Publications by authors named "Fabienne Charbit-Henrion"

Despite the well-described association of skin lesions with , the distinct ability of clinical isolates to influence the local and systemic inflammatory response in a patient-specific manner is insufficiently characterized. In this study, we analyzed clinical recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB), which is characterized by wounds chronically colonized with , to explore the relationship between inflammatory immune response and strain diversity. Children with RDEB (moderate phenotype,  = 5; severe phenotype,  = 10) and controls ( = 18) were enrolled in the study.

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Background: Suppressor of cytokine signalling 1 (SOCS1) insufficiency is an inborn error of immunity affecting the negative regulation of cytokine and growth factor signalling. We aimed to enhance the understanding of clinical manifestations, disease trajectories, disease penetrance, and the effect of Janus kinase (JAK) inhibition in individuals with SOCS1 insufficiency.

Methods: This study used data from two independent cohorts: the European Society for Immunodeficiencies (ESID) registry and the UK Biobank.

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Article Synopsis
  • Integrin alpha V is crucial for cell adhesion and signaling during development, and mutations in its gene (ITGAV) can lead to serious health issues.
  • In three families, biallelic variants were found that caused either dysfunctional protein production or the integrin being misplaced, resulting in severe developmental problems like eye and brain abnormalities, inflammatory bowel disease, and immune issues.
  • Studies in patient cells and zebrafish models confirmed these mutations resulted in impaired immune signaling and developmental defects, linking the ITGAV variants to a newly identified human disease.
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The proximal part of the small intestine, including duodenum and jejunum, is not only dedicated to nutrient digestion and absorption but is also a highly regulated immune site exposed to environmental factors. Host-protective responses against pathogens and tolerance to food antigens are essential functions in the small intestine. The cellular ecology and molecular pathways to maintain those functions are complex.

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Incontinentia pigmenti (IP, Bloch-Sulzberger syndrome) is a multisystem disorder which associates specific skin lesions that evolves in four stages, and occasionally, central nervous system, eye, hair, and teeth involvement. Familial (35%) and sporadic (65%) cases are caused by pathogenic variants in the IKBKG gene. Here we report an unusual family, where, in two half-sisters affected by typical IP, molecular genetic analysis identified a likely pathogenic non-sense variant in the IKBKG gene of one of the sisters, the other being not a carrier.

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Purpose: Hyper activation of the JAK-STAT signaling underlies the pathophysiology of many human immune-mediated diseases. Herein, the study of 2 adult patients with SOCS1 haploinsufficiency illustrates the severe and pleomorphic consequences of its impaired regulation in the intestinal tract.

Methods: Two unrelated adult patients presented with gastrointestinal manifestations, one with Crohn's disease-like ileo-colic inflammation refractory to anti-TNF and the other with lymphocytic leiomyositis causing severe chronic intestinal pseudo-occlusion.

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Dedicator of cytokinesis (DOCK) proteins play a central role in actin cytoskeleton regulation. This is highlighted by the DOCK2 and DOCK8 deficiencies leading to actinopathies and immune deficiencies. DOCK8 and DOCK11 activate CDC42, a Rho-guanosine triphosphate hydrolases involved in actin cytoskeleton dynamics, among many cellular functions.

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Mutations in UNC45A, a co-chaperone for myosins, were recently found causative of a syndrome combining cholestasis, diarrhea, loss of hearing and bone fragility. We generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from a patient with a homozygous missense mutation in UNC45A. Cells from this patient, which were reprogrammed using integration-free Sendaï virus, have normal karyotype, express pluripotency markers and are able to differentiate into the three germ cell layers.

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Bothnian palmoplantar keratoderma (PPKB, MIM600231) is an autosomal dominant form of diffuse non-epidermolytic PPK characterized by spontaneous yellowish-white PPK associated with a spongy appearance after water-immersion. It is due to heterozygous mutations. We report four patients carrying a novel heterozygous mutation (c.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Multiple chronic ulcers in the small intestine are often linked to Crohn's disease, but can also arise from issues related to abnormal prostaglandin activation or specific genetic mutations (like in the SLCO2A1 gene) affecting enteropathy.
  • - A case involving two French sisters highlighted the identification of chronic enteropathy associated with SLCO2A1 (CEAS), revealing that this syndrome is not limited to Asian populations, as previously believed.
  • - Genetic testing confirmed both sisters shared mutations in the SLCO2A1 gene, prompting the need for more awareness and genetic screening for this condition in European patients with recurrent intestinal issues resembling Crohn's disease.
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Mutations causing dysfunction of tubulins and microtubule-associated proteins, also known as tubulinopathies, are a group of recently described entities that lead to complex brain malformations. Anatomical and functional consequences of the disruption of tubulins include microcephaly, combined with abnormal corticogenesis due to impaired migration or lamination and abnormal growth cone dynamics of projecting and callosal axons. Key imaging features of tubulinopathies are characterized by three major patterns of malformations of cortical development (MCD): lissencephaly, microlissencephaly, and dysgyria.

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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists discovered that changes in a gene called UNC45A can lead to a health problem that includes diarrhea, deafness, and fragile bones.
  • They studied 6 patients and found that their UNC45A gene wasn't working properly, causing issues in their intestines.
  • The research showed that UNC45A helps other proteins, like myosin VB, work correctly, and when this gene is missing, it can lead to serious problems in how the intestines are formed and function.
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Congenital enteropathies (CE) are a group of rare inherited diseases with a typical onset early in life. They involve defects in enterocyte structure or differentiation. They can cause a severe condition of intestinal failure (IF).

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Variants in aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases (ARSs) genes are associated to a broad spectrum of human inherited diseases. Patients with defective PheRS, encoded by FARSA and FARSB, display brain abnormalities, interstitial lung disease and facial dysmorphism. We investigated four children from two unrelated consanguineous families carrying two missense homozygous variants in FARSA with significantly reduced PheRS-mediated aminoacylation activity.

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Objectives: The first ECCO-ESPGHAN guidelines for the medical management of pediatric Crohn disease (CD) were published in 2014. Whether their implementation, and the consequent increased use of an upfront anti-tumor necrosis factor therapy, have changed the course of the disease has not been investigated yet. We aimed at comparing the evolution of pediatric CD patients diagnosed and treated before and after 2014.

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Mevalonate kinase deficiency should be considered in patients with severe very-early-onset inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), especially in patients with a history of recurrent or chronic fever, peritoneal adhesions, and atypical IBD pathology. Anti-interleukin-1 therapy may be efficacious in these patients with monogenic very-early-onset IBD.

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Single genetic mutations predispose to very early onset inflammatory bowel disease (VEO-IBD). Here, we identify a de novo duplication of the 10p15.1 chromosomal region, including the IL2RA locus, in a 2-year-old girl with treatment-resistant pancolitis that was brought into remission by colectomy.

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Dysregulated transforming growth factor TGF-β signaling underlies the pathogenesis of genetic disorders affecting the connective tissue such as Loeys-Dietz syndrome. Here, we report 12 individuals with bi-allelic loss-of-function variants in IPO8 who presented with a syndromic association characterized by cardio-vascular anomalies, joint hyperlaxity, and various degree of dysmorphic features and developmental delay as well as immune dysregulation; the individuals were from nine unrelated families. Importin 8 belongs to the karyopherin family of nuclear transport receptors and was previously shown to mediate TGF-β-dependent SMADs trafficking to the nucleus in vitro.

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The mechanisms that maintain intestinal homeostasis despite constant exposure of the gut surface to multiple environmental antigens and to billions of microbes have been scrutinized over the past 20 years with the goals to gain basic knowledge, but also to elucidate the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) and to identify therapeutic targets for these severe diseases. Considerable insight has been obtained from studies based on gene inactivation in mice as well as from genome wide screens for genetic variants predisposing to human IBD. These studies are, however, not sufficient to delineate which pathways play key nonredundant role in the human intestinal barrier and to hierarchize their respective contribution.

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