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Featured researches published by Yonatan Perez.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Autosomal recessive Adams–Oliver syndrome caused by homozygous mutation in EOGT, encoding an EGF domain-specific O-GlcNAc transferase

Idan Cohen; Eldad Silberstein; Yonatan Perez; Daniella Landau; Khalil Elbedour; Yshaia Langer; Rotem Kadir; Michael Volodarsky; Sara Sivan; Ginat Narkis; Ohad S. Birk

Autosomal recessive Adams–Oliver syndrome was diagnosed in three remotely related Bedouin consanguineous families. Genome-wide linkage analysis ruled out association with known Adams–Oliver syndrome genes, identifying a single-homozygosity ∼1.8-Mb novel locus common to affected individuals (LOD score 3.37). Whole-exome sequencing followed by Sanger sequencing identified only a single mutation within this locus, shared by all affected individuals and found in patients from five additional apparently unrelated Bedouin families: a 1-bp deletion mutation in a predicted alternative splice variant of EOGT, leading to a putative truncated protein. RT-PCR demonstrated that the EOGT-predicted alternative splice variant is ubiquitously expressed. EOGT encodes EGF-domain-specific O-linked N-acetylglucosamine transferase, responsible for extracellular O-GlcNAcylation of epidermal growth factor-like domain-containing proteins, and is essential for epithelial cell-matrix interactions. F-actin staining in diseased fibroblasts showed apparently intact cell cytoskeleton and morphology, suggesting the EOGT mutation acts not through perturbation of cytoskeleton but through other mechanisms yet to be elucidated.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2016

UNC80 mutation causes a syndrome of hypotonia, severe intellectual disability, dyskinesia and dysmorphism, similar to that caused by mutations in its interacting cation channel NALCN

Yonatan Perez; Rotem Kadir; Michael Volodarsky; Iris Noyman; Hagit Flusser; Zamir Shorer; Libe Gradstein; Ramon Y. Birnbaum; Ohad S. Birk

Background A syndrome of profound hypotonia, intellectual disability, intrauterine growth retardation with subsequent failure to thrive, dyskinesia and epilepsy was diagnosed in Bedouin Israeli families. Mild dysmorphism was evident: plagiocephaly, broad forehead with prominent nose, smooth philtrum and congenital esotropia. We set out to decipher the molecular basis of this syndrome. Methods Genome-wide linkage analysis and fine mapping were done. Whole exome sequencing data were filtered for candidate variants within locus. Validation and segregation of the mutation was assayed via Sanger sequencing. UNC80 expression pattern was analysed through reverse transcription PCR. Results Homozygosity mapping followed by fine mapping identified a 7.5 Mb disease-associated locus (logarithm of odds score 3.5) on chromosome 2. Whole exome and Sanger sequencing identified a single homozygous nonsense mutation within this locus, segregating within the families as expected for recessive heredity and not found in a homozygous state in 150 Bedouin controls: c.151C>T, p.(R51*) in UNC80. Conclusions The syndrome described is caused by a mutation in UNC80, truncating most of the 3258 amino acids highly conserved encoded protein, that has no known motifs. UNC80 bridges between UNC79 and the cation channel NALCN, enabling NALCNs role in basal Na+ leak conductance in neurons, essential for neuronal function. The phenotype caused by the UNC80 mutation resembles that previously described for homozygous NALCN mutations.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Isolated foveal hypoplasia with secondary nystagmus and low vision is associated with a homozygous SLC38A8 mutation

Yonatan Perez; Libe Gradstein; Hagit Flusser; Barak Markus; Idan Cohen; Yshaia Langer; Mira Marcus; Tova Lifshitz; Rotem Kadir; Ohad S. Birk

Foveal hypoplasia, always accompanied by nystagmus, is found as part of the clinical spectrum of various eye disorders such as aniridia, albinism and achromatopsia. However, the molecular basis of isolated autosomal recessive foveal hypoplasia is yet unknown. Individuals of apparently unrelated non consanguineous Israeli families of Jewish Indian (Mumbai) ancestry presented with isolated foveal hypoplasia associated with congenital nystagmus and reduced visual acuity. Genome-wide homozygosity mapping followed by fine mapping defined a 830 Kb disease-associated locus (LOD score 3.5). Whole-exome sequencing identified a single missense mutation in the homozygosity region: c.95T>G, p.(Ile32Ser), in a conserved amino acid within the first predicted transmembrane domain of SLC38A8. The mutation fully segregated with the disease-associated phenotype, demonstrating an ∼10% carrier rate in Mumbai Jews. SLC38A8 encodes a putative sodium-dependent amino-acid/proton antiporter, which we showed to be expressed solely in the eye. Thus, a homozygous SLC38A8 mutation likely underlies isolated foveal hypoplasia.


Brain | 2017

SLC30A9 mutation affecting intracellular zinc homeostasis causes a novel cerebro-renal syndrome

Yonatan Perez; Zamir Shorer; Keren Liani-Leibson; Pauline Chabosseau; Rotem Kadir; Michael Volodarsky; Daniel Halperin; Shiran Barber-Zucker; Hanna Shalev; Ruth Schreiber; Libe Gradstein; Evgenia Gurevich; Raz Zarivach; Guy A. Rutter; Daniel Landau; Ohad S. Birk

Few cerebro-renal syndromes have been described to date. Perez et al. identify a novel autosomal recessive cerebro-renal syndrome in a consanguineous Bedouin kindred, caused by a mutation in SLC30A9. The mutation disrupts the role of SLC30A9 in Zn2+ transport, leading to impaired regulation of cytosolic zinc homeostasis.


PLOS Genetics | 2016

ALFY-Controlled DVL3 Autophagy Regulates Wnt Signaling, Determining Human Brain Size

Rotem Kadir; Tamar Harel; Barak Markus; Yonatan Perez; Idan Cohen; Michael Volodarsky; Miora Feintsein-Linial; Elana Chervinski; Joël Zlotogora; Sara Sivan; Ramon Y. Birnbaum; Uri Abdu; Stavit A. Shalev; Ohad S. Birk

Primary microcephaly is a congenital neurodevelopmental disorder of reduced head circumference and brain volume, with fewer neurons in the cortex of the developing brain due to premature transition between symmetrical and asymmetrical cellular division of the neuronal stem cell layer during neurogenesis. We now show through linkage analysis and whole exome sequencing, that a dominant mutation in ALFY, encoding an autophagy scaffold protein, causes human primary microcephaly. We demonstrate the dominant effect of the mutation in drosophila: transgenic flies harboring the human mutant allele display small brain volume, recapitulating the disease phenotype. Moreover, eye-specific expression of human mutant ALFY causes rough eye phenotype. In molecular terms, we demonstrate that normally ALFY attenuates the canonical Wnt signaling pathway via autophagy-dependent removal specifically of aggregates of DVL3 and not of Dvl1 or Dvl2. Thus, autophagic attenuation of Wnt signaling through removal of Dvl3 aggregates by ALFY acts in determining human brain size.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

CDC174, a novel component of the exon junction complex whose mutation underlies a syndrome of hypotonia and psychomotor developmental delay

Michael Volodarsky; Hava Lichtig; Tom Leibson; Yair Sadaka; Rotem Kadir; Yonatan Perez; Keren Liani-Leibson; Libe Gradstein; Ruthy Shaco-Levy; Zamir Shorer; Dale Frank; Ohad S. Birk

Siblings of non-consanguineous Jewish-Ethiopian ancestry presented with congenital axial hypotonia, weakness of the abducens nerve, psychomotor developmental delay with brain ventriculomegaly, variable thinning of corpus callosum and cardiac septal defects. Homozygosity mapping identified a single disease-associated locus of 3.5 Mb on chromosome 3. Studies of a Bedouin consanguineous kindred affected with a similar recessive phenotype identified a single disease-associated 18 Mb homozygosity locus encompassing the entire 3.5 Mb locus. Whole exome sequencing demonstrated only two homozygous mutations within a shared identical haplotype of 0.6 Mb, common to both Bedouin and Ethiopian affected individuals, suggesting an ancient common founder. Only one of the mutations segregated as expected in both kindreds and was not found in Bedouin and Jewish-Ethiopian controls: c.1404A>G, p.[*468Trpext*6] in CCDC174. We showed that CCDC174 is ubiquitous, restricted to the cell nucleus and co-localized with EIF4A3. In fact, yeast-two-hybrid assay demonstrated interaction of CCDC174 with EIF4A3, a component of exon junction complex. Knockdown of the CCDC174 ortholog in Xenopus laevis embryos resulted in poor neural fold closure at the neurula stage with later embryonic lethality. Knockdown embryos exhibited a sharp reduction in expression of n-tubulin, a marker for differentiating primary neurons, and of hindbrain markers krox20 and hoxb3. The Xenopus phenotype could be rescued by the human normal, yet not the mutant CCDC174 transcripts. Moreover, overexpression of mutant but not normal CCDC174 in neuroblastoma cells caused rapid apoptosis. In line with the hypotonia phenotype, the CCDC174 mutation caused depletion of RYR1 and marked myopathic changes in skeletal muscle of affected individuals.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

Progressive hereditary spastic paraplegia caused by a homozygous KY mutation

Yuval Yogev; Yonatan Perez; Iris Noyman; Anwar Abu Madegem; Hagit Flusser; Zamir Shorer; Eugene Cohen; Leonid Kachko; Analia Michaelovsky; Ruth Birk; Arie Koifman; Max Drabkin; Ohad Wormser; Daniel Halperin; Rotem Kadir; Ohad S. Birk

Twelve individuals of consanguineous Bedouin kindred presented with autosomal recessive progressive spastic paraplegia evident as of age 0–24 months, with spasticity of lower limbs, hyperreflexia, toe walking and equinus deformity. Kyphoscolisois was evident in older patients. Most had atrophy of the lateral aspects of the tongue and few had intellectual disability. Nerve conduction velocity, electromyography and head and spinal cord magnetic resonance imaging were normal in tested subjects. Muscle biopsy showed occasional central nuclei and fiber size variability with small angular fibers. Genome-wide linkage analysis identified a 6.7Mbp disease-associated locus on chromosome 3q21.3–3q22.2 (LOD score 9.02; D3S1290). Whole-exome sequencing identified a single homozygous variant within this locus, c.51_52ins(28); p.(V18fs56*) in KY, segregating in the family as expected and not found in 190 Bedouin controls. High KY transcript levels were demonstrated in muscular organs with lower expression in the CNS. The phenotype is reminiscent of kyphoscoliosis seen in Ky null mice. Two recent studies done independently and parallel to ours describe somewhat similar phenotypes in one and two patients with KY mutations. KY encodes a tranglutaminase-like peptidase, which interacts with muscle cytoskeletal proteins and is part of a Z-band protein complex, suggesting the disease mechanism may resemble myofibrillar myopathy. However, the mixed myopathic–neurologic features caused by human and mouse Ky mutations are difficult to explain by loss of KY sarcomere stabilizing function alone. KY transcription in CNS tissues may imply that it also has a role in neuromotor function, in line with the irregularity of neuromuscular junction in Ky null mutant mice.


BioMed Research International | 2017

A Rare Variant in PGAP2 Causes Autosomal Recessive Hyperphosphatasia with Mental Retardation Syndrome, with a Mild Phenotype in Heterozygous Carriers

Yonatan Perez; Ohad Wormser; Yair Sadaka; Ruth Birk; Ginat Narkis; Ohad S. Birk

Mutations in genes involved in the biosynthesis of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor cause autosomal recessive glycosylation defects, with a wide phenotypic spectrum of intellectual disability, seizures, minor facial dysmorphism, hypotonia, and elevated serum alkaline phosphatase. We now describe consanguineous Bedouin kindred presenting with an autosomal recessive syndrome of intellectual disability and elevated serum alkaline phosphatase. Genome-wide linkage analysis identified 6 possible disease-associated loci. Whole-exome sequencing followed by Sanger sequencing validation identified a single variant in PGAP2 as the disease-causing mutation (C.554G>A; p.185(R>Q)), segregating as expected within the kindred and not found in 150 Bedouin controls. The mutation replaces a highly conserved arginine residue with glutamine within the Frag1 (FGF receptor activating) domain of PGAP2. Interestingly, this mutation is a known dbSNP variant (rs745521288, build 147) with a very low allele frequency (0.00000824 in dbSNP, no homozygotes reported), highlighting the fact that dbSNP variants should not be automatically ruled out as disease-causing mutations. We further showed that PGAP2 is ubiquitously expressed, but in line with the disease phenotype, it is highly transcribed in human brain, skeletal muscle, and liver. Interestingly, a mild phenotype of slightly elevated serum levels of alkaline phosphatase and significant learning disabilities was observed in heterozygous carriers.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2018

A novel homozygous SLC25A1 mutation with impaired mitochondrial complex V: Possible phenotypic expansion

Idan Cohen; Orna Staretz-Chacham; Ohad Wormser; Yonatan Perez; Ann Saada; Rotem Kadir; Ohad S. Birk

SLC25A1 mutations are associated with combined D,L‐2‐hydroxyglutaric aciduria (DL‐ 2HGA; OMIM #615182), characterized by muscular hypotonia, severe neurodevelopmental dysfunction and intractable seizures. SLC25A1 encodes the mitochondrial citrate carrier (CIC), which mediates efflux of the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates citrate and isocitrate in exchange for cytosolic malate. Only a single family with an SLC25A1 mutation has been described in which mitochondrial respiratory chain dysfunction was documented, specifically in complex IV. Five infants of two consanguineous Bedouin families of the same tribe presented with small head circumference and neonatal‐onset encephalopathy with severe muscular weakness, intractable seizures, respiratory distress, and lack of psychomotor development culminating in early death. Ventricular septal defects (VSD) were demonstrated in three patients. Blood and CSF lactate were elevated with normal levels of plasma amino acids and free carnitine and increased 2‐OH‐glutaric acid urinary exertion. EEG was compatible with white matter disorder. Brain MRI revealed ventriculomegaly, thin corpus callosum with increased lactate peak on spectroscopy. Mitochondrial complex V deficiency was demonstrated in skeletal muscle biopsy of one infant. Homozygosity mapping and sequencing ruled out homozygosity of affected individuals in all known complex V‐associated genes. Whole exome sequencing identified a novel homozygous SLC25A1 c.713A>G (p.Asn238Ser) mutation, segregating as expected in the affected kindred and not found in 220 control alleles. Thus, SLC25A1 mutations might be associated with mitochondrial complex V deficiency and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of mitochondrial respiratory chain defects.


Human Mutation | 2017

PAX7 mutation in a syndrome of failure to thrive, hypotonia, and global neurodevelopmental delay

Regina Proskorovski-Ohayon; Rotem Kadir; Analia Michalowski; Hagit Flusser; Yonatan Perez; Eli Hershkovitz; Sara Sivan; Ohad S. Birk

PAX7 encodes a transcription factor essential in neural crest formation, myogenesis, and pituitary lineage specification. Pax7 null mice fail to thrive and exhibit muscle weakness, dying within 3 weeks. We describe a human autosomal‐recessive syndrome, with failure to thrive, severe global developmental delay, microcephaly, axial hypotonia, pyramidal signs, dystonic postures, seizures, irritability, and self‐mutilation. Aside from low blood carnitine levels, biochemical and metabolic screen was normal, with growth hormone deficiency in one patient. Electromyography was normal, with no specific findings in brain MRI/MRS yet nondemonstrable neuropituitary, a finding of unclear significance. Muscle biopsy showed unaffected overall organization of muscle fibers, yet positive fetal alpha myosin staining, suggesting regeneration. Homozygosity mapping with whole‐exome sequencing identified a single disease‐associated mutation in PAX7, segregating as expected in the kindred with no homozygosity in 200 ethnically matched controls. Transfection experiments showed that the PAX7 splice‐site mutation putatively causes nonsense‐mediated mRNA decay affecting onlyPAX7 isoform 3. This isoform, expressed specifically in brain, skeletal muscle and testes, is the sole Pax7 variant normally found in mice. The human muscle phenotype is in line with that in conditional Pax7 null mutant mice, where initial aberrant histological findings resolve postnatally through muscle regeneration.

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Ohad S. Birk

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Rotem Kadir

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Hagit Flusser

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Libe Gradstein

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Michael Volodarsky

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Zamir Shorer

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Idan Cohen

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Daniel Halperin

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Ginat Narkis

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Ohad Wormser

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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