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Dive into the research topics where Shuwen Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Shuwen Huang.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Recurrent rearrangements of chromosome 1q21.1 and variable pediatric phenotypes

Mefford Hc; Andrew J. Sharp; Carl Baker; Andy Itsara; Zhaoshi Jiang; Karen Buysse; Shuwen Huang; Viv Maloney; John A. Crolla; Diana Baralle; Amanda L. Collins; Catherine L. Mercer; Koenraad K. Norga; Thomy de Ravel; Koenraad Devriendt; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Nicole de Leeuw; William Reardon; Stefania Gimelli; Frédérique Béna; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Alison Male; Lorraine Gaunt; Jill Clayton-Smith; Ingrid Simonic; Soo Mi Park; Sarju G. Mehta; Serena Nik-Zainal; C. Geoffrey Woods; Helen V. Firth

BACKGROUND Duplications and deletions in the human genome can cause disease or predispose persons to disease. Advances in technologies to detect these changes allow for the routine identification of submicroscopic imbalances in large numbers of patients. METHODS We tested for the presence of microdeletions and microduplications at a specific region of chromosome 1q21.1 in two groups of patients with unexplained mental retardation, autism, or congenital anomalies and in unaffected persons. RESULTS We identified 25 persons with a recurrent 1.35-Mb deletion within 1q21.1 from screening 5218 patients. The microdeletions had arisen de novo in eight patients, were inherited from a mildly affected parent in three patients, were inherited from an apparently unaffected parent in six patients, and were of unknown inheritance in eight patients. The deletion was absent in a series of 4737 control persons (P=1.1x10(-7)). We found considerable variability in the level of phenotypic expression of the microdeletion; phenotypes included mild-to-moderate mental retardation, microcephaly, cardiac abnormalities, and cataracts. The reciprocal duplication was enriched in nine children with mental retardation or autism spectrum disorder and other variable features (P=0.02). We identified three deletions and three duplications of the 1q21.1 region in an independent sample of 788 patients with mental retardation and congenital anomalies. CONCLUSIONS We have identified recurrent molecular lesions that elude syndromic classification and whose disease manifestations must be considered in a broader context of development as opposed to being assigned to a specific disease. Clinical diagnosis in patients with these lesions may be most readily achieved on the basis of genotype rather than phenotype.


Genetics in Medicine | 2011

An evidence-based approach to establish the functional and clinical significance of copy number variants in intellectual and developmental disabilities

Erin B. Kaminsky; Vineith Kaul; Justin Paschall; Deanna M. Church; Brian Bunke; Dawn Kunig; Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Andres Moreno-De-Luca; Jennifer G. Mulle; Stephen T. Warren; Gabriele Richard; John Compton; Amy E. Fuller; Troy J. Gliem; Shuwen Huang; Morag N. Collinson; Sarah J. Beal; Todd Ackley; Diane L. Pickering; Denae M. Golden; Emily Aston; Heidi Whitby; Shashirekha Shetty; Michael R. Rossi; M. Katharine Rudd; Sarah T. South; Arthur R. Brothman; Warren G. Sanger; Ramaswamy K. Iyer; John A. Crolla

Purpose: Copy number variants have emerged as a major cause of human disease such as autism and intellectual disabilities. Because copy number variants are common in normal individuals, determining the functional and clinical significance of rare copy number variants in patients remains challenging. The adoption of whole-genome chromosomal microarray analysis as a first-tier diagnostic test for individuals with unexplained developmental disabilities provides a unique opportunity to obtain large copy number variant datasets generated through routine patient care.Methods: A consortium of diagnostic laboratories was established (the International Standards for Cytogenomic Arrays consortium) to share copy number variant and phenotypic data in a central, public database. We present the largest copy number variant case-control study to date comprising 15,749 International Standards for Cytogenomic Arrays cases and 10,118 published controls, focusing our initial analysis on recurrent deletions and duplications involving 14 copy number variant regions.Results: Compared with controls, 14 deletions and seven duplications were significantly overrepresented in cases, providing a clinical diagnosis as pathogenic.Conclusion: Given the rapid expansion of clinical chromosomal microarray analysis testing, very large datasets will be available to determine the functional significance of increasingly rare copy number variants. This data will provide an evidence-based guide to clinicians across many disciplines involved in the diagnosis, management, and care of these patients and their families.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Deletion 17q12 Is a Recurrent Copy Number Variant that Confers High Risk of Autism and Schizophrenia

Daniel Moreno-De-Luca; Jennifer G. Mulle; Erin B. Kaminsky; Stephan J. Sanders; Scott M. Myers; Margaret P Adam; Amy T. Pakula; Nancy J. Eisenhauer; Kim Uhas; LuAnn Weik; Lisa Guy; Melanie Care; Chantal Morel; Charlotte Boni; Bonnie Anne Salbert; Ashadeep Chandrareddy; Laurie A. Demmer; Eva W.C. Chow; Urvashi Surti; Swaroop Aradhya; Diane L. Pickering; Denae M. Golden; Warren G. Sanger; Emily Aston; Arthur R. Brothman; Troy J. Gliem; Erik C. Thorland; Todd Ackley; Ram Iyer; Shuwen Huang

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and schizophrenia are neurodevelopmental disorders for which recent evidence indicates an important etiologic role for rare copy number variants (CNVs) and suggests common genetic mechanisms. We performed cytogenomic array analysis in a discovery sample of patients with neurodevelopmental disorders referred for clinical testing. We detected a recurrent 1.4 Mb deletion at 17q12, which harbors HNF1B, the gene responsible for renal cysts and diabetes syndrome (RCAD), in 18/15,749 patients, including several with ASD, but 0/4,519 controls. We identified additional shared phenotypic features among nine patients available for clinical assessment, including macrocephaly, characteristic facial features, renal anomalies, and neurocognitive impairments. In a large follow-up sample, the same deletion was identified in 2/1,182 ASD/neurocognitive impairment and in 4/6,340 schizophrenia patients, but in 0/47,929 controls (corrected p = 7.37 × 10⁻⁵). These data demonstrate that deletion 17q12 is a recurrent, pathogenic CNV that confers a very high risk for ASD and schizophrenia and show that one or more of the 15 genes in the deleted interval is dosage sensitive and essential for normal brain development and function. In addition, the phenotypic features of patients with this CNV are consistent with a contiguous gene syndrome that extends beyond RCAD, which is caused by HNF1B mutations only.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2008

SOX2 Plays a Critical Role in the Pituitary, Forebrain, and Eye during Human Embryonic Development

Daniel Kelberman; Sandra C.P. De Castro; Shuwen Huang; John A. Crolla; Rodger Palmer; John Welbourn Gregory; David Taylor; Luciano Cavallo; Maria Felicia Faienza; Rita Fischetto; John C. Achermann; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Karine Rizzoti; Robin Lovell-Badge; Iain C. A. F. Robinson; Dianne Gerrelli; Mehul T. Dattani

CONTEXT Heterozygous, de novo mutations in the transcription factor SOX2 are associated with bilateral anophthalmia or severe microphthalmia and hypopituitarism. Variable additional abnormalities include defects of the corpus callosum and hippocampus. OBJECTIVE We have ascertained a further three patients with severe eye defects and pituitary abnormalities who were screened for mutations in SOX2. To provide further evidence of a direct role for SOX2 in hypothalamo-pituitary development, we have studied the expression of the gene in human embryonic tissues. RESULTS All three patients harbored heterozygous SOX2 mutations: a deletion encompassing the entire gene, an intragenic deletion (c.70_89del), and a novel nonsense mutation (p.Q61X) within the DNA binding domain that results in impaired transactivation. We also show that human SOX2 can inhibit beta-catenin-driven reporter gene expression in vitro, whereas mutant SOX2 proteins are unable to repress efficiently this activity. Furthermore, we show that SOX2 is expressed throughout the human brain, including the developing hypothalamus, as well as Rathkes pouch, the developing anterior pituitary, and the eye. CONCLUSIONS Patients with SOX2 mutations often manifest the unusual phenotype of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, with sparing of other pituitary hormones despite anterior pituitary hypoplasia. SOX2 expression patterns in human embryonic development support a direct involvement of the protein during development of tissues affected in these individuals. Given the critical role of Wnt-signaling in the development of most of these tissues, our data suggest that a failure to repress the Wnt-beta-catenin pathway could be one of the underlying pathogenic mechanisms associated with loss-of-function mutations in SOX2.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

8p23.1 duplication syndrome; a novel genomic condition with unexpected complexity revealed by array CGH

John C.K. Barber; Viv Maloney; Shuwen Huang; David J. Bunyan; Lara Cresswell; Esther Kinning; Anna Benson; Tim Cheetham; Jonathan Wyllie; Sally Ann Lynch; Simon Zwolinski; Laura Prescott; Yanick J. Crow; Rob Morgan; Emma Hobson

The 8p23.1 deletion syndrome is established but not an equivalent duplication syndrome. Here, we report five patients; a de novo prenatal case and two families in which 8p23.1 duplications have been directly transmitted from mothers to children. Dual-colour fluorescent in situ hybridisation, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification analysis and customised oligonucleotide array comparative genomic hybridisation (oaCGH) indicated an ∼3.75 Mb duplication of most of band 8p23.1 between the olfactory receptor/defensin repeats (ORDRs) in all cases. However, oaCGH revealed an additional duplication of 500 kb adjacent to the proximal ORDR in Family 1 and an additional deletion of 3.14 Mb within the Nablus Mask-Like Facial Syndrome region of 8q22.1 in Family 2. Copy number variation at introns 4–5 of the GATA4 gene was also identified. This 8p23.1 duplication syndrome is associated with a characteristic facial phenotype including a prominent forehead and arched eyebrows. Adrenal insufficiency, Tetralogy of Fallot, partial 2/3 syndactyly of the toes and cleft palate in some individuals may be explained by ascertainment bias, incomplete penetrance and/or the presence of the microdeletion in Family 2. The duplication is compatible with normal early childhood development but, although our adult cases live independent lives with varying degrees of support, learning difficulties have been experienced by some family members. We conclude that the 8p23.1 duplication syndrome is a genomic condition with an emerging but variable phenotype that may be under-diagnosed. Our results demonstrate that direct transmission does not distinguish genuine duplications from euchromatic variants and illustrate the power of array CGH to reveal unexpected additional imbalances in affected patients.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Interstitial 22q13 deletions: genes other than SHANK3 have major effects on cognitive and language development.

Heather L. Wilson; John A. Crolla; Dena Walker; Lina Artifoni; Bruno Dallapiccola; Takako Takano; Pradeep Vasudevan; Shuwen Huang; Vivienne Maloney; Twila Yobb; Oliver Quarrell; Heather E. McDermid

The severe mental retardation and speech deficits associated with 22q13 terminal deletions have been attributed in large part to haploinsufficiency of SHANK3, which maps to all 22q13 terminal deletions, although more proximal genes are assumed to have minor effects. We report two children with interstitial deletions of 22q13 and two copies of SHANK3, but clinical features similar to the terminal 22q13 deletion syndrome, including mental retardation and severe speech delay. Both these interstitial deletions are completely contained within the largest terminal deletion, but do not overlap with the nine smallest terminal deletions. These interstitial deletions indicate that haploinsufficiency for 22q13 genes other than SHANK3 can have major effects on cognitive and language development. However, the relatively mild speech problems and normal cognitive abilities of a parent who transmitted her identical interstitial deletion to her more severely affected son suggests that the phenotype associated with this region may be more variable than terminal deletions and therefore contribute to the relative lack of correlation between clinical severity and size of terminal deletions. The phenotypic similarity between the interstitial deletions and non-overlapping small terminal 22q13 deletions emphasizes the general nonspecificity of the clinical picture of the 22q13 deletion syndrome and the importance of molecular analysis for diagnosis.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Transmitted duplication of 8p23.1–8p23.2 associated with speech delay, autism and learning difficulties

Mary Glancy; Angela Barnicoat; Rajan Vijeratnam; Sharon de Souza; Joanne Gilmore; Shuwen Huang; Viv Maloney; N. Simon Thomas; David J. Bunyan; Ann Jackson; John C K Barber

Duplications of distal 8p with and without significant clinical phenotypes have been reported and are often associated with an unusual degree of structural complexity. Here, we present a duplication of 8p23.1–8p23.2 ascertained in a child with speech delay and a diagnosis of ICD-10 autism. The same duplication was found in his mother who had epilepsy and learning problems. A combination of cytogenetic, FISH, microsatellite, MLPA and oaCGH analysis was used to show that the duplication extended over a minimum of 6.8 Mb between 3 539 893 and 10 323 426 bp. This interval contains 32 novel and 41 known genes, of which only microcephalin (MCPH1) is a plausible candidate gene for autism at present. The distal breakpoint of the duplicated region interrupts the CSMD1 gene in 8p23.2 and the medial breakpoint lies between the MSRA and RP1L1 genes in 8p23.1.An interchromosomal insertion between a normal and polymorphically inverted chromosome 8 is proposed to explain the origin of this duplication. Further mapped imbalances of distal 8p are needed to determine whether the autistic component of the phenotype in this family results from the cumulative imbalance of many genes or dosage imbalance of an individual susceptibility gene.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2009

Constitutional haploinsufficiency of tumor suppressor genes in mentally retarded patients with microdeletions in 17p13.1.

A.C.V. Krepischi-Santos; D. Rajan; I.K. Temple; V. Shrubb; John A. Crolla; Shuwen Huang; S. Beal; Paulo A. Otto; Nigel P. Carter; Angela M. Vianna-Morgante; Carla Rosenberg

Chromosome microdeletions or duplications are detected in 10–20% of patients with mental impairment and normal karyotypes. A few cases have been reported of mental impairment with microdeletions comprising tumor suppressor genes. By array-CGH we detected 4 mentally impaired individuals carrying de novo microdeletions sharing an overlapping segment of ∼180 kb in 17p13.1. This segment encompasses 18 genes, including 3 involved in cancer, namely KCTD11/REN, DLG4/PSD95, and GPS2. Furthermore, in 2 of the patients, the deletions also included TP53, the most frequently inactivated gene in human cancers. The 3 tumor suppressor genes KCTD11, DLG4, and GPS2, in addition to the GABARAP gene, have a known or suspected function in neuronal development and are candidates for causing mental impairment in our patients. Among our 4 patients with deletions in 17p13.1, 3 were part of a Brazilian cohort of 300 mentally retarded individuals, suggesting that this segment may be particularly prone to rearrangements and appears to be an important cause (∼1%) of mental retardation. Further, the constitutive deletion of tumor suppressor genes in these patients, particularly TP53, probably confers a significantly increased lifetime risk for cancer and warrants careful oncological surveillance of these patients. Constitutional chromosome deletions containing tumor suppressor genes in patients with mental impairment or congenital abnormalities may represent an important mechanism linking abnormal phenotypes with increased risks of cancer.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

16p11.2–p12.2 duplication syndrome; a genomic condition differentiated from euchromatic variation of 16p11.2

John C K Barber; Victoria J. Hall; Viv Maloney; Shuwen Huang; Angharad M Roberts; Angela F Brady; Nicki Foulds; Beverley Bewes; Marianne Volleth; Thomas Liehr; Karl Mehnert; Mark S. Bateman; Helen E. White

Chromosome 16 contains multiple copy number variations (CNVs) that predispose to genomic disorders. Here, we differentiate pathogenic duplications of 16p11.2–p12.2 from microscopically similar euchromatic variants of 16p11.2. Patient 1 was a girl of 18 with autism, moderate intellectual disability, behavioural difficulties, dysmorphic features and a 7.71-Mb (megabase pair) duplication (16:21 521 005–29 233 146). Patient 2 had a 7.81-Mb duplication (16:21 382 561–29 191 527), speech delay and obsessional behaviour as a boy and, as an adult, short stature, macrocephaly and mild dysmorphism. The duplications contain 65 coding genes of which Polo-like kinase 1 (PLK1) has the highest likelihood of being haploinsufficient and, by implication, a triplosensitive gene. An additional 1.11-Mb CNV of 10q11.21 in Patient 1 was a possible modifier containing the G-protein-regulated inducer of neurite growth 2 (GPRIN2) gene. In contrast, the euchromatic variants in Patients 3 and 4 were amplifications from a 945-kb region containing non-functional immunoglobulin heavy chain (IGHV), hect domain pseudogene (HERC2P4) and TP53-inducible target gene 3 (TP53TG3) loci in proximal 16p11.2 (16:31 953 353–32 898 635). Paralogous pyrosequencing gave a total copy number of 3–8 in controls and 8 to >10 in Patients 3 and 4. The 16p11.2–p12.2 duplication syndrome is a recurrent genomic disorder with a variable phenotype including developmental delay, dysmorphic features, mild to severe intellectual disability, autism, obsessive or stereotyped behaviour, short stature and anomalies of the hands and fingers. It is important to differentiate pathogenic 16p11.2–p12.2 duplications from harmless, microscopically similar euchromatic variants of proximal 16p11.2, especially at prenatal diagnosis.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2010

A novel de novo microdeletion spanning the SYNGAP1 gene on the short arm of chromosome 6 associated with mental retardation

Ana C.V. Krepischi; Carla Rosenberg; Silvia S. Costa; John A. Crolla; Shuwen Huang; Angela M. Vianna-Morgante

Point mutations in the SYNGAP1gene were described recently as arelativelyfrequentcauseofmentalretardation,presentinabout3%of nonsyndromic individuals with mental retardation [Hamdanet al., 2009]. We ascertained a carrier of a deletion encompassingSYNGAP1 among 300 patients with mental retardation studied by1Mb array-comparative genomic hybridization (a-CGH). Data onthe patient were deposited in the DECIPHER database (Databaseof Chromosomal Imbalances and Phenotype in Humans usingEnsembl Resources, http://www.sanger.ac.uk/PostGenomics/decipher).Informed consent for publishing results and photos was obtainedfrom the patient’s legal guardians.The boy (DECIPHER USP002265) was the only child of non-consaguineous healthy parents, and no other cases of mentalimpairment were known among first- or second-degree relatives.He was born at term by caesarean; his birth weight was 3,315 g(between 25th and 50th centiles) and length 47cm ( 3rd centile).Motor development was considered slightly delayed: he sat upwithout support at 6

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John A. Crolla

Salisbury District Hospital

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Viv Maloney

Salisbury District Hospital

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Morag N. Collinson

Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust

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David J. Bunyan

Salisbury District Hospital

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John C K Barber

Salisbury District Hospital

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John C.K. Barber

Southampton General Hospital

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Denae M. Golden

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Diane L. Pickering

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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