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Featured researches published by Taila Hartley.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Utility of whole‐exome sequencing for those near the end of the diagnostic odyssey: time to address gaps in care

Sarah L. Sawyer; Taila Hartley; David A. Dyment; Chandree L. Beaulieu; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Amanda Smith; H.M. Bedford; G. Bernard; Francois P. Bernier; Bernard Brais; Dennis E. Bulman; J. Warman Chardon; David Chitayat; Johnny Deladoëy; Bridget A. Fernandez; P. Frosk; Michael T. Geraghty; B. Gerull; William T. Gibson; R.M. Gow; G.E. Graham; Jane Green; Elise Héon; Gabriella A. Horvath; A.M. Innes; N. Jabado; R.H. Kim; R.K. Koenekoop; A. Khan; O.J. Lehmann

An accurate diagnosis is an integral component of patient care for children with rare genetic disease. Recent advances in sequencing, in particular whole‐exome sequencing (WES), are identifying the genetic basis of disease for 25–40% of patients. The diagnostic rate is probably influenced by when in the diagnostic process WES is used. The Finding Of Rare Disease GEnes (FORGE) Canada project was a nation‐wide effort to identify mutations for childhood‐onset disorders using WES. Most children enrolled in the FORGE project were toward the end of the diagnostic odyssey. The two primary outcomes of FORGE were novel gene discovery and the identification of mutations in genes known to cause disease. In the latter instance, WES identified mutations in known disease genes for 105 of 362 families studied (29%), thereby informing the impact of WES in the setting of the diagnostic odyssey. Our analysis of this dataset showed that these known disease genes were not identified prior to WES enrollment for two key reasons: genetic heterogeneity associated with a clinical diagnosis and atypical presentation of known, clinically recognized diseases. What is becoming increasingly clear is that WES will be paradigm altering for patients and families with rare genetic diseases.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2015

The clinical application of genome-wide sequencing for monogenic diseases in Canada: Position Statement of the Canadian College of Medical Geneticists

Kym M. Boycott; Taila Hartley; Shelin Adam; Francois P. Bernier; Karen Chong; Bridget A. Fernandez; Jan M. Friedman; Michael T. Geraghty; Stacey Hume; Bartha Maria Knoppers; Anne-Marie Laberge; Jacek Majewski; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; M. Stephen Meyn; Jacques L. Michaud; Tanya N. Nelson; Julie Richer; Bekim Sadikovic; David L. Skidmore; Tracy L. Stockley; Sherry Taylor; Clara van Karnebeek; Ma'n H. Zawati; Julie Lauzon; Christine M. Armour

Purpose and scope The aim of this Position Statement is to provide recommendations for Canadian medical geneticists, clinical laboratory geneticists, genetic counsellors and other physicians regarding the use of genome-wide sequencing of germline DNA in the context of clinical genetic diagnosis. This statement has been developed to facilitate the clinical translation and development of best practices for clinical genome-wide sequencing for genetic diagnosis of monogenic diseases in Canada; it does not address the clinical application of this technology in other fields such as molecular investigation of cancer or for population screening of healthy individuals. Methods of statement development Two multidisciplinary groups consisting of medical geneticists, clinical laboratory geneticists, genetic counsellors, ethicists, lawyers and genetic researchers were assembled to review existing literature and guidelines on genome-wide sequencing for clinical genetic diagnosis in the context of monogenic diseases, and to make recommendations relevant to the Canadian context. The statement was circulated for comment to the Canadian College of Medical Geneticists (CCMG) membership-at-large and, following incorporation of feedback, approved by the CCMG Board of Directors. The CCMG is a Canadian organisation responsible for certifying medical geneticists and clinical laboratory geneticists, and for establishing professional and ethical standards for clinical genetics services in Canada. Results and conclusions Recommendations include (1) clinical genome-wide sequencing is an appropriate approach in the diagnostic assessment of a patient for whom there is suspicion of a significant monogenic disease that is associated with a high degree of genetic heterogeneity, or where specific genetic tests have failed to provide a diagnosis; (2) until the benefits of reporting incidental findings are established, we do not endorse the intentional clinical analysis of disease-associated genes other than those linked to the primary indication; and (3) clinicians should provide genetic counselling and obtain informed consent prior to undertaking clinical genome-wide sequencing. Counselling should include discussion of the limitations of testing, likelihood and implications of diagnosis and incidental findings, and the potential need for further analysis to facilitate clinical interpretation, including studies performed in a research setting. These recommendations will be routinely re-evaluated as knowledge of diagnostic and clinical utility of clinical genome-wide sequencing improves. While the document was developed to direct practice in Canada, the applicability of the statement is broader and will be of interest to clinicians and health jurisdictions internationally.


Human Mutation | 2015

PhenomeCentral: A Portal for Phenotypic and Genotypic Matchmaking of Patients with Rare Genetic Diseases

Orion J. Buske; Marta Girdea; Sergiu Dumitriu; Bailey Gallinger; Taila Hartley; Heather Trang; Andriy Misyura; Tal Friedman; Chandree L. Beaulieu; William P. Bone; Amanda E. Links; Nicole L. Washington; Melissa Haendel; Peter N. Robinson; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; David Adams; William A. Gahl; Kym M. Boycott; Michael Brudno

The discovery of disease‐causing mutations typically requires confirmation of the variant or gene in multiple unrelated individuals, and a large number of rare genetic diseases remain unsolved due to difficulty identifying second families. To enable the secure sharing of case records by clinicians and rare disease scientists, we have developed the PhenomeCentral portal (https://phenomecentral.org). Each record includes a phenotypic description and relevant genetic information (exome or candidate genes). PhenomeCentral identifies similar patients in the database based on semantic similarity between clinical features, automatically prioritized genes from whole‐exome data, and candidate genes entered by the users, enabling both hypothesis‐free and hypothesis‐driven matchmaking. Users can then contact other submitters to follow up on promising matches. PhenomeCentral incorporates data for over 1,000 patients with rare genetic diseases, contributed by the FORGE and Care4Rare Canada projects, the US NIH Undiagnosed Diseases Program, the EU Neuromics and ANDDIrare projects, as well as numerous independent clinicians and scientists. Though the majority of these records have associated exome data, most lack a molecular diagnosis. PhenomeCentral has already been used to identify causative mutations for several patients, and its ability to find matching patients and diagnose these diseases will grow with each additional patient that is entered.


Clinical Genetics | 2015

Whole-exome sequencing broadens the phenotypic spectrum of rare pediatric epilepsy: a retrospective study

David A. Dyment; Martine Tétreault; Chandree L. Beaulieu; Taila Hartley; P. Ferreira; Jodi Warman Chardon; J. Marcadier; Sarah L. Sawyer; S.J. Mosca; A.M. Innes; Jillian S. Parboosingh; Dennis E. Bulman; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Jacek Majewski; Mark A. Tarnopolsky; Kym M. Boycott; Care Rare Canada

Whole‐exome sequencing (WES) has transformed our ability to detect mutations causing rare diseases. FORGE (Finding Of Rare disease GEnes) and Care4Rare Canada are nation‐wide projects focused on identifying disease genes using WES and translating this technology to patient care. Rare forms of epilepsy are well‐suited for WES and we retrospectively selected FORGE and Care4Rare families with clinical descriptions that included childhood‐onset epilepsy or seizures not part of a recognizable syndrome or an early‐onset encephalopathy where standard‐of‐care investigations were unrevealing. Nine families met these criteria and a diagnosis was made in seven, and potentially eight, of the families. In the eight families we identified mutations in genes associated with known neurological and epilepsy disorders: ASAH1, FOLR1, GRIN2A (two families), SCN8A, SYNGAP1 and SYNJ1. A novel and rare mutation was identified in KCNQ2 and was likely responsible for the benign seizures segregating in the family though additional evidence would be required to be definitive. In retrospect, the clinical presentation of four of the patients was considered atypical, thereby broadening the phenotypic spectrum of these conditions. Given the extensive clinical and genetic heterogeneity associated with epilepsy, our findings suggest that WES may be considered when a specific gene is not immediately suspected as causal.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

International Cooperation to Enable the Diagnosis of All Rare Genetic Diseases

Kym M. Boycott; Ana Rath; Jessica X. Chong; Taila Hartley; Fowzan S. Alkuraya; Gareth Baynam; Anthony J. Brookes; Michael Brudno; Angel Carracedo; Johan T. den Dunnen; Stephanie O.M. Dyke; Xavier Estivill; Jack Goldblatt; Catherine Gonthier; Stephen C. Groft; Ivo Gut; Ada Hamosh; Philip Hieter; Sophie Höhn; Petra Kaufmann; Bartha Maria Knoppers; Jeffrey P. Krischer; Milan Macek; Gert Matthijs; Annie Olry; Samantha Parker; Justin Paschall; Anthony A. Philippakis; Heidi L. Rehm; Peter N. Robinson

Provision of a molecularly confirmed diagnosis in a timely manner for children and adults with rare genetic diseases shortens their “diagnostic odyssey,” improves disease management, and fosters genetic counseling with respect to recurrence risks while assuring reproductive choices. In a general clinical genetics setting, the current diagnostic rate is approximately 50%, but for those who do not receive a molecular diagnosis after the initial genetics evaluation, that rate is much lower. Diagnostic success for these more challenging affected individuals depends to a large extent on progress in the discovery of genes associated with, and mechanisms underlying, rare diseases. Thus, continued research is required for moving toward a more complete catalog of disease-related genes and variants. The International Rare Diseases Research Consortium (IRDiRC) was established in 2011 to bring together researchers and organizations invested in rare disease research to develop a means of achieving molecular diagnosis for all rare diseases. Here, we review the current and future bottlenecks to gene discovery and suggest strategies for enabling progress in this regard. Each successful discovery will define potential diagnostic, preventive, and therapeutic opportunities for the corresponding rare disease, enabling precision medicine for this patient population.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Mutations in LAMA1 Cause Cerebellar Dysplasia and Cysts with and without Retinal Dystrophy

Kimberly A. Aldinger; Stephen J. Mosca; Martine Tétreault; Jennifer C. Dempsey; Gisele E. Ishak; Taila Hartley; Ian G. Phelps; Ryan E. Lamont; Diana R. O’Day; Donald Basel; Karen W. Gripp; Laura D. Baker; Mark J. Stephan; Francois P. Bernier; Kym M. Boycott; Jacek Majewski; Jillian S. Parboosingh; A. Micheil Innes; Dan Doherty

Cerebellar dysplasia with cysts (CDC) is an imaging finding typically seen in combination with cobblestone cortex and congenital muscular dystrophy in individuals with dystroglycanopathies. More recently, CDC was reported in seven children without neuromuscular involvement (Poretti-Boltshauser syndrome). Using a combination of homozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing, we identified biallelic mutations in LAMA1 as the cause of CDC in seven affected individuals (from five families) independent from those included in the phenotypic description of Poretti-Boltshauser syndrome. Most of these individuals also have high myopia, and some have retinal dystrophy and patchy increased T2-weighted fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (T2/FLAIR) signal in cortical white matter. In one additional family, we identified two siblings who have truncating LAMA1 mutations in combination with retinal dystrophy and mild cerebellar dysplasia without cysts, indicating that cysts are not an obligate feature associated with loss of LAMA1 function. This work expands the phenotypic spectrum associated with the lamininopathy disorders and highlights the tissue-specific roles played by different laminin-encoding genes.


Human Mutation | 2015

The Matchmaker Exchange API: automating patient matching through the exchange of structured phenotypic and genotypic profiles.

Orion J. Buske; François Schiettecatte; Benjamin Hutton; Sergiu Dumitriu; Andriy Misyura; Lijia Huang; Taila Hartley; Marta Girdea; Nara Sobreira; Christopher J. Mungall; Michael Brudno

Despite the increasing prevalence of clinical sequencing, the difficulty of identifying additional affected families is a key obstacle to solving many rare diseases. There may only be a handful of similar patients worldwide, and their data may be stored in diverse clinical and research databases. Computational methods are necessary to enable finding similar patients across the growing number of patient repositories and registries. We present the Matchmaker Exchange Application Programming Interface (MME API), a protocol and data format for exchanging phenotype and genotype profiles to enable matchmaking among patient databases, facilitate the identification of additional cohorts, and increase the rate with which rare diseases can be researched and diagnosed. We designed the API to be straightforward and flexible in order to simplify its adoption on a large number of data types and workflows. We also provide a public test data set, curated from the literature, to facilitate implementation of the API and development of new matching algorithms. The initial version of the API has been successfully implemented by three members of the Matchmaker Exchange and was immediately able to reproduce previously identified matches and generate several new leads currently being validated. The API is available at https://github.com/ga4gh/mme‐apis.


Human Mutation | 2016

Mandibulofacial Dysostosis with Microcephaly: Mutation and Database Update

Lijia Huang; Megan R. Vanstone; Taila Hartley; Matthew Osmond; Nick Barrowman; Judith Allanson; Laura D. Baker; Tabib Dabir; Katrina M. Dipple; William B. Dobyns; Jane Estrella; Hanna Faghfoury; Francine P. Favaro; Himanshu Goel; Pernille A. Gregersen; Karen W. Gripp; Art Grix; Maria Leine Guion-Almeida; Margaret Harr; Cindy Hudson; Alasdair G. W. Hunter; John P. Johnson; Shelagh Joss; Amy Kimball; Usha Kini; Antonie D. Kline; Julie Lauzon; Dorte L. Lildballe; Vanesa López-González; Johanna Martinezmoles

Mandibulofacial dysostosis with microcephaly (MFDM) is a multiple malformation syndrome comprising microcephaly, craniofacial anomalies, hearing loss, dysmorphic features, and, in some cases, esophageal atresia. Haploinsufficiency of a spliceosomal GTPase, U5–116 kDa/EFTUD2, is responsible. Here, we review the molecular basis of MFDM in the 69 individuals described to date, and report mutations in 38 new individuals, bringing the total number of reported individuals to 107 individuals from 94 kindreds. Pathogenic EFTUD2 variants comprise 76 distinct mutations and seven microdeletions. Among point mutations, missense substitutions are infrequent (14 out of 76; 18%) relative to stop‐gain (29 out of 76; 38%), and splicing (33 out of 76; 43%) mutations. Where known, mutation origin was de novo in 48 out of 64 individuals (75%), dominantly inherited in 12 out of 64 (19%), and due to proven germline mosaicism in four out of 64 (6%). Highly penetrant clinical features include, microcephaly, first and second arch craniofacial malformations, and hearing loss; esophageal atresia is present in an estimated ∼27%. Microcephaly is virtually universal in childhood, with some adults exhibiting late “catch‐up” growth and normocephaly at maturity. Occasionally reported anomalies, include vestibular and ossicular malformations, reduced mouth opening, atrophy of cerebral white matter, structural brain malformations, and epibulbar dermoid. All reported EFTUD2 mutations can be found in the EFTUD2 mutation database (http://databases.lovd.nl/shared/genes/EFTUD2).


Clinical Genetics | 2017

Debunking Occam's razor: Diagnosing multiple genetic diseases in families by whole exome sequencing

T.B. Balci; Taila Hartley; Yanwei Xi; David A. Dyment; Chandree L. Beaulieu; Francois P. Bernier; L. Dupuis; Gabriella A. Horvath; Roberto Mendoza-Londono; Chitra Prasad; Julie Richer; X.‐R. Yang; Christine M. Armour; Eric Bareke; Bridget A. Fernandez; H.J. McMillan; Ryan E. Lamont; Jacek Majewski; Jillian S. Parboosingh; A.N. Prasad; C.A. Rupar; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Amanda Smith; Martine Tétreault; A.M. Innes; Kym M. Boycott

Recent clinical whole exome sequencing (WES) cohorts have identified unanticipated multiple genetic diagnoses in single patients. However, the frequency of multiple genetic diagnoses in families is largely unknown.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2017

A novel multisystem disease associated with recessive mutations in the tyrosyl‐tRNA synthetase (YARS) gene

Małgorzata J.M. Nowaczyk; Lijia Huang; Mark A. Tarnopolsky; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Jacek Majewski; Dennis E. Bulman; Taila Hartley; Kym M. Boycott

Aminoacyl‐tRNA synthetases (ARSs) are a group of ubiquitously expressed enzymes that are best known for their function in the first step of protein translation but have been increasingly associated with secondary functions including transcription and translation control and extracellular signaling. Mutations in numerous ARSs have been linked to a growing number of both autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive human diseases. The tyrosyl‐tRNA synthetase (YARS) links the amino acid tyrosine to its cognate tRNA. We report two siblings who presented with failure to thrive (FTT), hypertriglyceridemia, developmental delay, liver dysfunction, lung cysts, and abnormal subcortical white matter. Using exome sequencing the siblings were found to harbor bi‐allelic pathogenic‐appearing variants within the YARS gene (NM_003680.3):c.638C>T p.(Pro213Leu) and c.1573G>A p.(Gly525Arg). These YARS variants occur in the catalytic domain and the C‐terminal domain, respectively. Mutations in YARS have been previously associated with an autosomal dominant form of Charcot‐Marie‐Tooth (CMT); our findings suggest the disease spectrum associated with YARS dysregulation is broader than peripheral neuropathy.

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Kym M. Boycott

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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David A. Dyment

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Kristin D. Kernohan

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Dennis E. Bulman

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Chandree L. Beaulieu

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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Christine M. Armour

University of British Columbia

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Eric Bareke

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

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