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New data added to database
For what it’s worth, I’ve finally added an Excel file listing known CNVs upstream of PTCHD1, in the region overlapping DDX53, and exons of the non-coding antisense RNA, PTCHD1-AS (also a likely pseudogene of the chromosome 7 gene FAM3C).
New study suggests that both common and rare variants at the PTCHD1 gene locus contribute to autism spectrum disorder and intellectual disability
A new study has just been published in the European Journal of Human Genetics looking at variants in and around the PTCHD1 gene on the X chromosome in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and intellectual disability, and suggests that the single nucleotide polymorphism rs7052177 shows significant association with ASD, and that the longest allele of a triplet repeat polymorphism in the promoter region is also associated with ASD. A rare duplication polymorphism in the promoter, identified in three ASD individuals, is also associated with significantly decreased gene transcription.
This study adds further support to the involvement of PTCHD1 in the etiology of ASD.
see pubmed link for abstract: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25782667
A more complete summary of this research paper will shortly appear on the research page……..
2014 in review
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
A San Francisco cable car holds 60 people. This blog was viewed about 1,300 times in 2014. If it were a cable car, it would take about 22 trips to carry that many people.
PTCHD1 on facebook
We have just set up a facebook page, www.facebook.com/PTCHD1, aimed at the families who have family members affected by mutations of the PTCHD1 gene. Our hope is that this may become a forum for families to share their experiences, and to be able to network with other families who are going through similar situations and facing similar issues.
Please forward this information to anyone you know for whom this facebook page may be beneficial.
cheers
John
John B. Vincent, PhD
Senior Scientist, MiND Lab at CAMH
Professor, University of Toronto
Site stats, 25th Nov 2014, 1000 views, 41 countries
As of Tuesday 25th Nov 2014, PTCHD1-base has received 1000 views from 41 different countries, spanning all continents bar Antarctica. Come on Antarctica, give us a look-over!
Thanks for your interest!
Site stat 7/9/2014
As of Sunday 7th Sep 2014, during PTCHD1-base’s brief existence it has received 521 views from 15 different countries.
Thanks for your interest!
Phase II genotype/phenotype study
Now that our initial study of the genotype/phenotype relationship has been published, albeit as “epub ahead of print” (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25131214), we would like to move on to a more detailed analysis. This will involve:
a. recruiting additional subjects with CNVs (submicroscopic deletions or duplications) disrupting PTCHD1 or with nonsense or frameshifting mutations within the PTCHD1 coding region.
b. recruiting subjects with missense mutations within the PTCHD1 coding region.
c. recruiting subjects with CNVs spanning the region upstream of PTCHD1 (including the DDX53 gene, or exons of the lncRNA termed PTCHD1-AS1-3).
d. we would like to get detailed clinical information, including a videotaped neurological assessment, magnetic resonance imaging of the subject’s brain (if possible including DTI tracks), a full family history.
If you are a clinician or a parent of such a patient, and whom you think could participate in this study, for information regarding the study please contact either:
Dr. Melissa Carter (Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto; Tel (+1) 416 813-5340; melissa.carter@sickkids.ca)
or
Dr. John Vincent (Centre for Addiction & Mental Health, Toronto, Tel (+1) 416 535 8501 x36487; john.vincent@camh.ca)
or reply through the comments section on this post (non-confidential).
New study on the relationship between deletions or truncating mutations at PTCHD1 and clinical features
We have just published our study on the relationship between deletions or truncating mutations at PTCHD1 and clinical features – the first such paper of its kind for PTCHD1- in the journal Clinical Genetics (Chaudhry et al [epub ahead of print]). This paper is available online, although it’s not currently open access: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25131214; http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/cge.12482/abstract.
In this study, through a large collaborative network of researchers, we have identified 17 families with a PTCHD1 deletion, and report on the clinical features for 13 of these families. We also identified three families with truncating mutations within the PTCHD1 coding region. In these families there is either a single base-pair deletion or single base-pair insertion that disrupts the coding reading frame and leads to a premature STOP codon, thus prematurely truncating the translation from mRNA into protein. In addition to resulting in a shortened protein, such mutations typically trigger a mechanism known as nonsense-mediated mRNA decay (NMD), which targets the aberrant mRNA containing the premature STOP codon for degradation. This mechanism would deplete the PTCHD1 mRNA available for translation to protein.
In total, we studied 22 males and 1 female with PTCHD1 mutations. 40% of the subjects had autism spectrum disorder (ASD) or ASD-like behaviours. Global developmental delay was reported for 18 of the 23 (78%). Orofacial hypotonia was noted in 11 of the 23. Generalized hypotonia was found in six, and mild peripheral hypotonia in a further two.
There were very few significant medical co-morbidities. Eight reported mild problems with vision, including strabismus (three), jerky oculomotor movements (one), cataracts (one), astigmatism and myopia (one). One individual had mild hearing loss due to recurrent ear infections. Kyphosis was present in one family, mild scoliosis in another. Pes planus with small joint hypermobility was present in one case. One individual had a diagnosis of celiac disease, and one had vesico-ureteral refulux and unilateral inguinal hernia, requiring surgical repair.
There was no easily distinguishable facial gestalt that would point to a PTCHD1 mutation diagnosis, however, subtle facial features were noted in some, in particular relating to the mid-facial hypotonia. Lip and mouth shape may also be relevant, but only subtly, and not in every case.
We hope that our study paves the way for a more detailed study, incorporating more PTCHD1 patients, and featuring a more detailed clinical and physical analysis. We also hope to conduct a similar analysis for subjects with either deletions just upstream of PTCHD1, as reported in Noor et al, 2010, also for subjects with missense variants within PTCHD1. However, for the latter, we need to find a method for assessing PTCHD1 function (and indeed some clear functionality!) so that the effects of missense changes may be evaluated empirically.
John B. Vincent, Ph.D.
Senior Scientist, MiND Lab at CAMH
Professor, University of Torono
Welcome to PTCHD1-base
Welcome to PTCHD1-base. This website is aimed at researchers, clinicians, parents, and caregivers, with a view to providing useful information relating to PTCHD1 and its role in autism spectrum disorders, intellectual disability and other neurodevelopmental and behavioural conditions.
We hope to provide the most up-to-date research information, collating findings, the latest hypotheses as well as more speculative ideas from our own research efforts and around the globe.
While this site is a work in progress, I hope to add more information over the coming weeks, including results from our clinical study, with clinical findings from 20 families with deletions of part or all of PTCHD1 (N=17 families) or with coding mutations within the gene that lead to premature truncation of the protein (N=3 families). This paper was recently accepted for publication in the journal “Clinical Genetics”, and I will provide details of the paper and the results as soon as the publication embargo deadline has passed. This study will hopefully be the springboard for future, more in-depth clinical studies of PTCHD1 individuals.
cheers
John
John B. Vincent, Ph.D.
Head, Molecular Neuropsychiatry & Development Lab,
Senior Scientist, Centre for Addiction & Mental Health
Professor, University of Toronto
