Publications by authors named "Yoann Vial"

The major spliceosome contains five small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs; U1, U2, U4, U5 and U6) essential for splicing. Variants in RNU4-2, encoding U4, cause a neurodevelopmental disorder called ReNU syndrome. We investigated de novo variants in 50 snRNA-encoding genes in a French cohort of 23,649 individuals with rare disorders and gathered additional cases through international collaborations.

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Germline variants that disrupt components of the epigenetic machinery cause syndromic neurodevelopmental disorders. Using exome and genome sequencing, we identified variants in , a lysine demethylase crucial for embryonic development, in 18 individuals with developmental delays and/or intellectual disabilities. The severity ranged from learning disabilities to severe intellectual disability.

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Microcephaly is a common feature in inherited bone marrow failure syndromes, prompting investigations into shared pathways between neurogenesis and hematopoiesis. To understand this association, we studied the role of the microcephaly gene Mcph1 in hematological development. Our research revealed that Mcph1-knockout mice exhibited congenital macrocytic anemia due to impaired terminal erythroid differentiation during fetal development.

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  • The study aimed to clarify the dermatological features of Costello syndrome (CS) and distinguish them from other similar syndromes like cardiofaciocutaneous syndrome (CFCS) and types of Noonan syndrome (NS).
  • A ten-year multi-center study involving 31 patients found common skin and hair anomalies in CS, such as excessive eyebrows and various types of skin growths, which can help differentiate CS from CFCS and NS.
  • The findings propose multiple melanocytic naevi as a potential marker for a milder form of CS and suggest that acitretin could be beneficial for treating certain skin conditions, although no clear genotype-phenotype link was identified.
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Juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) is a rare, generally aggressive myeloproliferative neoplasm affecting young children. It is characterized by granulomonocytic expansion, with monocytosis infiltrating peripheral tissues. JMML is initiated by mutations upregulating RAS signaling.

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Clinical genome-wide next-generation sequencing (NGS) has brought new challenges to genetic laboratories. The identification of numerous patient-specific variants that may require to be screened for on multiple other samples poses an issue when striving for time and cost-effectiveness. Here, we propose d-multiSeq, a straightforward method utilizing the advantages of droplet PCR for multiplexing combined with amplicon-based NGS.

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  • This research examines the link between congenital abnormalities and pediatric cancers by analyzing data from children with both conditions in a multicenter study.
  • The study recorded 679 instances of pediatric cancers associated with congenital abnormalities, identifying common cancers like central nervous system tumors and leukemia, and noting that many abnormalities were not linked to known genetic disorders.
  • The findings highlight three key themes: the role of germline mutations, the impact of postzygotic events leading to genomic mosaicism, and incidental connections that may require further investigation to better understand childhood cancer development.
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  • Early treatment of neonatal diabetes with sulfonylureas, particularly oral glibenclamide (Amglidia), shows significant neurodevelopmental improvements and effective glycemic control in extremely preterm infants.
  • A specific case of a preterm infant born at 26 weeks treated with Amglidia demonstrated stable glucose levels and notable growth during treatment, highlighting the potential benefits of this medication.
  • The infant's treatment led to normalization of glucose profiles and regression of retinopathy of prematurity, suggesting that Amglidia could be a critical option for managing neonatal diabetes in preterm babies.
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Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive neuromuscular disorder resulting from biallelic alterations of the SMN1 gene: deletion, gene conversion or, in rare cases, intragenic variants. The disease severity is mainly influenced by the copy number of SMN2, a nearly identical gene, which produces only low amounts of full-length (FL) mRNA. Here we describe the first example of retrotransposon insertion as a pathogenic SMN1 mutational event.

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In a patient with severe microcephaly, congenital bone marrow failure, growth retardation, and renal hypoplasia, we identified a likely pathogenic variant in NUF2 that impairs the cell's ability to properly complete mitosis. Interestingly, these clinical features as well as the observed cellular alterations are highly reminiscent of what is reported in Fanconi Anaemia supporting a unifying causal role of the variant in the disease. This case provides the first evidence that a kinetochore defect, previously associated with microcephaly, can be responsible for an inherited bone marrow failure syndrome, highlighting the unique pathological link between neurogenesis and haematopoiesis.

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  • Mazzanti syndrome is a RASopathy linked to Noonan syndrome caused mainly by a specific mutation (c.4A > G, p.Ser2Gly) in the SHOC2 gene, leading to increased MAPK signaling and altered SHOC2 behavior in cells.
  • New research identifies additional pathogenic variants in SHOC2 from six unrelated individuals, showing diverse clinical presentations while still enhancing RAS-MAPK pathway activation.
  • The study broadens the range of recognized SHOC2 mutations, clarifying the disorder’s clinical features and confirming that the disease mechanism involves a gain-of-function effect in SHOC2 activity.
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  • *Research has previously linked variants in the A2ML1 gene to Noonan syndrome, but evidence to confirm this link is lacking.
  • *In a study of 15 individuals with rare A2ML1 variants, it was found that these variants often came from unaffected parents and were linked to other genetic issues, challenging the idea that A2ML1 is a primary cause of Noonan syndrome.
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  • Cherubism is a rare genetic condition caused by a mutation in the SH3BP2 gene that affects the jaw bones, making them soft and filled with certain types of cells.
  • Scientists found a 6-year-old girl with a severe form of cherubism who showed not only jaw problems but also low bone density and signs of inflammation in her body.
  • If it turns out that cherubism can affect the whole skeleton, it could make treatment easier for patients, potentially using new medicines that target their entire body instead of just the jaw area.
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Thrombocytopenia-absent radius (TAR) syndrome is a rare inherited bone marrow failure syndrome not generally associated with acute leukemia. The authors report a case of T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia in an adult female individual newly diagnosed with TAR syndrome. A 347-kb microdeletion of chromosome 1q21.

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Article Synopsis
  • - RASopathies are genetic disorders linked to variations in genes involved in the RAS/MAPK signaling pathway, with Noonan syndrome being the most prevalent, and characterized by heart defects, short stature, and distinct facial features.
  • - Recent research identified variants in the SOS2 gene, associated with Noonan syndrome, and studied 17 individuals with these variants, revealing that their symptoms align with typical Noonan syndrome but include unique features such as ectodermal anomalies.
  • - A notable finding was that more than half of the patients had lymphatic anomalies, indicating that SOS2-related Noonan syndrome carries a heightened risk for lymphatic complications, impacting patients' quality of life.
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Objective: Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus (TNDM) occurs during the 1st year of life and remits during childhood. We investigated glucose metabolism and socioeducational outcomes in adults.

Research Design And Methods: We included 27 participants with a history of TNDM currently with ( = 24) or without ( = 3) relapse of diabetes and 16 non-TNDM relatives known to be carriers of causal genetic defects and currently with ( = 9) or without ( = 7) diabetes.

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We report the case of a child who presented with a giant melanocytic nevus with numerous satellite nevi at birth and developed hypophosphatemic rickets due to excessive secretion of the FGF23 hormone. A NRAS c.182A>G (Q61R) mutation was identified in the lesional skin.

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Primary microcephaly (PM) is characterized by a small head since birth and is vastly heterogeneous both genetically and phenotypically. While most cases are monogenic, genetic interactions between Aspm and Wdr62 have recently been described in a mouse model of PM. Here, we used two complementary, holistic in vivo approaches: high throughput DNA sequencing of multiple PM genes in human patients with PM, and genome-edited zebrafish modeling for the digenic inheritance of PM.

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Whole exome sequencing undertaken in two siblings with delayed psychomotor development, absent speech, severe intellectual disability and postnatal microcephaly, with brain malformations consisting of cerebellar atrophy in the eldest affected and hypoplastic corpus callosum in the younger sister; revealed a homozygous intragenic deletion in VPS51, which encodes the vacuolar protein sorting-associated protein, one the four subunits of the Golgi-associated retrograde protein (GARP) and endosome-associated recycling protein (EARP) complexes that promotes the fusion of endosome-derived vesicles with the trans-Golgi network (GARP) and recycling endosomes (EARP). This observation supports a pathogenic effect of VPS51 variants, which has only been reported previously once, in a single child with microcephaly. It confirms the key role of membrane trafficking in normal brain development and homeostasis.

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Aberrant signaling through pathways controlling cell response to extracellular stimuli constitutes a central theme in disorders affecting development. Signaling through RAS and the MAPK cascade controls a variety of cell decisions in response to cytokines, hormones, and growth factors, and its upregulation causes Noonan syndrome (NS), a developmental disorder whose major features include a distinctive facies, a wide spectrum of cardiac defects, short stature, variable cognitive impairment, and predisposition to malignancies. NS is genetically heterogeneous, and mutations in more than ten genes have been reported to underlie this disorder.

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The SPECC1L protein plays a role in adherens junctions involved in cell adhesion, actin cytoskeleton organization, microtubule stabilization, spindle organization and cytokinesis. It modulates PI3K-AKT signaling and controls cranial neural crest cell delamination during facial morphogenesis. SPECC1L causative variants were first identified in individuals with oblique facial clefts.

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Article Synopsis
  • Autosomal recessive microcephaly (MCPH) is a brain disorder where kids have smaller brains, leading to varying levels of intellectual disability.
  • A gene called ASPM is linked to this condition, and mutations in this gene are found in many MCPH patients.
  • Researchers studied 47 new patients with different ASPM mutations and looked at brain structure and cognitive abilities, finding that not all patients with microcephaly have intellectual difficulties.
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