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Dive into the research topics where Willie Reardon is active.

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Featured researches published by Willie Reardon.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Williams Syndrome: Use of Chromosomal Microdeletions as a Tool to Dissect Cognitive and Physical Phenotypes

Mayada Tassabehji; Kay Metcalfe; Annette Karmiloff-Smith; Martin Carette; Julia Grant; Nick Dennis; Willie Reardon; Miranda Splitt; Andrew P. Read; Dian Donnai

In Williams syndrome (WS), a deletion of approximately 1.5 Mb on one copy of chromosome 7 causes specific physical, cognitive, and behavioral abnormalities. Molecular dissection of the phenotype may be a route to identification of genes important in human cognition and behavior. Among the genes known to be deleted in WS are ELN (which encodes elastin), LIMK1 (which encodes a protein tyrosine kinase expressed in the developing brain), STX1A (which encodes a component of the synaptic apparatus), and FZD3. Study of patients with deletions or mutations confined to ELN showed that hemizygosity for elastin is responsible for the cardiological features of WS. LIMK1 and STX1A are good candidates for cognitive or behavioral aspects of WS. Here we describe genetic and psychometric testing of patients who have small deletions within the WS critical region. Our results suggest that neither LIMK1 hemizygosity (contrary to a previous report) nor STX1A hemizygosity is likely to contribute to any part of the WS phenotype, and they emphasize the importance of such patients for dissecting subtle but highly penetrant phenotypes.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005

Genotype-phenotype correlation in Costello syndrome: HRAS mutation analysis in 43 cases

Bronwyn Kerr; M. A. Delrue; Sabine Sigaudy; Rahat Perveen; Michèle Marche; Ingrid Burgelin; Stef M; Betty K. P. Tang; O. B. Eden; James O'Sullivan; A. De Sandre-Giovannoli; Willie Reardon; C. Brewer; Christopher L. Bennett; O. Quarell; E. M'Cann; Dian Donnai; F. Stewart; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Hélène Cavé; Alain Verloes; Nicole Philip; Didier Lacombe; Nicolas Lévy; Benoit Arveiler; Graeme C.M. Black

Background: Costello syndrome (CS) is a rare multiple congenital abnormality syndrome, associated with failure to thrive and developmental delay. One of the more distinctive features in childhood is the development of facial warts, often nasolabial and in other moist body surfaces. Individuals with CS have an increased risk of malignancy, suggested to be about 17%. Recently, mutations in the HRAS gene on chromosome 11p13.3 have been found to cause CS. Methods: We report here the results of HRAS analysis in 43 individuals with a clinical diagnosis of CS. Results: Mutations were found in 37 (86%) of patients. Analysis of parental DNA samples was possible in 16 cases for both parents and in three cases for one parent, and confirmed the mutations as de novo in all of these cases. Three novel mutations (G12C, G12E, and K117R) were found in five cases. Conclusions: These results confirm that CS is caused, in most cases, by heterozygous missense mutations in the proto-oncogene HRAS. Analysis of the major phenotypic features by mutation suggests a potential correlation between malignancy risk and genotype, which is highest for patients with an uncommon (G12A) substitution. These results confirm that mutation testing for HRAS is a reliable diagnostic test for CS.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Mutation Analysis and Embryonic Expression of the HLXB9 Currarino Syndrome Gene

Dm Hagan; Alison Ross; Tom Strachan; Sa Lynch; Victor L. Ruiz-Perez; Ym Wang; Peter J. Scambler; E. Custard; Willie Reardon; S. Hassan; Maximilian Muenke; P Nixon; C Papapetrou; Robin M. Winter; Yvonne J. K. Edwards; Karen E. Morrison; Margaret Barrow; Mp Cordier-Alex; P. Correia; Patricia Galvin-Parton; S. Gaskill; K.J. Gaskin; S. Garcia-Minaur; R. Gereige; Richard Hayward; Tessa Homfray; Carole McKeown; Victoria Murday; H. Plauchu; Nora Shannon

The HLXB9 homeobox gene was recently identified as a locus for autosomal dominant Currarino syndrome, also known as hereditary sacral agenesis (HSA). This gene specifies a 403-amino acid protein containing a homeodomain preceded by a very highly conserved 82-amino acid domain of unknown function; the remainder of the protein is not well conserved. Here we report an extensive mutation survey that has identified mutations in the HLXB9 gene in 20 of 21 patients tested with familial Currarino syndrome. Mutations were also detected in two of seven sporadic Currarino syndrome patients; the remainder could be explained by undetected mosaicism for an HLXB9 mutation or by genetic heterogeneity in the sporadic patients. Of the mutations identified in the 22 index patients, 19 were intragenic and included 11 mutations that could lead to the introduction of a premature termination codon. The other eight mutations were missense mutations that were significantly clustered in the homeodomain, resulting, in each patient, in nonconservative substitution of a highly conserved amino acid. All of the intragenic mutations were associated with comparable phenotypes. The only genotype-phenotype correlation appeared to be the occurrence of developmental delay in the case of three patients with microdeletions. HLXB9 expression was analyzed during early human development in a period spanning Carnegie stages 12-21. Signal was detected in the basal plate of the spinal cord and hindbrain and in the pharynx, esophagus, stomach, and pancreas. Significant spatial and temporal expression differences were evident when compared with expression of the mouse Hlxb9 gene, which may partly explain the significant human-mouse differences in mutant phenotype.


Molecular Syndromology | 2012

Update on Kleefstra Syndrome

Marjolein H. Willemsen; A.T. Vulto-van Silfhout; Willy M. Nillesen; Willemijn Wissink-Lindhout; H. van Bokhoven; N. Philip; Elizabeth Berry-Kravis; Usha Kini; C.M.A. van Ravenswaaij-Arts; B. Delle Chiaie; A.M.M. Innes; Gunnar Houge; T. Kosonen; Kirsten Cremer; Madeleine Fannemel; Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen; Willie Reardon; J. Ignatius; Katherine Lachlan; C. Mircher; P.T.J.M. Helderman van den Enden; M. Mastebroek; P.E. Cohn-Hokke; Helger G. Yntema; S. Drunat; Tjitske Kleefstra

Kleefstra syndrome is characterized by the core phenotype of developmental delay/intellectual disability, (childhood) hypotonia and distinct facial features. The syndrome can be either caused by a microdeletion in chromosomal region 9q34.3 or by a mutation in the euchromatin histone methyltransferase 1 (EHMT1) gene. Since the early 1990s, 85 patients have been described, of which the majority had a 9q34.3 microdeletion (>85%). So far, no clear genotype-phenotype correlation could be observed by studying the clinical and molecular features of both 9q34.3 microdeletion patients and patients with an intragenic EHMT1 mutation. Thus, to further expand the genotypic and phenotypic knowledge about the syndrome, we here report 29 newly diagnosed patients, including 16 patients with a 9q34.3 microdeletion and 13 patients with an EHMT1 mutation, and review previous literature. The present findings are comparable to previous reports. In addition to our former findings and recommendations, we suggest cardiac screening during follow-up, because of the possible occurrence of cardiac arrhythmias. In addition, clinicians and caretakers should be aware of the regressive behavioral phenotype that might develop at adolescent/adult age and seems to have no clear neurological substrate, but is rather a so far unexplained neuropsychiatric feature.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2008

Clinical and molecular characteristics of 1qter microdeletion syndrome: delineating a critical region for corpus callosum agenesis/hypogenesis

B.W.M. van Bon; David A. Koolen; Renato Borgatti; Alex Magee; S. Garcia-Minaur; Liesbeth Rooms; Willie Reardon; Marcella Zollino; Maria Clara Bonaglia; M. De Gregori; Francesca Novara; R. Grasso; Roberto Ciccone; H.A. van Duyvenvoorde; A.M. Aalbers; Renzo Guerrini; Elisa Fazzi; Willy M. Nillesen; S. McCullough; Sarina G. Kant; Carlo Marcelis; R.P. Pfundt; N. de Leeuw; Dominique Smeets; Erik A. Sistermans; Jan M. Wit; B.C.J. Hamel; Han G. Brunner; Frank Kooy; Orsetta Zuffardi

Background: Patients with a microscopically visible deletion of the distal part of the long arm of chromosome 1 have a recognisable phenotype, including mental retardation, microcephaly, growth retardation, a distinct facial appearance and various midline defects including corpus callosum abnormalities, cardiac, gastro-oesophageal and urogenital defects, as well as various central nervous system anomalies. Patients with a submicroscopic, subtelomeric 1qter deletion have a similar phenotype, suggesting that the main phenotype of these patients is caused by haploinsufficiency of genes in this region. Objective: To describe the clinical presentation of 13 new patients with a submicroscopic deletion of 1q43q44, of which nine were interstitial, and to report on the molecular characterisation of the deletion size. Results and conclusions: The clinical presentation of these patients has clear similarities with previously reported cases with a terminal 1q deletion. Corpus callosum abnormalities were present in 10 of our patients. The AKT3 gene has been reported as an important candidate gene causing this abnormality. However, through detailed molecular analysis of the deletion sizes in our patient cohort, we were able to delineate the critical region for corpus callosum abnormalities to a 360 kb genomic segment which contains four possible candidate genes, but excluding the AKT3 gene.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

De Novo Mutations of the Gene Encoding the Histone Acetyltransferase KAT6B Cause Genitopatellar Syndrome

Michael A. Simpson; Charu Deshpande; Dimitra Dafou; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Wesley J. Woollard; Susan Holder; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Ronny Derks; Susan M. White; Ruthy Cohen-Snuijf; Sarina G. Kant; Lies H. Hoefsloot; Willie Reardon; Han G. Brunner; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Richard C. Trembath

Genitopatellar syndrome (GPS) is a rare disorder in which patellar aplasia or hypoplasia is associated with external genital anomalies and severe intellectual disability. Using an exome-sequencing approach, we identified de novo mutations of KAT6B in five individuals with GPS; a single nonsense variant and three frameshift indels, including a 4 bp deletion observed in two cases. All identified mutations are located within the terminal exon of the gene and are predicted to generate a truncated protein product lacking evolutionarily conserved domains. KAT6B encodes a member of the MYST family of histone acetyltranferases. We demonstrate a reduced level of both histone H3 and H4 acetylation in patient-derived cells suggesting that dysregulation of histone acetylation is a direct functional consequence of GPS alleles. These findings define the genetic basis of GPS and illustrate the complex role of the regulation of histone acetylation during development.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Genetic Heterogeneity of Usher Syndrome: Analysis of 151 Families with Usher Type I

Lisa M. Astuto; Michael D. Weston; Carol Carney; Denise M. Hoover; C.W.R.J. Cremers; M. Wagenaar; Claes Möller; Richard J.H. Smith; Sandra Pieke-Dahl; Jacquie Greenberg; Raj Ramesar; Samuel G. Jacobson; Carmen Ayuso; John R. Heckenlively; Marta L Tamayo; Michael B. Gorin; Willie Reardon; William J. Kimberling

Usher syndrome type I is an autosomal recessive disorder marked by hearing loss, vestibular areflexia, and retinitis pigmentosa. Six Usher I genetic subtypes at loci USH1A-USH1F have been reported. The MYO7A gene is responsible for USH1B, the most common subtype. In our analysis, 151 families with Usher I were screened by linkage and mutation analysis. MYO7A mutations were identified in 64 families with Usher I. Of the remaining 87 families, who were negative for MYO7A mutations, 54 were informative for linkage analysis and were screened with the remaining USH1 loci markers. Results of linkage and heterogeneity analyses showed no evidence of Usher types Ia or Ie. However, one maximum LOD score was observed lying within the USH1D region. Two lesser peak LOD scores were observed outside and between the putative regions for USH1D and USH1F, on chromosome 10. A HOMOG chi(2)((1)) plot shows evidence of heterogeneity across the USH1D, USH1F, and intervening regions. These results provide conclusive evidence that the second-most-common subtype of Usher I is due to genes on chromosome 10, and they confirm the existence of one Usher I gene in the previously defined USH1D region, as well as providing evidence for a second, and possibly a third, gene in the 10p/q region.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Parental insertional balanced translocations are an important cause of apparently de novo CNVs in patients with developmental anomalies

Beata Nowakowska; Nicole de Leeuw; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Birgit Sikkema-Raddatz; John A. Crolla; Reinhilde Thoelen; Marije Koopmans; Nicolette S. den Hollander; Arie van Haeringen; Anne-Marie F. van der Kevie-Kersemaekers; Rolph Pfundt; Hanneke Mieloo; Ton van Essen; Bert B.A. de Vries; Andrew Green; Willie Reardon; Jean-Pierre Fryns; Joris Vermeesch

In several laboratories, genome-wide array analysis has been implemented as the first tier diagnostic test for the identification of copy number changes in patients with mental retardation and/or congenital anomalies. The identification of a pathogenic copy number variant (CNV) is not only important to make a proper diagnosis but also to enable the accurate estimation of the recurrence risk to family members. Upon the identification of a de novo interstitial loss or gain, the risk recurrence is considered very low. However, this risk is 50% if one of the parents is carrier of a balanced insertional translocation (IT). The apparently de novo imbalance in a patient is then the consequence of the unbalanced transmission of a derivative chromosome involved in an IT. To determine the frequency with which insertional balanced translocations would be the origin of submicroscopic imbalances, we investigated the potential presence of an IT in a consecutive series of 477 interstitial CNVs, in which the parental origin has been tested by FISH, among 14 293 patients with developmental abnormalities referred for array. We demonstrate that ITs underlie ∼2.1% of the apparently de novo, interstitial CNVs, indicating that submicroscopic ITs are at least sixfold more frequent than cytogenetically visible ITs. This risk estimate should be taken into account during counseling, and warrant parental and proband FISH testing wherever possible in patients with an apparently de novo, interstitial aberration.


Clinical Genetics | 2013

MLL2 mutation detection in 86 patients with Kabuki syndrome: a genotype-phenotype study

Periklis Makrythanasis; Bw van Bon; Marloes Steehouwer; B Rodríguez-Santiago; Michael A. Simpson; P Dias; Bm Anderlid; P Arts; M Bhat; Bartolomeo Augello; Elisa Biamino; Emhf Bongers; M. del Campo; I Cordeiro; Am Cueto-González; I Cuscó; C Deshpande; E Frysira; Louise Izatt; R Flores; E Galán; B Gener; Christian Gilissen; Sm Granneman; Juliane Hoyer; Hg Yntema; Cm Kets; David A. Koolen; Cl Marcelis; A Medeira

Recently, pathogenic variants in the MLL2 gene were identified as the most common cause of Kabuki (Niikawa–Kuroki) syndrome (MIM#147920). To further elucidate the genotype–phenotype correlation, we studied a large cohort of 86 clinically defined patients with Kabuki syndrome (KS) for mutations in MLL2. All patients were assessed using a standardized phenotype list and all were scored using a newly developed clinical score list for KS (MLL2‐Kabuki score 0–10). Sequencing of the full coding region and intron–exon boundaries of MLL2 identified a total of 45 likely pathogenic mutations (52%): 31 nonsense, 10 missense and four splice‐site mutations, 34 of which were novel. In five additional patients, novel, i.e. non‐dbSNP132 variants of clinically unknown relevance, were identified. Patients with likely pathogenic nonsense or missense MLL2 mutations were usually more severely affected (median ‘MLL2‐Kabuki score’ of 6) as compared to the patients without MLL2 mutations (median ‘MLL2‐Kabuki score’ of 5), a significant difference (p < 0.0014). Several typical facial features such as large dysplastic ears, arched eyebrows with sparse lateral third, blue sclerae, a flat nasal tip with a broad nasal root, and a thin upper and a full lower lip were observed more often in mutation positive patients.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Meier-Gorlin syndrome genotype-phenotype studies: 35 individuals with pre-replication complex gene mutations and 10 without molecular diagnosis.

Sonja de Munnik; Louise S. Bicknell; Salim Aftimos; Jumana Y. Al-Aama; Yolande van Bever; Michael B. Bober; Jill Clayton-Smith; Alaa Y. Edrees; Murray Feingold; Alan Fryer; Johanna M. van Hagen; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Maaike C E Jansweijer; Diana Johnson; Sarina G. Kant; John M. Opitz; A. Radha Ramadevi; Willie Reardon; Alison Ross; Pierre Sarda; Constance T.R.M. Schrander-Stumpel; Jeroen Schoots; I. Karen Temple; Paulien A. Terhal; Annick Toutain; Carol A. Wise; Michael Wright; David L. Skidmore; Mark E. Samuels; Lies H. Hoefsloot

Meier–Gorlin syndrome (MGS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by microtia, patellar aplasia/hypoplasia, and short stature. Recently, mutations in five genes from the pre-replication complex (ORC1, ORC4, ORC6, CDT1, and CDC6), crucial in cell-cycle progression and growth, were identified in individuals with MGS. Here, we report on genotype–phenotype studies in 45 individuals with MGS (27 females, 18 males; age 3 months–47 years). Thirty-five individuals had biallelic mutations in one of the five causative pre-replication genes. No homozygous or compound heterozygous null mutations were detected. In 10 individuals, no definitive molecular diagnosis was made. The triad of microtia, absent/hypoplastic patellae, and short stature was observed in 82% of individuals with MGS. Additional frequent clinical features were mammary hypoplasia (100%) and abnormal genitalia (42%; predominantly cryptorchidism and hypoplastic labia minora/majora). One individual with ORC1 mutations only had short stature, emphasizing the highly variable clinical spectrum of MGS. Individuals with ORC1 mutations had significantly shorter stature and smaller head circumferences than individuals from other gene categories. Furthermore, compared with homozygous missense mutations, compound heterozygous mutations appeared to have a more severe effect on phenotype, causing more severe growth retardation in ORC4 and more frequently pulmonary emphysema in CDT1. A lethal phenotype was seen in four individuals with compound heterozygous ORC1 and CDT1 mutations. No other clear genotype–phenotype association was observed. Growth hormone and estrogen treatment may be of some benefit, respectively, to growth retardation and breast hypoplasia, though further studies in this patient group are needed.

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Dian Donnai

University of Manchester

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Sarina G. Kant

Leiden University Medical Center

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Alison Ross

University College London

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David A. Koolen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Diana Johnson

Boston Children's Hospital

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