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Dive into the research topics where Rebekah Jobling is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebekah Jobling.


npj Genomic Medicine | 2016

Whole-genome sequencing expands diagnostic utility and improves clinical management in paediatric medicine

Dimitri J. Stavropoulos; Daniele Merico; Rebekah Jobling; Sarah Bowdin; Nasim Monfared; Bhooma Thiruvahindrapuram; Thomas Nalpathamkalam; Giovanna Pellecchia; Ryan Kc C. Yuen; Michael J. Szego; Robin Z. Hayeems; Randi Zlotnik Shaul; Michael Brudno; Marta Girdea; Brendan J. Frey; Babak Alipanahi; Sohnee Ahmed; Riyana Babul-Hirji; Ramses Badilla Porras; Melissa T. Carter; Lauren Chad; Ayeshah Chaudhry; David Chitayat; Soghra Jougheh Doust; Cheryl Cytrynbaum; Lucie Dupuis; Resham Ejaz; Leona Fishman; Andrea Guerin; Bita Hashemi

The standard of care for first-tier clinical investigation of the aetiology of congenital malformations and neurodevelopmental disorders is chromosome microarray analysis (CMA) for copy-number variations (CNVs), often followed by gene(s)-specific sequencing searching for smaller insertion–deletions (indels) and single-nucleotide variant (SNV) mutations. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has the potential to capture all classes of genetic variation in one experiment; however, the diagnostic yield for mutation detection of WGS compared to CMA, and other tests, needs to be established. In a prospective study we utilised WGS and comprehensive medical annotation to assess 100 patients referred to a paediatric genetics service and compared the diagnostic yield versus standard genetic testing. WGS identified genetic variants meeting clinical diagnostic criteria in 34% of cases, representing a fourfold increase in diagnostic rate over CMA (8%; P value=1.42E−05) alone and more than twofold increase in CMA plus targeted gene sequencing (13%; P value=0.0009). WGS identified all rare clinically significant CNVs that were detected by CMA. In 26 patients, WGS revealed indel and missense mutations presenting in a dominant (63%) or a recessive (37%) manner. We found four subjects with mutations in at least two genes associated with distinct genetic disorders, including two cases harbouring a pathogenic CNV and SNV. When considering medically actionable secondary findings in addition to primary WGS findings, 38% of patients would benefit from genetic counselling. Clinical implementation of WGS as a primary test will provide a higher diagnostic yield than conventional genetic testing and potentially reduce the time required to reach a genetic diagnosis.


Neurology | 2014

Peroxisomal D-bifunctional protein deficiency: three adults diagnosed by whole-exome sequencing.

Rebekah Jobling; Lauren Brady; Christian R. Marshall; Stephen W. Scherer; Amadeo R. Rodriguez; Liesly Lee; Anthony E. Lang; Tiago Mestre; Sacha Ferdinandusse; Mark A. Tarnopolsky

Objective: To determine the causative genetic lesion in 3 adult siblings with a slowly progressive, juvenile-onset phenotype comprising cerebellar atrophy and ataxia, intellectual decline, hearing loss, hypogonadism, hyperreflexia, a demyelinating sensorimotor neuropathy, and (in 2 of 3 probands) supratentorial white matter changes, in whom numerous prior investigations were nondiagnostic. Methods: The patients’ initial clinical assessment included history and physical examination, cranial MRI, and nerve conduction studies. We performed whole-exome sequencing of all 3 probands, followed by variant annotation and selection of rare, shared, recessive coding changes to identify the gene responsible. We next performed a panel of peroxisomal investigations in blood and cultured fibroblasts, including assessment of D-bifunctional protein (DBP) stability and activity by immunoblot and enzymologic methods, respectively. Results: Exome sequencing identified compound heterozygous mutations in HSD17B4, encoding peroxisomal DBP, in all 3 probands. Both identified mutations alter a conserved residue within the active site of DBP’s enoyl-CoA hydratase domain. Routine peroxisomal screening tests, including very long-chain fatty acids and phytanic acid, were normal. DBP enzymatic activity was markedly reduced. Conclusion: Exome sequencing provides a powerful and elegant tool in the specific diagnosis of “mild” or “atypical” neurometabolic disorders. Given the broad differential diagnosis and the absence of detectable biochemical abnormalities in blood, molecular testing of HSD17B4 should be considered as a first-line investigation in patients with compatible features.


Genetics in Medicine | 2017

Improved diagnostic yield compared with targeted gene sequencing panels suggests a role for whole-genome sequencing as a first-tier genetic test

Anath C. Lionel; Gregory Costain; Nasim Monfared; Susan Walker; Miriam S. Reuter; S. Mohsen Hosseini; Bhooma Thiruvahindrapuram; Daniele Merico; Rebekah Jobling; Thomas Nalpathamkalam; Giovanna Pellecchia; Wilson W L Sung; Z. B. Wang; Peter Bikangaga; Cyrus Boelman; Melissa T. Carter; Dawn Cordeiro; Cheryl Cytrynbaum; Sharon D. Dell; Priya Dhir; James J. Dowling; Elise Héon; Stacy Hewson; Linda Hiraki; Michal Inbar-Feigenberg; Regan Klatt; Jonathan Kronick; Ronald M Laxer; Christoph Licht; Heather MacDonald

PurposeGenetic testing is an integral diagnostic component of pediatric medicine. Standard of care is often a time-consuming stepwise approach involving chromosomal microarray analysis and targeted gene sequencing panels, which can be costly and inconclusive. Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) provides a comprehensive testing platform that has the potential to streamline genetic assessments, but there are limited comparative data to guide its clinical use.MethodsWe prospectively recruited 103 patients from pediatric non-genetic subspecialty clinics, each with a clinical phenotype suggestive of an underlying genetic disorder, and compared the diagnostic yield and coverage of WGS with those of conventional genetic testing.ResultsWGS identified diagnostic variants in 41% of individuals, representing a significant increase over conventional testing results (24%; P = 0.01). Genes clinically sequenced in the cohort (n = 1,226) were well covered by WGS, with a median exonic coverage of 40 × ±8 × (mean ±SD). All the molecular diagnoses made by conventional methods were captured by WGS. The 18 new diagnoses made with WGS included structural and non-exonic sequence variants not detectable with whole-exome sequencing, and confirmed recent disease associations with the genes PIGG, RNU4ATAC, TRIO, and UNC13A.ConclusionWGS as a primary clinical test provided a higher diagnostic yield than conventional genetic testing in a clinically heterogeneous cohort.


Brain | 2015

PMPCA mutations cause abnormal mitochondrial protein processing in patients with non-progressive cerebellar ataxia

Rebekah Jobling; Mirna M. Assoum; Oleksandr Gakh; Susan Blaser; Julian Raiman; Cyril Mignot; Emmanuel Roze; Alexandra Durr; Alexis Brice; Nicolas Lévy; Chitra Prasad; Tara Paton; Andrew Paterson; Nicole M. Roslin; Christian R. Marshall; Jean Pierre Desvignes; Nathalie Roëckel-Trevisiol; Stephen W. Scherer; Guy A. Rouleau; André Mégarbané; Grazia Isaya; Valérie Delague; Grace Yoon

Non-progressive cerebellar ataxias are a rare group of disorders that comprise approximately 10% of static infantile encephalopathies. We report the identification of mutations in PMPCA in 17 patients from four families affected with cerebellar ataxia, including the large Lebanese family previously described with autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia and short stature of Norman type and localized to chromosome 9q34 (OMIM #213200). All patients present with non-progressive cerebellar ataxia, and the majority have intellectual disability of variable severity. PMPCA encodes α-MPP, the alpha subunit of mitochondrial processing peptidase, the primary enzyme responsible for the maturation of the vast majority of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins, which is necessary for life at the cellular level. Analysis of lymphoblastoid cells and fibroblasts from patients homozygous for the PMPCA p.Ala377Thr mutation and carriers demonstrate that the mutation impacts both the level of the alpha subunit encoded by PMPCA and the function of mitochondrial processing peptidase. In particular, this mutation impacts the maturation process of frataxin, the protein which is depleted in Friedreich ataxia. This study represents the first time that defects in PMPCA and mitochondrial processing peptidase have been described in association with a disease phenotype in humans.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2015

Whole-Exome Sequencing and Targeted Copy Number Analysis in Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia

Christian R. Marshall; Stephen W. Scherer; Maimoona A. Zariwala; Lynette Lau; Tara Paton; Tracy L. Stockley; Rebekah Jobling; Peter N. Ray; David A. Hall; Sharon D. Dell; Raymond H. Kim

Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an autosomal-recessive disorder resulting from loss of normal ciliary function. Symptoms include neonatal respiratory distress, chronic sinusitis, bronchiectasis, situs inversus, and infertility. Clinical features may be subtle and highly variable, making the diagnosis of PCD challenging. The diagnosis can be confirmed with ciliary ultrastructure analysis and/or molecular genetic testing of 32 PCD-associated genes. However, because of this genetic heterogeneity, comprehensive molecular genetic testing is not considered the standard of care, and the most efficient molecular approach has yet to be elucidated. Here, we propose a cost-effective and time-efficient molecular genetic algorithm to solve cases of PCD. We conducted targeted copy number variation (CNV) analysis and/or whole-exome sequencing on 20 families (22 patients) from a subset of 45 families (52 patients) with a clinical diagnosis of PCD who did not have a molecular genetic diagnosis after Sanger sequencing of 12 PCD-associated genes. This combined molecular genetic approach led to the identification of 4 of 20 (20%) families with clinically significant CNVs and 7 of 20 (35%) families with biallelic pathogenic mutations in recently identified PCD genes, resulting in an increased molecular genetic diagnostic rate of 55% (11/20). In patients with a clinical diagnosis of PCD, whole-exome sequencing followed by targeted CNV analysis results in an overall molecular genetic yield of 76% (34/45).


Current Rheumatology Reports | 2014

The Collagenopathies: Review of Clinical Phenotypes and Molecular Correlations

Rebekah Jobling; Rohan D’Souza; Naomi L. Baker; Irene Lara-Corrales; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; Lucie Dupuis; Ravi Savarirayan; Leena Ala-Kokko; Peter Kannu

Genetic defects of collagen formation (the collagenopathies) affect almost every organ system and tissue in the body. They can be grouped by clinical phenotype, which usually correlates with the tissue distribution of the affected collagen subtype. Many of these conditions present in childhood; however, milder phenotypes presenting in adulthood are increasingly recognized. Many are difficult to differentiate clinically. Precise diagnosis by means of genetic testing assists in providing prognosis information, family counseling, and individualized treatment. This review provides an overview of the current range of clinical presentations associated with collagen defects, and the molecular mechanisms important to understanding how the results of genetic testing affect medical care.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Clinical reappraisal of SHORT syndrome with PIK3R1 mutations: towards recommendation for molecular testing and management.

Magali Avila; David A. Dyment; Jørn V. Sagen; Judith St-Onge; Ute Moog; Brian Hon-Yin Chung; Sahar Mansour; Assunta Albanese; Sixto Garcia; David Ortiz Martin; Ainhoa Abad Lopez; Tor Claudi; Rainer König; Susan M. White; Sarah L. Sawyer; Jon A. Bernstein; Leah Slattery; Rebekah Jobling; Grace Yoon; Cynthia J. Curry; Martine Le Merrer; Bernard Le Luyer; Delphine Héron; Michèle Mathieu-Dramard; Pierre Bitoun; Sylvie Odent; Jeanne Amiel; Paul Kuentz; Julien Thevenon; Martine Laville

SHORT syndrome has historically been defined by its acronym: short stature (S), hyperextensibility of joints and/or inguinal hernia (H), ocular depression (O), Rieger abnormality (R) and teething delay (T). More recently several research groups have identified PIK3R1 mutations as responsible for SHORT syndrome. Knowledge of the molecular etiology of SHORT syndrome has permitted a reassessment of the clinical phenotype. The detailed phenotypes of 32 individuals with SHORT syndrome and PIK3R1 mutation, including eight newly ascertained individuals, were studied to fully define the syndrome and the indications for PIK3R1 testing. The major features described in the SHORT acronym were not universally seen and only half (52%) had four or more of the classic features. The commonly observed clinical features of SHORT syndrome seen in the cohort included intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) <10th percentile, postnatal growth restriction, lipoatrophy and the characteristic facial gestalt. Anterior chamber defects and insulin resistance or diabetes were also observed but were not as prevalent. The less specific, or minor features of SHORT syndrome include teething delay, thin wrinkled skin, speech delay, sensorineural deafness, hyperextensibility of joints and inguinal hernia. Given the high risk of diabetes mellitus, regular monitoring of glucose metabolism is warranted. An echocardiogram, ophthalmological and hearing assessments are also recommended.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Mutations Preventing Regulated Exon Skipping in MET Cause Osteofibrous Dysplasia

Mary J. Gray; Peter Kannu; Swarkar Sharma; Christine Neyt; Dongping Zhang; Nandina Paria; Philip B. Daniel; Heather Whetstone; Hans-Georg Sprenger; Philipp Hammerschmidt; Angela Weng; Lucie Dupuis; Rebekah Jobling; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; Michael Dray; Peiqiang Su; Megan J. Wilson; Raj P. Kapur; Edward F. McCarthy; Benjamin A. Alman; Andrew Howard; Gino R. Somers; Christian R. Marshall; Simon Manners; Adrienne M. Flanagan; Karl E. Rathjen; Lori A. Karol; Haemish Crawford; David Markie; Jonathan J. Rios

The periosteum contributes to bone repair and maintenance of cortical bone mass. In contrast to the understanding of bone development within the epiphyseal growth plate, factors that regulate periosteal osteogenesis have not been studied as intensively. Osteofibrous dysplasia (OFD) is a congenital disorder of osteogenesis and is typically sporadic and characterized by radiolucent lesions affecting the cortical bone immediately under the periosteum of the tibia and fibula. We identified germline mutations in MET, encoding a receptor tyrosine kinase, that segregate with an autosomal-dominant form of OFD in three families and a mutation in a fourth affected subject from a simplex family and with bilateral disease. Mutations identified in all families with dominant inheritance and in the one simplex subject with bilateral disease abolished the splice inclusion of exon 14 in MET transcripts, which resulted in a MET receptor (MET(Δ14)) lacking a cytoplasmic juxtamembrane domain. Splice exclusion of this domain occurs during normal embryonic development, and forced induction of this exon-exclusion event retarded osteoblastic differentiation in vitro and inhibited bone-matrix mineralization. In an additional subject with unilateral OFD, we identified a somatic MET mutation, also affecting exon 14, that substituted a tyrosine residue critical for MET receptor turnover and, as in the case of the MET(Δ14) mutations, had a stabilizing effect on the mature protein. Taken together, these data show that aberrant MET regulation via the juxtamembrane domain subverts core MET receptor functions that regulate osteogenesis within cortical diaphyseal bone.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2018

Periodic reanalysis of whole-genome sequencing data enhances the diagnostic advantage over standard clinical genetic testing

Gregory Costain; Rebekah Jobling; Susan Walker; Miriam S. Reuter; Meaghan Snell; Sarah Bowdin; Ronald D. Cohn; Lucie Dupuis; Stacy Hewson; Saadet Mercimek-Andrews; Cheryl Shuman; Neal Sondheimer; Rosanna Weksberg; Grace Yoon; M. Stephen Meyn; Dimitri J. Stavropoulos; Stephen W. Scherer; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; Christian R. Marshall

Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) as a first-tier diagnostic test could transform medical genetic assessments, but there are limited data regarding its clinical use. We previously showed that WGS could feasibly be deployed as a single molecular test capable of a higher diagnostic rate than current practices, in a prospectively recruited cohort of 100 children meeting criteria for chromosomal microarray analysis. In this study, we report on the added diagnostic yield with re-annotation and reanalysis of these WGS data ~2 years later. Explanatory variants have been discovered in seven (10.9%) of 64 previously undiagnosed cases, in emerging disease genes like HMGA2. No new genetic diagnoses were made by any other method in the interval period as part of ongoing clinical care. The results increase the cumulative diagnostic yield of WGS in the study cohort to 41%. This represents a greater than 5-fold increase over the chromosomal microarrays, and a greater than 3-fold increase over all the clinical genetic testing ordered in practice. These findings highlight periodic reanalysis as yet another advantage of genomic sequencing in heterogeneous disorders. We recommend reanalysis of an individual’s genome-wide sequencing data every 1–2 years until diagnosis, or sooner if their phenotype evolves.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2018

Chitayat-Hall and Schaaf-Yang syndromes: a common aetiology: expanding the phenotype of MAGEL2-related disorders

Rebekah Jobling; Dimitri J. Stavropoulos; Christian R. Marshall; Cheryl Cytrynbaum; Michelle M. Axford; Vanessa Londero; Sharon Moalem; Jennifer Orr; Francis Rossignol; Fátima Lopes; Julie Gauthier; Nathalie Alos; Rosemarie Rupps; Margaret L. McKinnon; Shelin Adam; Małgorzata J.M. Nowaczyk; Susan Walker; Stephen W. Scherer; Christina Nassif; Fadi F. Hamdan; Cheri Deal; Jean-François Soucy; Rosanna Weksberg; Patrick Macleod; Jacques L. Michaud; David Chitayat

Background Chitayat-Hall syndrome, initially described in 1990, is a rare condition characterised by distal arthrogryposis, intellectual disability, dysmorphic features and hypopituitarism, in particular growth hormone deficiency. The genetic aetiology has not been identified. Methods and results We identified three unrelated families with a total of six affected patients with the clinical manifestations of Chitayat-Hall syndrome. Through whole exome or whole genome sequencing, pathogenic variants in the MAGEL2 gene were identified in all affected patients. All disease-causing sequence variants detected are predicted to result in a truncated protein, including one complex variant that comprised a deletion and inversion. Conclusions Chitayat-Hall syndrome is caused by pathogenic variants in MAGEL2 and shares a common aetiology with the recently described Schaaf-Yang syndrome. The phenotype of MAGEL2-related disorders is expanded to include growth hormone deficiency as an important and treatable complication.

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Christian R. Marshall

The Centre for Applied Genomics

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Stephen W. Scherer

The Centre for Applied Genomics

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Gregory Costain

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

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Daniele Merico

The Centre for Applied Genomics

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Susan Walker

The Centre for Applied Genomics

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