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Dive into the research topics where Samarth Bhatt is active.

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Featured researches published by Samarth Bhatt.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Genomic and Genic Deletions of the FOX Gene Cluster on 16q24.1 and Inactivating Mutations of FOXF1 Cause Alveolar Capillary Dysplasia and Other Malformations

Pawel Stankiewicz; Partha Sen; Samarth Bhatt; Mekayla Storer; Zhilian Xia; Bassem A. Bejjani; Zhishuo Ou; Joanna Wiszniewska; Daniel J. Driscoll; Juan Bolivar; Mislen Bauer; Elaine H. Zackai; Donna M. McDonald-McGinn; Małgorzata M.J. Nowaczyk; Mitzi L. Murray; Tamim H. Shaikh; Vicki Martin; Matthew Tyreman; Ingrid Simonic; Lionel Willatt; Joan Paterson; Sarju G. Mehta; Diana Rajan; Tomas Fitzgerald; Susan M. Gribble; Elena Prigmore; Ankita Patel; Lisa G. Shaffer; Nigel P. Carter; Sau Wai Cheung

Alveolar capillary dysplasia with misalignment of pulmonary veins (ACD/MPV) is a rare, neonatally lethal developmental disorder of the lung with defining histologic abnormalities typically associated with multiple congenital anomalies (MCA). Using array CGH analysis, we have identified six overlapping microdeletions encompassing the FOX transcription factor gene cluster in chromosome 16q24.1q24.2 in patients with ACD/MPV and MCA. Subsequently, we have identified four different heterozygous mutations (frameshift, nonsense, and no-stop) in the candidate FOXF1 gene in unrelated patients with sporadic ACD/MPV and MCA. Custom-designed, high-resolution microarray analysis of additional ACD/MPV samples revealed one microdeletion harboring FOXF1 and two distinct microdeletions upstream of FOXF1, implicating a position effect. DNA sequence analysis revealed that in six of nine deletions, both breakpoints occurred in the portions of Alu elements showing eight to 43 base pairs of perfect microhomology, suggesting replication error Microhomology-Mediated Break-Induced Replication (MMBIR)/Fork Stalling and Template Switching (FoSTeS) as a mechanism of their formation. In contrast to the association of point mutations in FOXF1 with bowel malrotation, microdeletions of FOXF1 were associated with hypoplastic left heart syndrome and gastrointestinal atresias, probably due to haploinsufficiency for the neighboring FOXC2 and FOXL1 genes. These differences reveal the phenotypic consequences of gene alterations in cis.


Nature Genetics | 2009

A small recurrent deletion within 15q13.3 is associated with a range of neurodevelopmental phenotypes.

Marwan Shinawi; Christian P. Schaaf; Samarth Bhatt; Zhilian Xia; Ankita Patel; Sau Wai Cheung; Brendan Lanpher; Sandra Nagl; Heinrich Stephan Herding; Claudia Nevinny-Stickel; Ladonna Immken; Gayle Patel; Jennifer R German; Arthur L. Beaudet; Pawel Stankiewicz

We report a recurrent 680-kb deletion within chromosome 15q13.3 in ten individuals, from four unrelated families, with neurodevelopmental phenotypes including developmental delay, mental retardation and seizures. This deletion likely resulted from nonallelic homologous recombination between low-copy repeats on the normal and inverted region of chromosome 15q13.3. Although this deletion also affects OTUD7A, accumulated data suggest that haploinsufficiency of CHRNA7 is causative for the majority of neurodevelopmental phenotypes in the 15q13.3 microdeletion syndrome.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Rare pathogenic microdeletions and tandem duplications are microhomology-mediated and stimulated by local genomic architecture

Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Samarth Bhatt; Irene M. Janssen; Zhilian Xia; Seema R. Lalani; Rolph Pfundt; Katarzyna Derwińska; Bert B.A. de Vries; Christian Gilissen; Alexander Hoischen; Monika Nesteruk; Barbara Wisniowiecka-Kowalnik; Marta Smyk; Han G. Brunner; Sau Wai Cheung; Ad Geurts van Kessel; Joris A. Veltman; Pawel Stankiewicz

Genomic copy number variation (CNV) plays a major role in various human diseases as well as in normal phenotypic variability. For some recurrent disease-causing CNVs that convey genomic disorders, the causative mechanism is meiotic, non-allelic, homologous recombination between breakpoint regions exhibiting extensive sequence homology (e.g. low-copy repeats). For the majority of recently identified rare pathogenic CNVs, however, the mechanism is unknown. Recently, a model for CNV formation implicated mitotic replication-based mechanisms, such as (alternative) non-homologous end joining and fork stalling and template switching, in the etiology of human pathogenic CNVs. The extent to which such mitotic mechanisms contribute to rare pathogenic CNVs remains to be determined. In addition, it is unexplored whether genomic architectural features such as repetitive elements or sequence motifs associated with DNA breakage stimulate the formation of rare pathogenic CNVs. To this end, we have sequenced breakpoint junctions of 30 rare pathogenic microdeletions and eight tandem duplications, representing the largest series of such CNVs examined to date in this much detail. Our results demonstrate the presence of (micro)homology ranging from 2 to over 75 bp, in 79% of the breakpoint junctions. This indicates that microhomology-mediated repair mechanisms, including the recently reported fork stalling and template switching and/or microhomology-mediated break-induced replication, prevail in rare pathogenic CNVs. In addition, we found that the vast majority of all breakpoints (81%) were associated with at least one of the genomic architectural features evaluated. Moreover, 75% of tandem duplication breakpoints were associated with the presence of one of two novel sequence motifs. These data suggest that rare pathogenic microdeletions and tandem duplications do not occur at random genome sequences, but are stimulated and potentially catalyzed by various genomic architectural features.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2012

Microdeletion and Microduplication Syndromes

Anja Weise; Kristin Mrasek; Elisabeth Klein; Milene V. Mulatinho; Juan C. Llerena; David Hardekopf; Sona Pekova; Samarth Bhatt; Nadezda Kosyakova; Thomas Liehr

The widespread use of whole genome analysis based on array comparative genomic hybridization in diagnostics and research has led to a continuously growing number of microdeletion and microduplication syndromes (MMSs) connected to certain phenotypes. These MMSs also include increasing instances in which the critical region can be reciprocally deleted or duplicated. This review catalogues the currently known MMSs and the corresponding critical regions including phenotypic consequences. Besides the pathogenic pathways leading to such rearrangements, the different detection methods and their limitations are discussed. Finally, the databases available for distinguishing between reported benign or pathogenic copy number alterations are highlighted. Overall, a review of MMSs that previously were also denoted “genomic disorders” or “contiguous gene syndromes” is given.


Molecular Cytogenetics | 2008

Chromosome distribution in human sperm – a 3D multicolor banding-study

Marina Manvelyan; Friederike Hunstig; Samarth Bhatt; Kristin Mrasek; Franck Pellestor; Anja Weise; Isabella Simonyan; Rouben Aroutiounian; Thomas Liehr

BackgroundNuclear architecture studies in human sperm are sparse. By now performed ones were practically all done on flattened nuclei. Thus, studies close at the in vivo state of sperm, i.e. on three-dimensionally conserved interphase cells, are lacking by now. Only the position of 14 chromosomes in human sperm was studied.ResultsHere for the first time a combination of multicolor banding (MCB) and three-dimensional analysis of interphase cells was used to characterize the position and orientation of all human chromosomes in sperm cells of a healthy donor. The interphase nuclei of human sperm are organized in a non-random way, driven by the gene density and chromosome size.ConclusionHere we present the first comprehensive results on the nuclear architecture of normal human sperm. Future studies in this tissue type, e.g. also in male patients with unexplained fertility problems, may characterize yet unknown mechanisms of infertility.


Child Development | 2016

Prenatal Maternal Stress Predicts Methylation of Genes Regulating the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenocortical System in Mothers and Newborns in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Darlene A. Kertes; Hayley S. Kamin; David A. Hughes; Nicole C Rodney; Samarth Bhatt; Connie J. Mulligan

Exposure to stress early in life permanently shapes activity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis and the brain. Prenatally, glucocorticoids pass through the placenta to the fetus with postnatal impacts on brain development, birth weight (BW), and HPA axis functioning. Little is known about the biological mechanisms by which prenatal stress affects postnatal functioning. This study addresses this gap by examining the effect of chronic stress and traumatic war-related stress on epigenetic changes in four key genes regulating the HPA axis in neonatal cord blood, placenta, and maternal blood: CRH, CRHBP, NR3C1, and FKBP5. Participants were 24 mother-newborn dyads in the conflict-ridden region of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. BW data were collected at delivery and maternal interviews were conducted to assess culturally relevant chronic and war-related stressors. Chronic stress and war trauma had widespread effects on HPA axis gene methylation, with significant effects observed at transcription factor binding (TFB) sites in all target genes tested. Some changes in methylation were unique to chronic or war stress, whereas others were observed across both stressor types. Moreover, stress exposures impacted maternal and fetal tissues differently, supporting theoretical models that stress impacts vary according to life phase. Methylation in several NR3C1 and CRH CpG sites, all located at TFB sites, was associated with BW. These findings suggest that prenatal stress exposure impacts development via epigenetic changes in HPA axis genes.


Current Genomics | 2010

The Human Genome Puzzle - the Role of Copy Number Variation in Somatic Mosaicism

Hasmik Mkrtchyan; Madeleine Gross; Sophie Hinreiner; Anna Polytiko; Marina Manvelyan; Kristin Mrasek; Nadezda Kosyakova; Elisabeth Ewers; Heike Nelle; Thomas Liehr; Samarth Bhatt; Karen Thoma; Erich Gebhart; Sylvia Wilhelm; Raimund Fahsold; Marianne Volleth; Anja Weise

The discovery of copy number variations (CNV) in the human genome opened new perspectives in the study of the genetic causes of inherited disorders and the etiology of common diseases. Differently patterned instances of somatic mosaicism in CNV regions have been shown to be present in monozygotic twins and throughout different tissues within an individual. A single-cell-level investigation of CNV in different human cell types led us to uncover mitotically derived genomic mosaicism, which is stable in different cell types of one individual. A unique study of immortalized B-lymphoblastoid cell lines obtained with 20 year interval from the same two subjects shows that mitotic changes in CNV regions may happen early during embryonic development and seem to occur only once, as levels of mosaicism remained stable. This finding has the potential to change our concept of dynamic human genome variation. We propose that further genomic studies should focus on the single-cell level, to understand better the etiology and physiology of aging and diseases mediated by somatic variations.


Neurogenetics | 2009

Alu-specific microhomology-mediated deletions in CDKL5 in females with early-onset seizure disorder

Ayelet Erez; Amina J. Patel; Xueqing Wang; Zhilian Xia; Samarth Bhatt; William J. Craigen; Sau Wai Cheung; Richard Alan Lewis; Ping Fang; Sandra L. H. Davenport; Pawel Stankiewicz; Seema R. Lalani

Mutations in the cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5 (CDKL5) gene in Xp22.13 have been associated with infantile spasms, early-onset intractable epilepsy, and a Rett syndrome (RTT)-like phenotype. Using array comparative genomic hybridization, we identified variable-sized microdeletions involving exons 1–4 of the CDKL5 gene in three females with early-onset seizures. Two of these deletions were flanked by Alu repetitive elements and may have resulted from either non-allelic homologous recombination or the microhomology-mediated Fork Stalling and Template Switching/Microhomology-Mediated Break-Induced Replication mechanism. Our findings demonstrate the first instance of genomic deletion as the molecular basis of CDKL5 deficiency in females and highlight the importance of exon targeted array-CGH analysis for this gene in females with drug-resistant early-onset seizures.


Human Mutation | 2012

Recurrent deletions and reciprocal duplications of 10q11.21q11.23 including CHAT and SLC18A3 are likely mediated by complex low‐copy repeats

Pawel Stankiewicz; Shashikant Kulkarni; Avinash V. Dharmadhikari; Srirangan Sampath; Samarth Bhatt; Tamim H. Shaikh; Zhilian Xia; Amber N. Pursley; M. Lance Cooper; Marwan Shinawi; Alex R. Paciorkowski; Dorothy K. Grange; Michael J. Noetzel; Scott Saunders; Paul Simons; Marshall Summar; Brendan Lee; Fernando Scaglia; Florence Fellmann; Danielle Martinet; Jacques S. Beckmann; Alexander Asamoah; Kathryn Platky; Susan E Sparks; Ann S. Martin; Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal; Jacqueline M. Hoover; Livija Medne; Carsten G. Bönnemann; John B. Moeschler

We report 24 unrelated individuals with deletions and 17 additional cases with duplications at 10q11.21q21.1 identified by chromosomal microarray analysis. The rearrangements range in size from 0.3 to 12 Mb. Nineteen of the deletions and eight duplications are flanked by large, directly oriented segmental duplications of >98% sequence identity, suggesting that nonallelic homologous recombination (NAHR) caused these genomic rearrangements. Nine individuals with deletions and five with duplications have additional copy number changes. Detailed clinical evaluation of 20 patients with deletions revealed variable clinical features, with developmental delay (DD) and/or intellectual disability (ID) as the only features common to a majority of individuals. We suggest that some of the other features present in more than one patient with deletion, including hypotonia, sleep apnea, chronic constipation, gastroesophageal and vesicoureteral refluxes, epilepsy, ataxia, dysphagia, nystagmus, and ptosis may result from deletion of the CHAT gene, encoding choline acetyltransferase, and the SLC18A3 gene, mapping in the first intron of CHAT and encoding vesicular acetylcholine transporter. The phenotypic diversity and presence of the deletion in apparently normal carrier parents suggest that subjects carrying 10q11.21q11.23 deletions may exhibit variable phenotypic expressivity and incomplete penetrance influenced by additional genetic and nongenetic modifiers. Hum Mutat 33:165–179, 2012.


Molecular Cytogenetics | 2008

Position of chromosomes 18, 19, 21 and 22 in 3D-preserved interphase nuclei of human and gorilla and white hand gibbon

Marina Manvelyan; Friederike Hunstig; Kristin Mrasek; Samarth Bhatt; Franck Pellestor; Anja Weise; Thomas Liehr

BackgroundEven though comparative nuclear architecture studies in hominoids are sparse, nuclear chromosome architecture was shown to be conserved during hominoid evolution. Thus, it is suspected that yet unknown biological mechanisms must underlie this observation.ResultsHere for the first time a combination of multicolor banding (MCB) and three-dimensional analysis of interphase cells was used to characterize the position and orientation of human chromosomes #18, #19, #21 and #22 and their homologues in primate B-lymphocytic cells. In general, our data is in concordance with previous studies. The position of the four studied human chromosomes and their homologues were conserved during primate evolution. However, comparison of interphase architecture in human B-lymphocytic cells and sperm revealed differences of localization of acrocentric chromosomes. The latter might be related to the fact that the nucleolus organizing region is not active in sperm.ConclusionStudies in different tissue types may characterize more – potentially biologically relevant differences in nuclear architecture.

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Pawel Stankiewicz

Baylor College of Medicine

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Zhilian Xia

Baylor College of Medicine

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Maria Luiza Macedo Silva

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Raul C. Ribeiro

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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Eliana Abdelhay

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Manisha M. Brahmbhatt

Gujarat Cancer Research Institute

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Pina J. Trivedi

Gujarat Cancer Research Institute

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