16 results on '"Montantin G"'
Search Results
2. Delineation of CCDC39/CCDC40 mutation spectrum and associated phenotypes in primary ciliary dyskinesia
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Legendre, M, primary, Blanchon, S, additional, Copin, B, additional, Duquesnoy, P, additional, Montantin, G, additional, Kott, E, additional, Dastot, F, additional, Jeanson, L, additional, Cachanado, M, additional, Rousseau, A, additional, Papon, JF, additional, Tamalet, A, additional, Vojtek, AM, additional, Escalier, D, additional, Coste, A, additional, de Blic, J, additional, Clément, A, additional, Escudier, E, additional, and Amselem, S, additional
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- 2012
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3. Skewed X-chromosome inactivation drives the proportion of DNAAF6 -defective airway motile cilia and variable expressivity in primary ciliary dyskinesia.
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Thomas L, Cuisset L, Papon JF, Tamalet A, Pin I, Abou Taam R, Faucon C, Montantin G, Tissier S, Duquesnoy P, Dastot-Le Moal F, Copin B, Carion N, Louis B, Chantot-Bastaraud S, Siffroi JP, Mitri R, Coste A, Escudier E, Thouvenin G, Amselem S, and Legendre M
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- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Ciliary Motility Disorders genetics, Ciliary Motility Disorders pathology, DNA Methylation genetics, Dyneins genetics, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Kartagener Syndrome pathology, Mutation, Phenotype, Cilia pathology, Cilia genetics, X Chromosome Inactivation genetics
- Abstract
Background: Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare airway disorder caused by defective motile cilia. Only male patients have been reported with pathogenic mutations in X-linked DNAAF6 , which result in the absence of ciliary dynein arms, whereas their heterozygous mothers are supposedly healthy. Our objective was to assess the possible clinical and ciliary consequences of X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) in these mothers., Methods: XCI patterns of six mothers of male patients with DNAAF6 -related PCD were determined by DNA-methylation studies and compared with their clinical phenotype (6/6 mothers), as well as their ciliary phenotype (4/6 mothers), as assessed by immunofluorescence and high-speed videomicroscopy analyses. The mutated X chromosome was tracked to assess the percentage of cells with a normal inactivated DNAAF6 allele., Results: The mothers' phenotypes ranged from absence of symptoms to mild/moderate or severe airway phenotypes, closely reflecting their XCI pattern. Analyses of the symptomatic mothers' airway ciliated cells revealed the coexistence of normal cells and cells with immotile cilia lacking dynein arms, whose ratio closely mirrored their XCI pattern., Conclusion: This study highlights the importance of searching for heterozygous pathogenic DNAAF6 mutations in all female relatives of male PCD patients with a DNAAF6 defect, as well as in females consulting for mild chronic respiratory symptoms. Our results also demonstrate that about one-third-ranging from 20% to 50%-normal ciliated airway cells sufficed to avoid severe PCD, a result paving the way for gene therapy., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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4. Combining RSPH9 founder mutation screening and next-generation sequencing analysis is efficient for primary ciliary dyskinesia diagnosis in Saudi patients.
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Mabrouk I, Al-Harthi N, Mani R, Montantin G, Tissier S, Lagha R, Ben Abdallah F, Hassan MM, Alhomrani M, Gaber A, Alsanie WF, Ouali H, Jambi FA, Almaghamsi TM, Alqarni NA, Alfarsi NA, Kashgari K, Al-Zahrani HJ, Al-Shamary ZA, Al-Harbi A, Amselem S, Escudier E, and Legendre M
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- Founder Effect, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Mutation, Saudi Arabia, Cytoskeletal Proteins genetics, Kartagener Syndrome diagnosis, Kartagener Syndrome genetics
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous ciliopathy. Dysfunction of motile respiratory and nodal cilia results in sinopulmonary symptoms associated with laterality defects (LD) found in half of the patients. The molecular basis of the disease is insufficiently investigated in patients originating from the Arabian Peninsula. In a group of 16 unrelated Saudi patients clinically suspected of PCD and among whom only 5 (31%) had LD, we first screened by PCR-RFLP two founder mutations, RSPH9 c.804_806del and CCDC39 c.2190del previously identified in patients from the Arabian Peninsula and Tunisia, respectively. When negative, targeted panel or whole-exome sequencing was performed. Three patients were homozygous for the mutation in RSPH9, which encodes an axonemal protein that is absent from nodal cilia. None of the patients carried the CCDC39 founder mutation frequent in Tunisia. NGS analysis showed that nine patients had homozygous mutations in PCD genes. In total, sequential RFLP and NGS analysis solved 75% (12/16) of cases and identified ten distinct mutations, among which six are novel, in nine different genes. These results, which highlight the genetic heterogeneity of PCD in Saudi Arabia, show that the RSPH9 c.804_806del mutation is a prevalent mutation among Saudi patients, whereas the CCDC39 c.2190del ancestral allele is most likely related to the Berber population. This study shows that RSPH9 founder mutation first-line screening and NGS analysis is efficient for the genetic exploration of PCD in Saudi patients. The RSPH9 founder mutation accounts for the low rate of LD among Saudi patients., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Japan Society of Human Genetics.)
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- 2022
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5. Deep phenotyping, including quantitative ciliary beating parameters, and extensive genotyping in primary ciliary dyskinesia.
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Blanchon S, Legendre M, Bottier M, Tamalet A, Montantin G, Collot N, Faucon C, Dastot F, Copin B, Clement A, Filoche M, Coste A, Amselem S, Escudier E, Papon JF, and Louis B
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- Adolescent, Adult, Axoneme genetics, Axoneme pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cilia pathology, Ciliary Motility Disorders diagnostic imaging, Ciliary Motility Disorders pathology, Female, Genotype, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Microscopy, Video, Middle Aged, Mutation genetics, Phenotype, Young Adult, Axonemal Dyneins genetics, Cilia genetics, Ciliary Motility Disorders genetics, Cytoskeletal Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Background: Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare genetic disorder resulting in abnormal ciliary motility/structure, extremely heterogeneous at genetic and ultrastructural levels. We aimed, in light of extensive genotyping, to identify specific and quantitative ciliary beating anomalies, according to the ultrastructural phenotype., Methods: We prospectively included 75 patients with PCD exhibiting the main five ultrastructural phenotypes (n=15/group), screened all corresponding PCD genes and measured quantitative beating parameters by high-speed video-microscopy (HSV)., Results: Sixty-eight (91%) patients carried biallelic mutations. Combined outer/inner dynein arms (ODA/IDA) defect induces total ciliary immotility, regardless of the gene involved. ODA defect induces a residual beating with dramatically low ciliary beat frequency (CBF) related to increased recovery stroke and pause durations, especially in case of DNAI1 mutations. IDA defect with microtubular disorganisation induces a low percentage of beating cilia with decreased beating angle and, in case of CCDC39 mutations, a relatively conserved mean CBF with a high maximal CBF. Central complex defect induces nearly normal beating parameters, regardless of the gene involved, and a gyrating motion in a minority of ciliated edges, especially in case of RSPH1 mutations. PCD with normal ultrastructure exhibits heterogeneous HSV values, but mostly an increased CBF with an extremely high maximal CBF., Conclusion: Quantitative HSV analysis in PCD objectives beating anomalies associated with specific ciliary ultrastructures and genotypes. It represents a promising approach to guide the molecular analyses towards the best candidate gene(s) to be analysed or to assess the pathogenicity of the numerous sequence variants identified by next-generation-sequencing., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2020
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6. TTC12 Loss-of-Function Mutations Cause Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia and Unveil Distinct Dynein Assembly Mechanisms in Motile Cilia Versus Flagella.
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Thomas L, Bouhouche K, Whitfield M, Thouvenin G, Coste A, Louis B, Szymanski C, Bequignon E, Papon JF, Castelli M, Lemullois M, Dhalluin X, Drouin-Garraud V, Montantin G, Tissier S, Duquesnoy P, Copin B, Dastot F, Couvet S, Barbotin AL, Faucon C, Honore I, Maitre B, Beydon N, Tamalet A, Rives N, Koll F, Escudier E, Tassin AM, Touré A, Mitchell V, Amselem S, and Legendre M
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- Adult, Axoneme, Child, Cilia metabolism, Ciliary Motility Disorders pathology, Dyneins genetics, Female, Flagella metabolism, Homozygote, Humans, Infertility, Male etiology, Infertility, Male pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Pedigree, Phenotype, Sperm Motility, Sperm Tail metabolism, Young Adult, Cilia pathology, Ciliary Motility Disorders etiology, Dyneins metabolism, Flagella pathology, Mutation, Proteins genetics, Sperm Tail pathology
- Abstract
Cilia and flagella are evolutionarily conserved organelles whose motility relies on the outer and inner dynein arm complexes (ODAs and IDAs). Defects in ODAs and IDAs result in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a disease characterized by recurrent airway infections and male infertility. PCD mutations in assembly factors have been shown to cause a combined ODA-IDA defect, affecting both cilia and flagella. We identified four loss-of-function mutations in TTC12, which encodes a cytoplasmic protein, in four independent families in which affected individuals displayed a peculiar PCD phenotype characterized by the absence of ODAs and IDAs in sperm flagella, contrasting with the absence of only IDAs in respiratory cilia. Analyses of both primary cells from individuals carrying TTC12 mutations and human differentiated airway cells invalidated for TTC12 by a CRISPR-Cas9 approach revealed an IDA defect restricted to a subset of single-headed IDAs that are different in flagella and cilia, whereas TTC12 depletion in the ciliate Paramecium tetraurelia recapitulated the sperm phenotype. Overall, our study, which identifies TTC12 as a gene involved in PCD, unveils distinct dynein assembly mechanisms in human motile cilia versus flagella., (Copyright © 2019 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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7. Primary ciliary dyskinesia gene contribution in Tunisia: Identification of a major Mediterranean allele.
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Mani R, Belkacem S, Soua Z, Chantot S, Montantin G, Tissier S, Copin B, Bouguila J, Rive Le Gouard N, Boughamoura L, Ben Ameur S, Hachicha M, Boussoffara R, Boussetta K, Hammouda S, Bedoui A, Besbes H, Meddeb S, Chraeit K, Khlifa M, Escudier E, Amselem S, Mabrouk I, and Legendre M
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- Alleles, Amino Acid Substitution, Exons, Female, Genotype, Humans, Kartagener Syndrome diagnosis, Male, Tunisia epidemiology, Dyneins genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Kartagener Syndrome epidemiology, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Mutation, Population Surveillance
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a genetically heterogeneous disease of motile cilia. Even though PCD is widely studied, North-African patients have been rarely explored. In this study, we aim at confirming the clinical diagnosis and explore the genetic spectrum of PCD in a cohort of Tunisian patients. Forty clinically diagnosed patients with PCD belonging to 34 families were recruited from Tunisian pediatric departments. In each proband, targeted capture PCD panel sequencing of the 40 PCD genes was performed. PCD panel sequencing identified bi-allelic mutations in 82% of the families in eight PCD genes. Remarkably, 23.5% of patients carried the same c.2190del CCDC39 mutation. Single nucleotide polymorphism profiling in six unrelated patients carrying this mutation has revealed a founder effect in North-African patients. This mutation is estimated to date back at least 1,400-1,750 years ago. The identification of this major allele allowed us to suggest a cost-effective genetic diagnostic strategy in North-African patients with PCD., (© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
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- 2020
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8. Mutations in DNAH17, Encoding a Sperm-Specific Axonemal Outer Dynein Arm Heavy Chain, Cause Isolated Male Infertility Due to Asthenozoospermia.
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Whitfield M, Thomas L, Bequignon E, Schmitt A, Stouvenel L, Montantin G, Tissier S, Duquesnoy P, Copin B, Chantot S, Dastot F, Faucon C, Barbotin AL, Loyens A, Siffroi JP, Papon JF, Escudier E, Amselem S, Mitchell V, Touré A, and Legendre M
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- Adult, Humans, Infertility, Male metabolism, Infertility, Male pathology, Male, Pedigree, Phenotype, Spermatozoa metabolism, Asthenozoospermia complications, Axonemal Dyneins genetics, Infertility, Male etiology, Mutation, Spermatozoa pathology
- Abstract
Motile cilia and sperm flagella share an evolutionarily conserved axonemal structure. Their structural and/or functional defects are associated with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a genetic disease characterized by chronic respiratory-tract infections and in which most males are infertile due to asthenozoospermia. Among the well-characterized axonemal protein complexes, the outer dynein arms (ODAs), through ATPase activity of their heavy chains (HCs), play a major role for cilia and flagella beating. However, the contribution of the different HCs (γ-type: DNAH5 and DNAH8 and β-type: DNAH9, DNAH11, and DNAH17) in ODAs from both organelles is unknown. By analyzing five male individuals who consulted for isolated infertility and displayed a loss of ODAs in their sperm cells but not in their respiratory cells, we identified bi-allelic mutations in DNAH17. The isolated infertility phenotype prompted us to compare the protein composition of ODAs in the sperm and ciliary axonemes from control individuals. We show that DNAH17 and DNAH8, but not DNAH5, DNAH9, or DNAH11, colocalize with α-tubulin along the sperm axoneme, whereas the reverse picture is observed in respiratory cilia, thus explaining the phenotype restricted to sperm cells. We also demonstrate the loss of function associated with DNAH17 mutations in two unrelated individuals by performing immunoblot and immunofluorescence analyses on sperm cells; these analyses indicated the absence of DNAH17 and DNAH8, whereas DNAH2 and DNALI, two inner dynein arm components, were present. Overall, this study demonstrates that mutations in DNAH17 are responsible for isolated male infertility and provides information regarding ODA composition in human spermatozoa., (Copyright © 2019 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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9. Mutations in DNAJB13, Encoding an HSP40 Family Member, Cause Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia and Male Infertility.
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El Khouri E, Thomas L, Jeanson L, Bequignon E, Vallette B, Duquesnoy P, Montantin G, Copin B, Dastot-Le Moal F, Blanchon S, Papon JF, Lorès P, Yuan L, Collot N, Tissier S, Faucon C, Gacon G, Patrat C, Wolf JP, Dulioust E, Crestani B, Escudier E, Coste A, Legendre M, Touré A, and Amselem S
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- Adolescent, Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins, Axoneme genetics, Cilia genetics, Ciliary Motility Disorders pathology, Exome genetics, Female, Flagella genetics, Flagella pathology, HSP40 Heat-Shock Proteins metabolism, Heat-Shock Proteins metabolism, Homozygote, Humans, Infertility, Male pathology, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Male, Middle Aged, Molecular Chaperones, Mutation, Missense genetics, Phenotype, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Proteasome Endopeptidase Complex metabolism, Protein Stability, RNA Splicing genetics, Semen, Spermatozoa metabolism, Spermatozoa pathology, Ciliary Motility Disorders genetics, Heat-Shock Proteins genetics, Infertility, Male genetics, Mutation
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an autosomal-recessive disease due to functional or ultra-structural defects of motile cilia. Affected individuals display recurrent respiratory-tract infections; most males are infertile as a result of sperm flagellar dysfunction. The great majority of the PCD-associated genes identified so far encode either components of dynein arms (DAs), which are multiprotein-ATPase complexes essential for ciliary motility, or proteins involved in DA assembly. To identify the molecular basis of a PCD phenotype characterized by central complex (CC) defects but normal DA structure, a phenotype found in ∼15% of cases, we performed whole-exome sequencing in a male individual with PCD and unexplained CC defects. This analysis, combined with whole-genome SNP genotyping, identified a homozygous mutation in DNAJB13 (c.833T>G), a gene encoding a HSP40 co-chaperone whose ortholog in the flagellated alga Chlamydomonas localizes to the radial spokes. In vitro studies showed that this missense substitution (p.Met278Arg), which involves a highly conserved residue of several HSP40 family members, leads to protein instability and triggers proteasomal degradation, a result confirmed by the absence of endogenous DNAJB13 in cilia and sperm from this individual. Subsequent DNAJB13 analyses identified another homozygous mutation in a second family; the study of DNAJB13 transcripts obtained from airway cells showed that this mutation (c.68+1G>C) results in a splicing defect consistent with a loss-of-function mutation. Overall, this study, which establishes mutations in DNAJB13 as a cause of PCD, unveils the key role played by DNAJB13 in the proper formation and function of ciliary and flagellar axonemes in humans., (Copyright © 2016 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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10. Mutations in GAS8, a Gene Encoding a Nexin-Dynein Regulatory Complex Subunit, Cause Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia with Axonemal Disorganization.
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Jeanson L, Thomas L, Copin B, Coste A, Sermet-Gaudelus I, Dastot-Le Moal F, Duquesnoy P, Montantin G, Collot N, Tissier S, Papon JF, Clement A, Louis B, Escudier E, Amselem S, and Legendre M
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- Adult, Child, Cytoskeletal Proteins metabolism, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Kartagener Syndrome metabolism, Kartagener Syndrome pathology, Male, Neoplasm Proteins metabolism, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Axoneme pathology, Cytoskeletal Proteins genetics, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Mutation, Neoplasm Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by chronic respiratory infections of the upper and lower airways, hypofertility, and, in approximately half of the cases, situs inversus. This complex phenotype results from defects in motile cilia and sperm flagella. Among the numerous genes involved in PCD, very few-including CCDC39 and CCDC40-carry mutations that lead to a disorganization of ciliary axonemes with microtubule misalignment. Focusing on this particular phenotype, we identified bi-allelic loss-of-function mutations in GAS8, a gene that encodes a subunit of the nexin-dynein regulatory complex (N-DRC) orthologous to DRC4 of the flagellated alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Unlike the majority of PCD patients, individuals with GAS8 mutations have motile cilia, which, as documented by high-speed videomicroscopy, display a subtle beating pattern defect characterized by slightly reduced bending amplitude. Immunofluorescence studies performed on patients' respiratory cilia revealed that GAS8 is not required for the proper expression of CCDC39 and CCDC40. Rather, mutations in GAS8 affect the subcellular localization of another N-DRC subunit called DRC3. Overall, this study, which identifies GAS8 as a PCD gene, unveils the key importance of the corresponding protein in N-DRC integrity and in the proper alignment of axonemal microtubules in humans., (© 2016 WILEY PERIODICALS, INC.)
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- 2016
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11. RSPH3 Mutations Cause Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia with Central-Complex Defects and a Near Absence of Radial Spokes.
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Jeanson L, Copin B, Papon JF, Dastot-Le Moal F, Duquesnoy P, Montantin G, Cadranel J, Corvol H, Coste A, Désir J, Souayah A, Kott E, Collot N, Tissier S, Louis B, Tamalet A, de Blic J, Clement A, Escudier E, Amselem S, and Legendre M
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- Cilia ultrastructure, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Microscopy, Video, Cilia genetics, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Kartagener Syndrome pathology, Mutation genetics, Nerve Tissue Proteins genetics, Phenotype
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare autosomal-recessive condition resulting from structural and/or functional defects of the axoneme in motile cilia and sperm flagella. The great majority of mutations identified so far involve genes whose defects result in dynein-arm anomalies. By contrast, PCD due to CC/RS defects (those in the central complex [CC] and radial spokes [RSs]), which might be difficult to diagnose, remains mostly unexplained. We identified non-ambiguous RSPH3 mutations in 5 of 48 independent families affected by CC/RS defects. RSPH3, whose ortholog in the flagellated alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii encodes a RS-stalk protein, is mainly expressed in respiratory and testicular cells. Its protein product, which localizes within the cilia of respiratory epithelial cells, was undetectable in airway cells from an individual with RSPH3 mutations and in whom RSPH23 (a RS-neck protein) and RSPH1 and RSPH4A (RS-head proteins) were found to be still present within cilia. In the case of RSPH3 mutations, high-speed-videomicroscopy analyses revealed the coexistence of immotile cilia and motile cilia with movements of reduced amplitude. A striking feature of the ultrastructural phenotype associated with RSPH3 mutations is the near absence of detectable RSs in all cilia in combination with a variable proportion of cilia with CC defects. Overall, this study shows that RSPH3 mutations contribute to disease in more than 10% of PCD-affected individuals with CC/RS defects, thereby allowing an accurate diagnosis to be made in such cases. It also unveils the key role of RSPH3 in the proper building of RSs and the CC in humans., (Copyright © 2015 The American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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12. Loss-of-function mutations in RSPH1 cause primary ciliary dyskinesia with central-complex and radial-spoke defects.
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Kott E, Legendre M, Copin B, Papon JF, Dastot-Le Moal F, Montantin G, Duquesnoy P, Piterboth W, Amram D, Bassinet L, Beucher J, Beydon N, Deneuville E, Houdouin V, Journel H, Just J, Nathan N, Tamalet A, Collot N, Jeanson L, Le Gouez M, Vallette B, Vojtek AM, Epaud R, Coste A, Clement A, Housset B, Louis B, Escudier E, and Amselem S
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- Amino Acid Sequence, Cilia ultrastructure, DNA-Binding Proteins chemistry, Epithelial Cells metabolism, Epithelial Cells pathology, Family, Female, Humans, Male, Microscopy, Video, Molecular Sequence Data, Phenotype, Respiration, Cilia genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Kartagener Syndrome pathology, Mutation genetics
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare autosomal-recessive respiratory disorder resulting from defects of motile cilia. Various axonemal ultrastructural phenotypes have been observed, including one with so-called central-complex (CC) defects, whose molecular basis remains unexplained in most cases. To identify genes involved in this phenotype, whose diagnosis can be particularly difficult to establish, we combined homozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing in a consanguineous individual with CC defects. This identified a nonsense mutation in RSPH1, a gene whose ortholog in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii encodes a radial-spoke (RS)-head protein and is mainly expressed in respiratory and testis cells. Subsequent analyses of RSPH1 identified biallelic mutations in 10 of 48 independent families affected by CC defects. These mutations include splicing defects, as demonstrated by the study of RSPH1 transcripts obtained from airway cells of affected individuals. Wild-type RSPH1 localizes within cilia of airway cells, but we were unable to detect it in an individual with RSPH1 loss-of-function mutations. High-speed-videomicroscopy analyses revealed the coexistence of different ciliary beating patterns-cilia with a normal beat frequency but abnormal motion alongside immotile cilia or cilia with a slowed beat frequency-in each individual. This study shows that this gene is mutated in 20.8% of individuals with CC defects, whose diagnosis could now be improved by molecular screening. RSPH1 mutations thus appear as a major etiology for this PCD phenotype, which in fact includes RS defects, thereby unveiling the importance of RSPH1 in the proper building of CCs and RSs in humans., (Copyright © 2013 The American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
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13. Loss-of-function mutations in LRRC6, a gene essential for proper axonemal assembly of inner and outer dynein arms, cause primary ciliary dyskinesia.
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Kott E, Duquesnoy P, Copin B, Legendre M, Dastot-Le Moal F, Montantin G, Jeanson L, Tamalet A, Papon JF, Siffroi JP, Rives N, Mitchell V, de Blic J, Coste A, Clement A, Escalier D, Touré A, Escudier E, and Amselem S
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- Alleles, Amino Acid Sequence, Axonemal Dyneins metabolism, Cilia genetics, Cilia pathology, Consanguinity, Consensus Sequence, Cytoskeletal Proteins, Female, Fertility genetics, Gene Order, Humans, Kartagener Syndrome metabolism, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Phenotype, Protein Transport, Proteins chemistry, Proteins metabolism, Sequence Alignment, Sperm Tail metabolism, Sperm Tail pathology, Axonemal Dyneins genetics, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Mutation, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a group of autosomal-recessive disorders resulting from cilia and sperm-flagella defects, which lead to respiratory infections and male infertility. Most implicated genes encode structural proteins that participate in the composition of axonemal components, such as dynein arms (DAs), that are essential for ciliary and flagellar movements; they explain the pathology in fewer than half of the affected individuals. We undertook this study to further understand the pathogenesis of PCD due to the absence of both DAs. We identified, via homozygosity mapping, an early frameshift in LRRC6, a gene that encodes a leucine-rich-repeat (LRR)-containing protein. Subsequent analyses of this gene mainly expressed in testis and respiratory cells identified biallelic mutations in several independent individuals. The situs inversus observed in two of them supports a key role for LRRC6 in embryonic nodal cilia. Study of native LRRC6 in airway epithelial cells revealed that it localizes to the cytoplasm and within cilia, whereas it is absent from cells with loss-of-function mutations, in which DA protein markers are also missing. These results are consistent with the transmission-electron-microscopy data showing the absence of both DAs in cilia or flagella from individuals with LRRC6 mutations. In spite of structural and functional similarities between LRRC6 and DNAAF1, another LRR-containing protein involved in the same PCD phenotype, the two proteins are not redundant. The evolutionarily conserved LRRC6, therefore, emerges as an additional player in DA assembly, a process that is essential for proper axoneme building and that appears to be much more complex than was previously thought., (Copyright © 2012 The American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2012
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14. Delineation of CCDC39/CCDC40 mutation spectrum and associated phenotypes in primary ciliary dyskinesia.
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Blanchon S, Legendre M, Copin B, Duquesnoy P, Montantin G, Kott E, Dastot F, Jeanson L, Cachanado M, Rousseau A, Papon JF, Beydon N, Brouard J, Crestani B, Deschildre A, Désir J, Dollfus H, Leheup B, Tamalet A, Thumerelle C, Vojtek AM, Escalier D, Coste A, de Blic J, Clément A, Escudier E, and Amselem S
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Axoneme genetics, Axoneme pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, Cilia genetics, Cilia pathology, Cohort Studies, Cytoskeletal Proteins, DNA Mutational Analysis, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation genetics, Phenotype, Statistics, Nonparametric, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Background: CCDC39 and CCDC40 genes have recently been implicated in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) with inner dynein arm (IDA) defects and axonemal disorganisation; their contribution to the disease is, however, unknown. Aiming to delineate the CCDC39/CCDC40 mutation spectrum and associated phenotypes, this study screened a large cohort of patients with IDA defects, in whom clinical and ciliary phenotypes were accurately described., Methods: All CCDC39 and CCDC40 exons and intronic boundaries were sequenced in 43 patients from 40 unrelated families. The study recorded and compared clinical features (sex, origin, consanguinity, laterality defects, ages at first symptoms and at phenotype evaluation, neonatal respiratory distress, airway infections, nasal polyposis, otitis media, bronchiectasis, infertility), ciliary beat frequency, and quantitative ultrastructural analyses of cilia and sperm flagella., Results: Biallelic CCDC39 or CCDC40 mutations were identified in 30/34 (88.2%) unrelated families with IDA defects associated with axonemal disorganisation (22 and eight families, respectively). Fourteen of the 28 identified mutations are novel. No mutation was found in the six families with isolated IDA defects. Patients with identified mutations shared a similar phenotype, in terms of both clinical features and ciliary structure and function. The sperm flagellar ultrastructure, analysed in 4/7 infertile males, showed evidence of abnormalities similar to the ciliary ones., Conclusions: CCDC39 and CCDC40 mutations represent the major cause of PCD with IDA defects and axonemal disorganisation. Patients carrying CCDC39 or CCDC40 mutations are phenotypically indistinguishable. CCDC39 and CCDC40 analyses in selected patients ensure mutations are found with high probability, even if clinical or ciliary phenotypes cannot prioritise one analysis over the other.
- Published
- 2012
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15. CCDC39 is required for assembly of inner dynein arms and the dynein regulatory complex and for normal ciliary motility in humans and dogs.
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Merveille AC, Davis EE, Becker-Heck A, Legendre M, Amirav I, Bataille G, Belmont J, Beydon N, Billen F, Clément A, Clercx C, Coste A, Crosbie R, de Blic J, Deleuze S, Duquesnoy P, Escalier D, Escudier E, Fliegauf M, Horvath J, Hill K, Jorissen M, Just J, Kispert A, Lathrop M, Loges NT, Marthin JK, Momozawa Y, Montantin G, Nielsen KG, Olbrich H, Papon JF, Rayet I, Roger G, Schmidts M, Tenreiro H, Towbin JA, Zelenika D, Zentgraf H, Georges M, Lequarré AS, Katsanis N, Omran H, and Amselem S
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Cells, Cultured, Cytoskeletal Proteins, Dogs, Humans, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, Molecular Sequence Data, Mutation, Proteins analysis, Proteins physiology, Cilia physiology, Ciliary Motility Disorders genetics, Dyneins genetics, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an inherited disorder characterized by recurrent infections of the upper and lower respiratory tract, reduced fertility in males and situs inversus in about 50% of affected individuals (Kartagener syndrome). It is caused by motility defects in the respiratory cilia that are responsible for airway clearance, the flagella that propel sperm cells and the nodal monocilia that determine left-right asymmetry. Recessive mutations that cause PCD have been identified in genes encoding components of the outer dynein arms, radial spokes and cytoplasmic pre-assembly factors of axonemal dyneins, but these mutations account for only about 50% of cases of PCD. We exploited the unique properties of dog populations to positionally clone a new PCD gene, CCDC39. We found that loss-of-function mutations in the human ortholog underlie a substantial fraction of PCD cases with axonemal disorganization and abnormal ciliary beating. Functional analyses indicated that CCDC39 localizes to ciliary axonemes and is essential for assembly of inner dynein arms and the dynein regulatory complex.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Loss-of-function mutations in the human ortholog of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii ODA7 disrupt dynein arm assembly and cause primary ciliary dyskinesia.
- Author
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Duquesnoy P, Escudier E, Vincensini L, Freshour J, Bridoux AM, Coste A, Deschildre A, de Blic J, Legendre M, Montantin G, Tenreiro H, Vojtek AM, Loussert C, Clément A, Escalier D, Bastin P, Mitchell DR, and Amselem S
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Cytoplasm metabolism, DNA Mutational Analysis, Female, Flagella metabolism, Humans, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Pedigree, Phenotype, Sequence Homology, Amino Acid, Trypanosoma brucei brucei metabolism, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii genetics, Dyneins genetics, Kartagener Syndrome genetics, Microtubule-Associated Proteins genetics, Microtubule-Associated Proteins physiology, Mutation, Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Cilia and flagella are evolutionarily conserved structures that play various physiological roles in diverse cell types. Defects in motile cilia result in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), the most prominent ciliopathy, characterized by the association of respiratory symptoms, male infertility, and, in nearly 50% of cases, situs inversus. So far, most identified disease-causing mutations involve genes encoding various ciliary components, such those belonging to the dynein arms that are essential for ciliary motion. Following a candidate-gene approach based on data from a mutant strain of the biflagellated alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii carrying an ODA7 defect, we identified four families with a PCD phenotype characterized by the absence of both dynein arms and loss-of-function mutations in the human orthologous gene called LRRC50. Functional analyses performed in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and in another flagellated protist, Trypanosoma brucei, support a key role for LRRC50, a member of the leucine-rich-repeat superfamily, in cytoplasmic preassembly of dynein arms.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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