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Dive into the research topics where Sheng Chih Jin is active.

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Featured researches published by Sheng Chih Jin.


Science | 2015

De novo mutations in congenital heart disease with neurodevelopmental and other congenital anomalies

Jason Homsy; Samir Zaidi; Yufeng Shen; James S. Ware; Kaitlin E. Samocha; Konrad J. Karczewski; Steven R. DePalma; David M. McKean; Hiroko Wakimoto; Josh Gorham; Sheng Chih Jin; John Deanfield; Alessandro Giardini; George A. Porter; Richard Kim; Kaya Bilguvar; Francesc López-Giráldez; Irina Tikhonova; Shrikant Mane; Angela Romano-Adesman; Hongjian Qi; Badri N. Vardarajan; Lijiang Ma; Mark J. Daly; Amy E. Roberts; Mark W. Russell; Seema Mital; Jane W. Newburger; J. William Gaynor; Roger E. Breitbart

Putting both heart and brain at risk For reasons that are unclear, newborns with congenital heart disease (CHD) have a high risk of neurodevelopmental disabilities. Homsy et al. performed exome sequence analysis of 1200 CHD patients and their parents to identify spontaneously arising (de novo) mutations. Patients with both CHD and neurodevelopmental disorders had a much higher burden of damaging de novo mutations, particularly in genes with likely roles in both heart and brain development. Thus, clinical genotyping of patients with CHD may help to identify those at greatest risk of neurodevelopmental disabilities, allowing surveillance and early intervention. Science, this issue p. 1262 Genotyping of children with congenital heart disease may identify those at high risk of neurodevelopmental disorders. Congenital heart disease (CHD) patients have an increased prevalence of extracardiac congenital anomalies (CAs) and risk of neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDDs). Exome sequencing of 1213 CHD parent-offspring trios identified an excess of protein-damaging de novo mutations, especially in genes highly expressed in the developing heart and brain. These mutations accounted for 20% of patients with CHD, NDD, and CA but only 2% of patients with isolated CHD. Mutations altered genes involved in morphogenesis, chromatin modification, and transcriptional regulation, including multiple mutations in RBFOX2, a regulator of mRNA splicing. Genes mutated in other cohorts examined for NDD were enriched in CHD cases, particularly those with coexisting NDD. These findings reveal shared genetic contributions to CHD, NDD, and CA and provide opportunities for improved prognostic assessment and early therapeutic intervention in CHD patients.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Contribution of rare inherited and de novo variants in 2,871 congenital heart disease probands.

Sheng Chih Jin; Jason Homsy; Samir Zaidi; Qiongshi Lu; Sarah U. Morton; Steven R. DePalma; Xue Zeng; Hongjian Qi; Weni Chang; Michael C. Sierant; Wei Chien Hung; Shozeb Haider; Junhui Zhang; James Knight; Robert D. Bjornson; Christopher Castaldi; Irina R. Tikhonoa; Kaya Bilguvar; Shrikant Mane; Stephan J. Sanders; Seema Mital; Mark W. Russell; J. William Gaynor; John Deanfield; Alessandro Giardini; George A. Porter; Deepak Srivastava; Cecelia W. Lo; Yufeng Shen; W. Scott Watkins

Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of mortality from birth defects. Here, exome sequencing of a single cohort of 2,871 CHD probands, including 2,645 parent–offspring trios, implicated rare inherited mutations in 1.8%, including a recessive founder mutation in GDF1 accounting for ∼5% of severe CHD in Ashkenazim, recessive genotypes in MYH6 accounting for ∼11% of Shone complex, and dominant FLT4 mutations accounting for 2.3% of Tetralogy of Fallot. De novo mutations (DNMs) accounted for 8% of cases, including ∼3% of isolated CHD patients and ∼28% with both neurodevelopmental and extra-cardiac congenital anomalies. Seven genes surpassed thresholds for genome-wide significance, and 12 genes not previously implicated in CHD had >70% probability of being disease related. DNMs in ∼440 genes were inferred to contribute to CHD. Striking overlap between genes with damaging DNMs in probands with CHD and autism was also found.


Nature Genetics | 2018

CLCN2 chloride channel mutations in familial hyperaldosteronism type II

Ute I. Scholl; Gabriel Stölting; Julia Schewe; Anne Thiel; Hua Tan; Carol Nelson-Williams; Alfred A. Vichot; Sheng Chih Jin; Erin Loring; Verena Untiet; Taekyeong Yoo; Jungmin Choi; Shengxin Xu; Aihua Wu; Marieluise Kirchner; Philipp Mertins; Lars Christian Rump; Ali Mirza Onder; Cory Gamble; Daniel McKenney; Robert W. Lash; Deborah P. Jones; Gary Chune; Priscila Gagliardi; Murim Choi; Richard D. Gordon; Michael Stowasser; Christoph Fahlke; Richard P. Lifton

Primary aldosteronism, a common cause of severe hypertension1, features constitutive production of the adrenal steroid aldosterone. We analyzed a multiplex family with familial hyperaldosteronism type II (FH-II)2 and 80 additional probands with unsolved early-onset primary aldosteronism. Eight probands had novel heterozygous variants in CLCN2, including two de novo mutations and four independent occurrences of a mutation encoding an identical p.Arg172Gln substitution; all relatives with early-onset primary aldosteronism carried the CLCN2 variant found in the proband. CLCN2 encodes a voltage-gated chloride channel expressed in adrenal glomerulosa that opens at hyperpolarized membrane potentials. Channel opening depolarizes glomerulosa cells and induces expression of aldosterone synthase, the rate-limiting enzyme for aldosterone biosynthesis. Mutant channels show gain of function, with higher open probabilities at the glomerulosa resting potential. These findings for the first time demonstrate a role of anion channels in glomerulosa membrane potential determination, aldosterone production and hypertension. They establish the cause of a substantial fraction of early-onset primary aldosteronism.Whole-exome sequencing identifies mutations in CLCN2 in individuals with familial hyperaldosteronism type II or early-onset primary aldosteronism. These gain-of-function mutations cause chloride channel opening and glomerulosa cell depolarization, showing a role for anion channels in aldosterone production.


Human genome variation | 2016

Digenic mutations of human OCRL paralogs in Dent's disease type 2 associated with Chiari I malformation.

Daniel Duran; Sheng Chih Jin; Tyrone DeSpenza; Carol Nelson-Williams; Andrea G. Cogal; Elizabeth W Abrash; Peter C. Harris; John C. Lieske; Serena Je Shimshak; Shrikant Mane; Kaya Bilguvar; Michael L. DiLuna; Murat Gunel; Richard P. Lifton; Kristopher T. Kahle

OCRL1 and its paralog INPP5B encode phosphatidylinositol 5-phosphatases that localize to the primary cilium and have roles in ciliogenesis. Mutations in OCRL1 cause the X-linked Dent disease type 2 (DD2; OMIM# 300555), characterized by low-molecular weight proteinuria, hypercalciuria, and the variable presence of cataracts, glaucoma and intellectual disability without structural brain anomalies. Disease-causing mutations in INPP5B have not been described in humans. Here, we report the case of an 11-year-old boy with short stature and an above-average IQ; severe proteinuria, hypercalciuria and osteopenia resulting in a vertebral compression fracture; and Chiari I malformation with cervico-thoracic syringohydromyelia requiring suboccipital decompression. Sequencing revealed a novel, de novo DD2-causing 462 bp deletion disrupting exon 3 of OCRL1 and a maternally inherited, extremely rare (ExAC allele frequency 8.4×10−6) damaging missense mutation in INPP5B (p.A51V). This mutation substitutes an evolutionarily conserved amino acid in the protein’s critical PH domain. In silico analyses of mutation impact predicted by SIFT, PolyPhen2, MetaSVM and CADD algorithms were all highly deleterious. Together, our findings report a novel association of DD2 with Chiari I malformation and syringohydromyelia, and document the effects of digenic mutation of human OCRL paralogs. These findings lend genetic support to the hypothesis that impaired ciliogenesis may contribute to the development of Chiari I malformation, and implicates OCRL-dependent PIP3 metabolism in this mechanism.


Cold Spring Harb Mol Case Stud | 2018

De novo MYH9 mutation in congenital scalp hemangioma

Elena I. Fomchenko; Daniel Duran; Sheng Chih Jin; Weilai Dong; E. Zeynep Erson-Omay; Prince Antwi; August Allocco; Jonathan R. Gaillard; Anita Huttner; Murat Gunel; Michael L. DiLuna; Kristopher T. Kahle

Congenital hemangiomas are tumor-like vascular malformations with poorly understood pathogenesis. We report the case of a neonate with a massive congenital scalp hemangioma that required urgent neurosurgical removal on the second day of life because of concern for high-flow arteriovenous shunting. Exome sequencing identified a rare damaging de novo germline mutation in MYH9 (c.5308C>T, p.[Arg1770Cys]), encoding the MYH9 nonmuscle myosin IIA. MYH9 has a probability of loss-of-function intolerance (pLI) score of >0.99 and is highly intolerant to missense variation (z score = 5.59). The p.(Arg1770Cys) mutation substitutes an evolutionarily conserved amino acid in the proteins critical myosin tail domain and is predicted to be highly deleterious by SIFT, PolyPhen-2, MetaSVM, and CADD. MYH9 is a known regulator of cytokinesis, VEGF-regulated angiogenesis, and p53-dependent tumorigenesis. These findings reveal a novel association of germline de novo MYH9 mutation with congenital hemangioma.


Cold Spring Harb Mol Case Stud | 2018

A novel association of campomelic dysplasia and hydrocephalus with an unbalanced chromosomal translocation upstream of SOX9

Prince Antwi; Christopher S. Hong; Daniel Duran; Sheng Chih Jin; Weilai Dong; Michael L. DiLuna; Kristopher T. Kahle

Campomelic dysplasia is a rare skeletal dysplasia characterized by Pierre Robin sequence, craniofacial dysmorphism, shortening and angulation of long bones, tracheobronchomalacia, and occasionally sex reversal. The disease is due to mutations in SOX9 or chromosomal rearrangements involving the long arm of Chromosome 17 harboring the SOX9 locus. SOX9, a transcription factor, is indispensible in establishing and maintaining neural stem cells in the central nervous system. We present a patient with angulation of long bones and external female genitalia on prenatal ultrasound who was subsequently found to harbor the chromosomal abnormality 46, XY, t(6;17) (p21.1;q24.3) on prenatal genetic testing. Comparative genomic hybridization revealed deletions at 6p21.1 and 17q24.3, the latter being 2.3 Mb upstream of SOX9. Whole-exome sequencing did not identify pathogenic variants in SOX9, suggesting that the 17q24.3 deletion represents a translocation breakpoint farther upstream of SOX9 than previously identified. At 2 mo of age the patient developed progressive communicating ventriculomegaly and thinning of the cortical mantle without clinical signs of increased intracranial pressure. This case suggests ventriculomegaly in some cases represents not a primary impairment of cerebrospinal fluid dynamics, but an epiphenomenon driven by a genetic dysregulation of neural progenitor cell fate.


Nano Letters | 2004

Controlled growth of Y-junction nanotubes using Ti-doped vapor catalyst

N. Gothard; Chiara Daraio; Jay Gaillard; R. Zidan; Sheng Chih Jin; Apparao M. Rao


Physical Review B | 2004

Vacancy-mediated mechanism of nitrogen substitution in carbon nanotubes

Deepak Srivastava; Maghu Menon; Chiara Daraio; Sheng Chih Jin; Bindu Sadanadan; Apparao M. Rao


Neuron | 2018

De Novo Mutation in Genes Regulating Neural Stem Cell Fate in Human Congenital Hydrocephalus

Charuta Gavankar Furey; Jungmin Choi; Sheng Chih Jin; Xue Zeng; Andrew T. Timberlake; Carol Nelson-Williams; M. Shahid mansuri; Qiongshi Lu; Daniel Duran; Shreyas Panchagnula; August Allocco; Jason K. Karimy; Arjun Khanna; Jonathan R. Gaillard; Tyrone DeSpenza; Prince Antwi; Erin Loring; William E. Butler; Edward R. Smith; Benjamin C. Warf; Jennifer Strahle; David D. Limbrick; Phillip B. Storm; Gregory G. Heuer; Eric M. Jackson; Bermans J. Iskandar; James M. Johnston; Irina Tikhonova; Christopher Castaldi; Francesc López-Giráldez


World Neurosurgery | 2018

Human Genetics and Molecular Mechanisms of Congenital Hydrocephalus

Charuta Gavankar Furey; Xue Zeng; Weilai Dong; Sheng Chih Jin; Jungmin Choi; Andrew T. Timberlake; Ashley M Dunbar; August Allocco; Murat Gunel; Richard P. Lifton; Kristopher T. Kahle

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