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Dive into the research topics where Radu Harbuz is active.

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Featured researches published by Radu Harbuz.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

The Aurora Kinase C c.144delC mutation causes meiosis I arrest in men and is frequent in the North African population

Klaus Dieterich; Raoudha Zouari; Radu Harbuz; François Vialard; Delphine Martinez; Hanane Bellayou; Nadia Prisant; Abdelali Zoghmar; Marie Roberte Guichaoua; Isabelle Koscinski; Mahmoud Kharouf; Mehrdad Noruzinia; Sellama Nadifi; Jacqueline Lornage; Mohamed Zahi; Stéphane Viville; Bernard Sele; Pierre-Simon Jouk; Marie-Christine Jacob; Denise Escalier; Yorgos Nikas; Sylviane Hennebicq; Joël Lunardi; Pierre F. Ray

Infertility concerns a minimum of 70 million couples worldwide. An important proportion of cases is believed to have a genetic component, yet few causal genes have been identified so far. In a previous study, we demonstrated that a homozygous mutation (c.144delC) in the Aurora Kinase C (AURKC) gene led to the production of large-headed polyploid multi-flagellar spermatozoa, a primary infertility phenotype mainly observed in North Africans. We now want to estimate the prevalence of the defect, to improve our understanding of AURKC physiopathology in spermatogenesis and assess its implication in oogenesis. A carrier frequency of 1/50 was established from individuals from the Maghrebian general population, comparable to that of Y-microdeletions, thus far the only known recurrent genetic event altering spermatogenesis. A total of 62 patients were genotyped, all who had a typical phenotype with close to 100% large-headed spermatozoa were homozygously mutated (n = 32), whereas no AURKC mutations were detected in the others. Two homozygous females were identified; both were fertile indicating that AURKC is not indispensible in oogenesis. Previous FISH results had showed a great chromosomal heterogeneity in these patients spermatozoa. We demonstrate here by flow cytometry that all spermatozoa have in fact a homogeneous 4C DNA content and are thus all blocked before the first meiotic division. Our data thus indicate that a functional AURKC protein is necessary for male meiotic cytokinesis while its absence does not impair oogenesis.


Molecular Human Reproduction | 2011

A new AURKC mutation causing macrozoospermia: implications for human spermatogenesis and clinical diagnosis

Mariem Ben Khelifa; Raoudha Zouari; Radu Harbuz; Lazhar Halouani; Christophe Arnoult; Joël Lunardi; Pierre F. Ray

The presence of close to 100% large-headed multi-tailed spermatozoa in the ejaculate has been described as a rare phenotype of male infertility with a very poor prognosis. We demonstrated previously that most cases were caused by a homozygous mutation (c.144delC) in the Aurora Kinase C gene (AURKC) leading to the absence or the production of a non-functional protein. AURKC deficiency in these patients blocked meiosis and resulted in the production of tetraploid spermatozoa unsuitable for fertilization. We describe here the study of two brothers presenting with large-headed spermatozoa. Molecular analysis of the AURKC gene was carried out in two brothers presenting with a typical large-headed spermatozoa phenotype. Both affected brothers were heterozygous for the c.144delC mutation. After complete sequencing of the gene a new heterozygous variant, c.436-2A>G, was identified in both patients. This mutation is located in the acceptor consensus splice site of exon 5. AURKC transcripts were extracted from one of the patients leukocytes and reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction could be realized showing the presence of a truncated transcript indicating that c.436-2A>G leads to the skipping of exon 5. These results indicate that AURKC molecular analysis of patients with large-headed spermatozoa should not be stopped in the absence of a homozygous recurrent mutation on exon 3 but complete sequence analysis should be performed. This diagnosis is important as the identification of AURKC mutations in patients indicates that all spermatozoa will be chromosomally abnormal and that ICSI should not be attempted.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2010

Identification of new FOXP3 mutations and prenatal diagnosis of IPEX syndrome.

Radu Harbuz; James Lespinasse; Stéphanie Boulet; Christine Francannet; Isabelle Creveaux; Mariem Benkhelifa; Pierre-Simon Jouk; Joël Lunardi; Pierre F. Ray

Molecular diagnosis and prenatal care of two pregnant women at risk of transmitting immunodysregulation, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy X‐linked (IPEX) syndrome.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

A French multicenter study of over 700 patients with 22q11 deletions diagnosed using FISH or aCGH

Céline Poirsier; Justine Besseau-Ayasse; Caroline Schluth-Bolard; Jérôme Toutain; Chantal Missirian; Cédric Le Caignec; Anne Bazin; Marie Christine De Blois; Paul Kuentz; Marie Catty; Agnès Choiset; Ghislaine Plessis; Audrey Basinko; Pascaline Letard; Elisabeth Flori; Mélanie Jimenez; Mylène Valduga; Emilie Landais; Hakima Lallaoui; François Cartault; James Lespinasse; Dominique Martin-Coignard; Patrick Callier; Céline Pebrel-Richard; Marie-France Portnoï; Tiffany Busa; Aline Receveur; Florence Amblard; Catherine Yardin; Radu Harbuz

Although 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2DS) is the most recurrent human microdeletion syndrome associated with a highly variable phenotype, little is known about the condition’s true incidence and the phenotype at diagnosis. We performed a multicenter, retrospective analysis of postnatally diagnosed patients recruited by members of the Association des Cytogénéticiens de Langue Française (the French-Speaking Cytogeneticists Association). Clinical and cytogenetic data on 749 cases diagnosed between 1995 and 2013 were collected by 31 French cytogenetics laboratories. The most frequent reasons for referral of postnatally diagnosed cases were a congenital heart defect (CHD, 48.6%), facial dysmorphism (49.7%) and developmental delay (40.7%). Since 2007 (the year in which array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) was introduced for the routine screening of patients with intellectual disability), almost all cases have been diagnosed using FISH (96.1%). Only 15 cases (all with an atypical phenotype) were diagnosed with aCGH; the deletion size ranged from 745 to 2904 kb. The deletion was inherited in 15.0% of cases and was of maternal origin in 85.5% of the latter. This is the largest yet documented cohort of patients with 22q11.2DS (the most commonly diagnosed microdeletion) from the same population. French cytogenetics laboratories diagnosed at least 108 affected patients (including fetuses) per year from among a national population of ∼66 million. As observed for prenatal diagnoses, CHDs were the most frequently detected malformation in postnatal diagnoses. The most common CHD in postnatal diagnoses was an isolated septal defect.


Gynecologie Obstetrique & Fertilite | 2009

Rôle d’aurora kinase C (AURKC) dans la reproduction humaine

Radu Harbuz; Raoudha Zouari; Klaus Dieterich; Yorgos Nikas; Joël Lunardi; Sylviane Hennebicq; Pierre F. Ray

Infertility concerns at least 70 million couples worldwide. An important proportion of cases is believed to have a genetic component, yet few causal genes have been identified so far. Hundreds of genes are probably involved in spermatogenesis and oogenesis and this genetic heterogeneity has so far hindered the identification of genes causing infertility in the human. Careful morphological examination of spermatozoa can provide cues to identify homogeneous cohorts of patients likely to have the same genetic defect. We studied a cohort of North-Africans patients with a rare phenotype of large-headed spermatozoa. Using a homozygosity mapping strategy, we could map the morbid gene and we identified the same homozygous mutation (c.144delC) in the aurora kinase C gene (AURKC) of all patients studied initially. We then genotyped a total of 62 patients. All who had a typical phenotype with close to 100% large-headed spermatozoa were homozygously mutated (n=34), whereas no AURKC mutations were detected in the others. A carrier frequency of 1/50 was established from individuals from the Maghrebian population, indicating that 1 in 10,000 men from North-African can be expected to present this form of infertility, a frequency comparable to that of Y-microdeletions, thus far the only known recurrent genetic event altering spermatogenesis. Then we demonstrated by flow cytometry that all spermatozoa have in fact a homogeneous 4C. We recommend the realisation of a molecular diagnosis to all patients with large-headed spermatozoa. ICSI is formally contraindicated for all homozygous patients who can have recourse to donor sperm or adoption. One cannot be as categorical for the patients not harbouring an AURKC mutation.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2014

Pregnancy outcomes of prenatally diagnosed Turner syndrome: a French multicenter retrospective study including a series of 975 cases

Nicolas Gruchy; François Vialard; Eleonore Blondeel; N. Le Meur; Géraldine Joly-Hélas; P. Chambon; Marianne Till; M. Herbaut-Graux; A. Vigouroux-Castera; Aurélie Coussement; James Lespinasse; Florence Amblard; M. Jimenez; L. Lebel Roy Camille; F. Carré-Pigeon; Elisabeth Flori; Francine Mugneret; Sylvie Jaillard; Catherine Yardin; Radu Harbuz; M. Collonge Rame; Philippe Vago; Mylène Valduga; Nathalie Leporrier

The objectives of this study were to report pregnancy outcomes after prenatal diagnosis of Turner syndrome (TS) and to compare and assess termination of pregnancy rates during two periods. The intervals selected were before and after 1997 when multidisciplinary centers for prenatal diagnosis (MCPDs) were established in France.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2017

PBX1 haploinsufficiency leads to syndromic congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) in humans

Pauline Le Tanno; Julie Breton; Marie Bidart; Véronique Satre; Radu Harbuz; Pierre F. Ray; Caroline Bosson; Klaus Dieterich; Sylvie Jaillard; Sylvie Odent; Gemma Poke; Rachel Beddow; M C Digilio; Antonio Novelli; Laura Bernardini; Maria Antonietta Pisanti; Luisa Mackenroth; Karl Hackmann; Ida Vogel; Rikke Christensen; Siv Fokstuen; Frédérique Béna; Florence Amblard; Françoise Devillard; Gaëlle Vieville; Alexia Apostolou; Pierre Simon Jouk; Fitsum Guebre-Egziabher; Hervé Sartelet; Charles Coutton

Background Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT) represent a significant healthcare burden since it is the primary cause of chronic kidney in children. CNVs represent a recurrent molecular cause of CAKUT but the culprit gene remains often elusive. Our study aimed to define the gene responsible for CAKUT in patients with an 1q23.3q24.1 microdeletion. Methods We describe eight patients presenting with CAKUT carrying an 1q23.3q24.1 microdeletion as identified by chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA). Clinical features were collected, especially the renal and urinary tract phenotype, and extrarenal features. We characterised PBX1 expression and localisation in fetal and adult kidneys using quantitative RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. Results We defined a 276-kb minimal common region (MCR) that only overlaps with the PBX1 gene. All eight patients presented with syndromic CAKUT. CAKUT were mostly bilateral renal hypoplasia (75%). The most frequent extrarenal symptoms were developmental delay and ear malformations. We demonstrate that PBX1 is strongly expressed in fetal kidneys and brain and expression levels decreased in adult samples. In control fetal kidneys, PBX1 was localised in nuclei of medullary, interstitial and mesenchymal cells, whereas it was present in endothelial cells in adult kidneys. Conclusions Our results indicate that PBX1 haploinsufficiency leads to syndromic CAKUT as supported by the Pbx1-null mice model. Correct PBX1 dosage appears to be critical for normal nephrogenesis and seems important for brain development in humans. CMA should be recommended in cases of fetal renal anomalies to improve genetic counselling and pregnancy management.


Prenatal Diagnosis | 2016

Pregnancy outcomes in prenatally diagnosed 47, XXX and 47, XYY syndromes: a 30-year French, retrospective, multicentre study.

Nicolas Gruchy; Eleonore Blondeel; Nathalie Le Meur; Géraldine Joly-Hélas; Pascal Chambon; Marianne Till; Martine Herbaux; Adeline Vigouroux‐Castera; Aurélie Coussement; James Lespinasse; Florence Amblard; Mélanie Jimenez Pocquet; Camille Lebel‐Roy; Frédérique Carré‐Pigeon; Elisabeth Flori; Francine Mugneret; Sylvie Jaillard; Catherine Yardin; Radu Harbuz; Marie-Agnes Collonge-Rame; Philippe Vago; Mylène Valduga; Nathalie Leporrier; François Vialard

Sex chromosome aneuploidies are frequently detected fortuitously in a prenatal diagnosis. Most cases of 47, XXX and 47, XYY syndromes are diagnosed in this context, and parents are thus faced with an unexpected situation. The objective of the present study was to characterize a French cohort of prenatally diagnosed cases of 47, XXX and 47, XYY and to evaluate the termination of pregnancy (TOP) rate before and after Frances implementation of multidisciplinary centres for prenatal diagnosis in 1997.


Basic and clinical andrology | 2018

Is sperm FISH analysis still useful for Robertsonian translocations? Meiotic analysis for 23 patients and review of the literature

Anna Lamotte; Guillaume Martinez; Françoise Devillard; Jean-Pascal Hograindleur; Véronique Satre; Charles Coutton; Radu Harbuz; Florence Amblard; James Lespinasse; Mehdi Benchaib; Julien Bessonnat; Sophie Brouillet; Sylviane Hennebicq

BackgroundRobertsonian translocations (RobT) are common structural chromosome rearrangements where carriers display a majority of chromosomally balanced spermatozoa from alternate segregation mode. According to some monotony observed in the rates of balanced segregation, is sperm FISH analysis obsolete for RobT carriers?MethodsRetrospective cohort research study on 23 patients analyzed in our center from 2003 to 2017 and compared to the data of 187 patients in literature from 1983 to 2017.Robertsonian translocation carriers were divided in six groups according to the chromosomes involved in the translocation: 9 patients from our center and 107 from literature carrying 45,XY,der(13;14) karyotype, 3 and 35 patients respectively with 45,XY,der(14;21), 5 and 11 patients respectively with 45,XY,der(13;15), 4 and 7 patients respectively with 45,XY,der(14;15), 1 and 4 patients respectively with 45,XY,der(13;22),and 1 and 10 patients respectively with 45,XY,der(14;22).ResultsAlternate segregation mode is predominant in our group of Robertsonian translocation carriers with 73.45% ±8.05 of balanced spermatozoa (min 50.92%; max 89.99%). These results are compliant with the data from literature for all translocations types (p > 0.05) and are consistent among the different types of Robertsonian translocations (p > 0.05) except for der(13;15) that exhibit lower balanced spermatozoa rates (p < 0.05 versus der(13;14), der(14;21), (13;21) and der(15;22)). Normozoospermic patients also display a significantly (p < 0.01) higher rate of balanced sperm cells than patients with abnormal seminograms whatever the defect implied.ConclusionsAccording to the discrepancies observed between der(13;15) and all the other Rob T carriers, the differences observed among patients presenting normal and abnormal sperm parameters and the input in genetical counselling, sperm FISH does not seem obsolete for these patients. Moreover, it seems important to collect more data for rare RobT.RésuméContexteLe mode de ségrégation chromosomique le plus fréquemment observé chez les patients porteurs de translocation robertsonienne est. un mode équilibré. Les données semblent varier peu selon la translocation analysée. La relative constance des résultats dans le cas de ces translocations robertsoniennes rend elle inutile ces analyses chromosomiques pour ces patients?Patients et méthodesNous avons analysé de façon rétrospective les données spermatiques et de ségrégation méiotique de 23 patients porteurs de translocation robertsonienne, de 2003 à 2017 et comparé les résultats observés à ceux décrits dans la littérature pour 187 patients.RésultatsLe mode de ségrégation alterne est. prépondérant dans notre série de patients avec 73.45% ±8.05 de spermatozoïdes équilibrés (min 50.92%; max 89.99%). Ces résultats sont en accord avec les données de la littérature, toutes translocations confondues et selon le type de translocation (p > 0.05) sauf pour la translocation der(13;15) où ces taux sont significativement plus faibles (p < 0.05 vs der(13;14), der(14;21), (13;21) et der(15;22)). Nous observons également des taux de spermatozoïdes équilibrés significativement plus élevés chez les patients à spermogramme normal (p < 0.01).ConclusionsLes différences observées dans les taux d’aneuploïdies entre les translocations der(13;15) et les autres translocations robertsoniennes et entre les porteurs de translocation à spermogramme normal ou altéré, et l’utilité de ces données dans le conseil génétique conduisent à poursuivre l’analyse systématique de la ségrégation méiotique pour les patients porteurs de translocations robertsoniennes et ceci particulièrement pour les translocations rares.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

A Recurrent Deletion of DPY19L2 Causes Infertility in Man by Blocking Sperm Head Elongation and Acrosome Formation

Radu Harbuz; Raoudha Zouari; Virginie Pierre; Mariem Ben Khelifa; Mahmoud Kharouf; Charles Coutton; Ghaya Merdassi; Farid Abada; Jessica Escoffier; Yorgos Nikas; François Vialard; Isabelle Koscinski; Chema Triki; Nathalie Sermondade; Thérèse Schweitzer; Amel Zhioua; Fethi Zhioua; Habib Latrous; Lazhar Halouani; Marrakchi Ouafi; Mounir Makni; Pierre-Simon Jouk; Bernard Sele; Sylviane Hennebicq; Véronique Satre; Stéphane Viville; Christophe Arnoult; Joël Lunardi; Pierre F. Ray

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James Lespinasse

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Pierre-Simon Jouk

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Françoise Devillard

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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