13 results on '"Trotta JR"'
Search Results
2. Author Correction: The utility of Next Generation Sequencing for molecular diagnostics in Rett syndrome
- Author
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Vidal S, Brandi-Tarrau N, Pacheco-Fernández P, Gerotina E, Blasco-Perez L, Trotta JR, Derdak S, O'Callaghan-Gordo M, Garcia-Cazorla A, Pineda M, and Armstrong-Moron J
- Published
- 2021
3. The utility of Next Generation Sequencing for molecular diagnostics in Rett syndrome
- Author
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Vidal-Falcó S, Brandi-Tarrau N, Pacheco-Fernández P, Gerotina E, Blasco-Perez L, Trotta JR, Derdak S, O'Callaghan-Gordo M, Garcia-Cazorla A, Pineda M, and Armstrong-Moron J
- Abstract
Rett syndrome (RTT) is an early-onset neurodevelopmental disorder that almost exclusively affects girls and is totally disabling. Three genes have been identified that cause RTT: MECP2, CDKL5 and FOXG1. However, the etiology of some of RTT patients still remains unknown. Recently, next generation sequencing (NGS) has promoted genetic diagnoses because of the quickness and affordability of the method. To evaluate the usefulness of NGS in genetic diagnosis, we present the genetic study of RTT-like patients using different techniques based on this technology. We studied 1577 patients with RTT-like clinical diagnoses and reviewed patients who were previously studied and thought to have RTT genes by Sanger sequencing. Genetically, 477 of 1577 patients with a RTT-like suspicion have been diagnosed. Positive results were found in 30% by Sanger sequencing, 23% with a custom panel, 24% with a commercial panel and 32% with whole exome sequencing. A genetic study using NGS allows the study of a larger number of genes associated with RTT-like symptoms simultaneously, providing genetic study of a wider group of patients as well as significantly reducing the response time and cost of the study.
- Published
- 2017
4. Gelada genomes highlight events of gene flow, hybridisation and local adaptation that track past climatic changes.
- Author
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Caldon M, Mutti G, Mondanaro A, Imai H, Shotake T, Oteo Garcia G, Belay G, Morata J, Trotta JR, Montinaro F, Gippoliti S, and Capelli C
- Subjects
- Animals, Ethiopia, Theropithecus genetics, Genome genetics, Gene Flow, Hybridization, Genetic, Climate Change, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
Theropithecus gelada, the last surviving species of this genus, occupy a unique and highly specialised ecological niche in the Ethiopian highlands. A subdivision into three geographically defined populations (Northern, Central and Southern) has been tentatively proposed for this species on the basis of genetic analyses, but genomic data have been investigated only for two of these groups (Northern and Central). Here we combined newly generated whole genome sequences of individuals sampled from the population living south of the East Africa Great Rift Valley with available data from the other two gelada populations to reconstruct the evolutionary history of the species. Integrating genomic and paleoclimatic data we found that gene-flow across populations and with Papio species tracked past climate changes. The isolation and climatic conditions experienced by Southern geladas during the Holocene shaped local diversity and generated diet-related genomic signatures., (© 2024 The Author(s). Molecular Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A critical spotlight on the paradigms of FFPE-DNA sequencing.
- Author
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Steiert TA, Parra G, Gut M, Arnold N, Trotta JR, Tonda R, Moussy A, Gerber Z, Abuja PM, Zatloukal K, Röcken C, Folseraas T, Grimsrud MM, Vogel A, Goeppert B, Roessler S, Hinz S, Schafmayer C, Rosenstiel P, Deleuze JF, Gut IG, Franke A, and Forster M
- Subjects
- DNA genetics, DNA analysis, Formaldehyde, Paraffin Embedding methods, Tissue Fixation methods, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods
- Abstract
In the late 19th century, formalin fixation with paraffin-embedding (FFPE) of tissues was developed as a fixation and conservation method and is still used to this day in routine clinical and pathological practice. The implementation of state-of-the-art nucleic acid sequencing technologies has sparked much interest for using historical FFPE samples stored in biobanks as they hold promise in extracting new information from these valuable samples. However, formalin fixation chemically modifies DNA, which potentially leads to incorrect sequences or misinterpretations in downstream processing and data analysis. Many publications have concentrated on one type of DNA damage, but few have addressed the complete spectrum of FFPE-DNA damage. Here, we review mitigation strategies in (I) pre-analytical sample quality control, (II) DNA repair treatments, (III) analytical sample preparation and (IV) bioinformatic analysis of FFPE-DNA. We then provide recommendations that are tested and illustrated with DNA from 13-year-old liver specimens, one FFPE preserved and one fresh frozen, applying target-enriched sequencing. Thus, we show how DNA damage can be compensated, even when using low quantities (50 ng) of fragmented FFPE-DNA (DNA integrity number 2.0) that cannot be amplified well (Q129 bp/Q41 bp = 5%). Finally, we provide a checklist called 'ERROR-FFPE-DNA' that summarises recommendations for the minimal information in publications required for assessing fitness-for-purpose and inter-study comparison when using FFPE samples., (© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Nucleic Acids Research.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The RD-Connect Genome-Phenome Analysis Platform: Accelerating diagnosis, research, and gene discovery for rare diseases.
- Author
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Laurie S, Piscia D, Matalonga L, Corvó A, Fernández-Callejo M, Garcia-Linares C, Hernandez-Ferrer C, Luengo C, Martínez I, Papakonstantinou A, Picó-Amador D, Protasio J, Thompson R, Tonda R, Bayés M, Bullich G, Camps-Puchadas J, Paramonov I, Trotta JR, Alonso A, Attimonelli M, Béroud C, Bros-Facer V, Buske OJ, Cañada-Pallarés A, Fernández JM, Hansson MG, Horvath R, Jacobsen JOB, Kaliyaperumal R, Lair-Préterre S, Licata L, Lopes P, López-Martín E, Mascalzoni D, Monaco L, Pérez-Jurado LA, Posada de la Paz M, Rambla J, Rath A, Riess O, Robinson PN, Salgado D, Smedley D, Spalding D, 't Hoen PAC, Töpf A, Zaharieva I, Graessner H, Gut IG, Lochmüller H, and Beltran S
- Subjects
- Exome, Genetic Association Studies, Humans, Phenotype, Genomics methods, Rare Diseases diagnosis, Rare Diseases genetics
- Abstract
Rare disease patients are more likely to receive a rapid molecular diagnosis nowadays thanks to the wide adoption of next-generation sequencing. However, many cases remain undiagnosed even after exome or genome analysis, because the methods used missed the molecular cause in a known gene, or a novel causative gene could not be identified and/or confirmed. To address these challenges, the RD-Connect Genome-Phenome Analysis Platform (GPAP) facilitates the collation, discovery, sharing, and analysis of standardized genome-phenome data within a collaborative environment. Authorized clinicians and researchers submit pseudonymised phenotypic profiles encoded using the Human Phenotype Ontology, and raw genomic data which is processed through a standardized pipeline. After an optional embargo period, the data are shared with other platform users, with the objective that similar cases in the system and queries from peers may help diagnose the case. Additionally, the platform enables bidirectional discovery of similar cases in other databases from the Matchmaker Exchange network. To facilitate genome-phenome analysis and interpretation by clinical researchers, the RD-Connect GPAP provides a powerful user-friendly interface and leverages tens of information sources. As a result, the resource has already helped diagnose hundreds of rare disease patients and discover new disease causing genes., (© 2022 The Authors. Human Mutation published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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7. PrecisionFDA Truth Challenge V2: Calling variants from short and long reads in difficult-to-map regions.
- Author
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Olson ND, Wagner J, McDaniel J, Stephens SH, Westreich ST, Prasanna AG, Johanson E, Boja E, Maier EJ, Serang O, Jáspez D, Lorenzo-Salazar JM, Muñoz-Barrera A, Rubio-Rodríguez LA, Flores C, Kyriakidis K, Malousi A, Shafin K, Pesout T, Jain M, Paten B, Chang PC, Kolesnikov A, Nattestad M, Baid G, Goel S, Yang H, Carroll A, Eveleigh R, Bourgey M, Bourque G, Li G, Ma C, Tang L, Du Y, Zhang S, Morata J, Tonda R, Parra G, Trotta JR, Brueffer C, Demirkaya-Budak S, Kabakci-Zorlu D, Turgut D, Kalay Ö, Budak G, Narcı K, Arslan E, Brown R, Johnson IJ, Dolgoborodov A, Semenyuk V, Jain A, Tetikol HS, Jain V, Ruehle M, Lajoie B, Roddey C, Catreux S, Mehio R, Ahsan MU, Liu Q, Wang K, Sahraeian SME, Fang LT, Mohiyuddin M, Hung C, Jain C, Feng H, Li Z, Chen L, Sedlazeck FJ, and Zook JM
- Abstract
The precisionFDA Truth Challenge V2 aimed to assess the state of the art of variant calling in challenging genomic regions. Starting with FASTQs, 20 challenge participants applied their variant-calling pipelines and submitted 64 variant call sets for one or more sequencing technologies (Illumina, PacBio HiFi, and Oxford Nanopore Technologies). Submissions were evaluated following best practices for benchmarking small variants with updated Genome in a Bottle benchmark sets and genome stratifications. Challenge submissions included numerous innovative methods, with graph-based and machine learning methods scoring best for short-read and long-read datasets, respectively. With machine learning approaches, combining multiple sequencing technologies performed particularly well. Recent developments in sequencing and variant calling have enabled benchmarking variants in challenging genomic regions, paving the way for the identification of previously unknown clinically relevant variants., Competing Interests: DECLARATION OF INTERESTS C.B. is an employee and shareholder of SAGA Diagnostics AB. A.C., P.-C.C., A.K., M.N., G.B., S.G., and H.Y. are employees of Google, and A.C. is a shareholder. S.D.-B., D.K.-Z., D.T., Ö.K., G.B., K.N., E.A., R.B., I.J.J., A.D., V.S., A.J., and H.S.T. are employees of Seven Bridges Genomics. O.S. and S. T.W. are employees of DNAnexus. G.L., C.M., L.T.F., Y.D., and S.Z. are employees of Genetalks. V.J., M.R., B.L., C.R., S.C., and R.M. are employees of Illumina. S.M.E.S. and M.M. are employees of Roche. C.H. is an employee of Wasai Technology. H.F., Z.L., and L.C. are employees of Sentieon.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The Genetic Landscape of Inherited Retinal Diseases in a Mexican Cohort: Genes, Mutations and Phenotypes.
- Author
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Villanueva-Mendoza C, Tuson M, Apam-Garduño D, de Castro-Miró M, Tonda R, Trotta JR, Marfany G, Valero R, Cortés-González V, and Gonzàlez-Duarte R
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Mexico, Mutation, Retinal Diseases pathology, Genetic Heterogeneity, Phenotype, Retinal Diseases genetics
- Abstract
In this work, we aimed to provide the genetic diagnosis of a large cohort of patients affected with inherited retinal dystrophies (IRDs) from Mexico. Our data add valuable information to the genetic portrait in rare ocular diseases of Mesoamerican populations, which are mostly under-represented in genetic studies. A cohort of 144 unrelated probands with a clinical diagnosis of IRD were analyzed by next-generation sequencing using target gene panels (overall including 346 genes and 65 intronic sequences). Four unsolved cases were analyzed by whole-exome sequencing (WES). The pathogenicity of new variants was assessed by in silico prediction algorithms and classified following the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) guidelines. Pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants were identified in 105 probands, with a final diagnostic yield of 72.9%; 17 cases (11.8%) were partially solved. Eighteen patients were clinically reclassified after a genetic diagnostic test (17.1%). In our Mexican cohort, mutations in 48 genes were found, with ABCA4 , CRB1, RPGR and USH2A as the major contributors. Notably, over 50 new putatively pathogenic variants were identified. Our data highlight cases with relevant clinical and genetic features due to mutations in the RAB28 and CWC27 genes, enrich the novel mutation repertoire and expand the IRD landscape of the Mexican population.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Exome-wide rare variant analysis in familial essential tremor.
- Author
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Diez-Fairen M, Houle G, Ortega-Cubero S, Bandres-Ciga S, Alvarez I, Carcel M, Ibañez L, Fernandez MV, Budde JP, Trotta JR, Tonda R, Chong JX, Bamshad MJ, Nickerson DA, Aguilar M, Tartari JP, Gironell A, García-Martín E, Agundez JA, Alonso-Navarro H, Jimenez-Jimenez FJ, Fernandez M, Valldeoriola F, Marti MJ, Tolosa E, Coria F, Pastor MA, Vilariño-Güell C, Rajput A, Dion PA, Cruchaga C, Rouleau GA, and Pastor P
- Subjects
- Adult, Age of Onset, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Male, Matrix Metalloproteinase 10 genetics, Middle Aged, Pedigree, Exome Sequencing, Young Adult, Essential Tremor genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease
- Abstract
Introduction: Essential tremor (ET) is one of the most common movement disorders. Despite its high prevalence and heritability, its genetic etiology remains elusive with only a few susceptibility genes identified and poorly replicated. Our aim was to find novel candidate genes involved in ET predisposition through whole exome sequencing., Methods: We studied eight multigenerational families (N = 40 individuals) with an autosomal-dominant inheritance using a comprehensive strategy combining whole exome sequencing followed by case-control association testing of prioritized variants in a separate cohort comprising 521 ET cases and 596 controls. We further performed gene-based burden analyses in an additional dataset comprising 789 ET patients and 770 healthy individuals to investigate whether there was an enrichment of rare deleterious variants within our candidate genes., Results: Fifteen variants co-segregated with disease status in at least one of the families, among which rs749875462 in CCDC183, rs535864157 in MMP10 and rs114285050 in GPR151 showed a nominal association with ET. However, we found no significant enrichment of rare variants within these genes in cases compared with controls. Interestingly, MMP10 protein is involved in the inflammatory response to neuronal damage and has been previously associated with other neurological disorders., Conclusions: We prioritized a set of promising genes, especially MMP10, for further genetic and functional studies in ET. Our study suggests that rare deleterious coding variants that markedly increase susceptibility to ET are likely to be found in many genes. Future studies are needed to replicate and further infer biological mechanisms and potential disease causality for our identified genes., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Framework for quality assessment of whole genome cancer sequences.
- Author
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Whalley JP, Buchhalter I, Rheinbay E, Raine KM, Stobbe MD, Kleinheinz K, Werner J, Beltran S, Gut M, Hübschmann D, Hutter B, Livitz D, Perry MD, Rosenberg M, Saksena G, Trotta JR, Eils R, Gerhard DS, Campbell PJ, Schlesner M, and Gut IG
- Subjects
- Chromosome Mapping standards, Chromosomes, Human genetics, DNA Mutational Analysis standards, Female, Genomics methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing standards, Humans, Male, Mutation, Software, Whole Genome Sequencing standards, Genome, Human genetics, Genomics standards, Neoplasms genetics, Quality Control
- Abstract
Bringing together cancer genomes from different projects increases power and allows the investigation of pan-cancer, molecular mechanisms. However, working with whole genomes sequenced over several years in different sequencing centres requires a framework to compare the quality of these sequences. We used the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes cohort as a test case to construct such a framework. This cohort contains whole cancer genomes of 2832 donors from 18 sequencing centres. We developed a non-redundant set of five quality control (QC) measurements to establish a star rating system. These QC measures reflect known differences in sequencing protocol and provide a guide to downstream analyses and allow for exclusion of samples of poor quality. We have found that this is an effective framework of quality measures. The implementation of the framework is available at: https://dockstore.org/containers/quay.io/jwerner_dkfz/pancanqc:1.2.2 .
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The utility of Next Generation Sequencing for molecular diagnostics in Rett syndrome.
- Author
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Vidal S, Brandi N, Pacheco P, Gerotina E, Blasco L, Trotta JR, Derdak S, Del Mar O'Callaghan M, Garcia-Cazorla À, Pineda M, and Armstrong J
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, DNA Copy Number Variations genetics, Forkhead Transcription Factors genetics, Humans, Methyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2 genetics, Mutation, Nerve Tissue Proteins genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases genetics, Rett Syndrome genetics, Exome Sequencing, Genetic Testing methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Rett Syndrome diagnosis
- Abstract
Rett syndrome (RTT) is an early-onset neurodevelopmental disorder that almost exclusively affects girls and is totally disabling. Three genes have been identified that cause RTT: MECP2, CDKL5 and FOXG1. However, the etiology of some of RTT patients still remains unknown. Recently, next generation sequencing (NGS) has promoted genetic diagnoses because of the quickness and affordability of the method. To evaluate the usefulness of NGS in genetic diagnosis, we present the genetic study of RTT-like patients using different techniques based on this technology. We studied 1577 patients with RTT-like clinical diagnoses and reviewed patients who were previously studied and thought to have RTT genes by Sanger sequencing. Genetically, 477 of 1577 patients with a RTT-like suspicion have been diagnosed. Positive results were found in 30% by Sanger sequencing, 23% with a custom panel, 24% with a commercial panel and 32% with whole exome sequencing. A genetic study using NGS allows the study of a larger number of genes associated with RTT-like symptoms simultaneously, providing genetic study of a wider group of patients as well as significantly reducing the response time and cost of the study.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Benchmarking of Whole Exome Sequencing and Ad Hoc Designed Panels for Genetic Testing of Hereditary Cancer.
- Author
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Feliubadaló L, Tonda R, Gausachs M, Trotta JR, Castellanos E, López-Doriga A, Teulé À, Tornero E, Del Valle J, Gel B, Gut M, Pineda M, González S, Menéndez M, Navarro M, Capellá G, Gut I, Serra E, Brunet J, Beltran S, and Lázaro C
- Subjects
- Benchmarking, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Mutation, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary genetics, Exome Sequencing methods, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genetic Testing methods, Neoplastic Syndromes, Hereditary diagnosis
- Abstract
Next generation sequencing panels have been developed for hereditary cancer, although there is some debate about their cost-effectiveness compared to exome sequencing. The performance of two panels is compared to exome sequencing. Twenty-four patients were selected: ten with identified mutations (control set) and fourteen suspicious of hereditary cancer but with no mutation (discovery set). TruSight Cancer (94 genes) and a custom panel (122 genes) were assessed alongside exome sequencing. Eighty-three genes were targeted by the two panels and exome sequencing. More than 99% of bases had a read depth of over 30x in the panels, whereas exome sequencing covered 94%. Variant calling with standard settings identified the 10 mutations in the control set, with the exception of MSH6 c.255dupC using TruSight Cancer. In the discovery set, 240 unique non-silent coding and canonic splice-site variants were identified in the panel genes, 7 of them putatively pathogenic (in ATM, BARD1, CHEK2, ERCC3, FANCL, FANCM, MSH2). The three approaches identified a similar number of variants in the shared genes. Exomes were more expensive than panels but provided additional data. In terms of cost and depth, panels are a suitable option for genetic diagnostics, although exomes also identify variants in non-targeted genes.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. From Wet-Lab to Variations: Concordance and Speed of Bioinformatics Pipelines for Whole Genome and Whole Exome Sequencing.
- Author
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Laurie S, Fernandez-Callejo M, Marco-Sola S, Trotta JR, Camps J, Chacón A, Espinosa A, Gut M, Gut I, Heath S, and Beltran S
- Subjects
- Exome, Genetic Variation, Genome, Human, Humans, Software, Computational Biology methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods
- Abstract
As whole genome sequencing becomes cheaper and faster, it will progressively substitute targeted next-generation sequencing as standard practice in research and diagnostics. However, computing cost-performance ratio is not advancing at an equivalent rate. Therefore, it is essential to evaluate the robustness of the variant detection process taking into account the computing resources required. We have benchmarked six combinations of state-of-the-art read aligners (BWA-MEM and GEM3) and variant callers (FreeBayes, GATK HaplotypeCaller, SAMtools) on whole genome and whole exome sequencing data from the NA12878 human sample. Results have been compared between them and against the NIST Genome in a Bottle (GIAB) variants reference dataset. We report differences in speed of up to 20 times in some steps of the process and have observed that SNV, and to a lesser extent InDel, detection is highly consistent in 70% of the genome. SNV, and especially InDel, detection is less reliable in 20% of the genome, and almost unfeasible in the remaining 10%. These findings will aid in choosing the appropriate tools bearing in mind objectives, workload, and computing infrastructure available., (© 2016 The Authors. **Human Mutation published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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