human genetic disorders
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

91
(FIVE YEARS 9)

H-INDEX

23
(FIVE YEARS 1)

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Swartjes ◽  
Peng Shang ◽  
Dennis van den Berg ◽  
Tim A. Kunne ◽  
Niels Geijsen ◽  
...  

CRISPR-Cas has revolutionized genome editing and has a great potential for applications, such as correcting human genetic disorders. To increase the safety of genome editing applications, CRISPR-Cas may benefit from strict control over Cas enzyme activity. Previously, anti-CRISPR proteins and designed oligonucleotides have been proposed to modulate CRISPR-Cas activity. Here we report on the potential of guide-complementary DNA oligonucleotides as controlled inhibitors of Cas9 ribonucleoprotein complexes. First, we show that DNA oligonucleotides down-regulate Cas9 activity in human cells, reducing both on and off-target cleavage. We then used in vitro assays to better understand how inhibition is achieved and under which conditions. Two factors were found to be important for robust inhibition: the length of the complementary region, and the presence of a PAM-loop on the inhibitor. We conclude that DNA oligonucleotides can be used to effectively inhibit Cas9 activity both ex vivo and in vitro.


Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (24) ◽  
pp. 6292
Author(s):  
Claudia Álvarez ◽  
Aracelly Quiroz ◽  
Diego Benítez-Riquelme ◽  
Elizabeth Riffo ◽  
Ariel F. Castro ◽  
...  

SALL proteins are a family of four conserved C2H2 zinc finger transcription factors that play critical roles in organogenesis during embryonic development. They regulate cell proliferation, survival, migration, and stemness; consequently, they are involved in various human genetic disorders and cancer. SALL4 is a well-recognized oncogene; however, SALL1–3 play dual roles depending on the cancer context and stage of the disease. Current reviews of SALLs have focused only on SALL2 or SALL4, lacking an integrated view of the SALL family members in cancer. Here, we update the recent advances of the SALL members in tumor development, cancer progression, and therapy, highlighting the synergistic and/or antagonistic functions they perform in similar cancer contexts. We identified common regulatory mechanisms, targets, and signaling pathways in breast, brain, liver, colon, blood, and HPV-related cancers. In addition, we discuss the potential of the SALL family members as cancer biomarkers and in the cancer cells’ response to therapies. Understanding SALL proteins’ function and relationship will open new cancer biology, clinical research, and therapy perspectives.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (23) ◽  
pp. 12927
Author(s):  
Erik Schoenmakers ◽  
Krishna Chatterjee

Selenium, a trace element fundamental to human health, is incorporated as the amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) into more than 25 proteins, referred to as selenoproteins. Human mutations in SECISBP2, SEPSECS and TRU-TCA1-1, three genes essential in the selenocysteine incorporation pathway, affect the expression of most if not all selenoproteins. Systemic selenoprotein deficiency results in a complex, multifactorial disorder, reflecting loss of selenoprotein function in specific tissues and/or long-term impaired selenoenzyme-mediated defence against oxidative and endoplasmic reticulum stress. SEPSECS mutations are associated with a predominantly neurological phenotype with progressive cerebello-cerebral atrophy. Selenoprotein deficiency due to SECISBP2 and TRU-TCA1-1 defects are characterized by abnormal circulating thyroid hormones due to lack of Sec-containing deiodinases, low serum selenium levels (low SELENOP, GPX3), with additional features (myopathy due to low SELENON; photosensitivity, hearing loss, increased adipose mass and function due to reduced antioxidant and endoplasmic reticulum stress defence) in SECISBP2 cases. Antioxidant therapy ameliorates oxidative damage in cells and tissues of patients, but its longer term benefits remain undefined. Ongoing surveillance of patients enables ascertainment of additional phenotypes which may provide further insights into the role of selenoproteins in human biological processes.


Author(s):  
Thi Hoang Duong Nguyen

Telomerase ribonucleoprotein was discovered over three decades ago as a specialized reverse transcriptase that adds telomeric repeats to the ends of linear eukaryotic chromosomes. Telomerase plays key roles in maintaining genome stability; and its dysfunction and misregulation have been linked to different types of cancers and a spectrum of human genetic disorders. Over the years, a wealth of genetic and biochemical studies of human telomerase have illuminated its numerous fascinating features. Yet, structural studies of human telomerase have lagged behind due to various challenges. Recent technical developments in cryo-electron microscopy have allowed for the first detailed visualization of the human telomerase holoenzyme, revealing unprecedented insights into its active site and assembly. This review summarizes the cumulative work leading to the recent structural advances, as well as highlights how the future structural work will further advance our understanding of this enzyme.


Genes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 1159
Author(s):  
James Margolin Havrilla ◽  
Mengge Zhao ◽  
Cong Liu ◽  
Chunhua Weng ◽  
Ingo Helbig ◽  
...  

Human genetic disorders, such as Down syndrome, have a wide variety of clinical phenotypic presentations, and characterizing each nuanced phenotype and subtype can be difficult. In this study, we examined the electronic health records of 4095 individuals with Down syndrome at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia to create a method to characterize the phenotypic spectrum digitally. We extracted Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) terms from quality-filtered patient notes using a natural language processing (NLP) approach MetaMap. We catalogued the most common HPO terms related to Down syndrome patients and compared the terms with those from a baseline population. We characterized the top 100 HPO terms by their frequencies at different ages of clinical visits and highlighted selected terms that have time-dependent distributions. We also discovered phenotypic terms that have not been significantly associated with Down syndrome, such as “Proptosis”, “Downslanted palpebral fissures”, and “Microtia”. In summary, our study demonstrated that the clinical phenotypic spectrum of individual with Mendelian diseases can be characterized through NLP-based digital phenotyping on population-scale electronic health records (EHRs).


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Benedetta Bigio ◽  
Yoann Seeleuthner ◽  
Gaspard Kerner ◽  
Mélanie Migaud ◽  
Jérémie Rosain ◽  
...  

Abstract The detection of copy number variations (CNVs) in whole-exome sequencing (WES) data is important, as CNVs may underlie a number of human genetic disorders. The recently developed HMZDelFinder algorithm can detect rare homozygous and hemizygous (HMZ) deletions in WES data more effectively than other widely used tools. Here, we present HMZDelFinder_opt, an approach that outperforms HMZDelFinder for the detection of HMZ deletions, including partial exon deletions in particular, in WES data from laboratory patient collections that were generated over time in different experimental conditions. We show that using an optimized reference control set of WES data, based on a PCA-derived Euclidean distance for coverage, strongly improves the detection of HMZ complete exon deletions both in real patients carrying validated disease-causing deletions and in simulated data. Furthermore, we develop a sliding window approach enabling HMZDelFinder_opt to identify HMZ partial deletions of exons that are undiscovered by HMZDelFinder. HMZDelFinder_opt is a timely and powerful approach for detecting HMZ deletions, particularly partial exon deletions, in WES data from inherently heterogeneous laboratory patient collections.


Neuron ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manon Boivin ◽  
Jianwen Deng ◽  
Véronique Pfister ◽  
Erwan Grandgirard ◽  
Mustapha Oulad-Abdelghani ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Yiwei Niu ◽  
Xueyi Teng ◽  
Yirong Shi ◽  
Yanyan Li ◽  
Yiheng Tang ◽  
...  

AbstractMobile element insertions (MEIs) are a major class of structural variants (SVs) and have been linked to many human genetic disorders, including hemophilia, neurofibromatosis, and various cancers. However, human MEI resources from large-scale genome sequencing are still lacking compared to those for SNPs and SVs. Here, we report a comprehensive map of 36,699 non-reference MEIs constructed from 5,675 genomes, comprising 2,998 Chinese samples (∼26.2X, NyuWa) and 2,677 samples from the 1000 Genomes Project (∼7.4X, 1KGP). We discovered that LINE-1 insertions were highly enriched at centromere regions, implying the role of chromosome context in retroelement insertion. After functional annotation, we estimated that MEIs are responsible for about 9.3% of all protein-truncating events per genome. Finally, we built a companion database named HMEID for public use. This resource represents the latest and largest genomewide study on MEIs and will have broad utility for exploration of human MEI findings.


Author(s):  
Salma Hafeez

Zebrafish is an excellent model for observing human genetic disorders. Hearing impairment is the most common genetic disorder including syndromic & non-syndromic hearing loss. Stem cell therapies are considered a new hope in case of hearing impairment. Stem cells are the master cells of the human body and having the capability to differentiate into any other form of cells in more than 200 types of cells (regeneration). This review article describes zebrafish as a biomedical model for stem cell research in hearing impairment, which revolutionized the biomedical arena to compete for the challenges.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lisa Bachmann ◽  
Lucia Gallego Villarejo ◽  
Natalie Heinen ◽  
David Marks ◽  
Thorsten Müller

AbstractCerebral organoids are a promising model to study human brain function and disease, though the high inter-organoid variability of the mini-brains is still challenging. To overcome this limitation, we introduce the method of labeled mixed organoids generated from two different hiPSC lines, which enables the identification of cells from different origin within a single organoid. The method combines a gene editing workflow and subsequent organoid differentiation and offers a unique tool to study gene function in a complex human 3D tissue-like model. Using a CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing approach, different fluorescent proteins were fused to β-actin or lamin B1 in hiPSCs and subsequently used as a marker to identify each cell line. Mixtures of differently edited cells were seeded to induce embryoid body formation and cerebral organoid differentiation. As a consequence, the development of the 3D tissue was detectable by live confocal fluorescence microscopy and immunofluorescence staining in fixed samples. Analysis of mixed organoids allowed the identification and examination of specifically labeled cells in the organoid that belong to each of the two hiPSC donor lines. We demonstrate that a direct comparison of the individual cells is possible by having the edited and the control (or the two differentially labeled) cells within the same organoid, and thus the mixed organoids overcome the inter-organoid inhomogeneity limitations. The approach aims to pave the way for the reliable analysis of human genetic disorders by the use of organoids and to fundamentally understand the molecular mechanisms underlying pathological conditions.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document