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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Variações de novo e raras no genoma de pacientes com transtornos do espectro do autismo verbais e não verbais / New and rare variations in the genome of patients with autism spectrum disorders verbal and nonverbal

Viviane Neri de Souza Reis 30 September 2014 (has links)
Estudos de gêmeos e famílias demonstram que os transtornos do espectro do autismo (TEA) apresentam um grande componente genético (~50%), porém sua etiologia ainda é desconhecida, possivelmente devido aos TEA serem caracterizados como doenças complexas, poligênicas e multifatoriais. Recentemente, variações no número de cópias (CNVs, do inglês Copy Number Variations) e mutações pontuais (SNV, do inglês Single Nucleotide Variant) raras, de novo e herdadas foram associadas com TEA, sugerindo novos loci e genes candidatos. No entanto, a grande maioria das alterações descritas são individuais, de forma que analises por agrupamento das mesmas em genes, e busca de funções biológicas ou vias hiper-representadas tem sido uma abordagem para a compreensão dos possíveis mecanismos etiopatológicos dos TEA. Como os TEA são muito heterogêneos clinicamente o uso de endofenótipos específicos para agrupamento das alterações gênicas pode auxiliar a discriminação de vias e processos biológicos relacionados a dimensões fenotípicas. Considerando os estudos realizados em autismo, e a natureza das variações comuns e raras, nesse trabalho foi realizado o sequenciamento do exoma de 1 família de dois irmãos com TEA sindrômico (sequenciamento piloto) e 18 trios de casos esporádicos de TEA, em busca alterações muito raras e/ou de novo com provável impacto funcional nos pacientes; Além disso, foi analisado se existe diferença entre as vias biológicas hiper-representadas de redes gênicas crescidas a partir dos genes que apresentavam variações raras e de novo, comparando pacientes de TEA com: (1) pouca ou nenhuma comunicação, chamados de não verbais e (2) média a boa comunicação, chamados de verbais. No sequenciamento piloto da família dos irmãos com TEA sindrômico, encontramos 1 duplicação em 4p16.3 e 1 deleção em 8p23.3, em ambos os irmãos; alterações estas encontradas em estudos previos em pacientes com características sindrômicas e TEA; na análise de SNVs e Indels foi encontrada 1 variação de novo e 117 variações não-sinônimas raras herdadas de um dos pais na irmã e 150 variações não-sinônimas raras herdadas de um dos pais no irmão; a análise de vias revelou que os genes com as mutações pontuais raras estavam hiper-representados em regiões cromossômicas diferentes em cada irmão (no cromossomo 1 na paciente do sexo feminino e no cromossomo 16 no paciente do sexo masculino), o que pode estar relacionado às diferenças fenotípicas por eles apresentadas. No sequenciamento do exoma dos trios foram encontradas alterações de novo em 9 dos pacientes: 1 CNV de novo (deleção) de 1,5Mb na região 3q29, região previamente associada com síndrome e transtornos do desenvolvimento; e 8 genes alterados por mutações pontuais de novo, dos quais um dele é o GABBR2, que apresenta evidência de associação com TEA. A análise de vias e redes das variantes herdadas raras, mostrou que muitos dos genes relacionados aos dois grupos verbais e não verbais são genes já associados com TEA ou que apresentam interação com aqueles genes associados ao TEA. As analises de vias e redes precisam ser replicadas em amostras maiores, mas com nossos resultados preliminares podemos perceber que nosso estudo contribui com alterações em genes de vias relacionadas a neurogênese e sinaptogênese, independentemente do fenótipo, que possam refletir um conjunto de genes específicos e ou numero de alterações relacionadas a gravidade do TEA / Studies of twins and families have shown that autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are highly heritable (~50%), but its etiology is still unknown, possibly because it is a very heterogeneous phenotype and have multiple genes involved in its development, what characterizes a complex disease such as ASD. Recently, copy number variations (CNVs) and point mutations (SNVs) rare, inherited e de novo, were associated with ASD, suggesting new candidate genes and loci. Because they are very rare, the vast majority of the changes described are individual, so the analysis of different variations grouped by genes and searching for biological functions or hyper represented pathways has been an approach for understanding possible pathogenic mechanisms of ASD. As ASD is clinically very heterogeneous, the use of endophenotypes, specific grouping of genomic changes can help discriminating pathways and biological processes related to phenotypic dimensions. Considering the studies in autism, and the nature of common and rare variants, we sequenced all exons (exome) of 1 family with syndromic ASD (pilot sequencing) and 18 trios of sporadic ASD cases to search for de novo and rare variations with probable functional impact on Brazilian patients; Also, we analyzed whether there is a difference in the enrichment of biological pathways of gene networks from the list of genes affected with de novo and rare deleterious variants in two groups of ASD patients: (1) cases with little or no communication, called nonverbal and (2) cases with average to good communication, called verbal. In the pilot exome sequencing (ASD syndromic family), we found a duplication in 4p16.3 and a deletion in 8p23.3 in both siblings, alterations that were found in patients with syndromes and ASD in previously studies; the analysis of SNVs showed 1 variation de novo and 117 nonsynonymous rare variations inherited from only 1 of the parents in the female sibling, and 150 nonsynonymous rare variations inherited from only 1 of the parents in the male sibling; Pathway analysis revealed enrichment differences of chromosomal regions for each sibling (chromosome 1 for the female patient and chromosome 16 for the male patient), what may be related to their phenotypic differences. In the exome sequencing of trios, as expected, it was found de novo variation in 9 of the patients: 1 de novo CNV (deletion) of 1.5 Mb in the region 29 of the long arm of chromosome 3, a region previously associated with syndrome and developmental disorders; and 8 genes altered by de novo variations, one of those is in the GABBR2, gene with previous evidence of association with ASD. The pathways and networks analysis of rare inherited variants showed that many of the genes related to the two groups verbal and nonverbal are already associated with ASD or interacts with those genes associated with ASD. This pathway and gene network analyses need to be replicated in larger samples, but our preliminary results shows that our study contributes with variations in genes related to neurogenesis and synaptogenesis pathways, regardless of phenotype, with probable impact to specific genes that may be related to severity of clinical presentation
52

Stoichiometric imbalance in the receptor complex contributes to dysfunctional BMPR-II mediated signalling in pulmonary arterial hypertension

Nasim, Md. Talat, Ghouri, A., Patel, B., James, V., Rudarakanchana, N., Morrell, N.W., Trembath, R.C. January 2008 (has links)
No / Heterozygous germline defects in a gene encoding a type II receptor for bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPR-II) underlie the majority of inherited cases of the vascular disorder known as pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). However, the precise molecular consequences of PAH causing mutations on the function of the receptor complex remain unclear. We employed novel enzymatic and fluorescence activity based techniques to assess the impact of PAH mutations on pre-mRNA splicing, nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) and receptor complex interactions. We demonstrate that nonsense and frameshift mutations trigger NMD, providing further evidence that haplo-insufficiency is a major molecular consequence of disease-related BMPR2 mutations. We identified heterogeneous functional defects in BMPR-II activity, including impaired type I receptor phosphorylation, receptor interactions and altered receptor complex stoichiometry leading to perturbation of downstream signalling pathways. Importantly, these studies demonstrate that the intracellular domain of BMPR-II is both necessary and sufficient for receptor complex interaction. Finally and to address the potential for resolution of stoichiometric balance, we investigated an agent that promotes translational readthrough of a BMPR2 nonsense reporter construct without interfering with the NMD pathway. We propose that stoichiometric imbalance, due to either haplo-insufficiency or loss of optimal receptor-receptor interactions impairs BMPR-II mediated signalling in PAH. Taken together, these studies have identified an important target for early therapeutic intervention in familial PAH.

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