👤 Albert de la Chapelle

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3
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Also published as: A de La Chapelle, Lorcan Lamy de la Chapelle
articles
Hager Jaouadi, Victor Morel, Helene Martel +9 more · 2024 · Frontiers in medicine · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Approximately half of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) patients lack a precise genetic diagnosis. The likelihood of identifying clinically relevant variants increased over time. In this study, we con Show more
Approximately half of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) patients lack a precise genetic diagnosis. The likelihood of identifying clinically relevant variants increased over time. In this study, we conducted a gene-centric reanalysis of exome data of 200 HCM cases 5 years after the initial analysis. This reanalysis prioritized genes with a matched HCM entry in the OMIM database and recently emerging HCM-associated genes gathered using a text mining-based literature review. Further classification of the identified genes and variants was performed using the Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) resource and American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) guidelines to assess the robustness of gene-disease association and the clinical actionability of the prioritized variants. As expected, the majority of patients carried variants in Our study revealed that no variants were found in the Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2024.1480947
MYBPC3
Emmanuel E Zervos, Stephan M Tanner, Dana A Osborne +5 more · 2006 · The Journal of surgical research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Nearly 10% of all pancreatic cancer (PCA) results from genetic predisposition. Although abnormalities in sporadic PCA have been described, little is known about the genetics of heritable PCA. The purp Show more
Nearly 10% of all pancreatic cancer (PCA) results from genetic predisposition. Although abnormalities in sporadic PCA have been described, little is known about the genetics of heritable PCA. The purpose of this study was to identify novel genes expressed in patients with a presumed genetic predisposition or "familial" PCA. We defined "familial" PCA as patients having one or more first-degree relatives with biopsy-proven adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. Using a PCR-based subtractive and enrichment procedure, representational difference analysis (RDA), pancreatic tumor cDNA was reverse-transcribed from pooled poly(A)+ mRNA from six such patients (tester) and compared to pooled cDNA from five normal pancreata (driver). Tumor-specific gene fragments were identified and confirmed to be overexpressed in familial PCA by comparative RT-PCR. Six PCA cell lines, 11 sporadic tumors, 5 neuroendocrine tumors, and 3 chronic pancreatitis tissues were screened to determine the specificity of these genes. Sequence analysis revealed several sequences of unknown significance and six genes previously described in neoplasia/carcinogenesis: Apolipoprotein A4, CEA, Keratin 19, Stratifin (14-3-3 sigma), Trefoil Factor, and Calcium Binding Protein S100 A6. Screening of cell lines and pancreatic tissue types showed varying degrees of specificity for familial and sporadic PCA. The APO-A4 gene was up-regulated in familial PCA. The pattern of frequency in all screened tissue suggests that these genes are associated with conditions that produce significant desmoplastic responses and are difficult to differentiate from chronic inflammatory processes. Apolipoprotein A4 is preferentially expressed in familial patients, suggesting that the importance of fatty acid synthesis in carcinogenesis be investigated further. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2006.03.022
APOA4
A H Burghes, H E Vaessin, A de La Chapelle · 2001 · Science (New York, N.Y.) · Science · added 2026-04-24
no PDF DOI: 10.1126/science.1065930
BBS4