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Dive into the research topics where Susanna Lualdi is active.

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Featured researches published by Susanna Lualdi.


Human Mutation | 2010

Identification and characterization of 15 novel GALC gene mutations causing Krabbe disease.

Barbara Tappino; Roberta Biancheri; Matthew Mort; Stefano Regis; Fabio Corsolini; Andrea Rossi; Marina Stroppiano; Susanna Lualdi; Agata Fiumara; Bruno Bembi; Maja Di Rocco; David Neil Cooper; Mirella Filocamo

The characterization of the underlying GALC gene lesions was performed in 30 unrelated patients affected by Krabbe disease, an autosomal recessive leukodystrophy caused by the deficiency of lysosomal enzyme galactocerebrosidase. The GALC mutational spectrum comprised 33 distinct mutant (including 15 previously unreported) alleles. With the exception of 4 novel missense mutations that replaced evolutionarily highly conserved residues (p.P318R, p.G323R, p.I384T, p.Y490N), most of the newly described lesions altered mRNA processing. These included 7 frameshift mutations (c.61delG, c.408delA, c.521delA, c.1171_1175delCATTCinsA, c.1405_1407delCTCinsT, c.302_308dupAAATAGG, c.1819_1826dupGTTACAGG), 3 nonsense mutations (p.R69X, p.K88X, p.R127X) one of which (p.K88X) mediated the skipping of exon 2, and a splicing mutation (c.1489+1G>A) which induced the partial skipping of exon 13. In addition, 6 previously unreported GALC polymorphisms were identified. The functional significance of the novel GALC missense mutations and polymorphisms was investigated using the MutPred analysis tool. This study, reporting one of the largest genotype‐phenotype analyses of the GALC gene so far performed in a European Krabbe disease cohort, revealed that the Italian GALC mutational profile differs significantly from other populations of European origin. This is due in part to a GALC missense substitution (p.G553R) that occurs at high frequency on a common founder haplotype background in patients originating from the Naples region.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2011

Molecular Genetic Analysis of the PLP1 Gene in 38 Families with PLP1-related disorders: Identification and Functional Characterization of 11 Novel PLP1 Mutations

Serena Grossi; Stefano Regis; Roberta Biancheri; Matthew Mort; Susanna Lualdi; Enrico Bertini; Graziella Uziel; Odile Boespflug-Tanguy; Alessandro Simonati; Fabio Corsolini; Ercan Demir; Valentina Marchiani; Antonio Percesepe; Franco Stanzial; Andrea Rossi; Catherine Vaurs-Barrière; David Neil Cooper; Mirella Filocamo

BackgroundThe breadth of the clinical spectrum underlying Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease and spastic paraplegia type 2 is due to the extensive allelic heterogeneity in the X-linked PLP1 gene encoding myelin proteolipid protein (PLP). PLP1 mutations range from gene duplications of variable size found in 60-70% of patients to intragenic lesions present in 15-20% of patients.MethodsForty-eight male patients from 38 unrelated families with a PLP1-related disorder were studied. All DNA samples were screened for PLP1 gene duplications using real-time PCR. PLP1 gene sequencing analysis was performed on patients negative for the duplication. The mutational status of all 14 potential carrier mothers of the familial PLP1 gene mutation was determined as well as 15/24 potential carrier mothers of the PLP1 duplication.Results and ConclusionsPLP1 gene duplications were identified in 24 of the unrelated patients whereas a variety of intragenic PLP1 mutations were found in the remaining 14 patients. Of the 14 different intragenic lesions, 11 were novel; these included one nonsense and 7 missense mutations, a 657-bp deletion, a microdeletion and a microduplication. The functional significance of the novel PLP1 missense mutations, all occurring at evolutionarily conserved residues, was analysed by the MutPred tool whereas their potential effect on splicing was ascertained using the Skippy algorithm and a neural network. Although MutPred predicted that all 7 novel missense mutations would be likely to be deleterious, in silico analysis indicated that four of them (p.Leu146Val, p.Leu159Pro, p.Thr230Ile, p.Ala247Asp) might cause exon skipping by altering exonic splicing elements. These predictions were then investigated in vitro for both p.Leu146Val and p.Thr230Ile by means of RNA or minigene studies and were subsequently confirmed in the case of p.Leu146Val. Peripheral neuropathy was noted in four patients harbouring intragenic mutations that altered RNA processing, but was absent from all PLP1-duplication patients. Unprecedentedly, family studies revealed the de novo occurrence of the PLP1 duplication at a frequency of 20%.


Neurogenetics | 2005

Diagnosis of Pelizaeus–Merzbacher disease: detection of proteolipid protein gene copy number by real-time PCR

Stefano Regis; Serena Grossi; Susanna Lualdi; Roberta Biancheri; Mirella Filocamo

Duplication of the proteolipid protein gene (PLP1) is the most frequent cause of Pelizaeus–Merzbacher disease (PMD), a severe X-linked myelination disorder. We developed an assay for the detection of the PLP1 gene dosage by real-time quantitative PCR using the ABI Prism 7700 Sequence Detection System and the TaqMan chemistry. Copy number of the PLP1 gene was determined by the standard curve method using GAPDH as the reference gene. The assay was tested both on 50 normal controls and on 20 subjects whose PLP1 gene copy number was previously determined by quantitative fluorescent multiplex PCR. The procedure confirmed the expected results both on the male and female normal controls as well as on the 20 subjects previously tested. Ratios corresponding to the presence of one, two or three PLP1 gene copies, distributed in three non-overlapping ranges, were obtained by real-time PCR analysis. Subsequently, 29 DNA samples of putative PMD patients and possible female carriers, with unknown PLP1 gene dosage, were analysed. Five affected males carrying the PLP1 gene duplication and four female heterozygotes carrying three PLP1 gene copies were identified among them. The method is suitable for the identification of affected male patients and female carriers. Specific ranges are widely spaced, ensuring a correct assignment of the PLP1 gene copy number.


Human Mutation | 2016

SMPD1 Mutation Update: Database and Comprehensive Analysis of Published and Novel Variants

Stefania Zampieri; Mirella Filocamo; Annalisa Pianta; Susanna Lualdi; Laura Gort; Maria Jose Coll; Richard O. Sinnott; Tarekegn Geberhiwot; Bruno Bembi; Andrea Dardis

Niemann–Pick Types A and B (NPA/B) diseases are autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorders caused by the deficient activity of acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) because of the mutations in the SMPD1 gene. Here, we provide a comprehensive updated review of already reported and newly identified SMPD1 variants. Among them, 185 have been found in NPA/B patients. Disease‐causing variants are equally distributed along the SMPD1 gene; most of them are missense (65.4%) or frameshift (19%) mutations. The most frequently reported mutation worldwide is the p.R610del, clearly associated with an attenuated NP disease type B phenotype. The available information about the impact of 52 SMPD1 variants on ASM mRNA and/or enzymatic activity has been collected and whenever possible, phenotype/genotype correlations were established. In addition, we created a locus‐specific database easily accessible at http://www.inpdr.org/genes that catalogs the 417 SMPD1 variants reported to date and provides data on their in silico predicted effects on ASM protein function or mRNA splicing. The information reviewed in this article, providing new insights into the genotype/phenotype correlation, is extremely valuable to facilitate diagnosis and genetic counseling of families affected by NPA/B.


Clinical Genetics | 2008

Genotype–phenotype correlation in five Pelizaeus–Merzbacher disease patients with PLP1 gene duplications

Stefano Regis; Roberta Biancheri; Enrico Bertini; Alberto Burlina; Susanna Lualdi; M. G. Bianco; R. Devescovi; Andrea Rossi; Graziella Uziel; Mirella Filocamo

Pelizaeus–Merzbacher disease (PMD) is an X‐linked myelination disorder most frequently caused by duplication of a genomic segment of variable length containing the PLP1 gene. We studied five PMD male patients affected by the classic PMD form carrying a PLP1 gene duplication. On the basis of clinical and neuroradiological features, two of the five patients appeared to be the most severely affected. In order to establish a possible genotype–phenotype correlation, the extent of the duplication was determined in each patient and in the respective mother by quantifying the copy number of genomic markers surrounding the PLP1 gene by a real‐time PCR‐based approach. Duplications, ranging in size from 167–195 to 580–700 kb, were in the same genomic interval of the majority of the reported duplications. The extent of the duplicated genomic segments does not correlate with the clinical severity. Interestingly enough, each duplication had one of the two breakpoints in or near to low copy repeats (LCRs), supporting recent evidence concerning a possible role of LCRs in the generation of the duplications in PMD.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2006

Multiple cryptic splice sites can be activated by IDS point mutations generating misspliced transcripts

Susanna Lualdi; Maria Gabriela Pittis; Stefano Regis; Rossella Parini; Anna Elsa Maria Allegri; Francesca Furlan; Bruno Bembi; Mirella Filocamo

Mutations in the gene encoding the enzyme iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) were reported as the cause of the X-linked recessive lysosomal disease, mucopolysaccharidosis II (MPS II). Amongst the different mutations, it emerges that nearly 10% are nucleotide substitutions causing splicing mutations. We now report the molecular characterisation of three MPS II patients with multiple aberrant transcripts due to three different point mutations. The c.418+1G>C that occurred in the invariant splice-site motif, produced only aberrantly spliced transcripts. Whilst the mutations affecting variant motifs (c.419G>T) or coding regions (c.245C>T) led to aberrantly spliced transcripts in addition to correctly spliced transcripts with the respective predicted missense mutation, p.G140V or p.A82V. A combination of experimental tests and computational approaches were used to understand the molecular basis underlying the altered transcription patterns. In addition, by using real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, the reduction of mRNA amount in two patients observed was likely due to nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway. Overall, our results further emphasised the importance of cloning and sequencing independent transcripts to reveal less abundant, aberrant products, which often could not be detected by direct sequencing. Moreover, the different splicing patterns observed in the three patients as a consequence of point mutations show how sensitive the balance is between constitutive and cryptic splice sites in the IDS gene. The generation of such diverse transcripts, together with their level of expression, could contribute to the profound phenotypic variability reported in MPS II.


Human Mutation | 2010

Enigmatic In Vivo iduronate-2-sulfatase (IDS) mutant transcript correction to wild-type in Hunter syndrome

Susanna Lualdi; Barbara Tappino; Marco Di Duca; Andrea Dardis; Christopher J. Anderson; Roberto Biassoni; Peter Thompson; Fabio Corsolini; Maja Di Rocco; Bruno Bembi; Stefano Regis; David Neil Cooper; Mirella Filocamo

Sequence analysis of the X‐linked iduronate‐2‐sulfatase (IDS) gene in two Hunter syndrome patients revealed a lack of concordance between IDS genomic DNA and cDNA. These individuals were found to be hemizygous respectively for a nonsense mutation [c.22C>T;p.R8X] and a frameshift micro‐insertion [c.10insT;p.P4Sfs] in their genomic DNA. However, both wild‐type and mutant IDS sequences were evident upon cDNA analysis. Similar discrepant results were also obtained in a third unrelated patient carrying the same p.R8X mutation. Since both p.R8X mutations were inherited from carrier mothers, somatic mosaicism could be excluded. Although the presence of wild‐type IDSmRNA‐transcripts was confirmed in all three patients by restriction enzyme digestion, clone sequencing, pyrosequencing and single nucleotide primer extension (SNuPE), no wild‐type IDS genomic sequence was detectable. The relative abundance of wild‐type and mutation‐bearing IDS‐transcripts in different tissues was quantified by SNuPE. Although IDS transcript levels, as measured by real‐time PCR, were reduced (51‐71% normal) in these patients, some wild‐type IDS protein was detectable by western blotting. Various possible explanations for these unprecedented findings (e.g. accidental contamination, artefactual in vitro nucleotide misincorporation, malsegregation of an extra maternal X‐chromosome) were explored and experimentally excluded. PCR‐based discriminant assay and segregation analysis of a linked IDS polymorphism (rs1141608) also served to exclude the presence of IDS cDNA derived from the maternal wild‐type chromosome. Although it remains to be formally demonstrated by direct experimentation, the intriguing possibility arises that we have observed the in vivo correction of heritable gene lesions at the RNA level operating via a correction mechanism akin to RNA‐editing.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

ASAH1 variant causing a mild SMA phenotype with no myoclonic epilepsy: a clinical, biochemical and molecular study.

Massimiliano Filosto; Massimo Aureli; Barbara Castellotti; Fabrizio Rinaldi; Domitilla Schiumarini; Manuela Valsecchi; Susanna Lualdi; Raffaella Mazzotti; Viviana Pensato; Silvia Rota; Cinzia Gellera; Mirella Filocamo; Alessandro Padovani

ASAH1 gene encodes for acid ceramidase that is involved in the degradation of ceramide into sphingosine and free fatty acids within lysosomes. ASAH1 variants cause both the severe and early-onset Farber disease and rare cases of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) with progressive myoclonic epilepsy (SMA-PME), phenotypically characterized by childhood onset of proximal muscle weakness and atrophy due to spinal motor neuron degeneration followed by occurrence of severe and intractable myoclonic seizures and death in the teenage years. We studied two subjects, a 30-year-old pregnant woman and her 17-year-old sister, affected with a very slowly progressive non-5q SMA since childhood. No history of seizures or myoclonus has been reported and EEG was unremarkable. The molecular study of ASAH1 gene showed the presence of the homozygote nucleotide variation c.124A>G (r.124a>g) that causes the amino acid substitution p.Thr42Ala. Biochemical evaluation of cultured fibroblasts showed both reduction in ceramidase activity and accumulation of ceramide compared with the normal control. This study describes for the first time the association between ASAH1 variants and an adult SMA phenotype with no myoclonic epilepsy nor death in early age, thus expanding the phenotypic spectrum of ASAH1-related SMA. ASAH1 molecular analysis should be considered in the diagnostic testing of non-5q adult SMA patients.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2018

FGF signaling deregulation is associated with early developmental skeletal defects in animal models for mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPSII)

Stefania Bellesso; Marika Salvalaio; Susanna Lualdi; Elisa Tognon; Roberto Costa; Paola Braghetta; Chiara Giraudo; Roberto Stramare; Laura Rigon; Mirella Filocamo; Rosella Tomanin; Enrico Moro

Skeletal abnormalities represent a major clinical burden in patients affected by the lysosomal storage disorder mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPSII, OMIM #309900). While extensive research has emphasized the detrimental role of stored glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) in the bone marrow (BM), a limited understanding of primary cellular mechanisms underlying bone defects in MPSII has hampered the development of bone-targeted therapeutic strategies beyond enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). We here investigated the involvement of key signaling pathways related to the loss of iduronate-2-sulfatase activity in two different MPSII animal models, D. rerio and M. musculus. We found that FGF pathway activity is impaired during early stages of bone development in IDS knockout mice and in a newly generated Ids mutant fish. In both models the FGF signaling deregulation anticipated a slow but progressive defect in bone differentiation, regardless of any extensive GAGs storage. We also show that MPSII patient fibroblasts harboring different mutations spanning the IDS gene exhibit perturbed FGF signaling-related markers expression. Our work opens a new venue to discover possible druggable novel key targets in MPSII.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II in a female patient with a reciprocal X;9 translocation and skewed X chromosome inactivation

Fortunato Lonardo; Paola Di Natale; Susanna Lualdi; Fabio Acquaviva; Cristina Cuoco; Francesca Scarano; Marianna Maioli; Luigi Michele Pavone; Grazia Di Gregorio; Mirella Filocamo; Gioacchino Scarano

Mucopolysaccharidosis type II (MPS II or Hunter syndrome) is a rare X‐linked disorder caused by deficient activity of the lysosomal enzyme, iduronate‐2‐sulfatase (IDS). Phenotypic expression of MPS II in female patients rarely occurs and may be the result of (i) structural abnormalities of the X chromosome, (ii) homozygosity for disease‐causing mutations, or (iii) skewed X‐chromosome inactivation, in which the normal IDS allele is preferentially inactivated and the abnormal IDS allele is active. We report here on a female patient with clinical MPS II manifestations, deficiency of IDS enzyme activity and a de novo balanced reciprocal X;9 translocation. As our patient has a skewed XCI pattern, but neither genomic IDS mutations nor abnormal IDS transcripts were detected, we speculate about the possible role of the chromosomal rearrangement in reducing the IDS translation efficiency.

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Fabio Corsolini

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Stefano Regis

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Maja Di Rocco

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Andrea Dardis

University of California

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Barbara Tappino

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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