Publications by authors named "Trouillard O"

Background: Although the group of paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD) genes is expanding, the molecular cause remains elusive in more than 50% of cases.

Objective: The aim is to identify the missing genetic causes of PKD.

Methods: Phenotypic characterization, whole exome sequencing and association test were performed among 53 PKD cases.

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Background: Mirror movements are involuntary movements of one hand that mirror intentional movements of the other hand. Congenital mirror movements (CMM) is a rare genetic disorder with autosomal dominant inheritance, in which mirror movements are the main neurological manifestation. CMM is associated with an abnormal decussation of the corticospinal tract, a major motor tract for voluntary movements.

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Background: Variants in SCN1A gene, encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel Na1.1, are associated with distinct epilepsy syndromes ranging from the relatively benign genetic epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+) to Dravet syndrome, a severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). Most SCN1A pathogenic variants are heterozygous changes inherited in a dominant or de novo inheritance and many cause a loss-of-function of one allele.

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Background: Genes involved in Tourette syndrome (TS) remain largely unknown. We aimed to identify genetic factors contributing to TS in a French cohort of 120 individuals using a combination of hypothesis-driven and exome-sequencing approaches.

Methods: We first sequenced exons of and in the TS cohort and subsequently sequenced the exome of 12 individuals harboring rare variants in these genes to find additional rare variants contributing to the disorder under the hypothesis of oligogenic inheritance.

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The execution of coordinated hand movements requires complex interactions between premotor and primary motor areas in the two hemispheres. The supplementary motor area (SMA) is involved in movement preparation and bimanual coordination. How the SMA controls bimanual coordination remains unclear, although there is evidence suggesting that the SMA could modulate interhemispheric interactions.

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The deleted in colorectal cancer (DCC) gene encodes the netrin-1 (NTN1) receptor DCC, a transmembrane protein required for the guidance of commissural axons. Germline DCC mutations disrupt the development of predominantly commissural tracts in the central nervous system (CNS) and cause a spectrum of neurological disorders. Monoallelic, missense, and predicted loss-of-function DCC mutations cause congenital mirror movements, isolated agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACC), or both.

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Netrin-1 is a secreted protein that was first identified 20 years ago as an axon guidance molecule that regulates midline crossing in the CNS. It plays critical roles in various tissues throughout development and is implicated in tumorigenesis and inflammation in adulthood. Despite extensive studies, no inherited human disease has been directly associated with mutations in NTN1, the gene coding for netrin-1.

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  • DCC is a NETRIN-1 receptor that helps guide nerve cells across the midline in the central nervous system, specifically affecting the corticospinal tract (CST), which is crucial for voluntary movement.
  • In Kanga mice with a faulty DCC protein, the CST does not cross the midline correctly, similar to humans with DCC mutations who experience congenital mirror movements (CMM).
  • The study found that CMM patients have more ipsilateral CST projections, while DCC deletion in mice did not change CST anatomy, indicating that DCC plays a key role in CST midline crossing in both species, but through a non-cell-autonomous mechanism in mice.
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Brain malformations involving the corpus callosum are common in children with developmental disabilities. We identified DCC mutations in four families and five sporadic individuals with isolated agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACC) without intellectual disability. DCC mutations result in variable dominant phenotypes with decreased penetrance, including mirror movements and ACC associated with a favorable developmental prognosis.

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Background: Autosomal dominant congenital mirror movements (CMM) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by early onset involuntary movements of one side of the body that mirror intentional movements on the contralateral side; these persist throughout life in the absence of other neurological symptoms. The main culprit genes responsible for this condition are and . This condition has only been reported in a few families, and the molecular mechanisms linking mutations and mirror movements (MM) are poorly understood.

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Objective: To investigate the clinical spectrum and distinguishing features of adenylate cyclase 5 (ADCY5)-related dyskinesia and genotype-phenotype relationship.

Methods: We analyzed ADCY5 in patients with choreiform or dystonic movements by exome or targeted sequencing. Suspected mosaicism was confirmed by allele-specific amplification.

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  • - The study aimed to identify mutations in two genes, DCC and RAD51, in individuals with congenital mirror movements (CMM), analyzing both familial and simplex cases.
  • - Researchers conducted thorough neurological assessments, performed Sanger sequencing, and used a quantitative method to detect gene changes, comparing their findings to a control group.
  • - They discovered novel mutations in the DCC gene associated with CMM, with a significant difference in the frequency of harmful variants between patients and controls, indicating a strong link between these genes and CMM, though more genes likely contribute to the condition.
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Hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) channels contribute to cationic Ih current in neurons and regulate the excitability of neuronal networks. Studies in rat models have shown that the Hcn1 gene has a key role in epilepsy, but clinical evidence implicating HCN1 mutations in human epilepsy is lacking. We carried out exome sequencing for parent-offspring trios with fever-sensitive, intractable epileptic encephalopathy, leading to the discovery of two de novo missense HCN1 mutations.

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Purpose: Dominant mutations in the STXBP1 gene are a recently identified cause of infantile epileptic encephalopathy without metabolic and structural brain anomalies. To date, 25 patients with heterozygous mutation or deletion of STXBP1 have been reported. A diagnosis of early infantile epileptic encephalopathy with suppression-burst (Ohtahara syndrome) was made in most of them, with infantile spasms and nonsyndromic infantile epileptic encephalopathy being the diagnosis in other patients.

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Lafora disease is a fatal autosomal recessive form of progressive myoclonus epilepsy. Patients manifest myoclonus and tonic-clonic seizures, visual hallucinations, intellectual, and progressive neurologic deterioration beginning in adolescence. The two genes known to be involved in Lafora disease are EPM2A and NHLRC1 (EPM2B).

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Mutations in PCDH19, encoding protocadherin 19 on chromosome X, cause familial epilepsy and mental retardation limited to females or Dravet-like syndrome. Heterozygous females are affected while hemizygous males are spared, this unusual mode of inheritance being probably due to a mechanism called cellular interference. To extend the mutational and clinical spectra associated with PCDH19, we screened 150 unrelated patients (113 females) with febrile and afebrile seizures for mutations or rearrangements in the gene.

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