Publications by authors named "S Hinreiner"

Background: The protein O-mannosyltransferase 1, encoded by the POMT1 gene, is a key enzyme in the glycosylation of α-dystroglycan. POMT1-related disorders belong to the group of dystroglycanopathies characterized by a proximally pronounced muscular dystrophy with structural or functional involvement of the brain and/or the eyes. The phenotypic spectrum ranges from the severe Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) to milder forms of limb girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD).

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Holoprosencephaly (HPE) has been defined as a distinct clinical entity with characteristic facial gestalt, which may-or may not-be associated with the true brain malformation observed postmortem in autopsy or in pre- or postnatal imaging. Affected families mainly show autosomal dominant inheritance with markedly reduced penetrance and extremely broad clinical variability even between mutation carriers within the same families. We here present advances in prenatal imaging over the last years, increasing the proportion of individuals with HPE identified prenatally including milder HPE forms and more frequently allowing to detect more severe forms already in early gestation.

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Deletions and duplications of genomic DNA contribute to evolution, phenotypic diversity, and human disease. The underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. We identified deletions of exon 10 of the SPAST gene in two unrelated families with hereditary spastic paraplegia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Biallelic loss-of-function mutations in the SPG11 gene result in various neurodegenerative disorders, such as hereditary spastic paraplegia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease.
  • Through comprehensive screening of multiple patients with hereditary spastic paraplegia, researchers identified numerous small mutations and larger genomic rearrangements, estimating that about 19% of harmful SPG11 mutations are due to copy number variants (CNVs).
  • The study reveals the significance of Alu elements in mutational mechanisms, including a two-step retrotransposition process, and emphasizes the importance of these findings for diagnosing different clinical manifestations of SPG11-related disorders.
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The discovery of copy number variations (CNV) in the human genome opened new perspectives in the study of the genetic causes of inherited disorders and the etiology of common diseases. Differently patterned instances of somatic mosaicism in CNV regions have been shown to be present in monozygotic twins and throughout different tissues within an individual. A single-cell-level investigation of CNV in different human cell types led us to uncover mitotically derived genomic mosaicism, which is stable in different cell types of one individual.

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