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Featured researches published by Mollie A. Minear.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Missense Mutations in TCF8 Cause Late-Onset Fuchs Corneal Dystrophy and Interact with FCD4 on Chromosome 9p

S. Amer Riazuddin; Norann A. Zaghloul; Amr Al-Saif; Lisa Davey; Bill H. Diplas; Danielle N. Meadows; Allen O. Eghrari; Mollie A. Minear; Yi-Ju Li; Gordon K. Klintworth; Natalie A. Afshari; Simon G. Gregory; John D. Gottsch; Nicholas Katsanis

Fuchs corneal dystrophy (FCD) is a degenerative genetic disorder of the corneal endothelium that represents one of the most common causes of corneal transplantation in the United States. Despite its high prevalence (4% over the age of 40), the underlying genetic basis of FCD is largely unknown. Here we report missense mutations in TCF8, a transcription factor whose haploinsufficiency causes posterior polymorphous corneal dystrophy (PPCD), in a cohort of late-onset FCD patients. In contrast to PPCD-causing mutations, all of which are null, FCD-associated mutations encode rare missense changes suggested to cause loss of function by an in vivo complementation assay. Importantly, segregation of a recurring p.Q840P mutation in a large, multigenerational FCD pedigree showed this allele to be sufficient but not necessary for pathogenesis. Execution of a genome-wide scan conditioned for the presence of the 840P allele identified an additional late-onset FCD locus on chromosome 9p, whereas haplotype analysis indicated that the presence of the TCF8 allele and the disease haplotype on 9p leads to a severe FCD manifestation with poor prognosis. Our data suggest that PPCD and FCD are allelic variants of the same disease continuum and that genetic interaction between genes that cause corneal dystrophies can modulate the expressivity of the phenotype.


International Journal of Women's Health | 2015

Non-invasive prenatal testing: a review of international implementation and challenges

Megan Allyse; Mollie A. Minear; Elisa Berson; Shilpa Sridhar; Margaret Rote; Anthony Hung; Subhashini Chandrasekharan

Noninvasive prenatal genetic testing (NIPT) is an advance in the detection of fetal chromosomal aneuploidies that analyzes cell-free fetal DNA in the blood of a pregnant woman. Since its introduction to clinical practice in Hong Kong in 2011, NIPT has quickly spread across the globe. While many professional societies currently recommend that NIPT be used as a screening method, not a diagnostic test, its high sensitivity (true positive rate) and specificity (true negative rate) make it an attractive alternative to the serum screens and invasive tests currently in use. Professional societies also recommend that NIPT be accompanied by genetic counseling so that families can make informed reproductive choices. If NIPT becomes more widely adopted, States will have to implement regulation and oversight to ensure it fits into existing legal frameworks, with particular attention to returning fetal sex information in areas where sex-based abortions are prevalent. Although there are additional challenges for NIPT uptake in the developing world, including the lack of health care professionals and infrastructure, the use of NIPT in low-resource settings could potentially reduce the need for skilled clinicians who perform invasive testing. Future advances in NIPT technology promise to expand the range of conditions that can be detected, including single gene disorders. With these advances come questions of how to handle incidental findings and variants of unknown significance. Moving forward, it is essential that all stakeholders have a voice in crafting policies to ensure the ethical and equitable use of NIPT across the world.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Noninvasive Prenatal Testing Goes Global

Subhashini Chandrasekharan; Mollie A. Minear; Anthony Hung; Megan Allyse

Noninvasive prenatal genetic testing is becoming available worldwide, but many practical and ethical challenges in the developing world should be considered. Noninvasive prenatal genetic testing is becoming available worldwide—particularly in low- and middle-income countries—but practical and ethical challenges must be overcome.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Replication of TCF4 through Association and Linkage Studies in Late-Onset Fuchs Endothelial Corneal Dystrophy

Yi-Ju Li; Mollie A. Minear; Jacqueline Rimmler; Bei Zhao; Elmer Balajonda; Michael A. Hauser; R. Rand Allingham; Allen O. Eghrari; S. Amer Riazuddin; Nicholas Katsanis; John D. Gottsch; Simon G. Gregory; Gordon K. Klintworth; Natalie A. Afshari

Fuchs endothelial corneal dystrophy (FECD) is a common, late-onset disorder of the corneal endothelium. Although progress has been made in understanding the genetic basis of FECD by studying large families in which the phenotype is transmitted in an autosomal dominant fashion, a recently reported genome-wide association study identified common alleles at a locus on chromosome 18 near TCF4 which confer susceptibility to FECD. Here, we report the findings of our independent validation study for TCF4 using the largest FECD dataset to date (450 FECD cases and 340 normal controls). Logistic regression with sex as a covariate was performed for three genetic models: dominant (DOM), additive (ADD), and recessive (REC). We found significant association with rs613872, the target marker reported by Baratz et al.(2010), for all three genetic models (DOM: P = 9.33×10−35; ADD: P = 7.48×10−30; REC: P = 5.27×10−6). To strengthen the association study, we also conducted a genome-wide linkage scan on 64 multiplex families, composed primarily of affected sibling pairs (ASPs), using both parametric and non-parametric two-point and multipoint analyses. The most significant linkage region localizes to chromosome 18 from 69.94cM to 85.29cM, with a peak multipoint HLOD = 2.5 at rs1145315 (75.58cM) under the DOM model, mapping 1.5 Mb proximal to rs613872. In summary, our study presents evidence to support the role of the intronic TCF4 single nucleotide polymorphism rs613872 in late-onset FECD through both association and linkage studies.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2015

Global perspectives on clinical adoption of NIPT

Mollie A. Minear; Celine Lewis; Subarna Pradhan; Subhashini Chandrasekharan

The goals of this study were to assess global trends in clinical implementation of noninvasive prenatal testing (NIPT), as commercial tests are marketed increasingly worldwide, and to identify potential challenges for current or future use.


Nature Communications | 2017

Genome-wide association study identifies three novel loci in Fuchs endothelial corneal dystrophy

Natalie A. Afshari; Robert P. Igo; Nathan Morris; Dwight Stambolian; Shiwani Sharma; V. Lakshmi Pulagam; Steven P. Dunn; John F. Stamler; Barbara Truitt; Jacqueline Rimmler; Abraham Kuot; Christopher R. Croasdale; Xuejun Qin; Kathryn P. Burdon; S. Amer Riazuddin; Richard Arthur Mills; Sonja Klebe; Mollie A. Minear; Jiagang Zhao; Elmer Balajonda; George O. D. Rosenwasser; Keith H. Baratz; V. Vinod Mootha; Sanjay V. Patel; Simon G. Gregory; Joan E. Bailey-Wilson; Marianne O. Price; Francis W. Price; Jamie E. Craig; John H. Fingert

The structure of the cornea is vital to its transparency, and dystrophies that disrupt corneal organization are highly heritable. To understand the genetic aetiology of Fuchs endothelial corneal dystrophy (FECD), the most prevalent corneal disorder requiring transplantation, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) on 1,404 FECD cases and 2,564 controls of European ancestry, followed by replication and meta-analysis, for a total of 2,075 cases and 3,342 controls. We identify three novel loci meeting genome-wide significance (P<5 × 10−8): KANK4 rs79742895, LAMC1 rs3768617 and LINC00970/ATP1B1 rs1200114. We also observe an overwhelming effect of the established TCF4 locus. Interestingly, we detect differential sex-specific association at LAMC1, with greater risk in women, and TCF4, with greater risk in men. Combining GWAS results with biological evidence we expand the knowledge of common FECD loci from one to four, and provide a deeper understanding of the underlying pathogenic basis of FECD.


Journal of Personalized Medicine | 2015

Perspectives on Genetic and Genomic Technologies in an Academic Medical Center: The Duke Experience

Sara Huston Katsanis; Mollie A. Minear; Allison Vorderstrasse; Nancy Yang; Jason W. Reeves; Tejinder Rakhra-Burris; Robert Cook-Deegan; Geoffrey S. Ginsburg; Leigh Ann Simmons

In this age of personalized medicine, genetic and genomic testing is expected to become instrumental in health care delivery, but little is known about its actual implementation in clinical practice. Methods. We surveyed Duke faculty and healthcare providers to examine the extent of genetic and genomic testing adoption. We assessed providers’ use of genetic and genomic testing options and indications in clinical practice, providers’ awareness of pharmacogenetic applications, and providers’ opinions on returning research-generated genetic test results to participants. Most clinician respondents currently use family history routinely in their clinical practice, but only 18 percent of clinicians use pharmacogenetics. Only two respondents correctly identified the number of drug package inserts with pharmacogenetic indications. We also found strong support for the return of genetic research results to participants. Our results demonstrate that while Duke healthcare providers are enthusiastic about genomic technologies, use of genomic tools outside of research has been limited. Respondents favor return of research-based genetic results to participants, but clinicians lack knowledge about pharmacogenetic applications. We identified challenges faced by this institution when implementing genetic and genomic testing into patient care that should inform a policy and education agenda to improve provider support and clinician-researcher partnerships.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Mitochondrial polymorphism A10398G and Haplogroup I are associated with Fuchs' endothelial corneal dystrophy.

Yi-Ju Li; Mollie A. Minear; Xuejun Qin; Jacqueline Rimmler; Michael A. Hauser; R. Rand Allingham; Robert P. Igo; Jonathan H. Lass; Sudha K. Iyengar; Gordon K. Klintworth; Natalie A. Afshari; Simon G. Gregory

PURPOSE We investigated whether mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variants affect the susceptibility of Fuchs endothelial corneal dystrophy (FECD). METHODS Ten mtDNA variants defining European haplogroups were genotyped in a discovery dataset consisting of 530 cases and 498 controls of European descent from the Duke FECD cohort. Association tests for mtDNA markers and haplogroups were performed using logistic regression models with adjustment of age and sex. Subset analyses included controlling for additional effects of either the TCF4 SNP rs613872 or cigarette smoking. Our replication dataset was derived from the genome-wide association study (GWAS) of the FECD Genetics Consortium, where genotypes for three of 10 mtDNA markers were available. Replication analyses were performed to compare non-Duke cases to all GWAS controls (GWAS1, N = 3200), and to non-Duke controls (GWAS2, N = 3043). RESULTS The variant A10398G was significantly associated with FECD (odds ratio [OR] = 0.72; 95% confidence interval [CI] = [0.53, 0.98]; P = 0.034), and remains significant after adjusting for smoking status (min P = 0.012). This variant was replicated in GWAS1 (P = 0.019) and GWAS2 (P = 0.036). Haplogroup I was significantly associated with FECD (OR = 0.46; 95% CI = [0.22, 0.97]; P = 0.041) and remains significant after adjusting for the effect of smoking (min P = 0.008) or rs613872 (P = 0.034). CONCLUSIONS The 10398G allele and Haplogroup I appear to confer significant protective effects for FECD. The effect of A10398G and Haplogroup I to FECD is likely independent of the known TCF4 variant. More data are needed to decipher the interaction between smoking and mtDNA haplogroups.


Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics | 2015

Noninvasive Prenatal Genetic Testing: Current and Emerging Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues

Mollie A. Minear; Stephanie Alessi; Megan Allyse; Marsha Michie; Subhashini Chandrasekharan


Human Genetics | 2011

Polymorphic variants in tenascin-C (TNC) are associated with atherosclerosis and coronary artery disease

Mollie A. Minear; David R. Crosslin; Beth S. Sutton; Jessica J. Connelly; Sarah Nelson; Shera Gadson-Watson; Tianyuan Wang; David Seo; J. M. Vance; Michael H. Sketch; Carol Haynes; Pascal J. Goldschmidt-Clermont; Svati H. Shah; William E. Kraus; Elizabeth R. Hauser; Simon G. Gregory

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