Mustafa A. Salih
King Saud University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mustafa A. Salih.
Nature Genetics | 2000
Alessandra Bolino; Maria Muglia; Francesca Luisa Conforti; Eric LeGuern; Mustafa A. Salih; Domna Maria Georgiou; Kyproula Christodoulou; Irena Hausmanowa-Petrusewicz; Paola Mandich; Angelo Schenone; Antonio Gambardella; F. Bono; Aldo Quattrone; Marcella Devoto; Anthony P. Monaco
A gene mutated in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 4B (CMT4B), an autosomal recessive demyelinating neuropathy with myelin outfoldings, has been mapped on chromosome 11q22. Using a positional-cloning strategy, we identified in unrelated CMT4B patients mutations occurring in the gene MTMR2, encoding myotubularin-related protein-2, a dual specificity phosphatase (DSP).
Nature Genetics | 2002
Hiroshi Takashima; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Joy John; Gulam Mustafa Saifi; Mustafa A. Salih; Dawna L. Armstrong; Yuxin Mao; Florante A. Quiocho; Benjamin B. Roa; Masanori Nakagawa; David W. Stockton; James R. Lupski
Tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase 1 (TDP1) repairs covalently bound topoisomerase I–DNA complexes and is essential for preventing the formation of double-strand breaks that result when stalled topoisomerase I complexes interfere with DNA replication in yeast. Here we show that a deficiency of this DNA repair pathway in humans does not predispose to neoplasia or dysfunctions in rapidly replicating tissues, but instead causes spinocerebellar ataxia with axonal neuropathy (SCAN1) by affecting large, terminally differentiated, non-dividing neuronal cells. Using genome-wide linkage mapping and a positional candidate approach in a Saudi Arabian family affected with autosomal recessive SCAN1, we identified a homozygous mutation in TDP1 (A1478G) that results in the substitution of histidine 493 with an arginine residue. The His493 residue is conserved in TDP1 across species and is located in the active site of the enzyme. Protein modeling predicts that mutation of this amino acid to arginine will disrupt the symmetric structure of the active site. We propose that loss-of-function mutations in TDP1 may cause SCAN1 either by interfering with DNA transcription or by inducing apoptosis in postmitotic neurons.
Nature Genetics | 2005
Max A. Tischfield; Thomas M. Bosley; Mustafa A. Salih; Ibrahim A. Alorainy; Emin Cumhur Sener; Michael J Nester; Darren T. Oystreck; Wai-Man Chan; Caroline Andrews; Robert P. Erickson; Elizabeth C. Engle
We identified homozygous truncating mutations in HOXA1 in three genetically isolated human populations. The resulting phenotype includes horizontal gaze abnormalities, deafness, facial weakness, hypoventilation, vascular malformations of the internal carotid arteries and cardiac outflow tract, mental retardation and autism spectrum disorder. This is the first report to our knowledge of viable homozygous truncating mutations in any human HOX gene and of a mendelian disorder resulting from mutations in a human HOX gene critical for development of the central nervous system.
Annals of Neurology | 2007
Virginie Carmignac; Mustafa A. Salih; Susana Quijano-Roy; Sylvie Marchand; Molham M. Al Rayess; Maowia M. Mukhtar; Jon Andoni Urtizberea; Siegfried Labeit; Pascale Guicheney; Mathias Gautel; Michel Fardeau; Kevin P. Campbell; Isabelle Richard; Brigitte Estournet; Ana Ferreiro
The giant protein titin is essential for striated muscle development, structure, and elasticity. All titin mutations reported to date cause late‐onset, dominant disorders involving either skeletal muscle or the heart. Our aim was to delineate the phenotype and determine the genetic defects in two consanguineous families with an early‐onset, recessive muscle and cardiac disorder.
Brain | 2009
Mathieu Anheim; Ben Monga; Marie Fleury; Perrine Charles; Clara Barbot; Mustafa A. Salih; Jean-Pierre Delaunoy; M. Fritsch; Larissa Arning; Matthis Synofzik; Ludger Schöls; Jorge Sequeiros; Cyril Goizet; Cecilia Marelli; Isabelle Le Ber; Jeannette Koht; José Gazulla; Jan De Bleecker; Mawia Mukhtar; Nadège Drouot; Lamia Alipacha; Traki Benhassine; Mohammed Chbicheb; Abderrahim M'zahem; Abdelmadjid Hamri; Brigitte Chabrol; Jean Pouget; R. Murphy; Mitsunori Watanabe; Paula Coutinho
Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) is an autosomal recessive disease due to mutations in the senataxin gene, causing progressive cerebellar ataxia with peripheral neuropathy, cerebellar atrophy, occasional oculomotor apraxia and elevated alpha-feto-protein (AFP) serum level. We compiled a series of 67 previously reported and 58 novel ataxic patients who underwent senataxin gene sequencing because of suspected AOA2. An AOA2 diagnosis was established for 90 patients, originating from 15 countries worldwide, and 25 new senataxin gene mutations were found. In patients with AOA2, median AFP serum level was 31.0 microg/l at diagnosis, which was higher than the median AFP level of AOA2 negative patients: 13.8 microg/l, P = 0.0004; itself higher than the normal level (3.4 microg/l, range from 0.5 to 17.2 microg/l) because elevated AFP was one of the possible selection criteria. Polyneuropathy was found in 97.5% of AOA2 patients, cerebellar atrophy in 96%, occasional oculomotor apraxia in 51%, pyramidal signs in 20.5%, head tremor in 14%, dystonia in 13.5%, strabismus in 12.3% and chorea in 9.5%. No patient was lacking both peripheral neuropathy and cerebellar atrophy. The age at onset and presence of occasional oculomotor apraxia were negatively correlated to the progression rate of the disease (P = 0.03 and P = 0.009, respectively), whereas strabismus was positively correlated to the progression rate (P = 0.03). An increased AFP level as well as cerebellar atrophy seem to be stable in the course of the disease and to occur mostly at or before the onset of the disease. One of the two patients with a normal AFP level at diagnosis had high AFP levels 4 years later, while the other had borderline levels. The probability of missing AOA2 diagnosis, in case of sequencing senataxin gene only in non-Friedreich ataxia non-ataxia-telangiectasia ataxic patients with AFP level > or =7 microg/l, is 0.23% and the probability for a non-Friedreich ataxia non-ataxia-telangiectasia ataxic patient to be affected with AOA2 with AFP levels > or =7 microg/l is 46%. Therefore, selection of patients with an AFP level above 7 microg/l for senataxin gene sequencing is a good strategy for AOA2 diagnosis. Pyramidal signs and dystonia were more frequent and disease was less severe with missense mutations in the helicase domain of senataxin gene than with missense mutations out of helicase domain and deletion and nonsense mutations (P = 0.001, P = 0.008 and P = 0.01, respectively). The lack of pyramidal signs in most patients may be explained by masking due to severe motor neuropathy.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009
L. Gueneau; Anne T. Bertrand; Jean-Philippe Jais; Mustafa A. Salih; Tanya Stojkovic; Manfred Wehnert; Maria Hoeltzenbein; Simone Spuler; Shinji Saitoh; Annie Verschueren; Christine Tranchant; Maud Beuvin; Emmanuelle Lacène; Norma B. Romero; Simon Heath; Diana Zelenika; Thomas Voit; Bruno Eymard; Rabah Ben Yaou; Gisèle Bonne
Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) is a rare disorder characterized by early joint contractures, muscular dystrophy, and cardiac involvement with conduction defects and arrhythmias. So far, only 35% of EDMD cases are genetically elucidated and associated with EMD or LMNA gene mutations, suggesting the existence of additional major genes. By whole-genome scan, we identified linkage to the Xq26.3 locus containing the FHL1 gene in three informative families belonging to our EMD- and LMNA-negative cohort. Analysis of the FHL1 gene identified seven mutations, in the distal exons of FHL1 in these families, three additional families, and one isolated case, which differently affect the three FHL1 protein isoforms: two missense mutations affecting highly conserved cysteines, one abolishing the termination codon, and four out-of-frame insertions or deletions. The predominant phenotype was characterized by myopathy with scapulo-peroneal and/or axial distribution, as well as joint contractures, and associated with a peculiar cardiac disease characterized by conduction defects, arrhythmias, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in all index cases of the seven families. Heterozygous female carriers were either asymptomatic or had cardiac disease and/or mild myopathy. Interestingly, four of the FHL1-mutated male relatives had isolated cardiac disease, and an overt hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was present in two. Expression and functional studies demonstrated that the FHL1 proteins were severely reduced in all tested patients and that this was associated with a severe delay in myotube formation in the two patients for whom myoblasts were available. In conclusion, FHL1 should be considered as a gene associated with the X-linked EDMD phenotype, as well as with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012
M. Chiara Manzini; Dimira E. Tambunan; R. Sean Hill; Thomas M. Maynard; Erin L. Heinzen; Christine Stevens; Jennifer N. Partlow; Brenda J. Barry; Jacqueline Rodriguez; Vandana Gupta; Abdel Karim Al-Qudah; Wafaa Eyaid; Jan M. Friedman; Mustafa A. Salih; Robin D. Clark; Isabella Moroni; Marina Mora; Alan H. Beggs; Stacey Gabriel; Christopher A. Walsh
Whole-exome sequencing (WES), which analyzes the coding sequence of most annotated genes in the human genome, is an ideal approach to studying fully penetrant autosomal-recessive diseases, and it has been very powerful in identifying disease-causing mutations even when enrollment of affected individuals is limited by reduced survival. In this study, we combined WES with homozygosity analysis of consanguineous pedigrees, which are informative even when a single affected individual is available, to identify genetic mutations responsible for Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), a genetically heterogeneous autosomal-recessive disorder that severely affects the development of the brain, eyes, and muscle. Mutations in seven genes are known to cause WWS and explain 50%-60% of cases, but multiple additional genes are expected to be mutated because unexplained cases show suggestive linkage to diverse loci. Using WES in consanguineous WWS-affected families, we found multiple deleterious mutations in GTDC2 (also known as AGO61). GTDC2s predicted role as an uncharacterized glycosyltransferase is consistent with the function of other genes that are known to be mutated in WWS and that are involved in the glycosylation of the transmembrane receptor dystroglycan. Therefore, to explore the role of GTDC2 loss of function during development, we used morpholino-mediated knockdown of its zebrafish ortholog, gtdc2. We found that gtdc2 knockdown in zebrafish replicates all WWS features (hydrocephalus, ocular defects, and muscular dystrophy), strongly suggesting that GTDC2 mutations cause WWS.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013
Elizabeth Stevens; Keren J. Carss; Sebahattin Cirak; A. Reghan Foley; Silvia Torelli; Tobias Willer; Dimira E. Tambunan; Shu Yau; Lina Brodd; C. Sewry; L. Feng; Goknur Haliloglu; Diclehan Orhan; William B. Dobyns; Gregory M. Enns; Melanie A. Manning; Amanda Krause; Mustafa A. Salih; Christopher A. Walsh; Kevin P. Campbell; M. Chiara Manzini; Derek L. Stemple; Yung Yao Lin; Francesco Muntoni
Mutations in several known or putative glycosyltransferases cause glycosylation defects in α-dystroglycan (α-DG), an integral component of the dystrophin glycoprotein complex. The hypoglycosylation reduces the ability of α-DG to bind laminin and other extracellular matrix ligands and is responsible for the pathogenesis of an inherited subset of muscular dystrophies known as the dystroglycanopathies. By exome and Sanger sequencing we identified two individuals affected by a dystroglycanopathy with mutations in β-1,3-N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase 2 (B3GALNT2). B3GALNT2 transfers N-acetyl galactosamine (GalNAc) in a β-1,3 linkage to N-acetyl glucosamine (GlcNAc). A subsequent study of a separate cohort of individuals identified recessive mutations in four additional cases that were all affected by dystroglycanopathy with structural brain involvement. We show that functional dystroglycan glycosylation was reduced in the fibroblasts and muscle (when available) of these individuals via flow cytometry, immunoblotting, and immunocytochemistry. B3GALNT2 localized to the endoplasmic reticulum, and this localization was perturbed by some of the missense mutations identified. Moreover, knockdown of b3galnt2 in zebrafish recapitulated the human congenital muscular dystrophy phenotype with reduced motility, brain abnormalities, and disordered muscle fibers with evidence of damage to both the myosepta and the sarcolemma. Functional dystroglycan glycosylation was also reduced in the b3galnt2 knockdown zebrafish embryos. Together these results demonstrate a role for B3GALNT2 in the glycosylation of α-DG and show that B3GALNT2 mutations can cause dystroglycanopathy with muscle and brain involvement.
Human Mutation | 2010
Vincent Laugel; Cecile Dalloz; Myriam Durand; Florence Sauvanaud; Hans-Ulrik Kristensen; Marie-Claire Vincent; Laurent Pasquier; Sylvie Odent; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Blanca Gener; Edward S. Tobias; John Tolmie; Dominique Martin-Coignard; Valérie Drouin-Garraud; Delphine Héron; Hubert Journel; Emmanuel Raffo; Jaqueline Vigneron; Stanislas Lyonnet; Victoria Murday; Danielle Gubser-Mercati; Benoît Funalot; Louise Brueton; Jaime Sanchez del Pozo; E. Muñoz; Andrew R. Gennery; Mustafa A. Salih; Mehrdad Noruzinia; K. Prescott; L. Ramos
Cockayne syndrome is an autosomal recessive multisystem disorder characterized principally by neurological and sensory impairment, cachectic dwarfism, and photosensitivity. This rare disease is linked to mutations in the CSB/ERCC6 and CSA/ERCC8 genes encoding proteins involved in the transcription‐coupled DNA repair pathway. The clinical spectrum of Cockayne syndrome encompasses a wide range of severity from severe prenatal forms to mild and late‐onset presentations. We have reviewed the 45 published mutations in CSA and CSB to date and we report 43 new mutations in these genes together with the corresponding clinical data. Among the 84 reported kindreds, 52 (62%) have mutations in the CSB gene. Many types of mutations are scattered along the whole coding sequence of both genes, but clusters of missense mutations can be recognized and highlight the role of particular motifs in the proteins. Genotype–phenotype correlation hypotheses are considered with regard to these new molecular and clinical data. Additional cases of molecular prenatal diagnosis are reported and the strategy for prenatal testing is discussed. Two web‐based locus‐specific databases have been created to list all identified variants and to allow the inclusion of future reports (www.umd.be/CSA/ and www.umd.be/CSB/). Hum Mutat 31:113–126, 2010.
Human Genetics | 2007
Jeroen van Reeuwijk; Prabhjit K. Grewal; Mustafa A. Salih; Daniel Beltrán-Valero de Bernabé; Jenny M. McLaughlan; Caroline B. Michielse; Ralf Herrmann; Jane E. Hewitt; Alice Steinbrecher; Mohamed Z. Seidahmed; Mohamed M. Shaheed; Abdullah Abomelha; Han G. Brunner; Hans van Bokhoven; Thomas Voit
Intragenic homozygous deletions in the Large gene are associated with a severe neuromuscular phenotype in the myodystrophy (myd) mouse. These mutations result in a virtual lack of glycosylation of α-dystroglycan. Compound heterozygous LARGE mutations have been reported in a single human patient, manifesting with mild congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) and severe mental retardation. These mutations are likely to retain some residual LARGE glycosyltransferase activity as indicated by residual α-dystroglycan glycosylation in patient cells. We hypothesized that more severe LARGE mutations are associated with a more severe CMD phenotype in humans. Here we report a 63-kb intragenic LARGE deletion in a family with Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), which is characterized by CMD, and severe structural brain and eye malformations. This finding demonstrates that LARGE gene mutations can give rise to a wide clinical spectrum, similar as for other genes that have a role in the post-translational modification of the α-dystroglycan protein.