👤 Claire S Leblond

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Also published as: Nicholas D LeBlond, Pierre Leblond
articles
Lucie Auffret, Yassine Ajlil, Arnault Tauziède-Espariat +19 more · 2023 · Acta neuropathologica · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) H3 K27-altered are incurable grade 4 gliomas and represent a major challenge in neuro-oncology. This tumour type is now classified in four subtypes by the 2021 edition of Show more
Diffuse midline gliomas (DMG) H3 K27-altered are incurable grade 4 gliomas and represent a major challenge in neuro-oncology. This tumour type is now classified in four subtypes by the 2021 edition of the WHO Classification of the Central Nervous System (CNS) tumours. However, the H3.3-K27M subgroup still appears clinically and molecularly heterogeneous. Recent publications reported that rare patients presenting a co-occurrence of H3.3K27M with BRAF or FGFR1 alterations tended to have a better prognosis. To better study the role of these co-driver alterations, we assembled a large paediatric and adult cohort of 29 tumours H3K27-altered with co-occurring activating mutation in BRAF or FGFR1 as well as 31 previous cases from the literature. We performed a comprehensive histological, radiological, genomic, transcriptomic and DNA methylation analysis. Interestingly, unsupervised t-distributed Stochastic Neighbour Embedding (tSNE) analysis of DNA methylation profiles regrouped BRAF Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00401-023-02651-4
FGFR1
Meenakshi Sundaram, Kaitlin R Curtis, Mohsen Amir Alipour +8 more · 2017 · Journal of lipid research · added 2026-04-24
Recent cell culture and animal studies have suggested that expression of human apo C-III in the liver has a profound impact on the triacylglycerol (TAG)-rich VLDL
no PDF DOI: 10.1194/jlr.M077313
APOC3
Ziv Gan-Or, Sirui Zhou, Amirthagowri Ambalavanan +11 more · 2015 · Sleep medicine · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a common disorder, with several known genetic risk factors, yet the actual genetic causes are unclear. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed in seven RLS families, Show more
Restless legs syndrome (RLS) is a common disorder, with several known genetic risk factors, yet the actual genetic causes are unclear. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed in seven RLS families, focusing on six known genetic loci: MEIS1, BTBD9, PTPRD, MAP2K5/SKOR1, TOX3, and rs6747972. Genotyping using specific TaqMan assays was performed in two case-control cohorts (627 patients and 410 controls), and in a familial cohort (n = 718). WES identified two candidate GLO1 variants (within the BTBD9 locus), p.E111A and the promoter variant c.-7C>T, both co-segregated with the disease in four families. The GLO1 p.E111A variant was associated with RLS in the French-Canadian cohort (odds ratio, OR = 1.38, p = 0.02), and demonstrated a similar trend in the US cohort (OR = 1.26, p = 0.09, combined analysis OR = 1.28, p = 0.009). However, the original genome-wide association study (GWAS) marker, BTBD9 rs9357271, had stronger association with RLS (OR = 1.84, p = 0.0003). Conditional haplotype analysis, controlling for the effect of the BTBD9 variant rs9357271, demonstrated that the association of GLO1 p.E111A turned insignificant (p = 0.54). In the familial cohort, the two GLO1 variants were not associated with RLS. Other variants in the SKOR1 (p.W200R and p.A672V) and PTPRD (p.R995C, p.Q447E, p.T781A, p.Q447E, and c.551-4C > G) genes, did not co-segregate with the disease. The GLO1 variations studied here are not the source of association of the BTBD9 locus with RLS. It is likely that the genetic variants affecting RLS susceptibility are located in regulatory regions. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2015.06.002
MAP2K5
Ziv Gan-Or, Roy N Alcalay, Anat Bar-Shira +16 more · 2015 · Parkinsonism & related disorders · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Several studies proposed that Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) and Parkinson disease (PD) may be clinically and/or etiologically related. To examine this hypothesis, we aimed to determine whether the know Show more
Several studies proposed that Restless Legs Syndrome (RLS) and Parkinson disease (PD) may be clinically and/or etiologically related. To examine this hypothesis, we aimed to determine whether the known RLS genetic markers may be associated with PD risk, as well as with PD subtype. Two case-control cohorts from Tel-Aviv and New-York, including 1133 PD patients and 867 controls were genotyped for four RLS-related SNPs in the genes MEIS1, BTBD9, PTPRD and MAP2K5/SKOR1. The association between genotype, PD risk and phenotype was tested using multivariate regression models. None of the tested SNPs was significantly associated with PD risk, neither in any individual cohort nor in the combined analysis after correction for multiple comparisons. The MAP2K5/SKOR1 marker rs12593813 was associated with higher frequency of tremor in the Tel-Aviv cohort (61.0% vs. 46.5%, p = 0.001, dominant model). However, the risk allele for tremor in this gene has been associated with reduced RLS risk. Moreover, this association did not replicate in Tremor-dominant PD patients from New-York. RLS genetic risk markers are not associated with increased PD risk or subtype in the current study. Together with previous genetic, neuropathological and epidemiologic studies, our results further strengthen the notion that RLS and PD are likely to be distinct entities. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.parkreldis.2015.03.010
MAP2K5