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Dive into the research topics where Stefano Lise is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefano Lise.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2004

The CATH Domain Structure Database and related resources Gene3D and DHS provide comprehensive domain family information for genome analysis

Frances M. G. Pearl; Annabel E. Todd; Ian Sillitoe; Mark Dibley; Oliver Redfern; Tony E. Lewis; Christopher G. Bennett; Russell L. Marsden; Alastair Grant; David A. Lee; Adrian Akpor; Michael Maibaum; Andrew P. Harrison; Timothy Dallman; Gabrielle A. Reeves; Ilhem Diboun; Sarah Addou; Stefano Lise; Caroline E. Johnston; Antonio Sillero; Janet M. Thornton; Christine A. Orengo

The CATH database of protein domain structures (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/cath/) currently contains 43 229 domains classified into 1467 superfamilies and 5107 sequence families. Each structural family is expanded with sequence relatives from GenBank and completed genomes, using a variety of efficient sequence search protocols and reliable thresholds. This extended CATH protein family database contains 616 470 domain sequences classified into 23 876 sequence families. This results in the significant expansion of the CATH HMM model library to include models built from the CATH sequence relatives, giving a 10% increase in coverage for detecting remote homologues. An improved Dictionary of Homologous superfamilies (DHS) (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/dhs/) containing specific sequence, structural and functional information for each superfamily in CATH considerably assists manual validation of homologues. Information on sequence relatives in CATH superfamilies, GenBank and completed genomes is presented in the CATH associated DHS and Gene3D resources. Domain partnership information can be obtained from Gene3D (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/bsm/cath/Gene3D/). A new CATH server has been implemented (http://www.biochem.ucl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/cath/CathServer.pl) providing automatic classification of newly determined sequences and structures using a suite of rapid sequence and structure comparison methods. The statistical significance of matches is assessed and links are provided to the putative superfamily or fold group to which the query sequence or structure is assigned.


Brain | 2013

Next generation sequencing for molecular diagnosis of neurological disorders using ataxias as a model

Andrea H. Németh; Alexandra Kwasniewska; Stefano Lise; R Parolin Schnekenberg; Becker Ebe.; K D Bera; M Shanks; Lorna Gregory; David Buck; M. Zameel Cader; Kevin Talbot; R de Silva; Nicholas A. Fletcher; R Hastings; Sandeep Jayawant; Patrick J. Morrison; P Worth; M Taylor; J Tolmie; M O'Regan; R Valentine; E Packham; Julie Evans; A Seller; Jiannis Ragoussis

Many neurological conditions are caused by immensely heterogeneous gene mutations. The diagnostic process is often long and complex with most patients undergoing multiple invasive and costly investigations without ever reaching a conclusive molecular diagnosis. The advent of massively parallel, next-generation sequencing promises to revolutionize genetic testing and shorten the ‘diagnostic odyssey’ for many of these patients. We performed a pilot study using heterogeneous ataxias as a model neurogenetic disorder to assess the introduction of next-generation sequencing into clinical practice. We captured 58 known human ataxia genes followed by Illumina Next-Generation Sequencing in 50 highly heterogeneous patients with ataxia who had been extensively investigated and were refractory to diagnosis. All cases had been tested for spinocerebellar ataxia 1–3, 6, 7 and Friedrich’s ataxia and had multiple other biochemical, genetic and invasive tests. In those cases where we identified the genetic mutation, we determined the time to diagnosis. Pathogenicity was assessed using a bioinformatics pipeline and novel variants were validated using functional experiments. The overall detection rate in our heterogeneous cohort was 18% and varied from 8.3% in those with an adult onset progressive disorder to 40% in those with a childhood or adolescent onset progressive disorder. The highest detection rate was in those with an adolescent onset and a family history (75%). The majority of cases with detectable mutations had a childhood onset but most are now adults, reflecting the long delay in diagnosis. The delays were primarily related to lack of easily available clinical testing, but other factors included the presence of atypical phenotypes and the use of indirect testing. In the cases where we made an eventual diagnosis, the delay was 3–35 years (mean 18.1 years). Alignment and coverage metrics indicated that the capture and sequencing was highly efficient and the consumable cost was ∼£400 (€460 or US


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Next-generation sequencing (NGS) as a diagnostic tool for retinal degeneration reveals a much higher detection rate in early-onset disease.

Morag E Shanks; Susan M. Downes; Richard R. Copley; Stefano Lise; John Broxholme; Karl A. Hudspith; Alexandra Kwasniewska; Wayne I. L. Davies; Mark W. Hankins; Emily R Packham; Penny Clouston; Anneke Seller; Andrew O.M. Wilkie; Jenny C. Taylor; Jiannis Ragoussis; Andrea H. Németh

620). Our pathogenicity interpretation pathway predicted 13 different mutations in eight different genes: PRKCG, TTBK2, SETX, SPTBN2, SACS, MRE11, KCNC3 and DARS2 of which nine were novel including one causing a newly described recessive ataxia syndrome. Genetic testing using targeted capture followed by next-generation sequencing was efficient, cost-effective, and enabled a molecular diagnosis in many refractory cases. A specific challenge of next-generation sequencing data is pathogenicity interpretation, but functional analysis confirmed the pathogenicity of novel variants showing that the pipeline was robust. Our results have broad implications for clinical neurology practice and the approach to diagnostic testing.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

PepSite: prediction of peptide-binding sites from protein surfaces

Leonardo G. Trabuco; Stefano Lise; Evangelia Petsalaki; Robert B. Russell

Inherited retinal degeneration (IRD) is a common cause of visual impairment (prevalence ∼1/3500). There is considerable phenotype and genotype heterogeneity, making a specific diagnosis very difficult without molecular testing. We investigated targeted capture combined with next-generation sequencing using Nimblegen 12plex arrays and the Roche 454 sequencing platform to explore its potential for clinical diagnostics in two common types of IRD, retinitis pigmentosa and cone-rod dystrophy. 50 patients (36 unknowns and 14 positive controls) were screened, and pathogenic mutations were identified in 25% of patients in the unknown, with 53% in the early-onset cases. All patients with new mutations detected had an age of onset <21 years and 44% had a family history. Thirty-one percent of mutations detected were novel. A de novo mutation in rhodopsin was identified in one early-onset case without a family history. Bioinformatic pipelines were developed to identify likely pathogenic mutations and stringent criteria were used for assignment of pathogenicity. Analysis of sequencing metrics revealed significant variability in capture efficiency and depth of coverage. We conclude that targeted capture and next-generation sequencing are likely to be very useful in a diagnostic setting, but patients with earlier onset of disease are more likely to benefit from using this strategy. The mutation-detection rate suggests that many patients are likely to have mutations in novel genes.


Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Exome sequencing can detect pathogenic mosaic mutations present at low allele frequencies

Alistair T. Pagnamenta; Stefano Lise; Victoria Harrison; Helen Stewart; Sandeep Jayawant; Gerardine Quaghebeur; Alexander T Deng; Valerie Elizabeth Murphy; Elham Sadighi Akha; Andy Rimmer; Iain Mathieson; Samantha J. L. Knight; Usha Kini; Jenny C. Taylor; David A. Keays

Complex biological functions emerge through intricate protein–protein interaction networks. An important class of protein–protein interaction corresponds to peptide-mediated interactions, in which a short peptide stretch from one partner interacts with a large protein surface from the other partner. Protein–peptide interactions are typically of low affinity and involved in regulatory mechanisms, dynamically reshaping protein interaction networks. Due to the relatively small interaction surface, modulation of protein–peptide interactions is feasible and highly attractive for therapeutic purposes. Unfortunately, the number of available 3D structures of protein–peptide interfaces is very limited. For typical cases where a protein–peptide structure of interest is not available, the PepSite web server can be used to predict peptide-binding spots from protein surfaces alone. The PepSite method relies on preferred peptide-binding environments calculated from a set of known protein–peptide 3D structures, combined with distance constraints derived from known peptides. We present an updated version of the web server that is orders of magnitude faster than the original implementation, returning results in seconds instead of minutes or hours. The PepSite web server is available at http://pepsite2.russelllab.org.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Recessive mutations in SPTBN2 implicate β-III spectrin in both cognitive and motor development

Stefano Lise; Yvonne L. Clarkson; Emma M. Perkins; Alexandra Kwasniewska; Elham Sadighi Akha; Ricardo Parolin Schnekenberg; Daumante Suminaite; Jilly Hope; Ian Baker; Lorna Gregory; Angie Green; Chris Allan; Sarah Lamble; Sandeep Jayawant; Gerardine Quaghebeur; M. Zameel Cader; Sarah Hughes; Richard J. E. Armstrong; Alexander Kanapin; Andrew J. Rimmer; Gerton Lunter; Iain Mathieson; Jean-Baptiste Cazier; David Buck; Jenny C. Taylor; David R. Bentley; Gilean McVean; Peter Donnelly; Samantha J. L. Knight; Mandy Jackson

The development of next generation sequencing (NGS) has radically transformed the scientific landscape, making it possible to sequence the exome of any given individual in a cost-effective way. The power of this approach has been demonstrated by a number of groups who have identified pathogenic mutations in small pedigrees that have been resistant to traditional genetic mapping. Recently it has become clear that exome sequencing has great potential with respect to sporadic disease and the identification of de novo mutations. This is highlighted by studies reporting whole-exome sequencing of patient–parental trios affected by learning disability, autism and schizophrenia. It is widely anticipated that the introduction of this technique into a clinical setting will revolutionise genetic diagnosis. However, the sensitivity of NGS exome sequencing is currently unclear. Here, we describe the exome sequencing of DNA samples from a patient with double cortex syndrome and her parents, resulting in the detection of a mosaic splicing mutation in LIS1. This variant was found at an allele frequency of just 18%, demonstrating that NGS methods have the capacity to identify pathogenic mosaic mutations present at a low level.


Brain | 2013

Periventricular heterotopia in 6q terminal deletion syndrome: role of the C6orf70 gene

Valerio Conti; Aurelie Carabalona; Emilie Pallesi-Pocachard; Elena Parrini; Richard J. Leventer; Emmanuelle Buhler; George McGillivray; François Michel; Pasquale Striano; Davide Mei; Françoise Watrin; Stefano Lise; Alistair T. Pagnamenta; Jenny C. Taylor; Usha Kini; Jill Clayton-Smith; Francesca Novara; Orsetta Zuffardi; William B. Dobyns; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Stephen P. Robertson; Samuel F. Berkovic; Alfonso Represa; David A. Keays; Carlos Cardoso; Renzo Guerrini

β-III spectrin is present in the brain and is known to be important in the function of the cerebellum. Heterozygous mutations in SPTBN2, the gene encoding β-III spectrin, cause Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 5 (SCA5), an adult-onset, slowly progressive, autosomal-dominant pure cerebellar ataxia. SCA5 is sometimes known as “Lincoln ataxia,” because the largest known family is descended from relatives of the United States President Abraham Lincoln. Using targeted capture and next-generation sequencing, we identified a homozygous stop codon in SPTBN2 in a consanguineous family in which childhood developmental ataxia co-segregates with cognitive impairment. The cognitive impairment could result from mutations in a second gene, but further analysis using whole-genome sequencing combined with SNP array analysis did not reveal any evidence of other mutations. We also examined a mouse knockout of β-III spectrin in which ataxia and progressive degeneration of cerebellar Purkinje cells has been previously reported and found morphological abnormalities in neurons from prefrontal cortex and deficits in object recognition tasks, consistent with the human cognitive phenotype. These data provide the first evidence that β-III spectrin plays an important role in cortical brain development and cognition, in addition to its function in the cerebellum; and we conclude that cognitive impairment is an integral part of this novel recessive ataxic syndrome, Spectrin-associated Autosomal Recessive Cerebellar Ataxia type 1 (SPARCA1). In addition, the identification of SPARCA1 and normal heterozygous carriers of the stop codon in SPTBN2 provides insights into the mechanism of molecular dominance in SCA5 and demonstrates that the cell-specific repertoire of spectrin subunits underlies a novel group of disorders, the neuronal spectrinopathies, which includes SCA5, SPARCA1, and a form of West syndrome.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2016

Combination of Whole Genome Sequencing, Linkage, and Functional Studies Implicates a Missense Mutation in Titin as a Cause of Autosomal Dominant Cardiomyopathy With Features of Left Ventricular Noncompaction

Robert Hastings; Carin de Villiers; Charlotte Hooper; Liz Ormondroyd; Alistair T. Pagnamenta; Stefano Lise; Silvia Salatino; Samantha J. L. Knight; Jenny C. Taylor; K Thomson; Linda Arnold; Spyros D. Chatziefthimiou; Petr V. Konarev; Matthias Wilmanns; Elisabeth Ehler; Andrea Ghisleni; Mathias Gautel; Edward Blair; Hugh Watkins; Katja Gehmlich

Periventricular nodular heterotopia is caused by defective neuronal migration that results in heterotopic neuronal nodules lining the lateral ventricles. Mutations in filamin A (FLNA) or ADP-ribosylation factor guanine nucleotide-exchange factor 2 (ARFGEF2) cause periventricular nodular heterotopia, but most patients with this malformation do not have a known aetiology. Using comparative genomic hybridization, we identified 12 patients with developmental brain abnormalities, variably combining periventricular nodular heterotopia, corpus callosum dysgenesis, colpocephaly, cerebellar hypoplasia and polymicrogyria, harbouring a common 1.2 Mb minimal critical deletion in 6q27. These anatomic features were mainly associated with epilepsy, ataxia and cognitive impairment. Using whole exome sequencing in 14 patients with isolated periventricular nodular heterotopia but no copy number variants, we identified one patient with periventricular nodular heterotopia, developmental delay and epilepsy and a de novo missense mutation in the chromosome 6 open reading frame 70 (C6orf70) gene, mapping in the minimal critical deleted region. Using immunohistochemistry and western blots, we demonstrated that in human cell lines, C6orf70 shows primarily a cytoplasmic vesicular puncta-like distribution and that the mutation affects its stability and subcellular distribution. We also performed in utero silencing of C6orf70 and of Phf10 and Dll1, the two additional genes mapping in the 6q27 minimal critical deleted region that are expressed in human and rodent brain. Silencing of C6orf70 in the developing rat neocortex produced periventricular nodular heterotopia that was rescued by concomitant expression of wild-type human C6orf70 protein. Silencing of the contiguous Phf10 or Dll1 genes only produced slightly delayed migration but not periventricular nodular heterotopia. The complex brain phenotype observed in the 6q terminal deletion syndrome likely results from the combined haploinsufficiency of contiguous genes mapping to a small 1.2 Mb region. Our data suggest that, of the genes within this minimal critical region, C6orf70 plays a major role in the control of neuronal migration and its haploinsufficiency or mutation causes periventricular nodular heterotopia.


Genetics in Medicine | 2012

Next-generation sequencing in health-care delivery: lessons from the functional analysis of rhodopsin

Wayne I. L. Davies; Susan M. Downes; Josephine K. Fu; Morag E Shanks; Richard R. Copley; Stefano Lise; Simon C. Ramsden; Graeme C.M. Black; Kate Gibson; Russell G. Foster; Mark W. Hankins; Andrea H. Németh

Background—High throughput next-generation sequencing techniques have made whole genome sequencing accessible in clinical practice; however, the abundance of variation in the human genomes makes the identification of a disease-causing mutation on a background of benign rare variants challenging. Methods and Results—Here we combine whole genome sequencing with linkage analysis in a 3-generation family affected by cardiomyopathy with features of autosomal dominant left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy. A missense mutation in the giant protein titin is the only plausible disease-causing variant that segregates with disease among the 7 surviving affected individuals, with interrogation of the entire genome excluding other potential causes. This A178D missense mutation, affecting a conserved residue in the second immunoglobulin-like domain of titin, was introduced in a bacterially expressed recombinant protein fragment and biophysically characterized in comparison to its wild-type counterpart. Multiple experiments, including size exclusion chromatography, small-angle x ray scattering, and circular dichroism spectroscopy suggest partial unfolding and domain destabilization in the presence of the mutation. Moreover, binding experiments in mammalian cells show that the mutation markedly impairs binding to the titin ligand telethonin. Conclusions—Here we present genetic and functional evidence implicating the novel A178D missense mutation in titin as the cause of a highly penetrant familial cardiomyopathy with features of left ventricular noncompaction. This expands the spectrum of titin’s roles in cardiomyopathies. It furthermore highlights that rare titin missense variants, currently often ignored or left uninterpreted, should be considered to be relevant for cardiomyopathies and can be identified by the approach presented here.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Biallelic Mutations in the Autophagy Regulator DRAM2 Cause Retinal Dystrophy with Early Macular Involvement

Mohammed El-Asrag; Panagiotis I. Sergouniotis; Martin McKibbin; Vincent Plagnol; Eamonn Sheridan; Naushin Waseem; Zakia Abdelhamed; Declan J. McKeefry; Kristof Van Schil; James A. Poulter; Graeme C.M. Black; Georgina Hall; Stuart Ingram; Rachel L. Gillespie; Simon C. Ramsden; Forbes D.C. Manson; Alison J. Hardcastle; Michel Michaelides; Michael Cheetham; Gavin Arno; Niclas Thomas; Shomi S. Bhattacharya; Tony Moore; Andrea H. Németh; Susan M. Downes; Stefano Lise; Emma Lord; Colin A. Johnson; Ian M. Carr; Bart P. Leroy

Purpose:The interpretation of genetic information has always been challenging, but next-generation sequencing produces data on such a vast scale that many more variants of uncertain pathogenicity will be found. We exemplify this issue with reference to human rhodopsin, in which pathogenic mutations can lead to autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa.Methods:Rhodopsin variants, with unknown pathogenicity, were found in patients by next-generation and Sanger sequencing and a multidisciplinary approach was used to determine their functional significance.Results:Four variants in rhodopsin were identified: F45L, P53R, R69H, and M39R, with the latter two substitutions being novel. We investigated the cellular transport and photopigment function of all four human substitutions and found that the F45L and R69H variants behave like wild-type and are highly unlikely to be pathogenic. By contrast, P53R (a de novo change) and M39R were retained in the endoplasmic reticulum with significantly reduced functionality and are clearly pathogenic.Conclusion:Potential pathogenicity of variants requires careful assessment using clinical, genetic, and functional data. We suggest that a multidisciplinary pathway of assessment, using several functional assays, will be required if next-generation sequencing is to be used effectively, reliably, and safely in the clinical environment.Genet Med 2012:14(11):891–899

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Jenny C. Taylor

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Alistair T. Pagnamenta

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Samantha J. L. Knight

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Elham Sadighi Akha

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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Jiannis Ragoussis

Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics

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