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Featured researches published by Mark T. Handley.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Loss-of-Function Mutations in RAB18 Cause Warburg Micro Syndrome

Danai Bem; Shin Ichiro Yoshimura; Ricardo Nunes-Bastos; Frances F. Bond; Manju A. Kurian; Fatima Rahman; Mark T. Handley; Yavor Hadzhiev; Imran Masood; Ania Straatman-Iwanowska; Andrew R. Cullinane; Alisdair McNeill; Shanaz Pasha; Gail Kirby; Zubair Ahmed; Jenny Morton; Denise Williams; John M. Graham; William B. Dobyns; Lydie Burglen; John R. Ainsworth; Paul Gissen; Ferenc Müller; Eamonn R. Maher; Francis A. Barr; Irene A. Aligianis

Warburg Micro syndrome and Martsolf syndrome are heterogenous autosomal-recessive developmental disorders characterized by brain, eye, and endocrine abnormalities. Previously, identification of mutations in RAB3GAP1 and RAB3GAP2 in both these syndromes implicated dysregulation of the RAB3 cycle (which controls calcium-mediated exocytosis of neurotransmitters and hormones) in disease pathogenesis. RAB3GAP1 and RAB3GAP2 encode the catalytic and noncatalytic subunits of the hetrodimeric enzyme RAB3GAP (RAB3GTPase-activating protein), a key regulator of the RAB3 cycle. We performed autozygosity mapping in five consanguineous families without RAB3GAP1/2 mutations and identified loss-of-function mutations in RAB18. A c.71T > A (p.Leu24Gln) founder mutation was identified in four Pakistani families, and a homozygous exon 2 deletion (predicted to result in a frameshift) was found in the fifth family. A single family whose members were compound heterozygotes for an anti-termination mutation of the stop codon c.619T > C (p.X207QextX20) and an inframe arginine deletion c.277_279 del (p.Arg93 del) were identified after direct gene sequencing and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) of a further 58 families. Nucleotide binding assays for RAB18(Leu24Gln) and RAB18(Arg93del) showed that these mutant proteins were functionally null in that they were unable to bind guanine. The clinical features of Warburg Micro syndrome patients with RAB3GAP1 or RAB3GAP2 mutations and RAB18 mutations are indistinguishable, although the role of RAB18 in trafficking is still emerging, and it has not been linked previously to the RAB3 pathway. Knockdown of rab18 in zebrafish suggests that it might have a conserved developmental role. Our findings imply that RAB18 has a critical role in human brain and eye development and neurodegeneration.


Human Mutation | 2013

Mutation Spectrum in RAB3GAP1, RAB3GAP2, and RAB18 and Genotype–Phenotype Correlations in Warburg Micro Syndrome and Martsolf Syndrome

Mark T. Handley; Deborah J. Morris-Rosendahl; Stephen Brown; Fiona Macdonald; Carol Hardy; Danai Bem; Sarah M. Carpanini; Guntram Borck; Loreto Martorell; Claudia Izzi; Francesca Faravelli; Patrizia Accorsi; Lorenzo Pinelli; Lina Basel-Vanagaite; Gabriela Peretz; Ghada M.H. Abdel-Salam; Maha S. Zaki; Anna Jansen; David Mowat; Ian A. Glass; Helen Stewart; Grazia M.S. Mancini; Damien Lederer; Tony Roscioli; Fabienne Giuliano; Astrid S. Plomp; Arndt Rolfs; John M. Graham; Eva Seemanova; Pilar Poo

Warburg Micro syndrome and Martsolf syndrome (MS) are heterogeneous autosomal‐recessive developmental disorders characterized by brain, eye, and endocrine abnormalities. Causative biallelic germline mutations have been identified in RAB3GAP1, RAB3GAP2, or RAB18, each of which encode proteins involved in membrane trafficking. This report provides an up to date overview of all known disease variants identified in 29 previously published families and 52 new families. One‐hundred and forty‐four Micro and nine Martsolf families were investigated, identifying mutations in RAB3GAP1 in 41% of cases, mutations in RAB3GAP2 in 7% of cases, and mutations in RAB18 in 5% of cases. These are listed in Leiden Open source Variation Databases, which was created by us for all three genes. Genotype–phenotype correlations for these genes have now established that the clinical phenotypes in Micro syndrome and MS represent a phenotypic continuum related to the nature and severity of the mutations present in the disease genes, with more deleterious mutations causing Micro syndrome and milder mutations causing MS. RAB18 has not yet been linked to the RAB3 pathways, but mutations in all three genes cause an indistinguishable phenotype, making it likely that there is some overlap. There is considerable genetic heterogeneity for these disorders and further gene identification will help delineate these pathways.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

Rab18 and a Rab18 GEF complex are required for normal ER structure

Andreas Gerondopoulos; Ricardo Nunes Bastos; Shin-ichiro Yoshimura; Rachel Anderson; Sarah M. Carpanini; Irene A. Aligianis; Mark T. Handley; Francis A. Barr

The Rab3GAP complex that is mutated in the neurological disorder Micro syndrome is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor that promotes Rab18 localization to the endoplasmic reticulum.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Loss-of-Function Mutations in TBC1D20 Cause Cataracts and Male Infertility in blind sterile Mice and Warburg Micro Syndrome in Humans

Ryan Liegel; Mark T. Handley; Adam Ronchetti; Stephen Brown; Lars Langemeyer; Andrea Linford; Bo Chang; Deborah J. Morris-Rosendahl; Sarah M. Carpanini; Renata Posmyk; Verity Harthill; Eamonn Sheridan; Ghada M.H. Abdel-Salam; Paulien A. Terhal; Francesca Faravelli; Patrizia Accorsi; Lucio Giordano; Lorenzo Pinelli; Britta Hartmann; Allison D. Ebert; Francis A. Barr; Irene A. Aligianis; Duska J. Sidjanin

blind sterile (bs) is a spontaneous autosomal-recessive mouse mutation discovered more than 30 years ago. Phenotypically, bs mice exhibit nuclear cataracts and male infertility; genetic analyses assigned the bs locus to mouse chromosome 2. In this study, we first positionally cloned the bs locus and identified a putative causative mutation in the Tbc1d20 gene. Functional analysis established the mouse TBC1D20 protein as a GTPase-activating protein (GAP) for RAB1 and RAB2, and bs as a TBC1D20 loss-of-function mutation. Evaluation of bs mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mEFs) identified enlarged Golgi morphology and aberrant lipid droplet (LD) formation. Based on the function of TBC1D20 as a RABGAP and the bs cataract and testicular phenotypes, we hypothesized that mutations in TBC1D20 may contribute to Warburg micro syndrome (WARBM); WARBM constitutes a spectrum of disorders characterized by eye, brain, and endocrine abnormalities caused by mutations in RAB3GAP1, RAB3GAP2, and RAB18. Sequence analysis of a cohort of 77 families affected by WARBM identified five distinct TBC1D20 loss-of-function mutations, thereby establishing these mutations as causative of WARBM. Evaluation of human fibroblasts deficient in TBC1D20 function identified aberrant LDs similar to those identified in the bs mEFs. Additionally, our results show that human fibroblasts deficient in RAB18 and RAB3GAP1 function also exhibit aberrant LD formation. These findings collectively indicate that a defect in LD formation/metabolism may be a common cellular abnormality associated with WARBM, although it remains unclear whether abnormalities in LD metabolism are contributing to WARBM disease pathology.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2014

A novel mouse model of Warburg Micro syndrome reveals roles for RAB18 in eye development and organisation of the neuronal cytoskeleton

Sarah M. Carpanini; Lisa McKie; Derek Thomson; Ann K. Wright; Sarah L. Gordon; Sarah L. Roche; Mark T. Handley; Harris Morrison; David Brownstein; Thomas M. Wishart; Michael A. Cousin; Thomas H. Gillingwater; Irene A. Aligianis; Ian J. Jackson

Mutations in RAB18 have been shown to cause the heterogeneous autosomal recessive disorder Warburg Micro syndrome (WARBM). Individuals with WARBM present with a range of clinical symptoms, including ocular and neurological abnormalities. However, the underlying cellular and molecular pathogenesis of the disorder remains unclear, largely owing to the lack of any robust animal models that phenocopy both the ocular and neurological features of the disease. We report here the generation and characterisation of a novel Rab18-mutant mouse model of WARBM. Rab18-mutant mice are viable and fertile. They present with congenital nuclear cataracts and atonic pupils, recapitulating the characteristic ocular features that are associated with WARBM. Additionally, Rab18-mutant cells exhibit an increase in lipid droplet size following treatment with oleic acid. Lipid droplet abnormalities are a characteristic feature of cells taken from WARBM individuals, as well as cells taken from individuals with other neurodegenerative conditions. Neurological dysfunction is also apparent in Rab18-mutant mice, including progressive weakness of the hind limbs. We show that the neurological defects are, most likely, not caused by gross perturbations in synaptic vesicle recycling in the central or peripheral nervous system. Rather, loss of Rab18 is associated with widespread disruption of the neuronal cytoskeleton, including abnormal accumulations of neurofilament and microtubule proteins in synaptic terminals, and gross disorganisation of the cytoskeleton in peripheral nerves. Global proteomic profiling of peripheral nerves in Rab18-mutant mice reveals significant alterations in several core molecular pathways that regulate cytoskeletal dynamics in neurons. The apparent similarities between the WARBM phenotype and the phenotype that we describe here indicate that the Rab18-mutant mouse provides an important platform for investigation of the disease pathogenesis and therapeutic interventions.


Open Biology | 2015

Warburg Micro syndrome is caused by RAB18 deficiency or dysregulation

Mark T. Handley; Sarah M. Carpanini; Girish Mali; Duska J. Sidjanin; Irene A. Aligianis; Ian J. Jackson; David Fitzpatrick

RAB18, RAB3GAP1, RAB3GAP2 and TBC1D20 are each mutated in Warburg Micro syndrome, a rare autosomal recessive multisystem disorder. RAB3GAP1 and RAB3GAP2 form a binary ‘RAB3GAP’ complex that functions as a guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) for RAB18, whereas TBC1D20 shows modest RAB18 GTPase-activating (GAP) activity in vitro. Here, we show that in the absence of functional RAB3GAP or TBC1D20, the level, localization and dynamics of cellular RAB18 is altered. In cell lines where TBC1D20 is absent from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), RAB18 becomes more stably ER-associated and less cytosolic than in control cells. These data suggest that RAB18 is a physiological substrate of TBC1D20 and contribute to a model in which a Rab-GAP can be essential for the activity of a target Rab. Together with previous reports, this indicates that Warburg Micro syndrome can be caused directly by loss of RAB18, or indirectly through loss of RAB18 regulators RAB3GAP or TBC1D20.


Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine | 2014

Loss of ALDH18A1 function is associated with a cellular lipid droplet phenotype suggesting a link between autosomal recessive cutis laxa type 3A and Warburg Micro syndrome

Mark T. Handley; André Mégarbané; Alison Meynert; Stephen Brown; Elisabeth Freyer; Martin S. Taylor; Ian J. Jackson; Irene A. Aligianis

Autosomal recessive cutis laxa type 3A is caused by mutations in ALDH18A1, a gene encoding the mitochondrial enzyme ∆1‐pyrroline‐5‐carboxylate synthase (P5CS). It is a rare disorder with only six pathogenic mutations and 10 affected individuals from five families previously described in the literature. Here we report the identification of novel compound heterozygous missense mutations in two affected siblings from a Lebanese family by whole‐exome sequencing. The mutations alter a conserved C‐terminal domain of the encoded protein and reduce protein stability as determined through Western blot analysis of patient fibroblasts. Patient fibroblasts exhibit a lipid droplet phenotype similar to that recently reported in Warburg Micro syndrome, a disorder with similar features but hitherto unrelated cellular etiology.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

PLAA Mutations Cause a Lethal Infantile Epileptic Encephalopathy by Disrupting Ubiquitin-Mediated Endolysosomal Degradation of Synaptic Proteins

Emma A. Hall; Michael S. Nahorski; Lyndsay M. Murray; Ranad Shaheen; Emma M. Perkins; Kosala Dissanayake; Yosua Kristaryanto; Ross A. Jones; Julie Vogt; Manon Rivagorda; Mark T. Handley; Girish Mali; Tooba Quidwai; Dinesh C. Soares; Margaret Keighren; Lisa McKie; Richard L. Mort; Noor Gammoh; Amaya Garcia-Munoz; Tracey Davey; Matthieu Vermeren; D. Walsh; Peter S. Budd; Irene A. Aligianis; Eissa Faqeih; Alan J. Quigley; Ian J. Jackson; Yogesh Kulathu; Mandy Jackson; Richard R. Ribchester

During neurotransmission, synaptic vesicles undergo multiple rounds of exo-endocytosis, involving recycling and/or degradation of synaptic proteins. While ubiquitin signaling at synapses is essential for neural function, it has been assumed that synaptic proteostasis requires the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS). We demonstrate here that turnover of synaptic membrane proteins via the endolysosomal pathway is essential for synaptic function. In both human and mouse, hypomorphic mutations in the ubiquitin adaptor protein PLAA cause an infantile-lethal neurodysfunction syndrome with seizures. Resulting from perturbed endolysosomal degradation, Plaa mutant neurons accumulate K63-polyubiquitylated proteins and synaptic membrane proteins, disrupting synaptic vesicle recycling and neurotransmission. Through characterization of this neurological intracellular trafficking disorder, we establish the importance of ubiquitin-mediated endolysosomal trafficking at the synapse.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017

Novel PEX11B Mutations Extend the Peroxisome Biogenesis Disorder 14B Phenotypic Spectrum and Underscore Congenital Cataract as an Early Feature

Rachel L Taylor; Mark T. Handley; Sarah Waller; Christopher Campbell; Jill Urquhart; Alison Meynert; Jamie M Ellingford; Deirdre E. Donnelly; Gisela Wilcox; I. Chris Lloyd; Helen Mundy; David Fitzpatrick; Charu Deshpande; Jill Clayton-Smith; Graeme C.M. Black

Purpose Peroxisomes perform complex metabolic and catabolic functions essential for normal growth and development. Mutations in 14 genes cause a spectrum of peroxisomal disease in humans. Most recently, PEX11B was associated with an atypical peroxisome biogenesis disorder (PBD) in a single individual. In this study, we identify further PEX11B cases and delineate associated phenotypes. Methods Probands from three families underwent next generation sequencing (NGS) for diagnosis of a multisystem developmental disorder. Autozygosity mapping was conducted in one affected sibling pair. ExomeDepth was used to identify copy number variants from NGS data and confirmed by dosage analysis. Biochemical profiling was used to investigate the metabolic signature of the condition. Results All patients presented with bilateral cataract at birth but the systemic phenotype was variable, including short stature, skeletal abnormalities, and dysmorphism—features not described in the original case. Next generation sequencing identified biallelic loss-of-function mutations in PEX11B as the underlying cause of disease in each case (PEX11B c.235C>T p.(Arg79Ter) homozygous; PEX11B c.136C>T p.(Arg46Ter) homozygous; PEX11B c.595C>T p.(Arg199Ter) heterozygous, PEX11B ex1-3 del heterozygous). Biochemical studies identified very low plasmalogens in one patient, whilst a mildly deranged very long chain fatty acid profile was found in another. Conclusions Our findings expand the phenotypic spectrum of the condition and underscore congenital cataract as the consistent primary presenting feature. We also find that biochemical measurements of peroxisome function may be disturbed in some cases. Furthermore, diagnosis by NGS is proficient and may circumvent the requirement for an invasive skin biopsy for disease identification from fibroblast cells.


bioRxiv | 2018

ITPase Deficiency Causes Martsolf Syndrome With a Lethal Infantile Dilated Cardiomyopathy

David Fitzpatrick; Mark T. Handley; Kaalak Reddy; Jimi Wills; Elisabeth Rosser; Archith Kamath; Mihail Halachev; Gavin Falkous; Denise Williams; Phillip Cox; Alison Meynert; Eleanor S Raymond; Harris Morrison; Stephen Brown; Emma Allan; Irene A. Aligianis; Andrew P. Jackson; Bernard Ramsahoye; Alex von Kriegsheim; Robert W. Taylor; Andrew J. Finch

Martsolf syndrome is characterized by congenital cataracts, postnatal microcephaly, developmental delay, hypotonia, short stature and biallelic hypomorphic mutations in either RAB3GAP1 or RAB3GAP2. Through genetic analysis of 85 unrelated “mutation negative” probands referred with Martsolf syndrome we identified two individuals with different homozygous null mutations in ITPA, the gene encoding inosine triphosphate pyrophosphatase (ITPase). The probands reported here each presented with a lethal and highly distinctive disorder; Martsolf syndrome with infantile-onset dilated cardiomyopathy. Severe ITPase-deficiency has been previously reported with infantile epileptic encephalopathy (MIM 616647). ITPase acts to prevent incorporation of inosine bases (rl/dl) into RNA and DNA. In Itpa-null cells, dI was undetectable in genomic DNA. dI could be identified at a low level in mtDNA but this was not associated with detectable mitochondrial genome instability, mtDNA depletion or biochemical dysfunction of the mitochondria. rI accumulation was detectable in lymphoblastoid RNA from an affected individual. In Itpa-null mouse embryos rI was detectable in the brain and kidney with the highest level seen in the embryonic heart (rI at 1 in 385 bases). Transcriptome and proteome analysis in mutant cells revealed no major differences with controls. The rate of transcription and the total amount of cellular RNA also appeared normal. rI accumulation in RNA – and by implication rI production - correlates with the severity of organ dysfunction in ITPase deficiency but the basis of the cellulopathy remains cryptic. While we cannot exclude cumulative minor effects, there are no major anomalies in the production, processing, stability and/or translation of mRNA. Author Summary Nucleotide triphosphate bases containing inosine, ITP and dITP, are continually produced within the cell as a consequence of various essential biosynthetic reactions. The enzyme inosine triphosphate pyrophosphatase (ITPase) scavenges ITP and dITP to prevent their incorporation into RNA and DNA. Here we describe two unrelated families with complete loss of ITPase function as a consequence of disruptive mutations affecting both alleles of ITPA, the gene that encodes this protein. Both of the families have a very distinctive and severe combination of clinical problems, most notably a failure of heart muscle that was lethal in infancy or early childhood. They also have features of another rare genetic disorder affecting the brain and the eyes called Martsolf syndrome. We could not detect any evidence of dITP accumulation in genomic DNA from the affected individuals. A low but detectable level of inosine was present in the mitochondrial DNA but this did not have any obvious detrimental effect. The inosine accumulation in RNA was detectable in the patient cells. We made both cellular and animal models that were completely deficient in ITPase. Using these reagents we could show that the highest level of inosine accumulation into RNA was seen in the embryonic mouse heart. In this tissue more than 1 in 400 bases in all RNA in the cell was inosine. In normal tissues inosine is almost undetectable using very sensitive assays. The inosine accumulation did not seem to be having a global effect on the balance of RNA molecules or proteins.

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Lisa McKie

Western General Hospital

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Stephen Brown

Medical Research Council

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