter release and synaptogenesis. This nonsense mutation was found in all affected individuals from a large French-Canadian family segregating epilepsy and ASDs. Additional mutations in SYN1 (A51G, A550T and T567A) were found in 1.0 and 3.5% of French-Canadian individuals with autism and epilepsy, respectively. The majority of these SYN1 mutations were clustered in the proline-rich D-domain which is substrate of multiple protein kinases. When expressed in synapsin I (SynI) knockout (KO) neurons, all the D-domain mutants failed in rescuing the impairment in the size and trafficking of synaptic vesicle pools, whereas the wild-type human SynI fully reverted the KO phenotype. Moreover, the nonsense Q555X mutation had a dramatic impact on phosphorylation by MAPK/Erk and neurite outgrowth, whereas the missense A550T and T567A mutants displayed impaired targeting to nerve terminals. These results demonstrate that SYN1 is a novel predisposing gene to ASDs, in addition to epilepsy, and strengthen the hypothesis that a disturbance of synaptic homeostasis underlies the pathogenesis of both diseases.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Mutations in origin recognition complex gene ORC4 cause Meier-Gorlin syndrome

Duane L. Guernsey; Makoto Matsuoka; Haiyan Jiang; Susan C. Evans; Christine Macgillivray; Mathew Nightingale; Scott Perry; Meghan Ferguson; Marissa A. LeBlanc; Jean Paquette; Lysanne Patry; Andrea L. Rideout; Aidan Thomas; Andrew C. Orr; Chris R McMaster; Jacques L. Michaud; Cheri Deal; Sylvie Langlois; Duane W Superneau; Sandhya Parkash; Mark Ludman; David L. Skidmore; Mark E. Samuels

Meier-Gorlin syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive genetic condition whose primary clinical hallmarks include small stature, small external ears and small or absent patellae. Using marker-assisted mapping in multiple families from a founder population and traditional coding exon sequencing of positional candidate genes, we identified three different mutations in the gene encoding ORC4, a component of the eukaryotic origin recognition complex, in five individuals with Meier-Gorlin syndrome. In two such individuals that were negative for mutations in ORC4, we found potential mutations in ORC1 and CDT1, two other genes involved in origin recognition. ORC4 is well conserved in eukaryotes, and the yeast equivalent of the human ORC4 missense mutation was shown to be pathogenic in functional assays of cell growth. This is the first report, to our knowledge, of a germline mutation in any gene of the origin recognition complex in a vertebrate organism.


Human Mutation | 2013

Mutations in SYNGAP1 cause intellectual disability, autism, and a specific form of epilepsy by inducing haploinsufficiency.

Martin H. Berryer; Fadi F. Hamdan; Laura L. Klitten; Rikke S. Møller; Lionel Carmant; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Lysanne Patry; Daniel Rochefort; Mathilde Neugnot-Cerioli; Jean Claude Lacaille; Zhiyv Niu; Christine M. Eng; Yaping Yang; Sylvain Palardy; Céline Belhumeur; Guy A. Rouleau; Niels Tommerup; Ladonna Immken; Miriam H. Beauchamp; Gayle Patel; Jacek Majewski; Mark A. Tarnopolsky; Klaus Scheffzek; Helle Hjalgrim; Jacques L. Michaud; Graziella Di Cristo

De novo mutations in SYNGAP1, which codes for a RAS/RAP GTP‐activating protein, cause nonsyndromic intellectual disability (NSID). All disease‐causing point mutations identified until now in SYNGAP1 are truncating, raising the possibility of an association between this type of mutations and NSID. Here, we report the identification of the first pathogenic missense mutations (c.1084T>C [p.W362R], c.1685C>T [p.P562L]) and three novel truncating mutations (c.283dupC [p.H95PfsX5], c.2212_2213del [p.S738X], and (c.2184del [p.N729TfsX31]) in SYNGAP1 in patients with NSID. A subset of these patients also showed ataxia, autism, and a specific form of generalized epilepsy that can be refractory to treatment. All of these mutations occurred de novo, except c.283dupC, which was inherited from a father who is a mosaic. Biolistic transfection of wild‐type SYNGAP1 in pyramidal cells from cortical organotypic cultures significantly reduced activity‐dependent phosphorylated extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (pERK) levels. In contrast, constructs expressing p.W362R, p.P562L, or the previously described p.R579X had no significant effect on pERK levels. These experiments suggest that the de novo missense mutations, p.R579X, and possibly all the other truncating mutations in SYNGAP1 result in a loss of its function. Moreover, our study confirms the involvement of SYNGAP1 in autism while providing novel insight into the epileptic manifestations associated with its disruption.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Mutations in C5ORF42 Cause Joubert Syndrome in the French Canadian Population

Myriam Srour; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Fadi F. Hamdan; Luis H. Ospina; Lysanne Patry; Damian Labuda; Christine Massicotte; José-Mario Capo-Chichi; Simon Papillon-Cavanagh; Mark E. Samuels; Kym M. Boycott; Michael Shevell; Rachel Laframboise; Valérie Désilets; Bruno Maranda; Guy A. Rouleau; Jacek Majewski; Jacques L. Michaud

Joubert syndrome (JBTS) is an autosomal-recessive disorder characterized by a distinctive mid-hindbrain malformation, developmental delay with hypotonia, ocular-motor apraxia, and breathing abnormalities. Although JBTS was first described more than 40 years ago in French Canadian siblings, the causal mutations have not yet been identified in this family nor in most French Canadian individuals subsequently described. We ascertained a cluster of 16 JBTS-affected individuals from 11 families living in the Lower St. Lawrence region. SNP genotyping excluded the presence of a common homozygous mutation that would explain the clustering of these individuals. Exome sequencing performed on 15 subjects showed that nine affected individuals from seven families (including the original JBTS family) carried rare compound-heterozygous mutations in C5ORF42. Two missense variants (c.4006C>T [p.Arg1336Trp] and c.4690G>A [p.Ala1564Thr]) and a splicing mutation (c.7400+1G>A), which causes exon skipping, were found in multiple subjects that were not known to be related, whereas three other truncating mutations (c.6407del [p.Pro2136Hisfs*31], c.4804C>T [p.Arg1602*], and c.7477C>T [p.Arg2493*]) were identified in single individuals. None of the unaffected first-degree relatives were compound heterozygous for these mutations. Moreover, none of the six putative mutations were detected among 477 French Canadian controls. Our data suggest that mutations in C5ORF42 explain a large portion of French Canadian individuals with JBTS.


Neuron | 2013

Deficiency of asparagine synthetase causes congenital microcephaly and a progressive form of encephalopathy

Elizabeth K. Ruzzo; José-Mario Capo-Chichi; Bruria Ben-Zeev; David Chitayat; Hanqian Mao; Andrea L. Pappas; Yuki Hitomi; Yi-Fan Lu; Xiaodi Yao; Fadi F. Hamdan; Kimberly Pelak; Haike Reznik-Wolf; Ifat Bar-Joseph; Danit Oz-Levi; Dorit Lev; Tally Lerman-Sagie; Esther Leshinsky-Silver; Yair Anikster; Edna Ben-Asher; Tsviya Olender; Laurence Colleaux; Jean-Claude Décarie; Susan Blaser; Brenda Banwell; Rasesh B. Joshi; Xiao-Ping He; Lysanne Patry; Rachel Silver; Mohammad Safiqul Islam; Abul Hasnat

We analyzed four families that presented with a similar condition characterized by congenital microcephaly, intellectual disability, progressive cerebral atrophy, and intractable seizures. We show that recessive mutations in the ASNS gene are responsible for this syndrome. Two of the identified missense mutations dramatically reduce ASNS protein abundance, suggesting that the mutations cause loss of function. Hypomorphic Asns mutant mice have structural brain abnormalities, including enlarged ventricles and reduced cortical thickness, and show deficits in learning and memory mimicking aspects of the patient phenotype. ASNS encodes asparagine synthetase, which catalyzes the synthesis of asparagine from glutamine and aspartate. The neurological impairment resulting from ASNS deficiency may be explained by asparagine depletion in the brain or by accumulation of aspartate/glutamate leading to enhanced excitability and neuronal damage. Our study thus indicates that asparagine synthesis is essential for the development and function of the brain but not for that of other organs.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012

Mutations in TMEM231 cause Joubert syndrome in French Canadians

Myriam Srour; Fadi F. Hamdan; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Lysanne Patry; Luis H. Ospina; Michael Shevell; Valérie Désilets; Géraldine Mathonnet; Emmanuelle Lemyre; Christine Massicotte; Damian Labuda; Dina Amrom; Eva Andermann; Guillaume Sébire; Bruno Maranda; Guy A. Rouleau; Jacek Majewski; Jacques L. Michaud

Background Joubert syndrome (JBTS) is a predominantly autosomal recessive disorder characterised by a distinctive midhindbrain malformation, oculomotor apraxia, breathing abnormalities and developmental delay. JBTS is genetically heterogeneous, involving genes required for formation and function of non-motile cilia. Here we investigate the genetic basis of JBTS in 12 French–Canadian (FC) individuals. Methods and results Exome sequencing in all subjects showed that six of them carried rare compound heterozygous mutations in CC2D2A or C5ORF42, known JBTS genes. In addition, three individuals (two families) were compound heterozygous for the same rare mutations in TMEM231(c.12T>A[p.Tyr4*]; c.625G>A[p.Asp209Asn]). All three subjects showed a severe neurological phenotype and variable presence of polydactyly, retinopathy and renal cysts. These mutations were not detected among 385 FC controls. TMEM231 has been previously shown to localise to the ciliary transition zone, and to interact with several JBTS gene products in a complex involved in the formation of the diffusion barrier between the cilia and plasma membrane. siRNA knockdown of TMEM231 was also shown to affect barrier integrity, resulting in a reduction of cilia formation and ciliary localisation of signalling receptors. Conclusions Our data suggest that mutations in TMEM231 cause JBTS, reinforcing the relationship between this condition and the disruption of the barrier at the ciliary transition zone.


Human Mutation | 2013

Identification and biochemical characterization of a novel mutation in DDX11 causing Warsaw breakage syndrome.

José-Mario Capo-Chichi; Sanjay Kumar Bharti; Joshua A. Sommers; Tony Yammine; Eliane Chouery; Lysanne Patry; Guy A. Rouleau; Mark E. Samuels; Fadi F. Hamdan; Jacques L. Michaud; Robert M. Brosh; André Mégarbané; Zoha Kibar

Mutations in the gene encoding the iron–sulfur‐containing DNA helicase DDX11 (ChlR1) were recently identified as a cause of a new recessive cohesinopathy, Warsaw breakage syndrome (WABS), in a single patient with severe microcephaly, pre‐ and postnatal growth retardation, and abnormal skin pigmentation. Here, using homozygosity mapping in a Lebanese consanguineous family followed by exome sequencing, we identified a novel homozygous mutation (c.788G>A [p.R263Q]) in DDX11 in three affected siblings with severe intellectual disability and many of the congenital abnormalities reported in the WABS original case. Cultured lymphocytes from the patients showed increased mitomycin C‐induced chromosomal breakage, as found in WABS. Biochemical studies of purified recombinant DDX11 indicated that the p.R263Q mutation impaired DDX11 helicase activity by perturbing its DNA binding and DNA‐dependent ATP hydrolysis. Our findings thus confirm the involvement of DDX11 in WABS, describe its phenotypical spectrum, and provide novel insight into the structural requirement for DDX11 activity.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

SYN2 is an autism predisposing gene: loss-of-function mutations alter synaptic vesicle cycling and axon outgrowth

Anna Corradi; Manuela Fadda; Amélie Piton; Lysanne Patry; Antonella Marte; Pia Rossi; Maxime Cadieux-Dion; Julie Gauthier; Line Lapointe; Laurent Mottron; Flavia Valtorta; Guy A. Rouleau; Anna Fassio; Fabio Benfenati; Patrick Cossette

An increasing number of genes predisposing to autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) has been identified, many of which are implicated in synaptic function. This ‘synaptic autism pathway’ notably includes disruption of SYN1 that is associated with epilepsy, autism and abnormal behavior in both human and mice models. Synapsins constitute a multigene family of neuron-specific phosphoproteins (SYN1-3) present in the majority of synapses where they are implicated in the regulation of neurotransmitter release and synaptogenesis. Synapsins I and II, the major Syn isoforms in the adult brain, display partially overlapping functions and defects in both isoforms are associated with epilepsy and autistic-like behavior in mice. In this study, we show that nonsense (A94fs199X) and missense (Y236S and G464R) mutations in SYN2 are associated with ASD in humans. The phenotype is apparent in males. Female carriers of SYN2 mutations are unaffected, suggesting that SYN2 is another example of autosomal sex-limited expression in ASD. When expressed in SYN2  knockout neurons, wild-type human Syn II fully rescues the SYN2 knockout phenotype, whereas the nonsense mutant is not expressed and the missense mutants are virtually unable to modify the SYN2 knockout phenotype. These results identify for the first time SYN2  as a novel predisposing gene for ASD and strengthen the hypothesis that a disturbance of synaptic homeostasis underlies ASD.

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Guy A. Rouleau

Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital

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Fadi F. Hamdan

Université de Montréal

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Cheri Deal

Université de Montréal

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