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Dive into the research topics where Margaret L. McKinnon is active.

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Featured researches published by Margaret L. McKinnon.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Exome Sequencing and the Management of Neurometabolic Disorders

Maja Tarailo-Graovac; Casper Shyr; Colin Ross; Gabriella A. Horvath; Ramona Salvarinova; Xin C. Ye; Lin Hua Zhang; Amit P. Bhavsar; Jessica Lee; Britt I. Drögemöller; Mena Abdelsayed; Majid Alfadhel; Linlea Armstrong; Matthias R. Baumgartner; Patricie Burda; Mary B. Connolly; Jessie M. Cameron; Michelle Demos; Tammie Dewan; Janis Dionne; A. Mark Evans; Jan M. Friedman; Ian Garber; Suzanne Lewis; Jiqiang Ling; Rupasri Mandal; Andre Mattman; Margaret L. McKinnon; Aspasia Michoulas; Daniel Metzger

BACKGROUND Whole-exome sequencing has transformed gene discovery and diagnosis in rare diseases. Translation into disease-modifying treatments is challenging, particularly for intellectual developmental disorder. However, the exception is inborn errors of metabolism, since many of these disorders are responsive to therapy that targets pathophysiological features at the molecular or cellular level. METHODS To uncover the genetic basis of potentially treatable inborn errors of metabolism, we combined deep clinical phenotyping (the comprehensive characterization of the discrete components of a patients clinical and biochemical phenotype) with whole-exome sequencing analysis through a semiautomated bioinformatics pipeline in consecutively enrolled patients with intellectual developmental disorder and unexplained metabolic phenotypes. RESULTS We performed whole-exome sequencing on samples obtained from 47 probands. Of these patients, 6 were excluded, including 1 who withdrew from the study. The remaining 41 probands had been born to predominantly nonconsanguineous parents of European descent. In 37 probands, we identified variants in 2 genes newly implicated in disease, 9 candidate genes, 22 known genes with newly identified phenotypes, and 9 genes with expected phenotypes; in most of the genes, the variants were classified as either pathogenic or probably pathogenic. Complex phenotypes of patients in five families were explained by coexisting monogenic conditions. We obtained a diagnosis in 28 of 41 probands (68%) who were evaluated. A test of a targeted intervention was performed in 18 patients (44%). CONCLUSIONS Deep phenotyping and whole-exome sequencing in 41 probands with intellectual developmental disorder and unexplained metabolic abnormalities led to a diagnosis in 68%, the identification of 11 candidate genes newly implicated in neurometabolic disease, and a change in treatment beyond genetic counseling in 44%. (Funded by BC Childrens Hospital Foundation and others.).


Human Mutation | 2016

Mutations in FLNC are Associated with Familial Restrictive Cardiomyopathy.

Andreas Brodehl; Raechel A. Ferrier; Sara Jane Hamilton; Steven C. Greenway; Marie-Anne Brundler; Weiming Yu; William T. Gibson; Margaret L. McKinnon; Barbara McGillivray; Nanette Alvarez; Michael Giuffre; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Brenda Gerull

Individuals affected by restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM) often develop heart failure at young ages resulting in early heart transplantation. Familial forms are mainly caused by mutations in sarcomere proteins and demonstrate a common genetic etiology with other inherited cardiomyopathies. Using next‐generation sequencing, we identified two novel missense variants (p.S1624L; p.I2160F) in filamin‐C (FLNC), an actin‐cross‐linking protein mainly expressed in heart and skeletal muscle, segregating in two families with autosomal‐dominant RCM. Affected individuals presented with heart failure due to severe diastolic dysfunction requiring heart transplantation in some cases. Histopathology of heart tissue from patients of both families showed cytoplasmic inclusions suggesting protein aggregates, which were filamin‐C specific for the p.S1624L by immunohistochemistry. Cytoplasmic aggregates were also observed in transfected myoblast cell lines expressing this mutant filamin‐C indicating further evidence for its pathogenicity. Thus, FLNC is a disease gene for autosomal‐dominant RCM and broadens the phenotype spectrum of filaminopathies.


JCI insight | 2016

PIK3CA-associated developmental disorders exhibit distinct classes of mutations with variable expression and tissue distribution

Ghayda M. Mirzaa; Andrew E. Timms; Valerio Conti; Evan A. Boyle; Katta M. Girisha; Beth Martin; Martin Kircher; Carissa Olds; Jane Juusola; Sarah Collins; Kaylee Park; Melissa T. Carter; Ian A. Glass; Inge Krägeloh-Mann; David Chitayat; Aditi Shah Parikh; Rachael Bradshaw; Erin Torti; Stephen R. Braddock; Leah W. Burke; Sondhya Ghedia; Mark J. Stephan; Fiona Stewart; Chitra Prasad; Melanie Napier; Sulagna C. Saitta; Rachel Straussberg; Michael T. Gabbett; Bridget C. O’Connor; Catherine E. Keegan

Mosaicism is increasingly recognized as a cause of developmental disorders with the advent of next-generation sequencing (NGS). Mosaic mutations of PIK3CA have been associated with the widest spectrum of phenotypes associated with overgrowth and vascular malformations. We performed targeted NGS using 2 independent deep-coverage methods that utilize molecular inversion probes and amplicon sequencing in a cohort of 241 samples from 181 individuals with brain and/or body overgrowth. We identified PIK3CA mutations in 60 individuals. Several other individuals (n = 12) were identified separately to have mutations in PIK3CA by clinical targeted-panel testing (n = 6), whole-exome sequencing (n = 5), or Sanger sequencing (n = 1). Based on the clinical and molecular features, this cohort segregated into three distinct groups: (a) severe focal overgrowth due to low-level but highly activating (hotspot) mutations, (b) predominantly brain overgrowth and less severe somatic overgrowth due to less-activating mutations, and (c) intermediate phenotypes (capillary malformations with overgrowth) with intermediately activating mutations. Sixteen of 29 PIK3CA mutations were novel. We also identified constitutional PIK3CA mutations in 10 patients. Our molecular data, combined with review of the literature, show that PIK3CA-related overgrowth disorders comprise a discontinuous spectrum of disorders that correlate with the severity and distribution of mutations.


Human Mutation | 2016

Weaver Syndrome‐Associated EZH2 Protein Variants Show Impaired Histone Methyltransferase Function In Vitro

Ana S.A. Cohen; Damian B. Yap; M. E. Suzanne Lewis; Chieko Chijiwa; Maria A. Ramos-Arroyo; Natália Tkachenko; Valentina Milano; Mélanie Fradin; Margaret L. McKinnon; Katelin N. Townsend; Jieqing Xu; M. I. Van Allen; Colin Ross; William B. Dobyns; David D. Weaver; William T. Gibson

Weaver syndrome (WS) is a rare congenital disorder characterized by generalized overgrowth, macrocephaly, specific facial features, accelerated bone age, intellectual disability, and susceptibility to cancers. De novo mutations in the enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) have been shown to cause WS. EZH2 is a histone methyltransferase that acts as the catalytic agent of the polycomb‐repressive complex 2 (PRC2) to maintain gene repression via methylation of lysine 27 on histone H3 (H3K27). Functional studies investigating histone methyltransferase activity of mutant EZH2 from various cancers have been reported, whereas WS‐associated mutations remain poorly characterized. To investigate the role of EZH2 in WS, we performed functional studies using artificially assembled PRC2 complexes containing mutagenized human EZH2 that reflected the codon changes predicted from patients with WS. We found that WS‐associated amino acid alterations reduce the histone methyltransferase function of EZH2 in this in vitro assay. Our results support the hypothesis that WS is caused by constitutional mutations in EZH2 that alter the histone methyltransferase function of PRC2. However, histone methyltransferase activities of different EZH2 variants do not appear to correlate directly with the phenotypic variability between WS patients and individuals with a common c.553G>C (p.Asp185His) polymorphism in EZH2.


Human Genetics | 2016

Pathogenetics of alveolar capillary dysplasia with misalignment of pulmonary veins

Przemyslaw Szafranski; Tomasz Gambin; Avinash V. Dharmadhikari; Kadir C. Akdemir; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Jennifer Schuette; Nihal Godiwala; Svetlana A. Yatsenko; Jessica Sebastian; Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal; Urvashi Surti; Rosanna G. Abellar; David A. Bateman; Ashley Wilson; Melinda Markham; Jill Slamon; Fernando Santos-Simarro; María Palomares; Julián Nevado; Pablo Lapunzina; Brian Hon-Yin Chung; Wai Lap Wong; Yoyo W. Y. Chu; Gary Tsz Kin Mok; Eitan Kerem; Joel Reiter; Namasivayam Ambalavanan; Scott A. Anderson; David R. Kelly; Joseph T.C. Shieh

Alveolar capillary dysplasia with misalignment of pulmonary veins (ACDMPV) is a lethal lung developmental disorder caused by heterozygous point mutations or genomic deletion copy-number variants (CNVs) of FOXF1 or its upstream enhancer involving fetal lung-expressed long noncoding RNA genes LINC01081 and LINC01082. Using custom-designed array comparative genomic hybridization, Sanger sequencing, whole exome sequencing (WES), and bioinformatic analyses, we studied 22 new unrelated families (20 postnatal and two prenatal) with clinically diagnosed ACDMPV. We describe novel deletion CNVs at the FOXF1 locus in 13 unrelated ACDMPV patients. Together with the previously reported cases, all 31 genomic deletions in 16q24.1, pathogenic for ACDMPV, for which parental origin was determined, arose de novo with 30 of them occurring on the maternally inherited chromosome 16, strongly implicating genomic imprinting of the FOXF1 locus in human lungs. Surprisingly, we have also identified four ACDMPV families with the pathogenic variants in the FOXF1 locus that arose on paternal chromosome 16. Interestingly, a combination of the severe cardiac defects, including hypoplastic left heart, and single umbilical artery were observed only in children with deletion CNVs involving FOXF1 and its upstream enhancer. Our data demonstrate that genomic imprinting at 16q24.1 plays an important role in variable ACDMPV manifestation likely through long-range regulation of FOXF1 expression, and may be also responsible for key phenotypic features of maternal uniparental disomy 16. Moreover, in one family, WES revealed a de novo missense variant in ESRP1, potentially implicating FGF signaling in the etiology of ACDMPV.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014

Somatic mosaicism for the p.His1047Arg mutation in PIK3CA in a girl with mesenteric lipomatosis

Ana S.A. Cohen; Katelin N. Townsend; Qing-San Xiang; Raj Attariwala; Christof Borchers; Christof Senger; Wayne Picker; Jasna Levi; Lila Yewchuk; Joelle Tan; Patrice Eydoux; Amy Lum; Siu-Li Yong; Margaret L. McKinnon; Scott A. Lear; Robert Everett; Steven J.M. Jones; Stephen Yip; William T. Gibson

We describe a patient who presented with a localized growth of mature fat tissue, which was surgically removed. MRI imaging identified diffuse increase in visceral adipose tissue. Targeted deep sequencing of the resected tissue uncovered a p.H1047R variant in PIK3CA, which was absent in blood. This report expands the phenotypic spectrum of mosaic PIK3CA mutations.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2017

JAK1 gain-of-function causes an autosomal dominant immune dysregulatory and hypereosinophilic syndrome

Kate L. Del Bel; Robert J. Ragotte; Aabida Saferali; Susan Lee; Suzanne Vercauteren; Richard A. Schreiber; Julie S. Prendiville; Min S. Phang; Jessica Halparin; Nicholas Au; John Dean; John J. Priatel; Emily Jewels; Anne K. Junker; Paul C. Rogers; Michael Seear; Margaret L. McKinnon; Stuart E. Turvey

Kate L. Del Bel, MSc, Robert J. Ragotte, BSc, Aabida Saferali, MSc, Susan Lee, RN, Suzanne M. Vercauteren, MD PhD, Sara A. Mostafavi, PhD, Richard A. Schreiber, MD, Julie S. Prendiville, MD, Min S. Phang, MD, Jess Halperin, MD, Nicholas Au, MD, John M. Dean, MD BS, Emily Jewels, RN, Anne K. Junker, MD, Paul C. Rogers, MB ChB MBA, Michael Seear, MB ChB, Margaret L. McKinnon, MD, Stuart E. Turvey, MB BS, DPhil


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

Mutations in the Chromatin Regulator Gene BRPF1 Cause Syndromic Intellectual Disability and Deficient Histone Acetylation.

Kezhi Yan; Justine Rousseau; Rebecca Okashah Littlejohn; Courtney Kiss; Anna Lehman; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Constance Stumpel; Alexander P.A. Stegmann; Laurie Robak; Fernando Scaglia; Thi Tuyet Mai Nguyen; He Fu; Norbert F. Ajeawung; Maria Vittoria Camurri; Lin Li; Alice Gardham; Bianca Panis; Mohammed Almannai; Maria J. Guillen Sacoto; Berivan Baskin; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Fan Xia; Weimin Bi; Megan T. Cho; Thomas P. Potjer; Gijs W.E. Santen; Michael J. Parker; Natalie Canham; Margaret L. McKinnon; Lorraine Potocki

Identification of over 500 epigenetic regulators in humans raises an interesting question regarding how chromatin dysregulation contributes to different diseases. Bromodomain and PHD finger-containing protein 1 (BRPF1) is a multivalent chromatin regulator possessing three histone-binding domains, one non-specific DNA-binding module, and several motifs for interacting with and activating three lysine acetyltransferases. Genetic analyses of fish brpf1 and mouse Brpf1 have uncovered an important role in skeletal, hematopoietic, and brain development, but it remains unclear how BRPF1 is linked to human development and disease. Here, we describe an intellectual disability disorder in ten individuals with inherited or de novo monoallelic BRPF1 mutations. Symptoms include infantile hypotonia, global developmental delay, intellectual disability, expressive language impairment, and facial dysmorphisms. Central nervous system and spinal abnormalities are also seen in some individuals. These clinical features overlap with but are not identical to those reported for persons with KAT6A or KAT6B mutations, suggesting that BRPF1 targets these two acetyltransferases and additional partners in humans. Functional assays showed that the resulting BRPF1 variants are pathogenic and impair acetylation of histone H3 at lysine 23, an abundant but poorly characterized epigenetic mark. We also found a similar deficiency in different lines of Brpf1-knockout mice. These data indicate that aberrations in the chromatin regulator gene BRPF1 cause histone H3 acetylation deficiency and a previously unrecognized intellectual disability syndrome.


Clinical Immunology | 2017

The importance of considering monogenic causes of autoimmunity: A somatic mutation in KRAS causing pediatric Rosai-Dorfman syndrome and systemic lupus erythematosus

Robert J. Ragotte; Anita Dhanrajani; Julian Pleydell-Pearce; Kate L. Del Bel; Maja Tarailo-Graovac; Clara van Karnebeek; Jefferson Terry; Christof Senger; Margaret L. McKinnon; Michael Seear; Julie S. Prendiville; Lori B. Tucker; Kristin Houghton; David A. Cabral; Jaime Guzman; Ross E. Petty; Kelly L. Brown; Jenny Tekano; John Wu; Kimberly Morishita; Stuart E. Turvey

OBJECTIVES Clinicians need to be aware of the growing list of defined monogenic etiologies of autoimmune diseases. This is particularly relevant when evaluating children, as these rare monogenic forms of autoimmunity tend to present very early in life. METHODS AND RESULTS By harnessing the transformative power of next generation sequencing, we made the unifying diagnosis of RAS-associated autoimmune leukoproliferative disease (RALD), caused by the somatic gain-of-function p.G13C KRAS mutation, in a boy with the seemingly unrelated immune dysregulatory conditions of Rosai-Dorfman and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). CONCLUSIONS This case expands our understanding of the clinical phenotypes associated with the extremely rare condition of RALD, and emphasizes the importance of always considering the possibility of a monogenic cause for autoimmunity, particularly when the disease manifestations begin early in life and do not follow a typical clinical course.


Clinical Immunology | 2016

Successful clinical treatment and functional immunological normalization of human MALT1 deficiency following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

Jacob Rozmus; Rachel McDonald; Shan-Yu Fung; Kate L. Del Bel; Juliana Roden; Christof Senger; Kirk R. Schultz; Margaret L. McKinnon; Jeffrey H. Davis; Stuart E. Turvey

MALT1 mutations impair normal NF-κB activation and paracaspase activity to cause a novel combined immunodeficiency. The clinical and immunological phenotype of MALT1 deficiency can be successfully treated with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation following reduced intensity conditioning.

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Kate L. Del Bel

University of British Columbia

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Stuart E. Turvey

University of British Columbia

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Christof Senger

University of British Columbia

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Colin Ross

University of British Columbia

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Anne K. Junker

University of British Columbia

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Julie S. Prendiville

University of British Columbia

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Michael Seear

University of British Columbia

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William T. Gibson

University of British Columbia

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Ana S.A. Cohen

University of British Columbia

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