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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Cullup is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Cullup.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Mutations in ABCA12 underlie the severe congenital skin disease harlequin ichthyosis

P. David Kelsell; Elizabeth E. Norgett; Harriet Unsworth; Muy-Teck Teh; Thomas Cullup; Charles A. Mein; J. Patricia Dopping-Hepenstal; A. Beverly Dale; Gianluca Tadini; Philip Fleckman; G. Karen Stephens; P. Virginia Sybert; Susan B. Mallory; V. Bernard North; R. David Witt; Eli Sprecher; Aileen Taylor; Andrew Ilchyshyn; T. Cameron Kennedy; Helen Goodyear; Celia Moss; David Paige; I. John Harper; D. Bryan Young; M. Irene Leigh; A.J. Robin Eady; A. Edel O’Toole

Harlequin ichthyosis (HI) is the most severe and frequently lethal form of recessive congenital ichthyosis. Although defects in lipid transport, protein phosphatase activity, and differentiation have been described, the genetic basis underlying the clinical and cellular phenotypes of HI has yet to be determined. By use of single-nucleotide-polymorphism chip technology and homozygosity mapping, a common region of homozygosity was observed in five patients with HI in the chromosomal region 2q35. Sequencing of the ABCA12 gene, which maps within the minimal region defined by homozygosity mapping, revealed disease-associated mutations, including large intragenic deletions and frameshift deletions in 11 of the 12 screened individuals with HI. Since HI epidermis displays abnormal lamellar granule formation, ABCA12 may play a critical role in the formation of lamellar granules and the discharge of lipids into the intercellular spaces, which would explain the epidermal barrier defect seen in this disorder. This finding paves the way for early prenatal diagnosis. In addition, functional studies of ABCA12 will lead to a better understanding of epidermal differentiation and barrier formation.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Recessive mutations in EPG5 cause Vici syndrome, a multisystem disorder with defective autophagy

Thomas Cullup; Ay Lin Kho; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Birgit Brandmeier; Frances Smith; Zoe Urry; Michael A. Simpson; Shu Yau; Enrico Bertini; Verity McClelland; Mohammed Al-Owain; Stefan Koelker; Christian Koerner; Georg F. Hoffmann; Frits A. Wijburg; Amber E. ten Hoedt; R. Curtis Rogers; David K. Manchester; Rie Miyata; Masaharu Hayashi; Elizabeth Said; Doriette Soler; Peter M. Kroisel; Christian Windpassinger; Francis M. Filloux; Salwa Al-Kaabi; Jozef Hertecant; Miguel del Campo; Stefan Buk; Istvan Bodi

Vici syndrome is a recessively inherited multisystem disorder characterized by callosal agenesis, cataracts, cardiomyopathy, combined immunodeficiency and hypopigmentation. To investigate the molecular basis of Vici syndrome, we carried out exome and Sanger sequence analysis in a cohort of 18 affected individuals. We identified recessive mutations in EPG5 (previously KIAA1632), indicating a causative role in Vici syndrome. EPG5 is the human homolog of the metazoan-specific autophagy gene epg-5, encoding a key autophagy regulator (ectopic P-granules autophagy protein 5) implicated in the formation of autolysosomes. Further studies showed a severe block in autophagosomal clearance in muscle and fibroblasts from individuals with mutant EPG5, resulting in the accumulation of autophagic cargo in autophagosomes. These findings position Vici syndrome as a paradigm of human multisystem disorders associated with defective autophagy and suggest a fundamental role of the autophagy pathway in the immune system and the anatomical and functional formation of organs such as the brain and heart.


Neurology | 2015

Congenital myopathies Natural history of a large pediatric cohort

Irene Colombo; M. Scoto; Adnan Y. Manzur; S. Robb; Lorenzo Maggi; Vasantha Gowda; Thomas Cullup; M. Yau; Rahul Phadke; Caroline Sewry; Heinz Jungbluth; Francesco Muntoni

Objective: To assess the natural history of congenital myopathies (CMs) due to different genotypes. Methods: Retrospective cross-sectional study based on case-note review of 125 patients affected by CM, followed at a single pediatric neuromuscular center, between 1984 and 2012. Results: Genetic characterization was achieved in 99 of 125 cases (79.2%), with RYR1 most frequently implicated (44/125). Neonatal/infantile onset was observed in 76%. At birth, 30.4% required respiratory support, and 25.2% nasogastric feeding. Twelve percent died, mainly within the first year, associated with mutations in ACTA1, MTM1, or KLHL40. All RYR1-mutated cases survived and did not require long-term ventilator support including those with severe neonatal onset; however, recessive cases were more likely to require gastrostomy insertion (p = 0.0028) compared with dominant cases. Independent ambulation was achieved in 74.1% of all patients; 62.9% were late walkers. Among ambulant patients, 9% eventually became wheelchair-dependent. Scoliosis of variable severity was reported in 40%, with 1/3 of (both ambulant and nonambulant) patients requiring surgery. Bulbar involvement was present in 46.4% and required gastrostomy placement in 28.8% (at a mean age of 2.7 years). Respiratory impairment of variable severity was a feature in 64.1%; approximately half of these patients required nocturnal noninvasive ventilation due to respiratory failure (at a mean age of 8.5 years). Conclusions: We describe the long-term outcome of a large cohort of patients with CMs. While overall course is stable, we demonstrate a wide clinical spectrum with motor deterioration in a subset of cases. Severity in the neonatal/infantile period is critical for survival, with clear genotype-phenotype correlations that may inform future counseling.


Brain | 2013

Novel deletion of lysine 7 expands the clinical, histopathological and genetic spectrum of TPM2-related myopathies.

Ann E. Davidson; Fazeel M. Siddiqui; Michael A. Lopez; Peter Lunt; Heather A. Carlson; Brian E. Moore; Seth Love; Donald E. Born; Helen Roper; Anirban Majumdar; Suman Jayadev; Hunter R. Underhill; Corrine O. Smith; Maja von der Hagen; Angela Hubner; Philip Jardine; Andria Merrison; Elizabeth Curtis; Thomas Cullup; Heinz Jungbluth; Mary O. Cox; Thomas L. Winder; Hossam Abdel Salam; Jun Li; Steven A. Moore; James J. Dowling

The β-tropomyosin gene encodes a component of the sarcomeric thin filament. Rod-shaped dimers of tropomyosin regulate actin-myosin interactions and β-tropomyosin mutations have been associated with nemaline myopathy, cap myopathy, Escobar syndrome and distal arthrogryposis types 1A and 2B. In this study, we expand the allelic spectrum of β-tropomyosin-related myopathies through the identification of a novel β-tropomyosin mutation in two clinical contexts not previously associated with β-tropomyosin. The first clinical phenotype is core-rod myopathy, with a β-tropomyosin mutation uncovered by whole exome sequencing in a family with autosomal dominant distal myopathy and muscle biopsy features of both minicores and nemaline rods. The second phenotype, observed in four unrelated families, is autosomal dominant trismus-pseudocamptodactyly syndrome (distal arthrogryposis type 7; previously associated exclusively with myosin heavy chain 8 mutations). In all four families, the mutation identified was a novel 3-bp in-frame deletion (c.20_22del) that results in deletion of a conserved lysine at the seventh amino acid position (p.K7del). This is the first mutation identified in the extreme N-terminus of β-tropomyosin. To understand the potential pathogenic mechanism(s) underlying this mutation, we performed both computational analysis and in vivo modelling. Our theoretical model predicts that the mutation disrupts the N-terminus of the α-helices of dimeric β-tropomyosin, a change predicted to alter protein-protein binding between β-tropomyosin and other molecules and to disturb head-to-tail polymerization of β-tropomyosin dimers. To create an in vivo model, we expressed wild-type or p.K7del β-tropomyosin in the developing zebrafish. p.K7del β-tropomyosin fails to localize properly within the thin filament compartment and its expression alters sarcomere length, suggesting that the mutation interferes with head-to-tail β-tropomyosin polymerization and with overall sarcomeric structure. We describe a novel β-tropomyosin mutation, two clinical-histopathological phenotypes not previously associated with β-tropomyosin and pathogenic data from the first animal model of β-tropomyosin-related myopathies.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Nebulin (NEB) mutations in a childhood onset distal myopathy with rods and cores uncovered by next generation sequencing.

M. Scoto; Thomas Cullup; Sebahattin Cirak; Shu Yau; Adnan Y. Manzur; L. Feng; Ts Jacques; Glenn Anderson; Stephen Abbs; Caroline Sewry; Heinz Jungbluth; Francesco Muntoni

Recessive nebulin (NEB) mutations are a common cause of nemaline myopathy (NM), typically characterized by generalized weakness of early-onset and nemaline rods on muscle biopsy. Exceptional adult cases with additional cores and an isolated distal weakness have been reported. The large NEB gene with 183 exons has been an obstacle for the genetic work-up. Here we report a childhood-onset case with distal weakness and a core-rod myopathy, associated with recessive NEB mutations identified by next generation sequencing (NGS). This 6-year-old boy presented with a history of gross-motor difficulties following a normal early development. He had distal leg weakness with bilateral foot drop, as well as axial muscle weakness, scoliosis and spinal rigidity; additionally he required nocturnal respiratory support. Muscle magnetic resonance (MR) imaging showed distal involvement in the medial and anterior compartment of the lower leg. A muscle biopsy featured both rods and cores. Initial targeted testing identified a heterozygous Nebulin exon 55 deletion. Further analysis using NGS revealed a frameshifting 4u2009bp duplication, c.24372_24375dup (P.Val8126fs), on the opposite allele. This case illustrates that NEB mutations can cause childhood onset distal NM, with additional cores on muscle biopsy and proves the diagnostic utility of NGS for myopathies, particularly when large genes are implicated.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2010

Vici syndrome associated with sensorineural hearing loss and evidence of neuromuscular involvement on muscle biopsy

Verity McClelland; Thomas Cullup; Istvan Bodi; Deborah Ruddy; Anna Buj-Bello; Valérie Biancalana; J. Boehm; Marc Bitoun; Owen Miller; Wajanat Jan; Esse Menson; Luis Amaya; John Trounce; Jocelyn Laporte; Shehla Mohammed; Caroline Sewry; Julian Raiman; Heinz Jungbluth

Vici syndrome is a rare, genetically unresolved congenital multisystem disorder comprising agenesis of the corpus callosum, cataracts, immunodeficiency, cardiomyopathy, and hypopigmentation. An associated neuromuscular phenotype has not previously been described in detail. We report on an infant with clinical features suggestive of Vici syndrome and additional sensorineural hearing loss. Muscle biopsy revealed several changes including markedly increased variability in fiber size, increased internal nuclei, and abnormalities on Gomori trichrome and oxidative stains, raising a wide differential diagnosis including neurogenic atrophy, centronuclear myopathy (CNM) or a metabolic (mitochondrial) cytopathy. Respiratory chain enzyme studies, however, were normal and sequencing of common CNM‐associated genes did not reveal any mutations. This case expands the clinical spectrum of Vici syndrome and indicates that muscle biopsy ought to be considered in infants presenting with suggestive clinical features. In addition, we suggest that Vici syndrome is considered in the differential diagnosis of infants presenting with congenital callosal agenesis and that additional investigation has to address the possibility of associated ocular, auditory, cardiac, and immunologic involvement when this radiologic finding is present.


Nature Communications | 2017

X-linked primary ciliary dyskinesia due to mutations in the cytoplasmic axonemal dynein assembly factor PIH1D3.

Chiara Olcese; Mitali Patel; Amelia Shoemark; Santeri Kiviluoto; Marie Legendre; Hywel Williams; Cara K. Vaughan; Jane Hayward; Alice Goldenberg; Richard D. Emes; Mustafa M. Munye; Laura Dyer; Thomas Joseph Cahill; Jeremy Bevillard; Corinne Gehrig; Michel Guipponi; Sandra Chantot; Philippe Duquesnoy; Lucie Thomas; Ludovic Jeanson; Bruno Copin; Aline Tamalet; Christel Thauvin-Robinet; Jean Francois Papon; Antoine Garin; Isabelle Pin; Gabriella Vera; Paul Aurora; Mahmoud R. Fassad; Lucy Jenkins

By moving essential body fluids and molecules, motile cilia and flagella govern respiratory mucociliary clearance, laterality determination and the transport of gametes and cerebrospinal fluid. Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an autosomal recessive disorder frequently caused by non-assembly of dynein arm motors into cilia and flagella axonemes. Before their import into cilia and flagella, multi-subunit axonemal dynein arms are thought to be stabilized and pre-assembled in the cytoplasm through a DNAAF2–DNAAF4–HSP90 complex akin to the HSP90 co-chaperone R2TP complex. Here, we demonstrate that large genomic deletions as well as point mutations involving PIH1D3 are responsible for an X-linked form of PCD causing disruption of early axonemal dynein assembly. We propose that PIH1D3, a protein that emerges as a new player of the cytoplasmic pre-assembly pathway, is part of a complementary conserved R2TP-like HSP90 co-chaperone complex, the loss of which affects assembly of a subset of inner arm dyneins.


Brain | 2016

EPG5-related Vici syndrome: a paradigm of neurodevelopmental disorders with defective autophagy

Susan Byrne; Lara Jansen; Jean Marie U-King-im; Ata Siddiqui; Hart G.W. Lidov; Istvan Bodi; Luke Smith; Rachael Mein; Thomas Cullup; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Lihadh Al-Gazali; Mohammed Al-Owain; Zandre Bruwer; Khalid Al Thihli; Rana El-Garhy; Kevin M. Flanigan; Kandamurugu Manickam; Erik Zmuda; Wesley Banks; Ruth Gershoni-Baruch; Hanna Mandel; Efrat Dagan; Annick Raas-Rothschild; Hila Barash; Francis M. Filloux; Donnell J. Creel; Michael Harris; Ada Hamosh; Stefan Kölker; Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari

Vici syndrome is a progressive neurodevelopmental multisystem disorder caused by mutations in the autophagy gene EPG5. Byrne et al. characterise the phenotype of 50 affected children, revealing callosal agenesis, cataracts, hypopigmentation, cardiomyopathy, immune dysfunction, developmental delay and microcephaly. Downregulation of epg5 in Drosophila results in autophagic abnormalities and progressive neurodegeneration.


Human Mutation | 2015

Mosaicism for dominant collagen 6 mutations as a cause for intrafamilial phenotypic variability.

Sandra Donkervoort; Ying Hu; Tanya Stojkovic; Nicol C. Voermans; A. Reghan Foley; Meganne Leach; J. Dastgir; V. Bolduc; Thomas Cullup; Alix de Becdelièvre; Lin Yang; Hai Su; Katherine G. Meilleur; Alice B. Schindler; Erik Jan Kamsteeg; Pascale Richard; Russell J. Butterfield; Thomas L. Winder; Thomas O. Crawford; Robert B. Weiss; Francesco Muntoni; Valérie Allamand; Carsten G. Bönnemann

Collagen 6‐related dystrophies and myopathies (COL6‐RD) are a group of disorders that form a wide phenotypic spectrum, ranging from severe Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy, intermediate phenotypes, to the milder Bethlem myopathy. Both inter‐ and intrafamilial variable expressivity are commonly observed. We present clinical, immunohistochemical, and genetic data on four COL6‐RD families with marked intergenerational phenotypic heterogeneity. This variable expression seemingly masquerades as anticipation is due to parental mosaicism for a dominant mutation, with subsequent full inheritance and penetrance of the mutation in the heterozygous offspring. We also present an additional fifth simplex patient identified as a mosaic carrier. Parental mosaicism was confirmed in the four families through quantitative analysis of the ratio of mutant versus wild‐type allele (COL6A1, COL6A2, and COL6A3) in genomic DNA from various tissues, including blood, dermal fibroblasts, and saliva. Consistent with somatic mosaicism, parental samples had lower ratios of mutant versus wild‐type allele compared with the fully heterozygote offspring. However, there was notable variability of the mutant allele levels between tissues tested, ranging from 16% (saliva) to 43% (fibroblasts) in one mosaic father. This is the first report demonstrating mosaicism as a cause of intrafamilial/intergenerational variability of COL6‐RD, and suggests that sporadic and parental mosaicism may be more common than previously suspected.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Clinical utility gene card for: Vici syndrome

Thomas Cullup; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Ay L. Kho; Shu Yau; Shehla Mohammed; Mathias Gautel; Heinz Jungbluth

1.5 Mutational spectrum Mutations in EPG5 are principally null mutations, most commonly comprising premature truncations, small insertions and deletions, and variants affecting the canonical splice sites.1 Missense mutations are less common but have been identified in a small number of families. To date, large deletions and duplications have not been tested for; however, given that the majority of cases have point mutations in keeping with expected inheritance patterns, this mutation class is not predicted to represent a frequent causative mechanism; to date, only a single case has been shown to harbour one pathogenic allele in the absence of any other potential causal variants (unpublished observation). Among the 24 cases of EPG5related Vici syndrome screened in our laboratory to date, 38 variants have been detected that have been classed as neutral polymorphisms; identification of heterozygous alleles enables elimination of heterozygous deletions at these loci, but on an individual patient basis, significant proportions of the analyzed region remain uninformative. Most EPG5 mutations are private and only one recurrent mutation has been published to date.1 EPG5 mutations are typically inherited from unaffected carrier parents; a single (unpublished) case has been identified with an EPG5 mutation showing de novo occurrence in the proband. A small proportion of patients with diagnostic features of Vici syndrome do not have EPG5 mutations detectable on Sanger sequencing,1 suggesting either genetic heterogeneity or the presence of uncommon EPG5 mutations such as deep intronic mutations or large intragenic deletions/duplications.

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Lucy Jenkins

Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust

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Mitali Patel

University College London

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Shu Yau

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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Francesco Muntoni

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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Istvan Bodi

University of Cambridge

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Jane Hayward

University College London

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