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Dive into the research topics where Nadia Schoenmakers is active.

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Featured researches published by Nadia Schoenmakers.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

A Mutation in the Thyroid Hormone Receptor Alpha Gene

Elena G. Bochukova; Nadia Schoenmakers; Maura Agostini; Erik Schoenmakers; Odelia Rajanayagam; Julia M. Keogh; Elana Henning; Reinemund J; Evelien F. Gevers; Sarri M; Downes K; Amaka C. Offiah; Albanese A; David J. Halsall; John W. R. Schwabe; Bain M; Keith J. Lindley; Francesco Muntoni; Faraneh Vargha-Khadem; Mehul T. Dattani; Farooqi Is; Mark Gurnell; Krishna Chatterjee

Thyroid hormones exert their effects through alpha (TRα1) and beta (TRβ1 and TRβ2) receptors. Here we describe a child with classic features of hypothyroidism (growth retardation, developmental retardation, skeletal dysplasia, and severe constipation) but only borderline-abnormal thyroid hormone levels. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified a de novo heterozygous nonsense mutation in a gene encoding thyroid hormone receptor alpha (THRA) and generating a mutant protein that inhibits wild-type receptor action in a dominant negative manner. Our observations are consistent with defective human TRα-mediated thyroid hormone resistance and substantiate the concept of hormone action through distinct receptor subtypes in different target tissues.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Loss-of-function mutations in IGSF1 cause an X-linked syndrome of central hypothyroidism and testicular enlargement

Yu Sun; Beata Bak; Nadia Schoenmakers; A. S. Paul van Trotsenburg; W. Oostdijk; Peter J. Voshol; Emma L. Cambridge; Jacqueline K. White; Paul Le Tissier; S. Neda Mousavy Gharavy; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Wilhelmina H. Stokvis-Brantsma; Thomas Vulsma; Marlies Kempers; Luca Persani; Irene Campi; Marco Bonomi; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Hongdong Zhu; Timothy M. E. Davis; Anita Hokken-Koelega; Daria Gorbenko Del Blanco; Jayanti Rangasami; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Jeroen F. J. Laros; Marjolein Kriek; Sarina G. Kant; Cathy A J Bosch; Nienke R. Biermasz; Natasha M. Appelman-Dijkstra

Congenital central hypothyroidism occurs either in isolation or in conjunction with other pituitary hormone deficits. Using exome and candidate gene sequencing, we identified 8 distinct mutations and 2 deletions in IGSF1 in males from 11 unrelated families with central hypothyroidism, testicular enlargement and variably low prolactin concentrations. IGSF1 is a membrane glycoprotein that is highly expressed in the anterior pituitary gland, and the identified mutations impair its trafficking to the cell surface in heterologous cells. Igsf1-deficient male mice show diminished pituitary and serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) concentrations, reduced pituitary thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) receptor expression, decreased triiodothyronine concentrations and increased body mass. Collectively, our observations delineate a new X-linked disorder in which loss-of-function mutations in IGSF1 cause central hypothyroidism, likely secondary to an associated impairment in pituitary TRH signaling.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

An Adult Female With Resistance to Thyroid Hormone Mediated by Defective Thyroid Hormone Receptor α

Carla Moran; Nadia Schoenmakers; Maura Agostini; Erik Schoenmakers; Amaka C. Offiah; Anna Kydd; George J. Kahaly; Susan Mohr-Kahaly; Odelia Rajanayagam; Greta Lyons; Nicholas J. Wareham; David J. Halsall; Mehul T. Dattani; Stephen Hughes; Mark Gurnell; Soo-Mi Park; Krishna Chatterjee

CONTEXT The first human cases (female, age 6 y; father and daughter, ages 47 and 11 y, respectively) with growth retardation/short stature, skeletal dysplasia, constipation, and defective thyroid receptor α (TRα) have been recently described. OBJECTIVE A 45-year-old, short, overweight female with cognitive impairment, epilepsy, and constipation was investigated. DESIGN AND INTERVENTION Clinical, biochemical, and radiological assessment and THRA sequencing were undertaken. The patients thyroid status and her biochemical and physiological parameters were evaluated at baseline and after T4 therapy. RESULTS The patient exhibits disproportionate short stature, macrocephaly, low free T4/free T3 ratio and rT3 levels, together with subnormal heart and basal metabolic rate. She is heterozygous for a novel frameshift/premature stop (Ala382ProfsX7) THRA mutation, generating a mutant TRα with constitutive corepressor binding and negligible coactivator recruitment, which inhibits its wild-type counterpart in a dominant-negative manner-both in vitro and in mutation-containing patient blood mononuclear cells studied ex vivo. Her alertness and constipation responded to T4 therapy, which readily suppressed TSH levels, raised basal metabolic rate, and normalized elevated muscle creatine kinase, but cardiac parameters (heart rate, contractility) remained relatively refractory. The patient and a previous childhood case showed reduced red cell mass with macrocytosis unresponsive to T4 therapy. CONCLUSIONS Clinical (short stature, macrocephaly, constipation) and biochemical (low free T4/free T3 ratio, subnormal rT3) findings that are congruent with previous cases and newly recognized features (epilepsy) in this adult female with defective TRα define a shared phenotype in TRα-mediated resistance to thyroid hormone, with differential tissue responses to T4 treatment.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Resistance to thyroid hormone is associated with raised energy expenditure, muscle mitochondrial uncoupling, and hyperphagia

Catherine Mitchell; David B. Savage; Sylvie Dufour; Nadia Schoenmakers; Peter R. Murgatroyd; Douglas E. Befroy; David J. Halsall; Samantha Northcott; Philippa Raymond-Barker; Suzanne Curran; Elana Henning; Julia M. Keogh; Penny Owen; John H. Lazarus; Douglas L. Rothman; I. Sadaf Farooqi; Gerald I. Shulman; Krishna Chatterjee; Kitt Falk Petersen

Resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH), a dominantly inherited disorder usually associated with mutations in thyroid hormone receptor beta (THRB), is characterized by elevated levels of circulating thyroid hormones (including thyroxine), failure of feedback suppression of thyrotropin, and variable tissue refractoriness to thyroid hormone action. Raised energy expenditure and hyperphagia are recognized features of hyperthyroidism, but the effects of comparable hyperthyroxinemia in RTH patients are unknown. Here, we show that resting energy expenditure (REE) was substantially increased in adults and children with THRB mutations. Energy intake in RTH subjects was increased by 40%, with marked hyperphagia particularly evident in children. Rates of muscle TCA cycle flux were increased by 75% in adults with RTH, whereas rates of ATP synthesis were unchanged, as determined by 13C/31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Mitochondrial coupling index between ATP synthesis and mitochondrial rates of oxidation (as estimated by the ratio of ATP synthesis to TCA cycle flux) was significantly decreased in RTH patients. These data demonstrate that basal mitochondrial substrate oxidation is increased and energy production in the form of ATP synthesis is decreased in the muscle of RTH patients and that resting oxidative phosphorylation is uncoupled in this disorder. Furthermore, these observations suggest that mitochondrial uncoupling in skeletal muscle is a major contributor to increased REE in patients with RTH, due to tissue selective retention of thyroid hormone receptor alpha sensitivity to elevated thyroid hormone levels.


The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology | 2014

Resistance to thyroid hormone caused by a mutation in thyroid hormone receptor (TR)α1 and TRα2: clinical, biochemical, and genetic analyses of three related patients

Carla Moran; Maura Agostini; W Edward Visser; Erik Schoenmakers; Nadia Schoenmakers; Amaka C. Offiah; Ken Poole; Odelia Rajanayagam; Greta Lyons; David J. Halsall; Mark Gurnell; Dionisios Chrysis; Alexandra Efthymiadou; Charles Buchanan; Simon Aylwin; Krishna Chatterjee

BACKGROUND The thyroid hormone receptor α gene (THRA) transcript is alternatively spliced to generate either thyroid hormone receptor (TR)α1 or a non-hormone-binding variant protein, TRα2, the function of which is unknown. Here, we describe the first patients identified with a mutation in THRA that affects both TRα1 and TRα2, and compare them with patients who have resistance to thyroid hormone owing to a mutation affecting only TRα1, to delineate the relative roles of TRα1 and TRα2. METHODS We did clinical, biochemical, and genetic analyses of an index case and her two sons. We assessed physical and radiological features, thyroid function, physiological and biochemical markers of thyroid hormone action, and THRA sequence. FINDINGS The patients presented in childhood with growth failure, developmental delay, and constipation, which improved after treatment with thyroxine, despite normal concentrations of circulating thyroid hormones. They had similar clinical (macrocephaly, broad faces, skin tags, motor dyspraxia, slow speech), biochemical (subnormal ratio of free thyroxine:free tri-iodothyronine [T3], low concentration of total reverse T3, high concentration of creatine kinase, mild anaemia), and radiological (thickened calvarium) features to patients with TRα1-mediated resistance to thyroid hormone, although our patients had a heterozygous mis-sense mutation (Ala263Val) in both TRα1 and TRα2 proteins. The Ala263Val mutant TRα1 inhibited the transcriptional function of normal receptor in a dominant-negative fashion. By contrast, function of Ala263Val mutant TRα2 matched its normal counterpart. In vitro, high concentrations of T3 restored transcriptional activity of Ala263Val mutant TRα1, and reversed the dominant-negative inhibition of its normal counterpart. High concentrations of T3 restored expression of thyroid hormone-responsive target genes in patient-derived blood cells. INTERPRETATION TRα1 seems to be the principal functional product of the THRA gene. Thyroxine treatment alleviates hormone resistance in patients with mutations affecting this gene, possibly ameliorating the phenotype. These findings will help the diagnosis and treatment of other patients with resistance to thyroid hormone resulting from mutations in THRA. FUNDING Wellcome Trust, NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Marie Curie Actions, Foundation for Development of Internal Medicine in Europe.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

The IGSF1 Deficiency Syndrome: Characteristics of Male and Female Patients

Sjoerd D. Joustra; Nadia Schoenmakers; Luca Persani; Irene Campi; Marco Bonomi; G. Radetti; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; H. Zhu; T. M. E. Davis; Yu Sun; Eleonora P. M. Corssmit; Natasha M. Appelman-Dijkstra; Charlotte A Heinen; Alberto M. Pereira; Aimee J. Varewijck; Joseph A M J L Janssen; E. Endert; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; M. P. Lombardi; Marcel Mannens; Beata Bak; Daniel J. Bernard; M.H. Breuning; Krishna Chatterjee; Mehul T. Dattani; W. Oostdijk; Nienke R. Biermasz; J.M. Wit; A.S.P. van Trotsenburg

CONTEXT Ig superfamily member 1 (IGSF1) deficiency was recently discovered as a novel X-linked cause of central hypothyroidism (CeH) and macro-orchidism. However, clinical and biochemical data regarding growth, puberty, and metabolic outcome, as well as features of female carriers, are scarce. OBJECTIVE Our objective was to investigate clinical and biochemical characteristics associated with IGSF1 deficiency in both sexes. METHODS All patients (n = 42, 24 males) from 10 families examined in the university clinics of Leiden, Amsterdam, Cambridge, and Milan were included in this case series. Detailed clinical data were collected with an identical protocol, and biochemical measurements were performed in a central laboratory. RESULTS Male patients (age 0-87 years, 17 index cases and 7 from family studies) showed CeH (100%), hypoprolactinemia (n = 16, 67%), and transient partial GH deficiency (n = 3, 13%). Pubertal testosterone production was delayed, as were the growth spurt and pubic hair development. However, testicular growth started at a normal age and attained macro-orchid size in all evaluable adults. Body mass index, percent fat, and waist circumference tended to be elevated. The metabolic syndrome was present in 4 of 5 patients over 55 years of age. Heterozygous female carriers (age 32-80 years) showed CeH in 6 of 18 cases (33%), hypoprolactinemia in 2 (11%), and GH deficiency in none. As in men, body mass index, percent fat, and waist circumference were relatively high, and the metabolic syndrome was present in 3 cases. CONCLUSION In male patients, the X-linked IGSF1 deficiency syndrome is characterized by CeH, hypoprolactinemia, delayed puberty, macro-orchidism, and increased body weight. A subset of female carriers also exhibits CeH.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

Resistance to thyroid hormone mediated by defective thyroid hormone receptor alpha

Nadia Schoenmakers; Carla Moran; Robin P. Peeters; Theo J. Visser; Mark Gurnell; Krishna Chatterjee

BACKGROUND Thyroid hormone acts via receptor subtypes (TRα1, TRβ1, TRβ2) with differing tissue distributions, encoded by distinct genes (THRA, THRB). THRB mutations cause a disorder with central (hypothalamic-pituitary) resistance to thyroid hormone action with markedly elevated thyroid hormone and normal TSH levels. SCOPE OF REVIEW This review describes the clinical features, genetic and molecular pathogenesis of a homologous human disorder mediated by defective THRA. Clinical features include growth retardation, skeletal dysplasia and constipation associated with low-normal T4 and high-normal T3 levels and a low T4/T3 ratio, together with subnormal reverse T3 levels. Heterozygous TRa1 mutations in affected individuals generate defective mutant receptors which inhibit wild-type receptor action in a dominant negative manner. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS Mutations in human TRα1 mediate RTH with features of hypothyroidism in particular tissues (e.g. skeleton, gastrointestinal tract), but are not associated with a markedly dysregulated pituitary-thyroid axis. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Human THRA mutations could be more common but may have eluded discovery due to the absence of overt thyroid dysfunction. Nevertheless, in the appropriate clinical context, a thyroid biochemical signature (low T4/T3 ratio, subnormal reverse T3 levels), may enable future identification of cases. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Thyroid hormone signalling.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2014

The Clinical and Molecular Characterization of Patients With Dyshormonogenic Congenital Hypothyroidism Reveals Specific Diagnostic Clues for DUOX2 Defects

Marina Muzza; Sarah Rabbiosi; Maria Cristina Vigone; Valentina Cirello; M. A. Maffini; K. Maruca; Nadia Schoenmakers; L. Beccaria; F. Gallo; Soo-Mi Park; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Luca Persani; Giovanna Weber; Laura Fugazzola

CONTEXT Mutations in the DUOX2 gene have been associated with transient or permanent congenital hypothyroidism due to a dyshormonogenic defect. OBJECTIVE This study aimed to verify the prevalence of DUOX2 mutations and the associated clinical features in children selected by criteria supporting a partial iodide organification defect (PIOD). PATIENTS AND METHODS Thirty children with PIOD-like criteria were enrolled and genotyped. A detailed clinical characterization was undertaken together with the functional analysis of the DUOX2 variations and the revision of the clinical and molecular data of the literature. RESULTS In this large selected series, the prevalence of the DUOX2 mutations was high (37%). We identified 12 missense variants, one splice site, and three frameshift DUOX2 mutations. Functional analyses showed significant impairment of H2O2 generation with five missense variants. Stop-codon mutants were shown to totally abolish DUOX2 activity by nonsense-mediated RNA decay, exon skipping, or protein truncation. DUOX2 mutations, either mono- or biallelic, were most frequently associated with permanent congenital hypothyroidism. Moreover, the present data suggested that, together with goiter and PIOD, the most significant features to select patients for the DUOX2 analysis are the low free T4 and the high TSH concentrations at the first postnatal serum sampling, despite borderline blood spot TSH. Interestingly, the analysis of previously described DUOX2 mutated cases confirmed the validity of these findings. CONCLUSIONS The defects in the peroxide generation system are common among congenital hypothyroidism patients with PIOD. The most robust clinical parameters for selecting patients for DUOX2 analysis have been identified, and several DUOX2 variants have been functionally characterized.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2013

Thyroid dyshormonogenesis is mainly caused by TPO mutations in consanguineous community

Hakan Cangul; Zehra Aycan; Álvaro Olivera-Nappa; Halil Saglam; Nadia Schoenmakers; Kristien Boelaert; Semra Çetinkaya; Omer Tarim; Ece Böber; Feyza Darendeliler; Veysel Nijat Baş; Korcan Demir; Banu Kucukemre Aydin; Michaela Kendall; Trevor Cole; Wolfgang Högler; V. Krishna Chatterjee; Timothy Barrett; Eamonn R. Maher

In this study, we aimed to investigate the genetic background of thyroid dyshormonogenesis (TDH).


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

IGSF1 deficiency: lessons from an extensive case series and recommendations for clinical management

Sjoerd D. Joustra; Charlotte A Heinen; Nadia Schoenmakers; Marco Bonomi; Bart E.P.B. Ballieux; Marc-Olivier Turgeon; Daniel J. Bernard; E. Fliers; A.S.P. van Trotsenburg; Monique Losekoot; Luca Persani; J.M. Wit; Nienke R. Biermasz; Alberto M. Pereira; W. Oostdijk

Clinical and biochemical characteristics of 69 male patients and 56 female IGSF1 mutation carriers were collected, providing recommendations for mutational analysis, endocrine work-up, and long-term care.

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Greta Lyons

University of Cambridge

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Mark Gurnell

Medical Research Council

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Mehul T. Dattani

UCL Institute of Child Health

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