Raquel Dodelson de Kremer
National University of Cordoba
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Featured researches published by Raquel Dodelson de Kremer.
Brain | 2010
H.A. Jinnah; Irène Ceballos-Picot; Rosa J. Torres; Jasper E. Visser; David J. Schretlen; Alfonso Verdu; Laura E. Laróvere; Chung-Jen Chen; Antonello Cossu; Chien-Hui Wu; Radhika Sampat; Shun-Jen Chang; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; William L. Nyhan; James C. Harris; Stephen G. Reich; Juan García Puig
Lesch–Nyhan disease is a neurogenetic disorder caused by deficiency of the enzyme hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. The classic form of the disease is described by a characteristic syndrome that includes overproduction of uric acid, severe generalized dystonia, cognitive disability and self-injurious behaviour. In addition to the classic disease, variant forms of the disease occur wherein some clinical features are absent or unusually mild. The current studies provide the results of a prospective and multi-centre international study focusing on neurological manifestations of the largest cohort of Lesch–Nyhan disease variants evaluated to date, with 46 patients from 3 to 65 years of age coming from 34 families. All had evidence for overproduction of uric acid. Motor abnormalities were evident in 42 (91%), ranging from subtle clumsiness to severely disabling generalized dystonia. Cognitive function was affected in 31 (67%) but it was never severe. Though none exhibited self-injurious behaviours, many exhibited behaviours that were maladaptive. Only three patients had no evidence of neurological dysfunction. Our results were compared with a comprehensive review of 78 prior reports describing a total of 127 Lesch–Nyhan disease variants. Together these results define the spectrum of clinical features associated with hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency. At one end of the spectrum are patients with classic Lesch–Nyhan disease and the full clinical phenotype. At the other end of the spectrum are patients with overproduction of uric acid but no apparent neurological or behavioural deficits. Inbetween are patients with varying degrees of motor, cognitive, or behavioural abnormalities. Recognition of this spectrum is valuable for understanding the pathogenesis and diagnosis of all forms of hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency.
Human Mutation | 2010
Martijn Kranendijk; Eduard A. Struys; K. Michael Gibson; Wjera V. Wickenhagen; Jose E. Abdenur; Jochen Buechner; Ernst Christensen; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Abdellatif Errami; Paul Gissen; Wanda Gradowska; Emma Hobson; Lily Islam; Stanley H. Korman; Thaddeus W. Kurczynski; Bruno Maranda; Concetta Meli; Cristiano Rizzo; Claude Sansaricq; Friedrich K. Trefz; Rachel Webster; Cornelis Jakobs; Gajja S. Salomons
We performed molecular, enzyme, and metabolic studies in 50 patients with D‐2‐hydroxyglutaric aciduria (D‐2‐HGA) who accumulated D‐2‐hydroxyglutarate (D‐2‐HG) in physiological fluids. Presumed pathogenic mutations were detected in 24 of 50 patients in the D‐2‐hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase (D2HGDH) gene, which encodes D‐2‐hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase (D‐2‐HGDH). Enzyme assay of D‐2‐HGDH confirmed that all patients with mutations had impaired enzyme activity, whereas patients with D‐2‐HGA whose enzyme activity was normal did not have mutations. Significantly lower D‐2‐HG concentrations in body fluids were observed in mutation‐positive D‐2‐HGA patients than in mutation‐negative patients. These results imply that multiple genetic loci may be associated with hyperexcretion of D‐2‐HG. Accordingly, we suggest a new classification: D‐2‐HGA Type I associates with D‐2‐HGDH deficiency, whereas idiopathic D‐2‐HGA manifests with normal D‐2‐HGDH activity and higher D‐2‐HG levels in body fluids compared with Type I patients. It remains possible that several classifications for idiopathic D‐2‐HGA patients with diverse genetic loci will be revealed in future studies. Hum Mutat 31:1–5, 2010.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2004
Shunji Tomatsu; Tatiana Dieter; Ida V.D. Schwartz; Piedad Sarmient; Roberto Giugliani; Luis Alejandro Barrera; Norberto Guelbert; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Gabriela M. Repetto; Monica A. Gutierrez; Tatsuo Nishioka; Olga Peña Serrato; Adriana Montano; Seiji Yamaguchi; Akihiko Noguchi
AbstractMucopolysaccharidosis IVA (MPS IVA) is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficiency of N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulfate sulfatase (GALNS). Mutation screening of the GALNS was performed by genomic PCR and direct sequence analyses in 20 MPS IVA patients from Latin America. In this study, 12 different gene mutations including nine unreported ones were identified in 16 severe and four attenuated patients and accounted for 90.0% of the unrelated mutant alleles. The gene alterations were missense mutations except one insertion. Six recurrent mutations, p.A75G, p.G116S, p.G139S, p.N164T, p.R380S, and p.R386C, accounted for 5.0, 10.0, 5.0, 7.5, 5.0, and 32.5% of the unrelated mutant alleles, respectively. The p.R386C mutation was identified in all Latin American populations studied. Eleven mutations correlated with a severe form, while one mutation, p.R380S, was associated with an attenuated form. MPS IVA patients had an elevation of urine and plasma keratan sulfate (KS) concentrations compared with those of the age-matched control. KS concentrations in severe patients were higher than those in attenuated patients. These data provide evidence for extensive allelic heterogeneity and presence of a common mutation in Latin American patients. Accumulation of mutations with clinical description and KS concentration will lead us to predict clinical severity of the patient more precisely.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2006
Roser Urreizti; Carla Gabriela Asteggiano; Marta Bermúdez; Alfonso Córdoba; Mariana Szlago; Carola Grosso; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Laura Vilarinho; Vania D’Almeida; Mercedes Martínez-Pardo; Luis Peña-Quintana; Jaime Dalmau; Jaime Bernal; Ignacio Briceño; María Luz Couce; Marga Rodés; M. A. Vilaseca; Susana Balcells; Daniel Grinberg
In this article, one of the novel mutations, c.208_209+ 8del10, was incorrectly given as c.69_70+8del10. It corresponds to patient 64 in Table 4.
American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2001
Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Ana Paschini-Capra; Sandra R. Bacman; Carlos E. Argaraña; Gabriel Civallero; Richard I. Kelley; Norberto Guelbert; Alexandra Latini; Inés Noher de Halac; Alicia N. Giner-Ayala; Jennifer Johnston; Roy Proujansky; Iris Gonzalez; Catalina Depetris-Boldini; Ana María Oller-Ramírez; Celia J. Angaroni; Ricardo A. Theaux; Ernesto Hliba; Ernesto Juaneda
An Argentine male child died at 4.5 years of age of a lethal mitochondrial disease associated with a MELAS mutation and a Barth syndrome-like presentation. The child had severe failure to thrive from the early months and for approximately two years thereafter. In addition, the patient had severely delayed gross motor milestones, marked muscle weakness, and dilated cardiomyopathy that progressed to congestive heart failure. He also had persistently elevated urinary levels of 3-methylglutaconic and 2-ethylhydracrylic acids and low blood levels of cholesterol. Detailed histopathologic evaluation of the skeletal muscle biopsy showed high activity of succinate dehydrogenase, a generalized decrease of COX activity, and abundant ragged-red fibers. Electron microscopic studies revealed multiple mitochondrial abnormalities in lymphocytes and monocytes, in the striated muscle, and in the postmortem samples (muscle, heart, liver, and brain). Biochemical analysis showed a pronounced and constant lactic acidosis, and abnormal urinary organic acid excretion (unchanged in the fasting and postprandial states). In addition, in CSF there was a marked increase of lactate and beta-hydroxybutyrate (beta-HOB) and also a high systemic ratio beta-HOB/acetoacetate. Enzymatic assay of the respiratory chain in biopsied muscle showed 10% of complex I activity and 24% of complex IV activity compared with controls. Molecular studies of the mitochondrial genome revealed an A to G mutation at nucleotide pair 3243 in mitochondrial DNA, a well-known pathogenetic mutation (MELAS mutation) in all the patients tissues and also in the blood specimens of the probands mother and sibs (4 of 5). The diagnosis of MELAS mutation was reinforced by the absence of an identifiable mutation in the X-linked G4.5 gene of the propositus. The present observation gives additional evidence of the variable clinical expression of mtDNA mutations in humans and demonstrates that all clinical variants deserve adequate investigation to establish a primary defect. It also suggests adding Barth-like syndrome to the list of phenotypes with the MELAS mutation.
Metabolic Brain Disease | 2002
Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Alexandra Latini; Terttu Suormala; E. Regula Baumgartner; Laura E. Laróvere; Gabriel Civallero; Norberto Guelbert; Ana Paschini-Capra; Catalina Depetris-Boldini; Carlos Quiroga Mayor
We report the first case of isolated biotin resistant 3-methylcrotonyl-CoA carboxylase (MCC) deficiency in Argentina. The diagnosis was established at 14 months of age by urinary organic-acid analysis and confirmed by enzyme assay in fibroblasts. The patient suffered from severe psychomotor retardation, hypotonia, areflexia, and failure to thrive, and died unexpectedly at 3 years 4 months of life. Brain MRI at 14 months showed signals of the white matter on cerebral T2-weighted, which were indicative of confluent and multiple foci of leukodystrophy, a pattern not previously described in this entity. In addition, high levels of oxypurines were detected in cerebrospinal fluid. This might be related to energetic consequences of the enzyme deficiency in the brain. This case extends the phenotype of isolated MCC deficiency in infancy and suggests this entity should be considered to be one of the possible causes of “metabolic leukodystrophies.”
Human Genetics | 2011
Radhika Sampat; Rong Fu; Laura E. Laróvere; Rosa J. Torres; Irène Ceballos-Picot; Michel Fischbach; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; David J. Schretlen; Juan García Puig; H.A. Jinnah
Lesch–Nyhan disease is a neurogenetic disorder caused by mutation of the HPRT1 gene on the X chromosome. There is significant variation in the clinical phenotype, with more than 300 different known mutations. There are few studies that have addressed whether similar mutations result in similar phenotypes across different patients because hypoxanthine–guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGprt) deficiency is rare, and most mutations are unique or limited to individual families. However, recent studies have revealed multiple unrelated patients with similar mutations, providing an opportunity to examine genotype–phenotype correlations. We found significant variation among the clinical features of 10 patients from 8 unrelated families all carrying a mutation replacing guanine with adenine at base position 143 (c.143G>A) in the HPRT1 gene. This mutation results in replacement of arginine by histidine at amino acid position 48 (p.arg48his) in the HGprt enzyme. Biochemically, the enzyme exhibits reduced thermal integrity, a mechanism that may explain clinical variation. The literature reveals similar clinical variation among other patients with similar mutations, although the variation is relatively minor across the whole population of patients. Identifiable sources of clinical variation include known limitations of clinical ascertainment and mechanisms that affect residual enzyme activity and stability. These results are helpful for understanding genotype–phenotype correlations and discordance and likely are applicable to other neurogenetic disorders where similar variation occurs.
Clinica Chimica Acta | 1986
Thomas G. Warner; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Derek A. Applegarth; Amy K. Mock
The N-acetyl-glucosaminyl oligosaccharides excreted in urine and accumulating in tissues of Sandhoff disease patients have been analyzed and characterized using a combination of high performance liquid chromatography and 500 MHz proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Delineation between infantile and juvenile onset forms of the disease was possible, as the latter forms had 6- to 13-fold lower levels of urinary oligosaccharides. Patients from a geographically isolated population deme in the La Rioja region of Argentina had urinary oligosaccharides similar to unrelated non-Argentinean patients with identical clinical phenotype. Together, these results indicate that the urinary oligosaccharides serve as useful indicators of the mutation differences or clinical heterogeneity within this disease only in cases of markedly differing clinical presentation. Analysis of the accumulating metabolites in liver, kidney, pancreas, lung and spleen, showed a similar oligosaccharide pattern which differed dramatically from brain. These results suggest the possibility of tissue specific regulation of oligosaccharide biosynthesis since there are notable differences between neural and visceral tissues.
Gene | 2013
Romina Kohan; María Noelia Carabelos; Winnie Xin; Katherine B. Sims; Norberto Guelbert; Inés Adriana Cismondi; Patricia Pons; Graciela Irene Alonso; Mónica Troncoso; Scarlet Witting; David A. Pearce; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Ana María Oller-Ramírez; Inés Noher de Halac
Tripeptidyl-peptidase 1 (TPP1) null or residual activity occurs in neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) with underlying TPP1/CLN2 mutations. A survey of 25 South American CLN2 affected individuals enabled the differentiation of two phenotypes: classical late-infantile and variant juvenile, each in approximately 50% of patients, with residual TPP1 activity occurring in approximately 32%. Each individual was assigned to one of three subgroups: (I) n=11, null TPP1 activity in leukocytes; (II) n=8, residual TPP1 activity of 0.60-15.85 nmol/h/mg (nr 110-476); (III) n=6, activity not measured in leukocytes. Curvilinear bodies (CB) appeared in almost all studied CLN2 subjects; the only exceptions occurred in cases of subgroup II: two individuals had combined CBs/fingerprints (FPs), and one case had pure FPs. There were 15 mutations (4 first published in this paper, 3 previously observed in South America by our group, and 8 previously observed by others). In subgroup I, mutations were either missense or nonsense; in subgroups II and III, mutations prevailed at the non-conserved intronic site, c.887-10A>G (intron 7), and to a lesser extent at c.89+5G>C (intron 2), in heterozygous combinations. Grouping phenotypically and genetically known individuals on the basis of TPP1 activity supported the concept that residual enzyme activity underlies a protracted disease course. The prevalence of intronic mutations at non-conserved sites in subgroup II individuals indicates that some alternative splicing might allow some residual TPP1 activity.
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2010
Belén Pérez; Celia J. Angaroni; Rocío Sánchez-Alcudia; Begoña Merinero; Celia Pérez-Cerdá; N. Specola; Pilar Rodríguez-Pombo; Moacir Wajner; Raquel Dodelson de Kremer; Verónica Cornejo; Lourdes R. Desviat; Magdalena Ugarte
In this work, we review the clinical and genetic data in 14 Latin American propionic acidemia (PA) and 15 methylmalonic aciduria (MMAuria) patients. In the PA patients, we have identified four different changes in the PCCA gene, including one novel one (c.414+5G>A) affecting the splicing process. The PCCB mutational spectrum included two prevalent changes accounting for close to 60% of the mutant alleles studied and one novel change (c.494G>C) which by functional analysis is clearly pathogenic. We have also identified the deep intronic change c.654+462A>G, and the results of the antisense treatment in the patient’s cell line confirmed the functional recovery of PCC activity. All PA patients bearing out-of-frame mutations presented the disease earlier while patients bearing in hemizygous fashion p.E168K and p.R165W presented the disease later. Regarding the MMAuria patients, we have found three novel mutations in the MUT gene (c.1068G>A, c.1587_1594del8 and c.593delA) and one in the MMAB gene (c.349-1 G>C). Two patients with MMAuria with homocystinuria cblC type are carriers of the frequent c.271dupA mutation. All mut0, cblB and cblC patients presented the symptoms early and in general had more neurological complications, while cblA and mut- patients exhibited a late-onset presentation, and in general the long-term outcome was better. The results presented in this work emphasize the importance of the genetic analysis of the patients not only for diagnostic purposes but also to research into novel therapies based on the genotype.