Publications by authors named "David Zocche"

CHIME syndrome is a variable condition characterized by ichthyosiform dermatosis, accompanied by intellectual disability, ocular colobomas, ear anomalies, and heart defects. It is an autosomal recessive condition caused by biallelic pathogenic variants in the PIGL gene. Until now, all reports of individuals affected with CHIME syndrome showed the PIGL c.

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  • The GA4GH Phenopacket Schema, released in 2022 and approved as a standard by ISO, allows the sharing of clinical and genomic data, including phenotypic descriptions and genetic information, to aid in genomic diagnostics.
  • Phenopacket Store Version 0.1.19 offers a collection of 6668 phenopackets linked to various diseases and genes, making it a crucial resource for testing algorithms and software in genomic research.
  • This collection represents the first extensive case-level, standardized phenotypic information sourced from medical literature, supporting advancements in diagnostic genomics and machine learning applications.
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  • * The study identifies RNU4-2, a non-coding RNA gene, as a significant contributor to syndromic NDD, revealing a specific 18-base pair region with low variation that includes variants found in 115 individuals with NDD.
  • * RNU4-2 is highly expressed in the developing brain, and its variants disrupt splicing processes, indicating that non-coding genes play a crucial role in rare disorders, potentially aiding in the diagnosis of thousands with NDD worldwide.
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The Global Alliance for Genomics and Health (GA4GH) Phenopacket Schema was released in 2022 and approved by ISO as a standard for sharing clinical and genomic information about an individual, including phenotypic descriptions, numerical measurements, genetic information, diagnoses, and treatments. A phenopacket can be used as an input file for software that supports phenotype-driven genomic diagnostics and for algorithms that facilitate patient classification and stratification for identifying new diseases and treatments. There has been a great need for a collection of phenopackets to test software pipelines and algorithms.

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Around 60% of individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD) remain undiagnosed after comprehensive genetic testing, primarily of protein-coding genes. Increasingly, large genome-sequenced cohorts are improving our ability to discover new diagnoses in the non-coding genome. Here, we identify the non-coding RNA as a novel syndromic NDD gene.

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Purpose: Existing resources that characterize the essentiality status of genes are based on either proliferation assessment in human cell lines, viability evaluation in mouse knockouts, or constraint metrics derived from human population sequencing studies. Several repositories document phenotypic annotations for rare disorders; however, there is a lack of comprehensive reporting on lethal phenotypes.

Methods: We queried Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man for terms related to lethality and classified all Mendelian genes according to the earliest age of death recorded for the associated disorders, from prenatal death to no reports of premature death.

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Essential genes are those whose function is required for cell proliferation and/or organism survival. A gene's intolerance to loss-of-function can be allocated within a spectrum, as opposed to being considered a binary feature, since this function might be essential at different stages of development, genetic backgrounds or other contexts. Existing resources that collect and characterise the essentiality status of genes are based on either proliferation assessment in human cell lines, embryonic and postnatal viability evaluation in different model organisms, and gene metrics such as intolerance to variation scores derived from human population sequencing studies.

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Background: Colorectal cancer (CRC) is one of the most frequent events in oncology. Advances in molecular understanding of the processes of carcinogenesis have shed light on the fundamental mechanisms of tumorigenesis. Currently, knowledge of the molecular basis of its pathogenesis is being used to improve patient care and devise more rational therapeutics.

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