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Dive into the research topics where Mette Christensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Mette Christensen.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2007

Carnitine transporter and holocarboxylase synthetase deficiencies in The Faroe Islands

Allan M. Lund; F. Joensen; David M. Hougaard; L. K. Jensen; Ernst Christensen; Mette Christensen; B. Nørgaard-Petersen; M. Schwartz; Flemming Skovby

SummaryCarnitine transporter deficiency (CTD) and holocarboxylase synthetase deficiency (HLCSD) are frequent in The Faroe Islands compared to other areas, and treatment is available for both disorders. In order to evaluate the feasibility of neonatal screening in The Faroe Islands we studied detection in the neonatal period by tandem mass spectrometry, carrier frequencies, clinical manifestations, and effect of treatment of CTD and HLCSD. We found 11 patients with CTD from five families and 8 patients with HLCSD from five families. The natural history of both disorders varied extensively among patients, ranging from patients who presumably had died from their disease to asymptomatic individuals. All symptomatic patients responded favourably to supplementation with l-carnitine (in case of CTD) or biotin (in case of HLCSD), but only if treated early. Estimates of carrier frequency of about 1:20 for both disorders indicate that some enzyme-deficient individuals remain undiagnosed. Prospective and retrospective tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) analyses of carnitines from neonatally obtained filter-paper dried blood-spot samples (DBSS) uncovered 8 of 10 individuals with CTD when using both C0 and C2 as markers (current algorithm) and 10 of 10 when using only C0 as marker. MS/MS analysis uncovered 5 of 6 patient with HLCSD. This is the first study to report successful neonatal MS/MS analysis for the diagnosis of HLCSD. We conclude that CTD and HLCSD are relatively frequent in The Faroe Islands and are associated with variable clinical manifestations, and that diagnosis by neonatal screening followed by early therapy will secure a good outcome.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

Biochemical screening of 504,049 newborns in Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Greenland — Experience and development of a routine program for expanded newborn screening

Allan M. Lund; David M. Hougaard; Henrik Simonsen; Brage S. Andresen; Mette Christensen; Morten Duno; Kristin Skogstrand; Rikke K.J. Olsen; Ulrich Glümer Jensen; Arieh Cohen; Nanna Larsen; Peter Saugmann-Jensen; Niels Gregersen; Niels Jacob Brandt; Ernst Christensen; Flemming Skovby; Bent Nørgaard-Pedersen

Expanded newborn screening for selected inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) in Denmark, the Faroe Islands and Greenland was introduced in 2002. We now present clinical, biochemical, and statistical results of expanded screening (excluding PKU) of 504,049 newborns during nine years as well as diagnoses and clinical findings in 82,930 unscreened newborns born in the same period. The frequencies of diagnoses made within the panel of disorders screened for are compared with the frequencies of the disorders in the decade preceding expanded newborn screening. The expanded screening was performed as a pilot study during the first seven years, and the experience obtained during these years was used in the development of the routine neonatal screening program introduced in 2009. Methods for screening included tandem mass spectrometry and an assay for determination of biotinidase activity. A total of 310 samples from 504,049 newborns gave positive screening results. Of the 310 results, 114 were true positive, including results from 12 newborns in which the disease in question was subsequently diagnosed in their mothers. Thus, the overall frequency of an IEM in the screening panel was 1:4942 (mothers excluded) or 1:4421 (mothers included). The false positive rate was 0.038% and positive predictive value 37%. Overall specificity was 99.99%. All patients with true positive results were followed in The Center for Inherited Metabolic Disorders in Copenhagen, and the mean follow-up period was 45 months (range 2109 months). There were no deaths among the 102 children, and 94% had no clinically significant sequelae at last follow-up. Our study confirms the higher frequency of selected IEM after implementation of expanded newborn screening and suggests an improved outcome for several disorders. We argue that newborn screening for these disorders should be standard of care, though unresolved issues remain, e.g. about newborns with a potential for remaining asymptomatic throughout life. Well organized logistics of the screening program from screening laboratory to centralized, clinical management is important.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

MCAD deficiency in Denmark

Brage S. Andresen; Allan M. Lund; David M. Hougaard; Ernst Christensen; Birthe Gahrn; Mette Christensen; Peter Bross; Anne Vested; Henrik Simonsen; Kristin Skogstrand; S. E. Olpin; Niels Jacob Brandt; Flemming Skovby; Bent Nørgaard-Pedersen; Niels Gregersen

Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD) is the most common defect of fatty acid oxidation. Many countries have introduced newborn screening for MCADD, because characteristic acylcarnitines can easily be identified in filter paper blood spot samples by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), because MCADD is a frequent disease, and because of the success of early treatment initiated before clinical symptoms have emerged. In Denmark we have screened 519,350 newborns for MCADD by MS/MS and identified 58 affected babies. The diagnosis of MCADD was confirmed in all 58 newborns by mutation analysis. This gives an incidence of MCADD detected by newborn screening in Denmark of 1/8954. In sharp contrast to this we found that the incidence of clinically presenting MCADD in Denmark in the 10 year period preceding introduction of MS/MS-based screening was only 1 in 39,691. This means that four times more newborns with MCADD are detected by screening than what is expected based on the number of children presenting clinically in an unscreened population. The mutation spectrum in the newborns detected by screening is different from that observed in clinically presenting patients with a much lower proportion of newborns being homozygous for the prevalent disease-causing c.985A>G mutation. A significant number of the newborns have genotypes with mutations that have not been observed in patients detected clinically. Some of these mutations, like c.199T>C and c.127G>A, are always associated with a milder biochemical phenotype and may cause a milder form of MCADD with a relatively low risk of disease manifestation, thereby explaining part of the discrepancy between the frequency of clinically manifested MCADD and the frequency of MCADD determined by screening. In addition, our data suggest that some of this discrepancy can be explained by a reduced penetrance of the c.985A>G mutation, with perhaps only 50% of c.985A>G homozygotes presenting with disease manifestations. Interestingly, we also report that the observed number of newborns identified by screening who are homozygous for the c.985A>G mutation is twice that predicted from the estimated carrier frequency. We therefore redetermined the carrier frequency in a new sample of 1946 blood spots using a new assay, but this only confirmed that the c.985A>G carrier frequency in Denmark is approximately 1/105. We conclude that MCADD is much more frequent than expected, has a reduced penetrance and that rapid genotyping using the initial blood spot sample is important for correct diagnosis and counseling.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

CLPB variants associated with autosomal-recessive mitochondrial disorder with cataract, neutropenia, epilepsy, and methylglutaconic aciduria.

Carol J. Saunders; Laurie Smith; Kirstine Ravn; Peter Bross; Isabelle Thiffault; Mette Christensen; Andrea M. Atherton; Emily Farrow; Neil Miller; Stephen F. Kingsmore; Elsebet Ostergaard

3-methylglutaconic aciduria (3-MGA-uria) is a nonspecific finding associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, including defects of oxidative phosphorylation. 3-MGA-uria is classified into five groups, of which one, type IV, is genetically heterogeneous. Here we report five children with a form of type IV 3-MGA-uria characterized by cataracts, severe psychomotor regression during febrile episodes, epilepsy, neutropenia with frequent infections, and death in early childhood. Four of the individuals were of Greenlandic descent, and one was North American, of Northern European and Asian descent. Through a combination of homozygosity mapping in the Greenlandic individuals and exome sequencing in the North American, we identified biallelic variants in the caseinolytic peptidase B homolog (CLPB). The causative variants included one missense variant, c.803C>T (p.Thr268Met), and two nonsense variants, c.961A>T (p.Lys321*) and c.1249C>T (p.Arg417*). The level of CLPB protein was markedly decreased in fibroblasts and liver of affected individuals. CLPB is proposed to function as a mitochondrial chaperone involved in disaggregation of misfolded proteins, resulting from stress such as heat denaturation.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2007

Xanthurenic aciduria due to a mutation in KYNU encoding kynureninase

Mette Christensen; Morten Duno; Allan M. Lund; F. Skovby; Ernst Christensen

Massive urinary excretion of xanthurenic acid, 3-hydroxykynurenine and kynurenine, known as xanthurenic aciduria or hydroxykynureninuria, in a young Somali boy suggested kynureninase deficiency. Mutation analysis of KYNU encoding kynureninase of the index case revealed homozygosity for a c.593 A > G substitution leading to a threonine-to-alanine (T198A) shift. A younger brother was found to have a similar excretion pattern and the same genotype. At present, neither of the two boys has symptoms of niacin deficiency. This is the first report linking xanthurenic aciduria to a mutation in the gene encoding kynureninase.


JIMD reports | 2015

Abnormal Newborn Screening in a Healthy Infant of a Mother with Undiagnosed Medium-Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency

Lise Aksglaede; Mette Christensen; Jes Olesen; Morten Duno; Rikke K.J. Olsen; Brage S. Andresen; David M. Hougaard; Allan M. Lund

A neonate with low blood free carnitine level on newborn tandem mass spectrometry screening was evaluated for possible carnitine transporter defect (CTD). The plasma concentration of free carnitine was marginally reduced, and the concentrations of acylcarnitines (including C6, C8, and C10:1) were normal on confirmatory tests. Organic acids in urine were normal. In addition, none of the frequent Faroese SLC22A5 mutations (p.N32S, c.825-52G>A) which are common in the Danish population were identified. Evaluation of the mother showed low-normal free carnitine, but highly elevated medium-chain acylcarnitines (C6, C8, and C10:1) consistent with medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (MCADD). The diagnosis was confirmed by the finding of homozygous presence of the c.985A>G mutation in ACADM.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2018

Simultaneous quantification of succinylacetone and nitisinone for therapeutic drug monitoring in the treatment of Tyrosinemia type 1

Jonas Sundberg; Allan M. Lund; Mette Christensen

We present a straightforward and robust method for simultaneous quantification of succinylacetone and nitisinone in plasma using LC-ESI-MS/MS. The method has been developed for routine therapeutic drug monitoring in hepatorenal tyrosinemia type 1 (HT1) patients undergoing nitisinone treatment. Previous methods are based on separate analyses of succinylacetone and nitisinone, often using the potentially harmful compound hydrazine for derivatization of the former. In the present procedure, succinylacetone is derivatized in a single-step using butanolic HCl. Analyte extraction and sample clean-up is carried out by simple protein precipitation. The linear range for both analytes is 0.1 up to 125μM, covering the vast majority of encountered levels in real-life samples. The sensitivity and limit of quantification allows measurement of succinylacetone in the therapeutical range for HT1 patients. Stability studies show that succinylacetone is highly sensitive to storage conditions, whereas nitisinone shows little to no degradation. Correct sample handling is therefore important for reliable results when monitoring succinylacetone concentrations.


Neurogenetics | 2018

Compound heterozygous mutations in two different domains of ALDH18A1 do not affect the amino acid levels in a patient with hereditary spastic paraplegia

Maria Steenhof; Maria Kibæk; Martin Jakob Larsen; Mette Christensen; Allan M. Lund; Klaus Brusgaard; Jens Michael Hertz

Mutations in ALDH18A1 can cause autosomal recessive and dominant hereditary spastic paraplegia and autosomal recessive and dominant cutis laxa. ALDH18A1 encodes delta-1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate synthetase (P5CS), which consists of two domains, the glutamate 5-kinase (G5K) and the gamma-glutamyl phosphate reductase (GR5P) domain. The location of the mutations in the gene has influence on whether the amino acid levels are affected. Mutations affecting the G5K domain have previously been found to cause reduced plasma levels of proline, citrulline and arginine, whereas such effect is not seen with mutations affecting the GR5P domain. We present a 19-year old male patient with autosomal recessive spastic paraplegia and compound heterozygosity for two ALDH18A1 mutations, one in each of the P5CS domains. This young man has spastic paraplegia with onset in childhood and temporal lobe epilepsy, but normal levels of proline, ornithine and arginine. To our knowledge, this is the first case with compound heterozygous mutations affecting both P5CS domains, where levels of plasma amino acids have been reported.


JIMD reports | 2014

Mild Lesch–Nyhan Disease in a Boy with a Null Mutation in HPRT1 : An Exception to the Known Genotype–Phenotype Correlation

Allan Bayat; Mette Christensen; Morten Duno; Allan M. Lund

Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) deficiency results in a continuous spectrum of clinical phenotypes though all include overproduction of uric acid with hyperuricaemia, urate nephrolithiasis and gout. HPRT1 mutations that result in very low or no HPRT enzyme activities are generally associated with the classic Lesch-Nyhan disease (LND) phenotype with intellectual disability, motor handicap and self-injurious behaviour. Mutations that permit a higher residual HPRT activity are seen in some patients with the milder LND variant phenotypes with varying degrees of cognitive, motor handicap and maladaptive behaviour without recurrent self-injury. We present a boy with a LND variant phenotype due to a deletion of exon 5 of HPRT1 predicted to fully abolish HPRT activity. Metabolic analysis confirms lack of significant residual enzyme activity. The boy, currently age 10, presented with hyperuricaemia, hypotonia, developmental delay and extrapyramidal and pyramidal involvement. He has never shown any signs of self-injurious or maladaptive behaviour. This boy is one of the rare cases with a suspected null mutation in HPRT1 that associates with a milder than expected phenotype with lack of self-injurious behaviour. Key Clinical Message HPRT1 mutations that result in very low or no hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase enzyme activities are generally associated with the classic Lesch-Nyhan disease. This report presents one of the rare cases with a null mutation in the HPRT1 gene that associates with a milder than expected phenotype with lack of self-injurious behaviour.


JAMA Neurology | 2007

Treatment of Mitochondrial Neurogastrointestinal Encephalomyopathy With Dialysis

Halûk Yavuz; Ahmet Özel; Mette Christensen; Ernst Christensen; Marianne Schwartz; Mithat Elmaci; John Vissing

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Allan M. Lund

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Ernst Christensen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Morten Duno

University of Copenhagen

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Flemming Skovby

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Brage S. Andresen

University of Southern Denmark

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Aida Muhic

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Hans Skovgaard Poulsen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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