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Featured researches published by Sarah E. Ball.


Nature Genetics | 1999

The gene encoding ribosomal protein S19 is mutated in Diamond-Blackfan anaemia

Natalia Draptchinskaia; Peter Gustavsson; Björn Andersson; Monica Pettersson; Thiebaut-Noel Willig; Irma Dianzani; Sarah E. Ball; Gil Tchernia; Joakim Klar; Hans Matsson; Dimitri Tentler; Narla Mohandas; Birgit Carlsson; Niklas Dahl

Diamond–Blackfan anaemia (DBA) is a constitutional erythroblastopenia characterized by absent or decreased erythroid precursors. The disease, previously mapped to human chromosome 19q13, is frequently associated with a variety of malformations. To identify the gene involved in DBA, we cloned the chromosome 19q13 breakpoint in a patient with a reciprocal X;19 chromosome translocation. The breakpoint occurred in the gene encoding ribosomal protein S19. Furthermore, we identified mutations in RPS19 in 10 of 40 unrelated DBA patients, including nonsense, frameshift, splice site and missense mutations, as well as two intragenic deletions. These mutations are associated with clinical features that suggest a function for RPS19 in erythropoiesis and embryogenesis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Ribosomal Protein L5 and L11 Mutations Are Associated with Cleft Palate and Abnormal Thumbs in Diamond-Blackfan Anemia Patients

Hanna T. Gazda; Mee Rie Sheen; Adrianna Vlachos; Valérie Choesmel; Marie-Françoise O'Donohue; Hal E. Schneider; Natasha Darras; Catherine Hasman; Colin A. Sieff; Peter E. Newburger; Sarah E. Ball; Edyta Niewiadomska; Michał Matysiak; Jan Maciej Zaucha; Bertil Glader; Charlotte M. Niemeyer; Joerg J. Meerpohl; Eva Atsidaftos; Jeffrrey M. Lipton; Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes; Alan H. Beggs

Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA), a congenital bone-marrow-failure syndrome, is characterized by red blood cell aplasia, macrocytic anemia, clinical heterogeneity, and increased risk of malignancy. Although anemia is the most prominent feature of DBA, the disease is also characterized by growth retardation and congenital anomalies that are present in approximately 30%-50% of patients. The disease has been associated with mutations in four ribosomal protein (RP) genes, RPS19, RPS24, RPS17, and RPL35A, in about 30% of patients. However, the genetic basis of the remaining 70% of cases is still unknown. Here, we report the second known mutation in RPS17 and probable pathogenic mutations in three more RP genes, RPL5, RPL11, and RPS7. In addition, we identified rare variants of unknown significance in three other genes, RPL36, RPS15, and RPS27A. Remarkably, careful review of the clinical data showed that mutations in RPL5 are associated with multiple physical abnormalities, including craniofacial, thumb, and heart anomalies, whereas isolated thumb malformations are predominantly present in patients carrying mutations in RPL11. We also demonstrate that mutations of RPL5, RPL11, or RPS7 in DBA cells is associated with diverse defects in the maturation of ribosomal RNAs in the large or the small ribosomal subunit production pathway, expanding the repertoire of ribosomal RNA processing defects associated with DBA.


British Journal of Haematology | 2008

Diagnosing and treating Diamond Blackfan anaemia: results of an international clinical consensus conference

Adrianna Vlachos; Sarah E. Ball; Niklas Dahl; Blanche P. Alter; Sujit Sheth; Ugo Ramenghi; Joerg J. Meerpohl; Stefan Karlsson; Johnson M. Liu; Thierry Leblanc; Carole Paley; Elizabeth M. Kang; Eva Judmann Leder; Eva Atsidaftos; Akiko Shimamura; Monica Bessler; Bertil Glader; Jeffrey M. Lipton

Diamond Blackfan anaemia (DBA) is a rare, genetically and clinically heterogeneous, inherited red cell aplasia. Classical DBA affects about seven per million live births and presents during the first year of life. However, as mutated genes have been discovered in DBA, non‐classical cases with less distinct phenotypes are being described in adults as well as children. In caring for these patients it is often difficult to have a clear understanding of the treatment options and their outcomes because of the lack of complete information on the natural history of the disease. The purpose of this document is to review the criteria for diagnosis, evaluate the available treatment options, including corticosteroid and transfusion therapies and stem cell transplantation, and propose a plan for optimizing patient care. Congenital anomalies, mode of inheritance, cancer predisposition, and pregnancy in DBA are also reviewed. Evidence‐based conclusions will be made when possible; however, as in many rare diseases, the data are often anecdotal and the recommendations are based upon the best judgment of experienced clinicians. The recommendations regarding the diagnosis and management described in this report are the result of deliberations and discussions at an international consensus conference.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

Ribosomal Protein S24 Gene Is Mutated in Diamond-Blackfan Anemia

Hanna T. Gazda; Agnieszka Grabowska; Lilia B. Merida-Long; Elzbieta Latawiec; Hal E. Schneider; Jeffrey M. Lipton; Adrianna Vlachos; Eva Atsidaftos; Sarah E. Ball; Karen A. Orfali; Edyta Niewiadomska; Lydie Da Costa; Gil Tchernia; Charlotte M. Niemeyer; Joerg J. Meerpohl; Joachim Stahl; Gerhard Schratt; Bertil Glader; Karen Backer; Carolyn Wong; David G. Nathan; Alan H. Beggs; Colin A. Sieff

Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a rare congenital red-cell aplasia characterized by anemia, bone-marrow erythroblastopenia, and congenital anomalies and is associated with heterozygous mutations in the ribosomal protein (RP) S19 gene (RPS19) in approximately 25% of probands. We report identification of de novo nonsense and splice-site mutations in another RP, RPS24 (encoded by RPS24 [10q22-q23]) in approximately 2% of RPS19 mutation-negative probands. This finding strongly suggests that DBA is a disorder of ribosome synthesis and that mutations in other RP or associated genes that lead to disrupted ribosomal biogenesis and/or function may also cause DBA.


Blood | 2008

Abnormalities of the large ribosomal subunit protein, Rpl35A, in diamond-blackfan anemia

Jason E. Farrar; Michelle Nater; Emi Caywood; Michael A. McDevitt; Jeanne Kowalski; Clifford M. Takemoto; C. Conover Talbot; Paul S. Meltzer; Diane Esposito; Alan H. Beggs; Hal E. Schneider; Agnieszka Grabowska; Sarah E. Ball; Edyta Niewiadomska; Colin A. Sieff; Adrianna Vlachos; Eva Atsidaftos; Steven R. Ellis; Jeffrey M. Lipton; Hanna T. Gazda; Robert J. Arceci

Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome characterized by anemia, congenital abnormalities, and cancer predisposition. Small ribosomal subunit genes RPS19, RPS24, and RPS17 are mutated in approximately one-third of patients. We used a candidate gene strategy combining high-resolution genomic mapping and gene expression microarray in the analysis of 2 DBA patients with chromosome 3q deletions to identify RPL35A as a potential DBA gene. Sequence analysis of a cohort of DBA probands confirmed involvement RPL35A in DBA. shRNA inhibition shows that Rpl35a is essential for maturation of 28S and 5.8S rRNAs, 60S subunit biogenesis, normal proliferation, and cell survival. Analysis of pre-rRNA processing in primary DBA lymphoblastoid cell lines demonstrated similar alterations of large ribosomal subunit rRNA in both RPL35A-mutated and some RPL35A wild-type patients, suggesting additional large ribosomal subunit gene defects are likely present in some cases of DBA. These data demonstrate that alterations of large ribosomal subunit proteins cause DBA and support the hypothesis that DBA is primarily the result of altered ribosomal function. The results also establish that haploinsufficiency of large ribosomal subunit proteins contributes to bone marrow failure and potentially cancer predisposition.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Ribosomal Protein Genes RPS10 and RPS26 Are Commonly Mutated in Diamond-Blackfan Anemia

Leana Doherty; Mee Rie Sheen; Adrianna Vlachos; Valérie Choesmel; Marie-Françoise O'Donohue; Catherine Clinton; Hal E. Schneider; Colin A. Sieff; Peter E. Newburger; Sarah E. Ball; Edyta Niewiadomska; Michał Matysiak; Bertil Glader; Robert J. Arceci; Jason E. Farrar; Eva Atsidaftos; Jeffrrey M. Lipton; Pierre-Emmanuel Gleizes; Hanna T. Gazda

Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA), an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome characterized by anemia that usually presents before the first birthday or in early childhood, is associated with birth defects and an increased risk of cancer. Although anemia is the most prominent feature of DBA, the disease is also characterized by growth retardation and congenital malformations, in particular craniofacial, upper limb, heart, and urinary system defects that are present in approximately 30%-50% of patients. DBA has been associated with mutations in seven ribosomal protein (RP) genes, RPS19, RPS24, RPS17, RPL35A, RPL5, RPL11, and RPS7, in about 43% of patients. To continue our large-scale screen of RP genes in a DBA population, we sequenced 35 ribosomal protein genes, RPL15, RPL24, RPL29, RPL32, RPL34, RPL9, RPL37, RPS14, RPS23, RPL10A, RPS10, RPS12, RPS18, RPL30, RPS20, RPL12, RPL7A, RPS6, RPL27A, RPLP2, RPS25, RPS3, RPL41, RPL6, RPLP0, RPS26, RPL21, RPL36AL, RPS29, RPL4, RPLP1, RPL13, RPS15A, RPS2, and RPL38, in our DBA patient cohort of 117 probands. We identified three distinct mutations of RPS10 in five probands and nine distinct mutations of RPS26 in 12 probands. Pre-rRNA analysis in lymphoblastoid cells from patients bearing mutations in RPS10 and RPS26 showed elevated levels of 18S-E pre-rRNA. This accumulation is consistent with the phenotype observed in HeLa cells after knockdown of RPS10 or RPS26 expression with siRNAs, which indicates that mutations in the RPS10 and RPS26 genes in DBA patients affect the function of the proteins in rRNA processing.


British Journal of Haematology | 2003

Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of acquired aplastic anaemia.

J. C. W. Marsh; Sarah E. Ball; Philip Darbyshire; Edward C. Gordon-Smith; A.J. Keidan; A. Martin; Shaun R. McCann; Jane Mercieca; David Oscier; A.W.W. Roques; John A. Liu Yin

The purpose of this guideline is to provide a rational approach to the investigation and management of patients with acquired aplastic anaemia. These guidelines have been produced by both specialists in the field of aplastic anaemia and experienced district general hospital haematologists, and reviewed by members of the British Committee for Standards in Haematology (BCSH) General Haematology Task Force. Because aplastic anaemia is a rare disease, many of the statements and comments in the first part of this manuscript are based on review of the literature and expert or consensus opinion rather than on clinical studies or trials. Medline, Cinahl and Embase databases were searched for this purpose. Levels of evidence for treatment of aplastic anaemia also reflect the rarity of this condition. To ensure wide dissemination of these guidelines, they are also available on the BCSH website and will be reviewed on a three yearly basis.


British Journal of Haematology | 1996

Diamond‐Blackfan anaemia in the U.K.: analysis of 80 cases from a 20‐year birth cohort

Sarah E. Ball; Colin P. McGuckin; G. Jenkins; Edward C. Gordon-Smith

The U.K. Diamond‐Blackfan Anaemia (DBA) Registry was established with the aim of providing a representative database for studies on the aetiology, pathophysiology and treatment of DBA. We have analysed retrospective data from 80 cases (33 male, 47 female) born in the U.K. in a 20‐year period (1975–94), representing an annual incidence of 5 per million live births. Ten children from seven families had an apparently familial disorder. 13% were anaemic at birth, and 72.5% had presented by the age of 3 months. 67% had macrocytosis at presentation. 72% responded initially to steroids, and at the time of study 61% were transfusion‐independent (45% steroid‐dependent) and 39% required regular transfusions. Unequivocal physical anomalies, predominantly craniofacial, were present in 37%, and were more likely in boys (52%) than girls (25%). 18% had thumb abnormalities. Height was below the third centile for age in 28%, and 31% had neither short stature nor physical anomalies. Four children without physical abnormalities had normal red cell indices, and achieved steroid‐independent remission, suggesting transient erythroblastopenia of childhood rather than DBA. The birth month distribution of children with sporadic DBA and craniofacial dysmorphism showed a possible seasonality, consistent with a viral aetiology.


British Journal of Haematology | 2004

Diamond Blackfan anaemia in the UK: clinical and genetic heterogeneity.

Karen Orfali; Yaw Ohene-Abuakwa; Sarah E. Ball

A detailed family study was undertaken of patients notified to the UK Diamond Blackfan Anaemia (DBA) Registry. RPS19 mutations were detected in 16 of 104 families, including two patients with deletions detected by intragenic loss of heterozygosity of tightly linked polymorphisms. In two further cases, polymorphisms were used to determine the parental allele of origin of RPS19 point mutations. A review of clinical details of patients with mutations and patients in the literature having identical or equivalent mutations revealed evidence for a genotype:phenotype correlation with respect to the prevalence of physical anomalies, and the occurrence of mild or variable haematological severity. Nine of 60 patients had a known family history of DBA. Haematological abnormalities, including raised red cell adenosine deaminase activity, were found in first‐degree relatives of 16 of 51 (31%) of patients not previously considered to have familial DBA. Results of both parents and any siblings were normal in only 35 of 60 (58%) of cases, who were therefore assumed to have sporadic de novo DBA. The classical inheritance pattern for DBA is autosomal dominant; however, 12 of 60 families (20%) had more than one affected child despite normal results in both parents. These results have important implications for genetic counselling, and for the selection of potential sibling bone marrow donors.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998

Identification of microdeletions spanning the Diamond-Blackfan anemia locus on 19q13 and evidence for genetic heterogeneity.

Peter Gustavsson; Emanuela Garelli; Natalia Draptchinskaia; Sarah E. Ball; Thiebaut-Noel Willig; Dimitri Tentler; Irma Dianzani; Hope H. Punnett; Frank E. Shafer; Holger Cario; Ugo Ramenghi; Anders Glomstein; R. A. Pfeiffer; Andy Goringe; Nancy F. Olivieri; Elizabeth Smibert; Gil Tchernia; Göran Elinder; Niklas Dahl

Summary Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a rare pure red-cell hypoplasia of unknown etiology and pathogenesis. A major DBA locus has previously been localized to chromosome 19q13.2. Samples from additional families have been collected to identify key recombinations, microdeletions, and the possibility of heterogeneity for the disorder. In total, 29 multiplex DBA families and 50 families that comprise sporadic DBA cases have been analyzed with polymorphic 19q13 markers, including a newly identified short-tandem repeat in the critical gene region. The results from DNA analysis of 29 multiplex families revealed that 26 of these were consistent with a DBA gene on 19q localized to within a 4.1-cM interval restricted by loci D19S200 and D19S178; however, in three multiplex families, the DBA candidate region on 19q13 was excluded from the segregation of marker alleles. Our results suggest genetic heterogeneity for DBA, and we show that a gene region on chromosome 19q segregates with the disease in the majority of familial cases. Among the 50 families comprising sporadic DBA cases, we identified two novel and overlapping microdeletions on chromosome 19q13. In combination, the three known microdeletions associated with DBA restrict the critical gene region to ∼1 Mb. The results indicate that a proportion of sporadic DBA cases are caused by deletions in the 19q13 region.

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Colin A. Sieff

Boston Children's Hospital

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Hanna T. Gazda

Boston Children's Hospital

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Adrianna Vlachos

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Alan H. Beggs

Boston Children's Hospital

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Eva Atsidaftos

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Edyta Niewiadomska

Medical University of Warsaw

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Hal E. Schneider

Boston Children's Hospital

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Jeffrey M. Lipton

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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