Sérgio B. Sousa
UCL Institute of Child Health
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Featured researches published by Sérgio B. Sousa.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007
Christiane Zweier; Maarit Peippo; Juliane Hoyer; Sérgio B. Sousa; Armand Bottani; Jill Clayton-Smith; William Reardon; Jorge A. Saraiva; Alexandra Cabral; Ina Göhring; Koenraad Devriendt; Thomy de Ravel; Emilia K. Bijlsma; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Alfredo Orrico; Monika Cohen; Alexander Dreweke; André Reis; Peter Nürnberg; Anita Rauch
Pitt-Hopkins syndrome is a rarely reported syndrome of so-far-unknown etiology characterized by mental retardation, wide mouth, and intermittent hyperventilation. By molecular karyotyping with GeneChip Human Mapping 100K SNP arrays, we detected a 1.2-Mb deletion on 18q21.2 in one patient. Sequencing of the TCF4 transcription factor gene, which is contained in the deletion region, in 30 patients with significant phenotypic overlap revealed heterozygous stop, splice, and missense mutations in five further patients with severe mental retardation and remarkable facial resemblance. Thus, we establish the Pitt-Hopkins syndrome as a distinct but probably heterogeneous entity caused by autosomal dominant de novo mutations in TCF4. Because of its phenotypic overlap, Pitt-Hopkins syndrome evolves as an important differential diagnosis to Angelman and Rett syndromes. Both null and missense mutations impaired the interaction of TCF4 with ASCL1 from the PHOX-RET pathway in transactivating an E box-containing reporter construct; therefore, hyperventilation and Hirschsprung disease in patients with Pitt-Hopkins syndrome might be explained by altered development of noradrenergic derivatives.
PLOS Genetics | 2011
Margot E. Bowen; Eric D. Boyden; Ingrid A. Holm; Belinda Campos-Xavier; Luisa Bonafé; Andrea Superti-Furga; Shiro Ikegawa; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Judith V. M. G. Bovée; Twinkal C. Pansuriya; Sérgio B. Sousa; Ravi Savarirayan; Elena Andreucci; Miikka Vikkula; Livia Garavelli; Caroline Pottinger; Toshihiko Ogino; Akinori Sakai; Bianca M. Regazzoni; Wim Wuyts; Luca Sangiorgi; Elena Pedrini; Mei Zhu; Harry P. Kozakewich; James R. Kasser; J. G. Seidman; Kyle C. Kurek; Matthew L. Warman
Metachondromatosis (MC) is a rare, autosomal dominant, incompletely penetrant combined exostosis and enchondromatosis tumor syndrome. MC is clinically distinct from other multiple exostosis or multiple enchondromatosis syndromes and is unlinked to EXT1 and EXT2, the genes responsible for autosomal dominant multiple osteochondromas (MO). To identify a gene for MC, we performed linkage analysis with high-density SNP arrays in a single family, used a targeted array to capture exons and promoter sequences from the linked interval in 16 participants from 11 MC families, and sequenced the captured DNA using high-throughput parallel sequencing technologies. DNA capture and parallel sequencing identified heterozygous putative loss-of-function mutations in PTPN11 in 4 of the 11 families. Sanger sequence analysis of PTPN11 coding regions in a total of 17 MC families identified mutations in 10 of them (5 frameshift, 2 nonsense, and 3 splice-site mutations). Copy number analysis of sequencing reads from a second targeted capture that included the entire PTPN11 gene identified an additional family with a 15 kb deletion spanning exon 7 of PTPN11. Microdissected MC lesions from two patients with PTPN11 mutations demonstrated loss-of-heterozygosity for the wild-type allele. We next sequenced PTPN11 in DNA samples from 54 patients with the multiple enchondromatosis disorders Ollier disease or Maffucci syndrome, but found no coding sequence PTPN11 mutations. We conclude that heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in PTPN11 are a frequent cause of MC, that lesions in patients with MC appear to arise following a “second hit,” that MC may be locus heterogeneous since 1 familial and 5 sporadically occurring cases lacked obvious disease-causing PTPN11 mutations, and that PTPN11 mutations are not a common cause of Ollier disease or Maffucci syndrome.
PLOS Genetics | 2011
Joe Rainger; Ellen van Beusekom; Jacqueline Ramsay; Lisa McKie; Lihadh Al-Gazali; Rosanna Pallotta; Anita Saponari; Peter Branney; Malcolm Fisher; Harris Morrison; Louise S. Bicknell; Philippe Gautier; Paul Perry; Kishan Sokhi; David Sexton; Tanya Bardakjian; Adele Schneider; Nursel Elcioglu; Ferda Ozkinay; Rainer Koenig; André Mégarbané; C. Nur Semerci; Ayesha Khan; Saemah Nuzhat Zafar; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Sérgio B. Sousa; Lina Ramos; Livia Garavelli; Andrea Superti Furga; Anita Wischmeijer
Ophthalmo-acromelic syndrome (OAS), also known as Waardenburg Anophthalmia syndrome, is defined by the combination of eye malformations, most commonly bilateral anophthalmia, with post-axial oligosyndactyly. Homozygosity mapping and subsequent targeted mutation analysis of a locus on 14q24.2 identified homozygous mutations in SMOC1 (SPARC-related modular calcium binding 1) in eight unrelated families. Four of these mutations are nonsense, two frame-shift, and two missense. The missense mutations are both in the second Thyroglobulin Type-1 (Tg1) domain of the protein. The orthologous gene in the mouse, Smoc1, shows site- and stage-specific expression during eye, limb, craniofacial, and somite development. We also report a targeted pre-conditional gene-trap mutation of Smoc1 (Smoc1tm1a) that reduces mRNA to ∼10% of wild-type levels. This gene-trap results in highly penetrant hindlimb post-axial oligosyndactyly in homozygous mutant animals (Smoc1tm1a/tm1a). Eye malformations, most commonly coloboma, and cleft palate occur in a significant proportion of Smoc1tm1a/tm1a embryos and pups. Thus partial loss of Smoc-1 results in a convincing phenocopy of the human disease. SMOC-1 is one of the two mammalian paralogs of Drosophila Pentagone, an inhibitor of decapentaplegic. The orthologous gene in Xenopus laevis, Smoc-1, also functions as a Bone Morphogenic Protein (BMP) antagonist in early embryogenesis. Loss of BMP antagonism during mammalian development provides a plausible explanation for both the limb and eye phenotype in humans and mice.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2009
Sérgio B. Sousa; Omar A. Abdul-Rahman; Armand Bottani; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Alan Fryer; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Denise Horn; Dragana Josifova; Alma Kuechler; Melissa Lees; Kay D. MacDermot; Alex Magee; Fanny Morice-Picard; Elizabeth Rosser; Ajoy Sarkar; Nora Shannon; Irene Stolte-Dijkstra; Alain Verloes; Emma Wakeling; Louise C. Wilson; Raoul C. M. Hennekam
Nicolaides–Baraitser syndrome (NBS) is an infrequently described condition, thus far reported in five cases. In order to delineate the phenotype and its natural history in more detail, we gathered data on 18 hitherto unreported patients through a multi‐center collaborative study, and follow‐up data of the earlier reported patients. A detailed comparison of the 23 patients is provided. NBS is a distinct and recognizable entity, and probably has been underdiagnosed until now. Main clinical features are severe mental retardation with absent or limited speech, seizures, short stature, sparse hair, typical facial characteristics, brachydactyly, prominent finger joints and broad distal phalanges. Some of the features are progressive with time. The main differential diagnosis is Coffin–Siris syndrome. There is no important gender difference in occurrence and frequency of the syndrome, and all cases have been sporadic thus far. Microarray analysis performed in 14 of the patients gave normal results. Except for the progressive nature there are no clues to the cause.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014
Anna Thomas; H Williams; Núria Setó-Salvia; Chiara Bacchelli; Dagan Jenkins; Mary O'Sullivan; Konstantinos Mengrelis; Miho Ishida; Louise Ocaka; Estelle Chanudet; Chela James; Francesco Lescai; Glenn Anderson; Deborah Morrogh; Mina Ryten; Andrew J. Duncan; Yun Jin Pai; Jorge M. Saraiva; Fabiana Ramos; Bernadette Farren; Dawn E. Saunders; Bertrand Vernay; Paul Gissen; Anna Straatmaan-Iwanowska; Frank Baas; Nicholas W. Wood; Joshua Hersheson; Henry Houlden; Jane L. Hurst; Richard H. Scott
Intellectual disability and cerebellar atrophy occur together in a large number of genetic conditions and are frequently associated with microcephaly and/or epilepsy. Here we report the identification of causal mutations in Sorting Nexin 14 (SNX14) found in seven affected individuals from three unrelated consanguineous families who presented with recessively inherited moderate-severe intellectual disability, cerebellar ataxia, early-onset cerebellar atrophy, sensorineural hearing loss, and the distinctive association of progressively coarsening facial features, relative macrocephaly, and the absence of seizures. We used homozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing to identify a homozygous nonsense mutation and an in-frame multiexon deletion in two families. A homozygous splice site mutation was identified by Sanger sequencing of SNX14 in a third family, selected purely by phenotypic similarity. This discovery confirms that these characteristic features represent a distinct and recognizable syndrome. SNX14 encodes a cellular protein containing Phox (PX) and regulator of G protein signaling (RGS) domains. Weighted gene coexpression network analysis predicts that SNX14 is highly coexpressed with genes involved in cellular protein metabolism and vesicle-mediated transport. All three mutations either directly affected the PX domain or diminished SNX14 levels, implicating a loss of normal cellular function. This manifested as increased cytoplasmic vacuolation as observed in cultured fibroblasts. Our findings indicate an essential role for SNX14 in neural development and function, particularly in development and maturation of the cerebellum.
Nature Genetics | 2014
Sérgio B. Sousa; Dagan Jenkins; Estelle Chanudet; Guergana Tasseva; Miho Ishida; Glenn Anderson; James Docker; Mina Ryten; Joaquim de Sá; Jorge M. Saraiva; Angela Barnicoat; Richard W. Scott; Alistair Calder; Duangrurdee Wattanasirichaigoon; Krystyna H. Chrzanowska; Martina Simandlova; Lionel Van Maldergem; Philip Stanier; Philip L. Beales; Jean E. Vance; Gudrun E. Moore
Lenz-Majewski syndrome (LMS) is a syndrome of intellectual disability and multiple congenital anomalies that features generalized craniotubular hyperostosis. By using whole-exome sequencing and selecting variants consistent with the predicted dominant de novo etiology of LMS, we identified causative heterozygous missense mutations in PTDSS1, which encodes phosphatidylserine synthase 1 (PSS1). PSS1 is one of two enzymes involved in the production of phosphatidylserine. Phosphatidylserine synthesis was increased in intact fibroblasts from affected individuals, and end-product inhibition of PSS1 by phosphatidylserine was markedly reduced. Therefore, these mutations cause a gain-of-function effect associated with regulatory dysfunction of PSS1. We have identified LMS as the first human disease, to our knowledge, caused by disrupted phosphatidylserine metabolism. Our results point to an unexplored link between phosphatidylserine synthesis and bone metabolism.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2014
Sérgio B. Sousa; Raoul C. M. Hennekam
Nicolaides–Baraitser syndrome (NCBRS) is an intellectual disability (ID)/multiple congenital anomalies syndrome caused by non‐truncating mutations in the ATPase region of SMARCA2, which codes for one of the two alternative catalytic subunits of the BAF chromatin remodeling complex. We analyzed 61 molecularly confirmed cases, including all previously reported patients (n = 47) and 14 additional unpublished individuals. NCBRS is clinically and genetically homogeneous. The cardinal features (ID, short stature, microcephaly, typical face, sparse hair, brachydactyly, prominent interphalangeal joints, behavioral problems and seizures), are almost universally present. There is variability however, as ID can range from severe to mild, and sparse hair may be present only in certain age groups. There may be a correlation between the severity of the ID and presence of seizures, absent speech, short stature and microcephaly. SMARCA2 mutations causing NCBRS are likely to act through a dominant‐negative effect. There may be some genotype–phenotype correlations (mutations at domain VI with severe ID and seizures; mutations affecting residues Pro883, Leu946, and Ala1201 with mild phenotypes) but numbers are still too small to draw definitive conclusions.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2008
Sérgio B. Sousa; Raquel Pina; Lina Ramos; Naigel Pereira; Martin Krahn; Wiktor Borozdin; Jürgen Kohlhase; Marta Amorim; Katia Gonnet; Nicolas Lévy; Isabel M. Carreira; Ana Bela Couceiro; Jorge M. Saraiva
Tetra‐amelia is a rare malformation that may be associated with other anomalies and is usually inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern. We describe a fetus, born to a nonconsanguineous couple, with tetra‐amelia, bilateral cleft lip and palate and bilateral lung agenesis, without other anomalies. Karyotype was normal (46,XX) and premature centromere separation was excluded. No mutation was identified upon molecular analysis of WNT3, HS6ST1, and HS6ST3. We reviewed the literature and the differential diagnosis to clarify the clinical delineation of conditions associated with tetra‐amelia. The present report describes the sixth family with this pattern of malformations and reinforces the evidence that the “tetra‐amelia and lung hypo/aplasia syndrome” is a distinct autosomal recessive condition, with no identified gene thus far.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2008
Sérgio B. Sousa; Isabelle Russell-Eggitt; Christine M. Hall; Bryan D. Hall; Raoul C. M. Hennekam
There are several entities that combine a skeletal dysplasia with a retinal dystrophy. Recently, another possibly autosomal recessive entity was added to this group characterized by a specific spondylometaphyseal dysplasia and a cone‐rod dystrophy, without other significant impairments. The entity was named SMD‐CRD. We further delineate this disorder by reporting on a 16‐year‐old boy and a pair of twins with this entity. Possible etiologies are discussed. The boy showed low α‐neuraminidase activity levels in fibroblasts, but normal levels in leucocytes. The meaning of this finding remains as yet unknown.
Journal of pediatric rehabilitation medicine | 2010
Paula Garcia; Sérgio B. Sousa; Tah Pu Ling; Mário Conceição; Jorge Seabra; Klane K. White; Luísa Diogo
Mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) VI is an inheritable lysosomal storage disorder that is often associated with severe orthopedic problems such as hip dysplasia, spinal deformities, and deformities in the skull, knees and hands. We describe the progression and management of three MPS VI cases with focus on their orthopedic problems.