Marie Claude Addor
University of Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marie Claude Addor.
Ultrasound in Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2005
Ester Garne; Maria Loane; Helen Dolk; C. De Vigan; Giocchino Scarano; David Tucker; Claude Stoll; Blanca Gener; Anna Pierini; Vera Nelen; C. Rösch; Yves Gillerot; Maria Feijoo; R. Tincheva; Annette Queisser-Luft; Marie Claude Addor; C. Mosquera; Miriam Gatt; Ingeborg Barišić
To assess at a population‐based level the frequency with which severe structural congenital malformations are detected prenatally in Europe and the gestational age at detection, and to describe regional variation in these indicators.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012
Andreas Zankl; Emma L. Duncan; Paul Leo; Graeme R. Clark; Evgeny A. Glazov; Marie Claude Addor; Troels Herlin; Chong Ae Kim; Bruno Leheup; Jim McGill; Steven McTaggart; Stephan Mittas; Anna L. Mitchell; Geert Mortier; Stephen P. Robertson; Marie Schroeder; Paulien A. Terhal; Matthew A. Brown
Multicentric carpotarsal osteolysis (MCTO) is a rare skeletal dysplasia characterized by aggressive osteolysis, particularly affecting the carpal and tarsal bones, and is frequently associated with progressive renal failure. Using exome capture and next-generation sequencing in five unrelated simplex cases of MCTO, we identified previously unreported missense mutations clustering within a 51 base pair region of the single exon of MAFB, validated by Sanger sequencing. A further six unrelated simplex cases with MCTO were also heterozygous for previously unreported mutations within this same region, as were affected members of two families with autosomal-dominant MCTO. MAFB encodes a transcription factor that negatively regulates RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis and is essential for normal renal development. Identification of this gene paves the way for development of novel therapeutic approaches for this crippling disease and provides insight into normal bone and kidney development.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003
Helga V. Toriello; John C. Carey; Marie Claude Addor; William Allen; Leah W. Burke; Nicole Chun; William B. Dobyns; Ellen Roy Elias; Renata C. Gallagher; Roel Hordijk; Gene Hoyme; Mira Irons; Tamison Jewett; Martine LeMerrer; Mark Lubinsky; Rick A. Martin; Donna M. McDonald-McGinn; Luitgard Neumann; William G. Newman; Richard M. Pauli; Laurie H. Seaver; Anna Tsai; David Wargowsky; Marc S. Williams; Elaine H. Zackai
Toriello and Carey [1988: Am J Med Genet 31:17–23] first described a syndrome with component manifestations of corpus callosum agenesis, unusual facial appearance, Robin sequence, and other anomalies. This was termed the Toriello–Carey syndrome by Lacombe et al. [1992: Am J Med Genet 42:374–376]. Since then, 11 reports describing 16 additional children have been published; in addition, we have had the opportunity to review over 30 unpublished cases. However, for various reasons, only 25 of the unpublished patients were included in this review. Based on this total, we can begin to better delineate this syndrome, as well as provide some information on natural history.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Cheol Sang Hwang; Maja Sukalo; Olga Batygin; Marie Claude Addor; Han G. Brunner; Antonio Pérez Aytés; Julia Mayerle; Hyun Kyu Song; Alexander Varshavsky; Martin Zenker
Background Johanson-Blizzard syndrome (JBS; OMIM 243800) is an autosomal recessive disorder that includes congenital exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, facial dysmorphism with the characteristic nasal wing hypoplasia, multiple malformations, and frequent mental retardation. Our previous work has shown that JBS is caused by mutations in human UBR1, which encodes one of the E3 ubiquitin ligases of the N-end rule pathway. The N-end rule relates the regulation of the in vivo half-life of a protein to the identity of its N-terminal residue. One class of degradation signals (degrons) recognized by UBR1 are destabilizing N-terminal residues of protein substrates. Methodology/Principal Findings Most JBS-causing alterations of UBR1 are nonsense, frameshift or splice-site mutations that abolish UBR1 activity. We report here missense mutations of human UBR1 in patients with milder variants of JBS. These single-residue changes, including a previously reported missense mutation, involve positions in the RING-H2 and UBR domains of UBR1 that are conserved among eukaryotes. Taking advantage of this conservation, we constructed alleles of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae UBR1 that were counterparts of missense JBS-UBR1 alleles. Among these yeast Ubr1 mutants, one of them (H160R) was inactive in yeast-based activity assays, the other one (Q1224E) had a detectable but weak activity, and the third one (V146L) exhibited a decreased but significant activity, in agreement with manifestations of JBS in the corresponding JBS patients. Conclusions/Significance These results, made possible by modeling defects of a human ubiquitin ligase in its yeast counterpart, verified and confirmed the relevance of specific missense UBR1 alleles to JBS, and suggested that a residual activity of a missense allele is causally associated with milder variants of JBS.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012
Cheryl DeScipio; Laura K. Conlin; Jill A. Rosenfeld; James Tepperberg; Romela Pasion; Ankita Patel; Marie McDonald; Swaroop Aradhya; Darlene Ho; Jennifer L. Goldstein; Marianne McGuire; Surabhi Mulchandani; Livija Medne; Rosemarie Rupps; Alvaro H. Serrano; Erik C. Thorland; Anne C.-H. Tsai; Yvonne Hilhorst-Hofstee; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Hilde Van Esch; Marie Claude Addor; Danielle Martinet; Thornton B.A. Mason; Dinah Clark; Nancy B. Spinner; Ian D. Krantz
We describe 19 unrelated individuals with submicroscopic deletions involving 10p15.3 characterized by chromosomal microarray (CMA). Interestingly, to our knowledge, only two individuals with isolated, submicroscopic 10p15.3 deletion have been reported to date; however, only limited clinical information is available for these probands and the deleted region has not been molecularly mapped. Comprehensive clinical history was obtained for 12 of the 19 individuals described in this study. Common features among these 12 individuals include: cognitive/behavioral/developmental differences (11/11), speech delay/language disorder (10/10), motor delay (10/10), craniofacial dysmorphism (9/12), hypotonia (7/11), brain anomalies (4/6) and seizures (3/7). Parental studies were performed for nine of the 19 individuals; the 10p15.3 deletion was de novo in seven of the probands, not maternally inherited in one proband and inherited from an apparently affected mother in one proband. Molecular mapping of the 19 individuals reported in this study has identified two genes, ZMYND11 (OMIM 608668) and DIP2C (OMIM 611380; UCSC Genome Browser), mapping within 10p15.3 which are most commonly deleted. Although no single gene has been identified which is deleted in all 19 individuals studied, the deleted region in all but one individual includes ZMYND11 and the deleted region in all but one other individual includes DIP2C. There is not a clearly identifiable phenotypic difference between these two individuals and the size of the deleted region does not generally predict clinical features. Little is currently known about these genes complicating a direct genotype/phenotype correlation at this time. These data however, suggest that ZMYND11 and/or DIP2C haploinsufficiency contributes to the clinical features associated with 10p15 deletions in probands described in this study.
Molecular Syndromology | 2010
L Desmyter; Michella Ghassibé; Nicole Revencu; Odile Boute; Melissa Lees; Geneviève J. François; Christine Verellen-Dumoulin; Yves Sznajer; Anne Moncla; Hervé Benateau; K. Claes; Koenraad Devriendt; Michèle Mathieu; L. Van Maldergem; Marie Claude Addor; Valérie Drouin-Garraud; Geert Mortier; M. Bouma; Anne Dieux-Coeslier; David Geneviève; Alice Goldenberg; A. Gozu; P. Makrythanasis; U. Mcentagart; A. Sanchez; Catheline Vilain; Sascha Vermeer; Fiona Connell; Joke B. G. M. Verheij; Sylvie Manouvrier-Hanu
Van der Woude syndrome (VWS), caused by dominant IRF6 mutation, is the most common cleft syndrome. In 15% of the patients, lip pits are absent and the phenotype mimics isolated clefts. Therefore, we hypothesized that some of the families classified as having non-syndromic inherited cleft lip and palate could have an IRF6 mutation. We screened in total 170 patients with cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P): 75 were syndromic and 95 were a priori part of multiplex non-syndromic families. A mutation was identified in 62.7 and 3.3% of the patients, respectively. In one of the 95 a priori non-syndromic families with an autosomal dominant inheritance (family B), new insights into the family history revealed the presence, at birth, of lower lip pits in two members and the diagnosis was revised as VWS. A novel lower lip sign was observed in one individual in this family. Interestingly, a similar lower lip sign was also observed in one individual from a 2nd family (family A). This consists of 2 nodules below the lower lip on the external side. In a 3rd multiplex family (family C), a de novo mutation was identified in an a priori non-syndromic CL/P patient. Re-examination after mutation screening revealed the presence of a tiny pit-looking lesion on the inner side of the lower lip leading to a revised diagnosis of VWS. On the basis of this data, we conclude that IRF6 should be screened when any doubt rises about the normality of the lower lip and also if a non-syndromic cleft lip patient (with or without cleft palate) has a family history suggestive of autosomal dominant inheritance.
Clinical Genetics | 2013
Patrick Callier; Bernard Aral; N Hanna; S Lambert; H Dindy; C Ragon; M. Payet; Gwenaëlle Collod-Béroud; Carmignac; M A Delrue; Cyril Goizet; Nicole Philip; T Busa; Y Dulac; I Missotte; Yves Sznajer; Annick Toutain; C Francannet; André Mégarbané; S Julia; T Edouard; P Sarda; Jeanne Amiel; Stanislas Lyonnet; Cormier-Daire; B Gilbert; A Jacquette; Delphine Héron; P Collignon; Didier Lacombe
The association of marfanoid habitus (MH) and intellectual disability (ID) has been reported in the literature, with overlapping presentations and genetic heterogeneity. A hundred patients (71 males and 29 females) with a MH and ID were recruited. Custom‐designed 244K array‐CGH (Agilent®; Agilent Technologies Inc., Santa Clara, CA) and MED12, ZDHHC9, UPF3B, FBN1, TGFBR1 and TGFBR2 sequencing analyses were performed. Eighty patients could be classified as isolated MH and ID: 12 chromosomal imbalances, 1 FBN1 mutation and 1 possibly pathogenic MED12 mutation were found (17%). Twenty patients could be classified as ID with other extra‐skeletal features of the Marfan syndrome (MFS) spectrum: 4 pathogenic FBN1 mutations and 4 chromosomal imbalances were found (2 patients with both FBN1 mutation and chromosomal rearrangement) (29%). These results suggest either that there are more loci with genes yet to be discovered or that MH can also be a relatively non‐specific feature of patients with ID. The search for aortic complications is mandatory even if MH is associated with ID since FBN1 mutations or rearrangements were found in some patients. The excess of males is in favour of the involvement of other X‐linked genes. Although it was impossible to make a diagnosis in 80% of patients, these results will improve genetic counselling in families.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2013
Charlotte H. W. Wijers; I.A.L.M. van Rooij; Marian K. Bakker; Carlo M. Marcelis; Marie Claude Addor; Ingeborg Barišić; Judit Béres; Sebastiano Bianca; Fabrizio Bianchi; Elisa Calzolari; Ruth Greenlees; Nathalie Lelong; Anna Latos-Bielenska; Candice Dias; Robert McDonnell; Carmel Mullaney; Vera Nelen; Mary O'Mahony; Annette Queisser-Luft; Judith Rankin; Natalya Zymak-Zakutnia; I. de Blaauw; Nel Roeleveld; de Hermien Walle
To identify pregnancy‐related risk factors for different manifestations of congenital anorectal malformations (ARMs).
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016
Emma M. Wade; Philip B. Daniel; Zandra A. Jenkins; Aideen McInerney-Leo; Paul Leo; Timothy R. Morgan; Marie Claude Addor; Lesley C. Adès; Débora Romeo Bertola; Axel Bohring; Erin Carter; Tae-Joon Cho; Hans-Christoph Duba; Elaine Fletcher; Chong A. Kim; Deborah Krakow; Eva Morava; Teresa Neuhann; Andrea Superti-Furga; Irma Veenstra-Knol; Dagmar Wieczorek; Louise C. Wilson; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Andrew J. Sutherland-Smith; Tim M. Strom; Andrew O.M. Wilkie; Matthew A. Brown; Emma L. Duncan; David Markie; Stephen P. Robertson
Frontometaphyseal dysplasia (FMD) is a progressive sclerosing skeletal dysplasia affecting the long bones and skull. The cause of FMD in some individuals is gain-of-function mutations in FLNA, although how these mutations result in a hyperostotic phenotype remains unknown. Approximately one half of individuals with FMD have no identified mutation in FLNA and are phenotypically very similar to individuals with FLNA mutations, except for an increased tendency to form keloid scars. Using whole-exome sequencing and targeted Sanger sequencing in 19 FMD-affected individuals with no identifiable FLNA mutation, we identified mutations in two genes-MAP3K7, encoding transforming growth factor β (TGF-β)-activated kinase (TAK1), and TAB2, encoding TAK1-associated binding protein 2 (TAB2). Four mutations were found in MAP3K7, including one highly recurrent (n = 15) de novo mutation (c.1454C>T [ p.Pro485Leu]) proximal to the coiled-coil domain of TAK1 and three missense mutations affecting the kinase domain (c.208G>C [p.Glu70Gln], c.299T>A [p.Val100Glu], and c.502G>C [p.Gly168Arg]). Notably, the subjects with the latter three mutations had a milder FMD phenotype. An additional de novo mutation was found in TAB2 (c.1705G>A, p.Glu569Lys). The recurrent mutation does not destabilize TAK1, or impair its ability to homodimerize or bind TAB2, but it does increase TAK1 autophosphorylation and alter the activity of more than one signaling pathway regulated by the TAK1 kinase complex. These findings show that dysregulation of the TAK1 complex produces a close phenocopy of FMD caused by FLNA mutations. Furthermore, they suggest that the pathogenesis of some of the filaminopathies caused by FLNA mutations might be mediated by misregulation of signaling coordinated through the TAK1 signaling complex.
Ophthalmic Genetics | 2005
Daniel Satgé; Daniel F. Schorderet; Aubin Balmer; Maja Beck-Popovic; Marie Claude Addor; Jacques S. Beckmann; Francis L. Munier
A significant subset of cancers is due to a variety of constitutional genetic susceptibilities. The study of particular causative associations has allowed an understanding of the genetic mechanisms involved in the process of carcinogenesis and, in particular, of the role of the Rb gene in retinoblastoma development.1 Here, we report on a new case of retinoblastoma in an infant with Down syndrome that we believe could be another example of non-random association. A bilateral retinoblastoma was discovered in an 11-monthold infant with progressive pendular horizontal nystagmus since the age of seven months. Anisocoria and enlargement of the right pupil appeared later. The parents, a 32-year-old mother and a 37-year-old father, were non-consanguineous and in good health. There was no familial history of eye disease, cancer, or malformation, including the three-year-old brother of the patient. A comprehensive ocular examination revealed a bilateral group V (according to Reese-Elworth classification) exophytic retinoblastoma with a total of four primary tumors: three in the right eye and one in the left eye. Metastatic evaluation was negative. The child was treated with four cycles of chemoreduction (Carboplatine and Etoposide) followed by a bilateral stereotac-