Traki Benhassine
Pasteur Institute
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Featured researches published by Traki Benhassine.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008
Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Meriem Tazir; Luis C. López; Catarina M. Quinzii; Mirna Assoum; Nathalie Drouot; Cleverson Busso; Samira Makri; Lamia Alipacha; Traki Benhassine; Mathieu Anheim; David R. Lynch; Christelle Thibault; Frédéric Plewniak; Laurent Bianchetti; Christine Tranchant; Olivier Poch; Salvatore DiMauro; Jean-Louis Mandel; Mario H. Barros; Michio Hirano; Michel Koenig
Muscle coenzyme Q(10) (CoQ(10) or ubiquinone) deficiency has been identified in more than 20 patients with presumed autosomal-recessive ataxia. However, mutations in genes required for CoQ(10) biosynthetic pathway have been identified only in patients with infantile-onset multisystemic diseases or isolated nephropathy. Our SNP-based genome-wide scan in a large consanguineous family revealed a locus for autosomal-recessive ataxia at chromosome 1q41. The causative mutation is a homozygous splice-site mutation in the aarF-domain-containing kinase 3 gene (ADCK3). Five additional mutations in ADCK3 were found in three patients with sporadic ataxia, including one known to have CoQ(10) deficiency in muscle. All of the patients have childhood-onset cerebellar ataxia with slow progression, and three of six have mildly elevated lactate levels. ADCK3 is a mitochondrial protein homologous to the yeast COQ8 and the bacterial UbiB proteins, which are required for CoQ biosynthesis. Three out of four patients tested showed a low endogenous pool of CoQ(10) in their fibroblasts or lymphoblasts, and two out of three patients showed impaired ubiquinone synthesis, strongly suggesting that ADCK3 is also involved in CoQ(10) biosynthesis. The deleterious nature of the three identified missense changes was confirmed by the introduction of them at the corresponding positions of the yeast COQ8 gene. Finally, a phylogenetic analysis shows that ADCK3 belongs to the family of atypical kinases, which includes phosphoinositide and choline kinases, suggesting that ADCK3 plays an indirect regulatory role in ubiquinone biosynthesis possibly as part of a feedback loop that regulates ATP production.
Brain | 2009
Mathieu Anheim; Ben Monga; Marie Fleury; Perrine Charles; Clara Barbot; Mustafa A. Salih; Jean-Pierre Delaunoy; M. Fritsch; Larissa Arning; Matthis Synofzik; Ludger Schöls; Jorge Sequeiros; Cyril Goizet; Cecilia Marelli; Isabelle Le Ber; Jeannette Koht; José Gazulla; Jan De Bleecker; Mawia Mukhtar; Nadège Drouot; Lamia Alipacha; Traki Benhassine; Mohammed Chbicheb; Abderrahim M'zahem; Abdelmadjid Hamri; Brigitte Chabrol; Jean Pouget; R. Murphy; Mitsunori Watanabe; Paula Coutinho
Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) is an autosomal recessive disease due to mutations in the senataxin gene, causing progressive cerebellar ataxia with peripheral neuropathy, cerebellar atrophy, occasional oculomotor apraxia and elevated alpha-feto-protein (AFP) serum level. We compiled a series of 67 previously reported and 58 novel ataxic patients who underwent senataxin gene sequencing because of suspected AOA2. An AOA2 diagnosis was established for 90 patients, originating from 15 countries worldwide, and 25 new senataxin gene mutations were found. In patients with AOA2, median AFP serum level was 31.0 microg/l at diagnosis, which was higher than the median AFP level of AOA2 negative patients: 13.8 microg/l, P = 0.0004; itself higher than the normal level (3.4 microg/l, range from 0.5 to 17.2 microg/l) because elevated AFP was one of the possible selection criteria. Polyneuropathy was found in 97.5% of AOA2 patients, cerebellar atrophy in 96%, occasional oculomotor apraxia in 51%, pyramidal signs in 20.5%, head tremor in 14%, dystonia in 13.5%, strabismus in 12.3% and chorea in 9.5%. No patient was lacking both peripheral neuropathy and cerebellar atrophy. The age at onset and presence of occasional oculomotor apraxia were negatively correlated to the progression rate of the disease (P = 0.03 and P = 0.009, respectively), whereas strabismus was positively correlated to the progression rate (P = 0.03). An increased AFP level as well as cerebellar atrophy seem to be stable in the course of the disease and to occur mostly at or before the onset of the disease. One of the two patients with a normal AFP level at diagnosis had high AFP levels 4 years later, while the other had borderline levels. The probability of missing AOA2 diagnosis, in case of sequencing senataxin gene only in non-Friedreich ataxia non-ataxia-telangiectasia ataxic patients with AFP level > or =7 microg/l, is 0.23% and the probability for a non-Friedreich ataxia non-ataxia-telangiectasia ataxic patient to be affected with AOA2 with AFP levels > or =7 microg/l is 46%. Therefore, selection of patients with an AFP level above 7 microg/l for senataxin gene sequencing is a good strategy for AOA2 diagnosis. Pyramidal signs and dystonia were more frequent and disease was less severe with missense mutations in the helicase domain of senataxin gene than with missense mutations out of helicase domain and deletion and nonsense mutations (P = 0.001, P = 0.008 and P = 0.01, respectively). The lack of pyramidal signs in most patients may be explained by masking due to severe motor neuropathy.
Parkinsonism & Related Disorders | 2010
Soreya Belarbi; Nassima Hecham; Suzanne Lesage; Mohamed Islam Kediha; Nourredine Smail; Traki Benhassine; Farida Ysmail-Dahlouk; Ebba Lohman; Badia Benhabyles; Tarik Hamadouche; Salima Assami; Alexis Brice; Meriem Tazir
A series of 106 patients with isolated or familial Parkinsonism underwent clinical evaluation and genetic testing for the LRRK2 G2019S mutation which was identified in 34/106 patients (32%). Seventy one of them accepted to be evaluated for neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric studies with the aim to compare mutation carriers with non-carriers. For neuropsychological testing, comparisons between LRRK2 G2019S carriers and non-carriers were made after stratification according to the level of education: median and high school versus low level. Memory was investigated with the five words test, 2 novel tests with verbalized visual material dedicated to illiterate patients, the TNI-93 (nine pictures test), The TMA-93 (associative memory test), and digit spans (forward/backward). Cognitive analyse did not show major differences between the two groups of patients. Nevertheless, behavioral abnormalities, mostly depression and hallucinations, were more frequent in the LRRK2 G2019S carriers, suggesting the presence of a greater involvement of the limbic system in these patients. Sleep disorders which were also more common amongst mutation carriers than non-carriers might be related to depression.
Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2009
Meriem Tazir; L. Ali-Pacha; A. M'Zahem; J.P. Delaunoy; M. Fritsch; Sonia Nouioua; Traki Benhassine; Salima Assami; Djamel Grid; Jean-Michel Vallat; A. Hamri; Michel Koenig
Ataxia with oculo-motor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) is a recently described autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia (ARCA) caused by mutations in the senataxin gene (SETX). We analysed the phenotypic spectrum of 19 AOA2 patients with mutations in SETX, which seems to be the third most frequent form of ARCA in Algeria after Freidreich ataxia and Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency. In AOA2 patients, the mean age at onset for all families was in the second decade. Cerebellar ataxia was progressive, slowly leading to disability which was aggravated by axonal polyneuropathy present in almost all the patients. Mean disease duration until wheelchair was around 20 years. Oculo-motor apraxia (OMA) was present in 32% of the patients while convergent strabismus was present in 37%. Strabismus is therefore also very suggestive of AOA2 when associated with ataxia and polyneuropathy even in the absence of OMA. Cerebellar atrophy was more severe in the eldest patients; however it may also be an early sign since it was present in the youngest and paucisymptomatic patients. The initial sign was gait ataxia in all but two patients who presented with head tremor and writer cramp, respectively. Serum alpha-fetoprotein, which was elevated in all tested patients, was a good marker to suggest molecular studies of the SETX gene.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2010
Suzanne Lesage; Etienne Patin; Christel Condroyer; Anne-Louise Leutenegger; Ebba Lohmann; Nir Giladi; Anat Bar-Shira; Soraya Belarbi; Nassima Hecham; Pierre Pollak; Anne-Marie Ouvrard-Hernandez; Soraya Bardien; Jonathan Carr; Traki Benhassine; Hiroyuki Tomiyama; Caroline Pirkevi; Tarik Hamadouche; Cécile Cazeneuve; A. Nazli Basak; Nobutaka Hattori; Alexandra Durr; Meriem Tazir; Avi Orr-Urtreger; Lluis Quintana-Murci; Alexis Brice
Mutations in the leucine-rich-repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) gene have been identified in families with autosomal dominant Parkinsons disease (PD) and in sporadic cases; the G2019S mutation is the single most frequent. Intriguingly, the frequency of this mutation in PD patients varies greatly among ethnic groups and geographic origins: it is present at <0.1% in East Asia, approximately 2% in European-descent patients and can reach frequencies of up to 15-40% in PD Ashkenazi Jews and North African Arabs. To ascertain the evolutionary dynamics of the G2019S mutation in different populations, we genotyped 74 markers spanning a 16 Mb genomic region around G2019S, in 191 individuals carrying the mutation from 126 families of different origins. Sixty-seven families were of North-African Arab origin, 18 were of North/Western European descent, 37 were of Jewish origin, mostly from Eastern Europe, one was from Japan, one from Turkey and two were of mixed origins. We found the G2019S mutation on three different haplotypes. Network analyses of the three carrier haplotypes showed that G2019S arose independently at least twice in humans. In addition, the population distribution of the intra-allelic diversity of the most widespread carrier haplotype, together with estimations of the age of G2019S determined by two different methods, suggests that one of the founding G2019S mutational events occurred in the Near East at least 4000 years ago.
Neurology | 2008
Suzanne Lesage; Soreya Belarbi; André Troiano; Christel Condroyer; Nassima Hecham; Pierre Pollak; E. Lohman; Traki Benhassine; F. Ysmail-Dahlouk; Alexandra Durr; M. Tazir; Alexis Brice
Parkinson disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that mainly affects the elderly. The majority of cases are sporadic; only 10 to 15% are familial. Recently, mutations in the leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) were associated with autosomal dominant, late-onset parkinsonism.1,2 The most common mutation, G2019S (c.6055 G>A), was detected in up to 5–6% of several European PD populations and 1–2% of patients with sporadic late-onset disease,3 but ∼40% in patients with PD from North Africa.4 Here we report the screening of the LRRK2 G2019S mutation in a new independent series of 136 North African patients with PD, and in ethnically matched healthy controls. We found that dyskinesias were significantly more frequent in patients with the G2019S mutation than in noncarriers. ### Methods. A new series of 136 unrelated patients with PD from Algeria (n = 114), Morocco (n = 10), Tunisia (n = 7), France (n = 4), and Libya (n = 1) (74 men, 62 women; mean age at onset, 54.7 ± 12.4 years, range 12–78) were compared with 66 healthy Algerian controls (32 men, 34 women; mean age at examination, 55.9 ± 11.0 years, range 39–84). The clinical diagnosis of PD was established as previously reported.4 A total of 119 patients (88%), 31 of whom had consanguinity, were diagnosed with sporadic idiopathic PD, 17 patients reported family histories of PD. …
Journal of Neurology | 2011
D. H’mida-Ben Brahim; A. M’zahem; Mirna Assoum; Y. Bouhlal; F. Fattori; Mathieu Anheim; Lamia Alipacha; F. Ferrat; M. Chaouch; Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Nathalie Drouot; C. Thibaut; Traki Benhassine; Y. Sifi; D. Stoppa-Lyonnet; K. N’Guyen; J. Poujet; Abdelmadjid Hamri; F. Hentati; R. Amouri; Filippo M. Santorelli; Meriem Tazir; Michel Koenig
The diagnosis of rare inherited diseases is becoming more and more complex as an increasing number of clinical conditions appear to be genetically heterogeneous. Multigenic inheritance also applies to the autosomal recessive progressive cerebellar ataxias (ARCAs), for which 14 genes have been identified and more are expected to be discovered. We used homozygosity mapping as a guide for identification of the defective locus in patients with ARCA born from consanguineous parents. Patients from 97 families were analyzed with GeneChip Mapping 10K or 50K SNP Affymetrix microarrays. We identified six families homozygous for regions containing the autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay (ARSACS) gene, two families homozygous for the ataxia-telangiectasia gene (ATM), two families homozygous for the ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 1 (AOA1) gene, and one family homozygous for the AOA type 2 (AOA2) gene. Upon direct gene testing, we were able to identify a disease-related mutation in all families but one of the two kindred homozygous at the ATM locus. Although linkage analyses pointed to a single locus on chromosome 11q22.1-q23.1 for this family, clinical features, normal levels of serum alpha-foetoprotein as well as absence of mutations in the ATM gene rather suggest the existence of an additional ARCA-related gene in that interval. While the use of homozygosity mapping was very effective at pointing to the correct gene, it also suggests that the majority of patients harbor mutations either in the genes of the rare forms of ARCA or in genes yet to be identified.
BMC Medical Genetics | 2015
Wahiba Hamza; Lamia Ali Pacha; Tarik Hamadouche; Jean Muller; Nathalie Drouot; Farida Ferrat; S. Makri; Malika Chaouch; Meriem Tazir; Michel Koenig; Traki Benhassine
BackgroundAutosomal recessive cerebellar ataxias (ARCA) are a complex group of neurodegenerative disorders with great genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity, over 30 genes/loci have been associated with more than 20 different clinical forms of ARCA. Genetic heterogeneity combined with highly variable clinical expression of the cerebellar symptoms and overlapping features complicate furthermore the etiological diagnosis of ARCA. The determination of the most frequent mutations and corresponding ataxias, as well as particular features specific to a population, are mandatory to facilitate and speed up the diagnosis process, especially when an appropriate treatment is available.MethodsWe explored 166 patients (115 families) refered to the neurology units of Algiers central hospitals (Algeria) with a cerebellar ataxia phenotype segregating as an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance. Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples and mutational screening was performed by PCR and direct sequencing or by targeted genomic capture and massive parallel sequencing of 57 genes associated with inherited cerebellar ataxia phenotypes.ResultsIn this work we report the clinical and molecular results obtained on a large cohort of Algerian patients (110 patients/76 families) with genetically determined autosomal recessive ataxia, representing 9 different types of ARCA and 23 different mutations, including 6 novel ones. The five most common ARCA in this cohort were Friedreich ataxia, ataxia with isolated vitamin E deficiency, ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2, autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay and ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 1.ConclusionWe report here a large cohort of patients with genetically determined autosomal recessive ataxia and the first study of the genetic context of ARCA in Algeria. This study showed that in Algerian patients, the two most common types of ataxia (Friedreich ataxia and ataxia with isolated vitamin E deficiency) coexist with forms that may be less common or underdiagnosed. To refine the genotype/phenotype correlation in rare and heteregeneous diseases as autosomal recessive ataxias, more extensive epidemiological investigations and reports are necessary as well as more accurate and detailed clinical characterizations. The use of standardized clinical and molecular protocols would thus enable a better knowledge of the different forms of ARCA.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2011
Sonia Nouioua; Tarik Hamadouche; Benoît Funalot; Rafaëlle Bernard; Nora Bellatache; Radia Bouderba; Djamel Grid; Salima Assami; Traki Benhassine; Nicolas Lévy; Jean-Michel Vallat; Meriem Tazir
Autosomal recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth diseases, relatively common in Algeria due to high prevalence of consanguineous marriages, are clinically and genetically heterogeneous. We report on two consanguineous families with demyelinating autosomal recessive Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT4) associated with novel homozygous mutations in the MTMR2 gene, c.331dupA (p.Arg111LysfsX24) and PRX gene, c.1090C>T (p.Arg364X) respectively, and peculiar clinical phenotypes. The three patients with MTMR2 mutations (CMT4B1 family) had a typical phenotype of severe early onset motor and sensory neuropathy with typical focally folded myelin on nerve biopsy. Associated clinical features included vocal cord paresis, prominent chest deformities and claw hands. Contrasting with the classical presentation of CMT4F (early-onset Dejerine-Sottas phenotype), the four patients with PRX mutations (CMT4F family) had essentially a late age of onset and a protracted and relatively benign evolution, although they presented marked spine deformities. These observations broaden the spectrum of clinical phenotypes associated with these two CMT4 forms.
Archive | 1998
J. Michiels; T. Van Soom; I. D’hooghe; B. Dombrecht; Traki Benhassine; J. Vanderleyden
Bacterial sigma factors confer promoter specificity to transcription initiated by the RNA polymerase holoenzyme. The alternative sigma factor σ54 (RpoN, NtrA, GlnF) encoded by the rpoN gene allows cells to respond to many different environmental stimuli. Although it is clear that σ54 fulfills a central role during symbiosis, little is known on the regulation of rpoN transcription and activity of its gene product. We have isolated, sequenced and mutated the rpoN gene region of Rhizobium etli, the nodulating symbiont of the common bean plant, Phaseolus vulgaris.