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Featured researches published by Steven A. Hardy.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2014

Titin founder mutation is a common cause of myofibrillar myopathy with early respiratory failure

Gerald Pfeffer; Rita Barresi; Ian Wilson; Steven A. Hardy; Helen Griffin; J. Hudson; Hannah R Elliott; Aravind V Ramesh; Aleksandar Radunovic; John Winer; Sujit Vaidya; Ashok Raman; Mark Busby; Maria Elena Farrugia; Alec Ming; Chris Everett; Hedley C. A. Emsley; Rita Horvath; Volker Straub; Kate Bushby; Hanns Lochmüller; Patrick F. Chinnery; A. Sarkozy

Objective Titin gene (TTN) mutations have been described in eight families with hereditary myopathy with early respiratory failure (HMERF). Some of the original patients had features resembling myofibrillar myopathy (MFM), arguing that TTN mutations could be a much more common cause of inherited muscle disease, especially in presence of early respiratory involvement. Methods We studied 127 undiagnosed patients with clinical presentation compatible with MFM. Sanger sequencing for the two previously described TTN mutations in HMERF (p.C30071R in the 119th fibronectin-3 (FN3) domain, and p.R32450W in the kinase domain) was performed in all patients. Patients with mutations had detailed review of their clinical records, muscle MRI findings and muscle pathology. Results We identified five new families with the p.C30071R mutation who were clinically similar to previously reported cases, and muscle pathology demonstrated diagnostic features of MFM. Two further families had novel variants in the 119th FN3 domain (p.P30091L and p.N30145K). No patients were identified with mutations at position p.32450. Conclusions Mutations in TTN are a cause of MFM, and titinopathy is more common than previously thought. The finding of the p.C30071R mutation in 3.9% of our study population is likely due to a British founder effect. The occurrence of novel FN3 domain variants, although still of uncertain pathogenicity, suggests that other mutations in this domain may cause MFM, and that the disease is likely to be globally distributed. We suggest that HMERF due to mutations in the TTN gene be nosologically classified as MFM-titinopathy.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Clinical, biochemical, and genetic spectrum of seven patients with NFU1 deficiency

Uwe Ahting; Johannes A. Mayr; Arnaud Vanlander; Steven A. Hardy; Saikat Santra; Christine Makowski; Charlotte L. Alston; Franz A. Zimmermann; Lucia Abela; Barbara Plecko; Marianne Rohrbach; Stephanie Spranger; Sara Seneca; Boris Rolinski; Angela Hagendorff; Maja Hempel; Wolfgang Sperl; Thomas Meitinger; Joél Smet; Robert W. Taylor; Rudy Van Coster; Peter Freisinger; Holger Prokisch; Tobias B. Haack

Disorders of the mitochondrial energy metabolism are clinically and genetically heterogeneous. An increasingly recognized subgroup is caused by defective mitochondrial iron–sulfur (Fe–S) cluster biosynthesis, with defects in 13 genes being linked to human disease to date. Mutations in three of them, NFU1, BOLA3, and IBA57, affect the assembly of mitochondrial [4Fe–4S] proteins leading to an impairment of diverse mitochondrial metabolic pathways and ATP production. Patients with defects in these three genes present with lactic acidosis, hyperglycinemia, and reduced activities of respiratory chain complexes I and II, the four lipoic acid-dependent 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases and the glycine cleavage system (GCS). To date, five different NFU1 pathogenic variants have been reported in 15 patients from 12 families. We report on seven new patients from five families carrying compound heterozygous or homozygous pathogenic NFU1 mutations identified by candidate gene screening and exome sequencing. Six out of eight different disease alleles were novel and functional studies were performed to support the pathogenicity of five of them. Characteristic clinical features included fatal infantile encephalopathy and pulmonary hypertension leading to death within the first 6 months of life in six out of seven patients. Laboratory investigations revealed combined defects of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (five out of five) and respiratory chain complexes I and II+III (four out of five) in skeletal muscle and/or cultured skin fibroblasts as well as increased lactate (five out of six) and glycine concentration (seven out of seven). Our study contributes to a better definition of the phenotypic spectrum associated with NFU1 mutations and to the diagnostic workup of future patients.


Brain | 2015

LRPPRC mutations cause early-onset multisystem mitochondrial disease outside of the French-Canadian population.

Monika Oláhová; Steven A. Hardy; Julie Hall; John W. Yarham; Tobias B. Haack; William C. Wilson; Charlotte L. Alston; Langping He; Erik Aznauryan; Ruth M. Brown; Garry K. Brown; A. A. M. Morris; Helen Mundy; Alex Broomfield; Ines A. Barbosa; Michael A. Simpson; Charu Deshpande; Dorothea Moeslinger; Johannes Koch; Georg M. Stettner; Penelope E. Bonnen; Holger Prokisch; Robert N. Lightowlers; Robert McFarland; Zofia M.A. Chrzanowska-Lightowlers; Robert W. Taylor

The French-Canadian variant of COX-deficient Leigh syndrome (LSFC) is unique to Québec and caused by a founder mutation in the LRPPRC gene. Using whole exome sequencing, Oláhová et al. identify mutations in this gene associated with multisystem mitochondrial disease and early-onset neurodevelopmental problems in ten patients from different ethnic backgrounds.


European Heart Journal | 2016

Sudden adult death syndrome in m.3243A>G- related mitochondrial disease: an unrecognized clinical entity in young, asymptomatic adults

Yi Shiau Ng; John P. Grady; Nichola Z. Lax; John P. Bourke; Charlotte L. Alston; Steven A. Hardy; Gavin Falkous; Andrew G. Schaefer; Aleksandar Radunovic; Saidi A. Mohiddin; Matilda Ralph; Ali Alhakim; Robert W. Taylor; Robert McFarland; Douglass M. Turnbull; Grainne S. Gorman

Translational perspective We report striking respiratory chain deficiency and high levels of the m.3243A>G mitochondrial DNA mutation in cardiac muscle from two young asymptomatic adults found dead-in-bed. Our findings suggest this is an unrecognized clinical entity in individuals carrying the m.3243A>G mutation. We have developed new cardiac guidelines for the management of patients with the m.3243A>G mutation. In addition, because of the frequency of this mutation in the population, it should be screened for in all cases of unexplained SADS.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Mutations in APOPT1, encoding a mitochondrial protein, cause cavitating leukoencephalopathy with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency

Laura Melchionda; Tobias B. Haack; Steven A. Hardy; Truus E. M. Abbink; Erika Fernandez-Vizarra; Eleonora Lamantea; Silvia Marchet; Lucia Morandi; Maurizio Moggio; Rosalba Carrozzo; Alessandra Torraco; Daria Diodato; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Pinar Tekturk; Zuhal Yapici; Fathiya Al-Murshedi; René Stevens; Richard J. Rodenburg; Costanza Lamperti; Anna Ardissone; Isabella Moroni; Graziella Uziel; Holger Prokisch; Robert W. Taylor; Enrico Bertini; Marjo S. van der Knaap; Daniele Ghezzi; Massimo Zeviani

Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency is a frequent biochemical abnormality in mitochondrial disorders, but a large fraction of cases remains genetically undetermined. Whole-exome sequencing led to the identification of APOPT1 mutations in two Italian sisters and in a third Turkish individual presenting severe COX deficiency. All three subjects presented a distinctive brain MRI pattern characterized by cavitating leukodystrophy, predominantly in the posterior region of the cerebral hemispheres. We then found APOPT1 mutations in three additional unrelated children, selected on the basis of these particular MRI features. All identified mutations predicted the synthesis of severely damaged protein variants. The clinical features of the six subjects varied widely from acute neurometabolic decompensation in late infancy to subtle neurological signs, which appeared in adolescence; all presented a chronic, long-surviving clinical course. We showed that APOPT1 is targeted to and localized within mitochondria by an N-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequence that is eventually cleaved off from the mature protein. We then showed that APOPT1 is virtually absent in fibroblasts cultured in standard conditions, but its levels increase by inhibiting the proteasome or after oxidative challenge. Mutant fibroblasts showed reduced amount of COX holocomplex and higher levels of reactive oxygen species, which both shifted toward control values by expressing a recombinant, wild-type APOPT1 cDNA. The shRNA-mediated knockdown of APOPT1 in myoblasts and fibroblasts caused dramatic decrease in cell viability. APOPT1 mutations are responsible for infantile or childhood-onset mitochondrial disease, hallmarked by the combination of profound COX deficiency with a distinctive neuroimaging presentation.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2015

Long-term survival in a child with severe encephalopathy, multiple respiratory chain deficiency and GFM1 mutations.

Sara Brito; Kyle Thompson; Jaume Campistol; Jaime Colomer; Steven A. Hardy; Langping He; Ana Fernández-Marmiesse; Lourdes Palacios; C. Jou; C. Jimenez-Mallebrera; Judith Armstrong; Rafael Artuch; Christin Tischner; Tina Wenz; Robert McFarland; Robert W. Taylor

Background: Mitochondrial diseases due to deficiencies in the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation system (OXPHOS) can be associated with nuclear genes involved in mitochondrial translation, causing heterogeneous early onset and often fatal phenotypes. Case report: The authors describe the clinical features and diagnostic workup of an infant who presented with an early onset severe encephalopathy, spastic-dystonic tetraparesis, failure to thrive, seizures and persistent lactic acidemia. Brain imaging revealed thinning of the corpus callosum and diffuse alteration of white matter signal. Genetic investigation confirmed two novel mutations in the GFM1 gene, encoding the mitochondrial translation elongation factor G1 (mtEFG1), resulting in combined deficiencies of OXPHOS. Discussion: The patient shares multiple clinical, laboratory and radiological similarities with the 11 reported patients with mutations involving this gene, but presents with a stable clinical course without metabolic decompensations, rather than a rapidly progressive fatal course. Defects in GFM1 gene confer high susceptibility to neurologic or hepatic dysfunction and this is, to the best of our knowledge, the first described patient who has survived beyond early childhood. Reporting of such cases is essential so as to delineate the key clinical and neuroradiological features of this disease and provide a more comprehensive view of its prognosis.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2017

Pathogenic variants in HTRA2 cause an early-onset mitochondrial syndrome associated with 3-methylglutaconic aciduria

Monika Oláhová; Kyle Thompson; Steven A. Hardy; Ines A. Barbosa; Arnaud Besse; Maria Eleni Anagnostou; Kathryn White; Tracey Davey; Michael A. Simpson; Michael Champion; Greg Enns; Susan Schelley; Robert N. Lightowlers; Zofia M.A. Chrzanowska-Lightowlers; Robert McFarland; Charu Deshpande; Penelope E. Bonnen; Robert W. Taylor

Mitochondrial diseases collectively represent one of the most heterogeneous group of metabolic disorders. Symptoms can manifest at any age, presenting with isolated or multiple-organ involvement. Advances in next-generation sequencing strategies have greatly enhanced the diagnosis of patients with mitochondrial disease, particularly where a mitochondrial aetiology is strongly suspected yet OXPHOS activities in biopsied tissue samples appear normal. We used whole exome sequencing (WES) to identify the molecular basis of an early-onset mitochondrial syndrome—pathogenic biallelic variants in the HTRA2 gene, encoding a mitochondria-localised serine protease—in five subjects from two unrelated families characterised by seizures, neutropenia, hypotonia and cardio-respiratory problems. A unifying feature in all affected children was 3-methylglutaconic aciduria (3-MGA-uria), a common biochemical marker observed in some patients with mitochondrial dysfunction. Although functional studies of HTRA2 subjects’ fibroblasts and skeletal muscle homogenates showed severely decreased levels of mutant HTRA2 protein, the structural subunits and complexes of the mitochondrial respiratory chain appeared normal. We did detect a profound defect in OPA1 processing in HTRA2-deficient fibroblasts, suggesting a role for HTRA2 in the regulation of mitochondrial dynamics and OPA1 proteolysis. In addition, investigated subject fibroblasts were more susceptible to apoptotic insults. Our data support recent studies that described important functions for HTRA2 in programmed cell death and confirm that patients with genetically-unresolved 3-MGA-uria should be screened by WES with pathogenic variants in the HTRA2 gene prioritised for further analysis.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2016

A recurrent mitochondrial p.Trp22Arg NDUFB3 variant causes a distinctive facial appearance, short stature and a mild biochemical and clinical phenotype

Charlotte L. Alston; Caoimhe Howard; Monika Oláhová; Steven A. Hardy; Langping He; Philip Murray; Siobhan O'Sullivan; Gary Doherty; Julian Shield; Iain Hargreaves; A. A. Monavari; Ina Knerr; Peter McCarthy; A. A. M. Morris; David R. Thorburn; Holger Prokisch; Peter Clayton; Robert McFarland; Joanne Hughes; Ellen Crushell; Robert W. Taylor

Background Isolated Complex I deficiency is the most common paediatric mitochondrial disease presentation, associated with poor prognosis and high mortality. Complex I comprises 44 structural subunits with at least 10 ancillary proteins; mutations in 29 of these have so far been associated with mitochondrial disease but there are limited genotype-phenotype correlations to guide clinicians to the correct genetic diagnosis. Methods Patients were analysed by whole-exome sequencing, targeted capture or candidate gene sequencing. Clinical phenotyping of affected individuals was performed. Results We identified a cohort of 10 patients from 8 families (7 families are of unrelated Irish ancestry) all of whom have short stature (<9th centile) and similar facial features including a prominent forehead, smooth philtrum and deep-set eyes associated with a recurrent homozygous c.64T>C, p.Trp22Arg NDUFB3 variant. Two sibs presented with primary short stature without obvious metabolic dysfunction. Analysis of skeletal muscle from three patients confirmed a defect in Complex I assembly. Conclusions Our report highlights that the long-term prognosis related to the p.Trp22Arg NDUFB3 mutation can be good, even for some patients presenting in acute metabolic crisis with evidence of an isolated Complex I deficiency in muscle. Recognition of the distinctive facial features—particularly when associated with markers of mitochondrial dysfunction and/or Irish ancestry—should suggest screening for the p.Trp22Arg NDUFB3 mutation to establish a genetic diagnosis, circumventing the requirement of muscle biopsy to direct genetic investigations.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Pathogenic mitochondrial mt-tRNA Ala variants are uniquely associated with isolated myopathy

Diana Lehmann; Kathrin Schubert; Pushpa Raj Joshi; Steven A. Hardy; Helen A. Tuppen; Karen Baty; Emma L. Blakely; Christian Bamberg; Stephan Zierz; Marcus Deschauer; Robert W. Taylor

Pathogenic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) point mutations are associated with a wide range of clinical phenotypes, often involving multiple organ systems. We report two patients with isolated myopathy owing to novel mt-tRNAAla variants. Muscle biopsy revealed extensive histopathological findings including cytochrome c oxidase (COX)-deficient fibres. Pyrosequencing confirmed mtDNA heteroplasmy for both mutations (m.5631G>A and m.5610G>A) whilst single-muscle fibre segregation studies (revealing statistically significant higher mutation loads in COX-deficient fibres than in COX-positive fibres), hierarchical mutation segregation within patient tissues and decreased steady-state mt-tRNAAla levels all provide compelling evidence of pathogenicity. Interestingly, both patients showed very high-mutation levels in all tissues, inferring that the threshold for impairment of oxidative phosphorylation, as evidenced by COX deficiency, appears to be extremely high for these mt-tRNAAla variants. Previously described mt-tRNAAla mutations are also associated with a pure myopathic phenotype and demonstrate very high mtDNA heteroplasmy thresholds, inferring at least some genotype:phenotype correlation for mutations within this particular mt-tRNA gene.


Neurology Genetics | 2016

Pathogenic mtDNA mutations causing mitochondrial myopathy: The need for muscle biopsy

Steven A. Hardy; Emma L. Blakely; Andrew Purvis; Mariana C. Rocha; Syeda T. Ahmed; Gavin Falkous; Joanna Poulton; Michael R. Rose; Olivia O'Mahony; Niamh Bermingham; Charlotte F. Dougan; Yi Shiau Ng; Rita Horvath; Doug M. Turnbull; Grainne S. Gorman; Robert W. Taylor

Pathogenic mitochondrial tRNA (mt-tRNA) gene mutations represent a prominent cause of primary mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)-related disease despite accounting for only 5%–10% of the mitochondrial genome.1,2 Although some common mt-tRNA mutations, such as the m.3243A>G mutation, exist, the majority are rare and have been reported in only a small number of cases.3 The MT-TP gene, encoding mt-tRNAPro, is one of the less polymorphic mt-tRNA genes, and only 5 MT-TP mutations have been reported as a cause of mitochondrial muscle disease to date (table e-1 at Neurology.org/ng, P6–10). We report 5 patients with myopathic phenotypes, each harboring different pathogenic mutations in the MT-TP gene, highlighting the importance of MT-TP mutations as a cause of mitochondrial muscle disease and the requirement to study clinically relevant tissue.

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