201 results match your criteria: "Genomic Medicine Center[Affiliation]"

Mutations accumulate in the genome of every cell of the body throughout life, causing cancer and other diseases. Most mutations begin as nucleotide mismatches or damage in one of the two strands of the DNA before becoming double-strand mutations if unrepaired or misrepaired. However, current DNA-sequencing technologies cannot accurately resolve these initial single-strand events.

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Morphometric Analysis of Spina Bifida after Fetal Repair Shows New Subtypes with Associated Outcomes.

medRxiv

May 2024

Division of Fetal Intervention, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, McGovern Medical School, UTHealth Science Center, Houston, TX 77030.

Importance: The binary classification of spina bifida lesions as myelomeningocele (with sac) or myeloschisis (without sac) belies a spectrum of morphologies, which have not been correlated to clinical characteristics and outcomes.

Objective: To characterize spina bifida lesion types and correlate them with preoperative presentation and postoperative outcomes.

Design: Secondary analysis of images and videos obtained during fetoscopic spina bifida repair surgery from 2020-2023.

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Data on immunogenicity induced by SARS-CoV-2 infection and its sustainability are essential to inform COVID-19 vaccine schedule. A prospective cohort study was conducted among adults at-risk for COVID-19 during the Omicron variant-dominant epidemic. All were followed up for anti-spike RBD levels on days 0, 14, 90 and 180 after enrollment.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The SARS-CoV-2 envelope protein triggers inflammation via toll-like receptor 2 signaling, leading to a prolonged state of immune tolerance where monocytes become less responsive to further immune challenges.
  • * This immune tolerance encourages long-term dysfunction and increases vulnerability to future infections, suggesting that the E protein may be a potential target for therapies aimed at improving immune response after COVID-19.
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Article Synopsis
  • The ChiCaP study investigates the role of childhood cancer predisposition (ChiCaP) syndromes and how integrating germline whole-genome sequencing (gWGS) with tumor sequencing can improve diagnosis and treatment strategies for children with solid tumors.
  • Out of 309 children tested, 11% were diagnosed with ChiCaP syndromes, often missed before, showing significant diagnostic yield especially in certain cancers like retinoblastomas and high-grade astrocytomas.
  • The findings underscore the importance of combining systematic phenotyping and genomic diagnostics, as it enables personalized care and tailored treatment recommendations for a substantial number of affected patients.
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Large-scale mutational analysis identifies UNC93B1 variants that drive TLR-mediated autoimmunity in mice and humans.

J Exp Med

August 2024

Division of Immunology and Molecular Medicine, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.

Nucleic acid-sensing Toll-like receptors (TLR) 3, 7/8, and 9 are key innate immune sensors whose activities must be tightly regulated to prevent systemic autoimmune or autoinflammatory disease or virus-associated immunopathology. Here, we report a systematic scanning-alanine mutagenesis screen of all cytosolic and luminal residues of the TLR chaperone protein UNC93B1, which identified both negative and positive regulatory regions affecting TLR3, TLR7, and TLR9 responses. We subsequently identified two families harboring heterozygous coding mutations in UNC93B1, UNC93B1+/T93I and UNC93B1+/R336C, both in key negative regulatory regions identified in our screen.

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Utilizing trio whole-exome sequencing and a gene matching approach, we identified a cohort of 18 male individuals from 17 families with hemizygous variants in KCND1, including two de novo missense variants, three maternally inherited protein-truncating variants, and 12 maternally inherited missense variants. Affected subjects present with a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by diverse neurological abnormalities, mostly delays in different developmental domains, but also distinct neuropsychiatric signs and epilepsy. Heterozygous carrier mothers are clinically unaffected.

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is a primate-specific gene family that has expanded in the human lineage and has been implicated in neuronal progenitor proliferation and expansion of the frontal cortex. The gene family and its expression have been challenging to investigate because it is embedded in high-identity and highly variable segmental duplications. We sequenced and assembled the gene family using long-read sequencing data from 34 humans and 11 nonhuman primate species.

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Genomic Answers for Kids: Toward more equitable access to genomic testing for rare diseases in rural populations.

Am J Hum Genet

May 2024

Genomic Medicine Center, Children's Mercy Kansas City, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA; UKMC School of Medicine, University of Missouri Kansas City, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA; Department of Pediatrics, Children's Mercy Kansas City, Kansas City, MO 64108, USA.

Next-generation sequencing has revolutionized the speed of rare disease (RD) diagnoses. While clinical exome and genome sequencing represent an effective tool for many RD diagnoses, there is room to further improve the diagnostic odyssey of many RD patients. One recognizable intervention lies in increasing equitable access to genomic testing.

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Purpose: Tumor classification is a key component in personalized cancer care. For soft-tissue and bone tumors, this classification is currently based primarily on morphology assessment and IHC staining. However, these standard-of-care methods can pose challenges for pathologists.

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Corrigendum to "Volanesorsen and triglyceride levels in familial chylomicronemia syndrome: Long-term efficacy and safety data from patients in an open-label extension trial" [Journal of Clinical Lipidology, Volume 17, Issue 3, May-June 2023, Pages 342-355].

J Clin Lipidol

October 2023

Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, Room 1081, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093 USA (Drs Joseph L. Witztum; Sotirios Tsimikas); Ionis Pharmaceuticals, 2855 Gazelle Court, Carlsbad, CA 92010, USA (Drs Veronica J. Alexander; Lynnetta Watts; Shuting Xia; Sotirios Tsimikas).

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent studies highlight the widespread presence of rare structural variants (rSVs) in human genomes, which can significantly affect gene expression and are often linked to rare diseases without identifiable single nucleotide variants (SNVs).
  • The researchers proposed a new method to integrate trait-relevant polygenic scores (PGS) to streamline the identification of candidate disease genes impacted by rSVs, focusing on a core set of genes likely affected by these variants.
  • In their study involving patients in the Genomic Answers for Kids program, they discovered various types of rSVs in genes associated with Autism, showing that certain rSVs often occur in regions of higher genomic constraint, emphasizing the need for further functional analysis of these variants.
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Neurons form the basic anatomical and functional structure of the nervous system, and defects in neuronal differentiation or formation of neurites are associated with various psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders. Dynamic changes in the cytoskeleton are essential for this process, which is, inter alia, controlled by the dedicator of cytokinesis 4 (DOCK4) through the activation of RAC1. Here, we clinically describe 7 individuals (6 males and one female) with variants in DOCK4 and overlapping phenotype of mild to severe global developmental delay.

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Background: Increased inflammation caused by SARS-CoV-2 infection can lead to severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and long-term disease manifestations. The mechanisms of this variable long-term immune activation are poorly defined. One feature of this increased inflammation is elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines.

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Motivation: Human epigenomic data has been generated by large consortia for thousands of cell types to be used as a reference map of normal and disease chromatin states. Since epigenetic data contains potentially identifiable information, similarly to genetic data, most raw files generated by these consortia are stored in controlled-access databases. It is important to protect identifiable information, but this should not hinder secure sharing of these valuable datasets.

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Humans display remarkable interindividual variation in their immune response to identical challenges. Yet, our understanding of the genetic and epigenetic factors contributing to such variation remains limited. Here we performed in-depth genetic, epigenetic and transcriptional profiling on primary macrophages derived from individuals of European and African ancestry before and after infection with influenza A virus.

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RNA Sequencing in Disease Diagnosis.

Annu Rev Genomics Hum Genet

August 2024

Department of Biomedical Data Science, Department of Genetics, and Department of Pathology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, USA; email:

RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) enables the accurate measurement of multiple transcriptomic phenotypes for modeling the impacts of disease variants. Advances in technologies, experimental protocols, and analysis strategies are rapidly expanding the application of RNA-seq to identify disease biomarkers, tissue- and cell-type-specific impacts, and the spatial localization of disease-associated mechanisms. Ongoing international efforts to construct biobank-scale transcriptomic repositories with matched genomic data across diverse population groups are further increasing the utility of RNA-seq approaches by providing large-scale normative reference resources.

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Current and emerging sequencing-based tools for precision cancer medicine.

Mol Aspects Med

April 2024

Department of Molecular Medicine and Surgery, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden; Clinical Genetics and Genomics, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden; Genomic Medicine Center Karolinska, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.

Article Synopsis
  • - Current cancer precision medicine relies heavily on analyzing various genomic changes, with next-generation sequencing (NGS) becoming the primary method for diagnostics in recent years as it offers a comprehensive view of tumors.
  • - This shift towards NGS is driven by a need to evaluate more complex biomarkers and genomic variations that influence treatment outcomes, alongside the rapid decrease in sequencing costs and the advent of new targeted therapies.
  • - The review emphasizes the historical context of these methods, their clinical relevance in both pediatric and adult cancers, and discusses challenges in implementing them, while also stressing the importance of monitoring treatment response and exploring future advancements in sequencing technology.
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Fcγ receptors (FcγRs) are membrane-bound glycoproteins that bind to the fragment crystallizable (Fc) constant regions of IgG antibodies. Interactions between IgG immune complexes and FcγRs can initiate signal transduction that mediates important components of the immune response including activation of immune cells for clearance of opsonized pathogens or infected host cells. In humans, many studies have identified associations between FcγR gene polymorphisms and risk of infection, or progression of disease, suggesting a gene-level impact on FcγR-dependent immune responses.

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Emerging evidence implicates common genetic variation - aggregated into polygenic scores (PGS) - impacting the onset and phenotypic presentation of rare diseases. In this study, we quantified individual polygenic liability for 1,151 previously published PGS in a cohort of 2,374 probands enrolled in the Genomic Answers for Kids (GA4K) rare disease study, revealing widespread associations between rare disease phenotypes and PGSs for common complex diseases and traits, blood protein levels, and brain and other organ morphological measurements. We observed increased polygenic burden in probands with variants of unknown significance (VUS) compared to unaffected carrier parents.

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Background: Research priorities are best defined through engagement with communities who will be impacted by the research and have lived experience of the topics to be studied. We aimed to establish a pediatric rare disease community stakeholder group and empower them in (1) eliciting perspectives from affected families in the wider region and (2) synthesizing collective ideas into a research agenda focused on shared ethical, legal, and social implications (ELSI) across rare disease.

Methods: This two-year project utilized a community-centered approach to engage rare disease community members as equal partners in developing a research agenda for ELSI in rare disease.

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Rare DNA alterations that cause heritable diseases are only partially resolvable by clinical next-generation sequencing due to the difficulty of detecting structural variation (SV) in all genomic contexts. Long-read, high fidelity genome sequencing (HiFi-GS) detects SVs with increased sensitivity and enables assembling personal and graph genomes. We leverage standard reference genomes, public assemblies (n = 94) and a large collection of HiFi-GS data from a rare disease program (Genomic Answers for Kids, GA4K, n = 574 assemblies) to build a graph genome representing a unified SV callset in GA4K, identify common variation and prioritize SVs that are more likely to cause genetic disease (MAF < 0.

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A syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder caused by rare variants in PPFIA3.

Am J Hum Genet

January 2024

Department of Pediatrics, Section of Neurology and Developmental Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX, USA; Cain Pediatric Neurology Research Foundation Laboratories, Jan and Dan Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Houston, TX, USA; Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX, USA; Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA; McNair Medical Institute, The Robert and Janice McNair Foundation, Houston, TX, USA. Electronic address:

PPFIA3 encodes the protein-tyrosine phosphatase, receptor-type, F-polypeptide-interacting-protein-alpha-3 (PPFIA3), which is a member of the LAR-protein-tyrosine phosphatase-interacting-protein (liprin) family involved in synapse formation and function, synaptic vesicle transport, and presynaptic active zone assembly. The protein structure and function are evolutionarily well conserved, but human diseases related to PPFIA3 dysfunction are not yet reported in OMIM. Here, we report 20 individuals with rare PPFIA3 variants (19 heterozygous and 1 compound heterozygous) presenting with developmental delay, intellectual disability, hypotonia, dysmorphisms, microcephaly or macrocephaly, autistic features, and epilepsy with reduced penetrance.

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