Publications by authors named "Rebecca Halligan"

Background: Hepatic glycogen storage diseases (GSDs) are characterised by enzyme defects affecting liver glycogen metabolism, where carbohydrate supplementation to prevent overnight hypoglycaemia is common. Concerns around sleep quality in hepatic GSDs relate to emerging evidence that overnight dysglycaemia impacts sleep quality.

Methods: This prospective observational study reported sleep quality and duration in children with hepatic GSDs over 7 days utilising: actigraphy (Actiwatch 2 by Phillips Respironics), sleep diaries, proxy reported age-appropriate sleep and quality-of-life (QoL) questionnaires, in the context of nocturnal glycaemic profiles continuous glucose monitor (CGM, Dexcom G6) and nocturnal dietary management strategies.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explores pre-mRNA splicing, its critical role in neurodevelopment, and how mutations in spliceosome-related genes U2AF2 and PRPF19 contribute to neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs).
  • - Researchers found multiple pathogenic variants in U2AF2 and PRPF19 across unrelated individuals, with functional analysis showing that specific U2AF2 variants disrupted normal splicing and neuritogenesis in human neurons.
  • - Additionally, investigations in Drosophila models revealed that the loss of function in U2AF2 and PRPF19 caused severe developmental defects and social issues, pointing to a genetic network wherein splicing factors like Rbfox1 play a significant role in brain development and function. *
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This report presents a case of childhood Gaucher disease type 1, a rare inherited metabolic disorder. Although the clinical symptoms were classical, the histological findings in this case were atypical and initially led to diagnostic uncertainty. The pathognomonic histological finding on bone marrow is Gaucher cells, which are lipid-engorged phagocytes secondary to the accumulation of glucosylceramide.

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Contiguous / deletion syndrome (CADDS) is a rare deletion syndrome involving two contiguous genes on Xq28, and (formerly known as ). Only nine individuals with this diagnosis have been reported in the medical literature to date. Intragenic loss-of-function variants in cause the deafness, dystonia, and cerebral hypomyelination syndrome (DDCH).

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Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (OTCD) is an X-linked urea cycle disorder characterised by reduced or absent OTC enzyme activity, resulting in the accumulation of neurotoxic ammonia. Approximately 80%-90% of the causative variants are identified by Sanger sequencing or multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) of the gene. A 23-year-old male with biochemical evidence of OTCD was referred for molecular analysis.

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Background: Glycogen storage disease type Ib (GSD Ib) is a severe disorder of carbohydrate metabolism due to bi-allelic variants in SLC37A4. It is associated with neutropaenia and neutrophil dysfunction, which has recently been attributed to the accumulation of 1,5-anhydroglucitol-6-phosphate (1,5AG6P) within neutrophils. Treatment with sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors, such as empagliflozin, is a novel therapy that reduces 1,5-anhydroglucitol (1,5AG) in plasma.

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Purpose: This paper aims to report collective information on safety and efficacy of empagliflozin drug repurposing in individuals with glycogen storage disease type Ib (GSD Ib).

Methods: This is an international retrospective questionnaire study on the safety and efficacy of empagliflozin use for management of neutropenia/neutrophil dysfunction in patients with GSD Ib, conducted among the respective health care providers from 24 countries across the globe.

Results: Clinical data from 112 individuals with GSD Ib were evaluated, representing a total of 94 treatment years.

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Ethylmalonic encephalopathy (MIM #602473) is a rare autosomal recessive metabolic condition caused by biallelic variants in (MIM #608451), characterized by global developmental delay, infantile hypotonia, seizures, and microvascular damage. The microvascular changes result in a pattern of relapsing spontaneous diffuse petechiae and purpura, positional acrocyanosis, and pedal edema, hemorrhagic suffusions of mucous membranes, and chronic diarrhea. Here, we describe an instructive case in which ethylmalonic encephalopathy masqueraded as meningococcal septicemia and shock.

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Glycogen storage disease type Ib (GSDIb) is characterized by hepatomegaly and fasting hypoglycaemia as well as neutropaenia and recurrent infections. We conducted a retrospective observational study on a cohort of patients with GSDIb across England. A total of 35 patients, with a median age of 9.

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Carnitine acyl-carnitine translocase deficiency (CACTD) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder of mitochondrial long-chain fatty-acid transport. Most patients present in the first 2 days of life, with hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, hyperammonaemia, cardiomyopathy or arrhythmia, hepatomegaly and elevated liver enzymes. Multi-centre international retrospective chart review of clinical presentation, biochemistry, treatment modalities including diet, subsequent complications, and mode of death of all patients.

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Mitochondrial protein synthesis requires charging mt-tRNAs with their cognate amino acids by mitochondrial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, with the exception of glutaminyl mt-tRNA (mt-tRNA). mt-tRNA is indirectly charged by a transamidation reaction involving the GatCAB aminoacyl-tRNA amidotransferase complex. Defects involving the mitochondrial protein synthesis machinery cause a broad spectrum of disorders, with often fatal outcome.

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