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Featured researches published by Milena Mariani.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

(Epi)genotype–phenotype correlations in Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome

Alessandro Mussa; Silvia Russo; Agostina De Crescenzo; Andrea Freschi; Luciano Calzari; Silvia Maitz; Marina Macchiaiolo; Cristina Molinatto; Giuseppina Baldassarre; Milena Mariani; Luigi Tarani; Maria Francesca Bedeschi; Donatella Milani; Daniela Melis; Andrea Bartuli; Maria Vittoria Cubellis; Angelo Selicorni; Margherita Silengo; Lidia Larizza; Andrea Riccio; Giovanni Battista Ferrero

Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is characterized by cancer predisposition, overgrowth and highly variable association of macroglossia, abdominal wall defects, nephrourological anomalies, nevus flammeus, ear malformations, hypoglycemia, hemihyperplasia, and organomegaly. BWS molecular defects, causing alteration of expression or activity of the genes regulated by two imprinting centres (IC) in the 11p15 chromosomal region, are also heterogeneous. In this paper we define (epi)genotype–phenotype correlations in molecularly confirmed BWS patients. The characteristics of 318 BWS patients with proven molecular defect were compared among the main four molecular subclasses: IC2 loss of methylation (IC2-LoM, n=190), IC1 gain of methylation (IC1-GoM, n=31), chromosome 11p15 paternal uniparental disomy (UPD, n=87), and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1C gene (CDKN1C) variants (n=10). A characteristic growth pattern was found in each group; neonatal macrosomia was almost constant in IC1-GoM, postnatal overgrowth in IC2-LoM, and hemihyperplasia more common in UPD (P<0.001). Exomphalos was more common in IC2/CDKN1C patients (P<0.001). Renal defects were typical of UPD/IC1 patients, uretheral malformations of IC1-GoM cases (P<0.001). Ear anomalies and nevus flammeus were associated with IC2/CDKN1C genotype (P<0.001). Macroglossia was less common among UPD patients (P<0.001). Wilms’ tumor was associated with IC1-GoM or UPD and never observed in IC2-LoM patients (P<0.001). Hepatoblastoma occurred only in UPD cases. Cancer risk was lower in IC2/CDKN1C, intermediate in UPD, and very high in IC1 cases (P=0.009). In conclusion, (epi)genotype–phenotype correlations define four different phenotypic BWS profiles with some degree of clinical overlap. These observations impact clinical care allowing to move toward (epi) genotype-based follow-up and cancer screening.


Human Mutation | 2015

De novo heterozygous mutations in SMC3 cause a range of Cornelia de Lange syndrome-overlapping phenotypes.

María Concepción Gil-Rodríguez; Matthew A. Deardorff; Morad Ansari; Christopher A. Tan; Ilaria Parenti; Carolina Baquero-Montoya; Lilian Bomme Ousager; Beatriz Puisac; María Hernández-Marcos; María Esperanza Teresa-Rodrigo; Íñigo Marcos-Alcalde; Jan Jaap Wesselink; Silvia Lusa-Bernal; Emilia K. Bijlsma; Diana Braunholz; Inés Bueno-Martínez; Dinah Clark; Nicola S. Cooper; Cynthia J. Curry; Richard Fisher; Alan Fryer; Jaya Ganesh; Cristina Gervasini; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Yiran Guo; Hakon Hakonarson; Robert J. Hopkin; Maninder Kaur; Brendan J. Keating; Maria Kibæk

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is characterized by facial dysmorphism, growth failure, intellectual disability, limb malformations, and multiple organ involvement. Mutations in five genes, encoding subunits of the cohesin complex (SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21) and its regulators (NIPBL, HDAC8), account for at least 70% of patients with CdLS or CdLS‐like phenotypes. To date, only the clinical features from a single CdLS patient with SMC3 mutation has been published. Here, we report the efforts of an international research and clinical collaboration to provide clinical comparison of 16 patients with CdLS‐like features caused by mutations in SMC3. Modeling of the mutation effects on protein structure suggests a dominant‐negative effect on the multimeric cohesin complex. When compared with typical CdLS, many SMC3‐associated phenotypes are also characterized by postnatal microcephaly but with a less distinctive craniofacial appearance, a milder prenatal growth retardation that worsens in childhood, few congenital heart defects, and an absence of limb deficiencies. While most mutations are unique, two unrelated affected individuals shared the same mutation but presented with different phenotypes. This work confirms that de novo SMC3 mutations account for ∼1%–2% of CdLS‐like phenotypes.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Broadening of cohesinopathies: exome sequencing identifies mutations in ANKRD11 in two patients with Cornelia de Lange-overlapping phenotype

Ilaria Parenti; Cristina Gervasini; Jelena Pozojevic; Luitgard Graul-Neumann; Jacopo Azzollini; Diana Braunholz; Erwan Watrin; Kerstin S. Wendt; Anna Cereda; Davide Cittaro; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Dejan Lazarevic; Milena Mariani; Silvia Russo; Ralf Werner; Peter Krawitz; Lidia Larizza; Angelo Selicorni; Frank J. Kaiser

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) and KBG syndrome are two distinct developmental pathologies sharing common features such as intellectual disability, psychomotor delay, and some craniofacial and limb abnormalities. Mutations in one of the five genes NIPBL, SMC1A, SMC3, HDAC8 or RAD21, were identified in at least 70% of the patients with CdLS. Consequently, additional causative genes, either unknown or responsible of partially merging entities, possibly account for the remaining 30% of the patients. In contrast, KBG has only been associated with mutations in ANKRD11. By exome sequencing we could identify heterozygous loss‐of‐function mutations in ANKRD11 in two patients with the clinical diagnosis of CdLS. Both patients show features reminiscent of CdLS such as characteristic facies as well as a small head circumference which is not described for KBG syndrome. Patient A, who carries the mutation in a mosaic state, is a 4‐year‐old girl with features reminiscent of CdLS. Patient B, a 15‐year‐old boy, shows a complex phenotype which resembled CdLS during infancy, but has developed to a more KBG overlapping phenotype during childhood. These findings point out the importance of screening ANKRD11 in young CdLS patients who were found to be negative for mutations in the five known CdLS genes.


Clinical Epigenetics | 2015

Broadening of cohesinopathies: Exome sequencing identifies mutations in ANKRD11 in two patients with Cornelia de Lange-overlapping phenotype

Ilaria Parenti; Cristina Gervasini; Jelena Pozojevic; Luitgard Graul-Neumann; Jacopo Azzollini; Diana Braunholz; Erwan Watrin; Kerstin S. Wendt; Anna Cereda; Davide Cittaro; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Dejan Lazarevic; Milena Mariani; Silvia Russo; Ralf Werner; Peter Krawitz; Lidia Larizza; Angelo Selicorni; Frank J. Kaiser

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) and KBG syndrome are two distinct developmental pathologies sharing common features such as intellectual disability, psychomotor delay, and some craniofacial and limb abnormalities. Mutations in one of the five genes NIPBL, SMC1A, SMC3, HDAC8 or RAD21, were identified in at least 70% of the patients with CdLS. Consequently, additional causative genes, either unknown or responsible of partially merging entities, possibly account for the remaining 30% of the patients. In contrast, KBG has only been associated with mutations in ANKRD11. By exome sequencing we could identify heterozygous loss‐of‐function mutations in ANKRD11 in two patients with the clinical diagnosis of CdLS. Both patients show features reminiscent of CdLS such as characteristic facies as well as a small head circumference which is not described for KBG syndrome. Patient A, who carries the mutation in a mosaic state, is a 4‐year‐old girl with features reminiscent of CdLS. Patient B, a 15‐year‐old boy, shows a complex phenotype which resembled CdLS during infancy, but has developed to a more KBG overlapping phenotype during childhood. These findings point out the importance of screening ANKRD11 in young CdLS patients who were found to be negative for mutations in the five known CdLS genes.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Expanding the clinical spectrum of the 'HDAC8-phenotype' - implications for molecular diagnostics, counseling and risk prediction

Ilaria Parenti; Cristina Gervasini; Jelena Pozojevic; Kerstin S. Wendt; Erwan Watrin; Jacopo Azzollini; Diana Braunholz; K. Buiting; Anna Cereda; Hartmut Engels; Livia Garavelli; R. Glazar; B. Graffmann; Lidia Larizza; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Milena Mariani; Maura Masciadri; Juan Pié; Feliciano J. Ramos; Silvia Russo; Angelo Selicorni; M Stefanova; Tim M. Strom; Ralf Werner; Jolanta Wierzba; Giuseppe Zampino; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Dagmar Wieczorek; Frank J. Kaiser

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a clinically heterogeneous disorder characterized by typical facial dysmorphism, cognitive impairment and multiple congenital anomalies. Approximately 75% of patients carry a variant in one of the five cohesin‐related genes NIPBL, SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21 and HDAC8. Herein we report on the clinical and molecular characterization of 11 patients carrying 10 distinct variants in HDAC8. Given the high number of variants identified so far, we advise sequencing of HDAC8 as an indispensable part of the routine molecular diagnostic for patients with CdLS or CdLS‐overlapping features. The phenotype of our patients is very broad, whereas males tend to be more severely affected than females, who instead often present with less canonical CdLS features. The extensive clinical variability observed in the heterozygous females might be at least partially associated with a completely skewed X‐inactivation, observed in seven out of eight female patients. Our cohort also includes two affected siblings whose unaffected mother was found to be mosaic for the causative mutation inherited to both affected children. This further supports the urgent need for an integration of highly sensitive sequencing technology to allow an appropriate molecular diagnostic, genetic counseling and risk prediction.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Fetal growth patterns in Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome.

Alessandro Mussa; Silvia Russo; A. de Crescenzo; Andrea Freschi; Luciano Calzari; Silvia Maitz; Marina Macchiaiolo; Cristina Molinatto; Giuseppina Baldassarre; Milena Mariani; Luigi Tarani; Maria Francesca Bedeschi; Donatella Milani; Daniela Melis; Andrea Bartuli; Maria Vittoria Cubellis; Angelo Selicorni; Margherita Silengo; Lidia Larizza; Andrea Riccio; Giovanni Battista Ferrero

We provide data on fetal growth pattern on the molecular subtypes of Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS): IC1 gain of methylation (IC1‐GoM), IC2 loss of methylation (IC2‐LoM), 11p15.5 paternal uniparental disomy (UPD), and CDKN1C mutation. In this observational study, gestational ages and neonatal growth parameters of 247 BWS patients were compared by calculating gestational age‐corrected standard deviation scores (SDS) and proportionality indexes to search for differences among IC1‐GoM (n = 21), UPD (n = 87), IC2‐LoM (n = 147), and CDKN1C mutation (n = 11) patients. In IC1‐GoM subgroup, weight and length are higher than in other subgroups. Body proportionality indexes display the following pattern: highest in IC1‐GoM patients, lowest in IC2‐LoM/CDKN1C patients, intermediate in UPD ones. Prematurity was significantly more prevalent in the CDKN1C (64%) and IC2‐LoM subgroups (37%). Fetal growth patterns are different in the four molecular subtypes of BWS and remarkably consistent with altered gene expression primed by the respective molecular mechanisms. IC1‐GoM cases show extreme macrosomia and severe disproportion between weight and length excess. In IC2‐LoM/CDKN1C patients, macrosomia is less common and associated with more proportionate weight/length ratios with excess of preterm birth. UPD patients show growth patterns closer to those of IC2‐LoM, but manifest a body mass disproportion rather similar to that seen in IC1‐GoM cases.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Partial duplication of the PARK2 gene in a child with developmental delay and her normal mother: A second report

Milena Mariani; Francesca Crosti; Serena Redaelli; Chiara Fossati; Roberta Piras; Andrea Biondi; Leda Dalprà; Angelo Selicorni

Partial Duplication of the PARK2 Gene in a Child With Developmental Delay and her Normal Mother: A Second Report Milena Mariani, Francesca Crosti, Serena Redaelli, Chiara Fossati, Roberta Piras, Andrea Biondi, Leda Dalprà, and Angelo Selicorni* U.O.S. Genetica Clinica Pediatrica, Clinica Pediatrica Università Milano Bicocca, Fondazione MBBM, A.O. S. Gerardo, Monza (MB), Italy U.S. di Genetica Medica, A.O. S. Gerardo, Monza (MB), Italy Università degli Studi di Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy Istituto di Ricerca Genetica e Biomedica (IRGB), Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Cittadella Universitaria di Cagliari, Monserrato (CA), Italy Clinica Pediatrica Università Milano Bicocca, Fondazione MBBM, A.O. S. Gerardo, Monza (MB), Italy


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014

Cervical spine malformation in cornelia de lange syndrome: A report of three patients

Laura Rachele Bettini; Laura Locatelli; Milena Mariani; Paola Cianci; Carlo Giussani; Francesco Canonico; Anna Cereda; Silvia Russo; Cristina Gervasini; Andrea Biondi; Angelo Selicorni

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a complex genetic disease with skeletal involvement mostly related to upper limb malformations. We report on three males with clinical and molecular diagnoses of CdLS. Besides typical CdLS features, all showed different cervical spine malformations. To the best of our knowledge, this is an unusual malformation in the CdLS phenotypic spectrum.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2016

A new prognostic index of severity of intellectual disabilities in Cornelia de Lange syndrome

Anna Cereda; Milena Mariani; Paola Rebora; Anna Sajeva; Paola Francesca Ajmone; Cristina Gervasini; Silvia Russo; Gaia Kullmann; Grazia Valsecchi; Angelo Selicorni

Cornelia de Lange syndrome is a well‐known multiple congenital anomalies/intellectual disability syndrome with genetic heterogeneity and wide clinical variability, regarding the severity of both the intellectual disabilities and the physical features, not completely explained by the genotype‐phenotype correlations known to date. The aim of the study was the identification of prognostic features, ascertainable precociously in the patients life, of a better intellectual outcome and the development of a new prognostic index of severity of intellectual disability in CdLS patients. In 66 italian CdLS patients aged 8 years or more, we evaluated the association of the degree of intellectual disability with various clinical parameters ascertainable before 6 months of life and with the molecular data by the application of cumulative regression logistic model. Based on these results and on the previously known genotype‐phenotype correlations, we selected seven parameters to be used in a multivariate cumulative regression logistic model to develop a prognostic index of severity of intellectual disability. The probability of a mild ID increases with the reducing final score less than two, the probability of a severe ID increases with the increasing final score more than three. This prognostic index allows to define, precociously in the life of a baby, the probability of a better or worse intellectual outcome in CdLS patients.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2016

Adolescents and adults affected by Cornelia de Lange syndrome: A report of 73 Italian patients.

Milena Mariani; Valentina Decimi; Laura Rachele Bettini; Silvia Maitz; Cristina Gervasini; Maura Masciadri; Paola Francesca Ajmone; Gaia Kullman; Marco Dinelli; Roberto Panceri; Anna Cereda; Angelo Selicorni

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a rare genetic condition related to mutation of various cohesion complex related genes. Its natural history is quite well characterized as regard pediatric age. Relatively little information is available regarding the evolution of the disease in young‐adult age. In medical literature, only one specific study has been published on this topic. We report on our experience on 73 Italian CdLS patients (40 males and 33 females) with and age range from 15 to 49 years. Our results confirm the previous study indicating that gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is the main medical problem of these patients in childhood and young‐adult age. Other medical features that should be considered in the medical follow‐up are tendency to overweight/frank obesity, constipation, discrepancy of limbs’ length, epilepsy, hearing, and visual problems. Behavioral problems are particularly frequent as well. For this reason, every source of hidden pain should be actively searched for in evaluating a patient showing such a disorder. Finally, recommendations for medical follow‐up in adult age are discussed.

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Silvia Russo

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Andrea Biondi

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Paola Francesca Ajmone

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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