👤 Said El Shamieh

🔍 Search 📋 Browse 🏷️ Tags ❤️ Favourites ➕ Add 🧬 Extraction
2
Articles
articles
Nisrine Bissar, Rayan Kassir, Ferdos Missilmani +2 more · 2026 · Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD · SAGE Publications · added 2026-04-24
BackgroundAlzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative characterized by amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide aggregation and tangles. Protein translation deregulation and viral exposures, including S Show more
BackgroundAlzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative characterized by amyloid-β (Aβ) peptide aggregation and tangles. Protein translation deregulation and viral exposures, including SARS-CoV-2, have been implicated in increased AD risk. Genes such as YIF1A, PABPC4, and MRPS27, which are involved in mRNA translation and protein folding have been linked to neurodegeneration and host responses to SARS-CoV-2.ObjectiveThis study investigates the association of three genetic variants, rs7945723G>A Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1177/13872877261424256
PABPC4
Vasily M Smirnov, Marco Nassisi, Cyntia Solis Hernandez +11 more · 2021 · JAMA ophthalmology · added 2026-04-24
Biallelic variants in CLN3 lead to a spectrum of diseases, ranging from severe neurodegeneration with retinal involvement (juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis) to retina-restricted conditions. To Show more
Biallelic variants in CLN3 lead to a spectrum of diseases, ranging from severe neurodegeneration with retinal involvement (juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis) to retina-restricted conditions. To provide a detailed description of the retinal phenotype of patients with isolated retinal degeneration harboring biallelic CLN3 pathogenic variants and to attempt a phenotype-genotype correlation associated with this gene defect. This retrospective cohort study included patients carrying biallelic CLN3 variants extracted from a cohort of patients with inherited retinal disorders (IRDs) investigated at the National Reference Center for Rare Ocular Diseases of the Centre Hospitalier National d'Ophtalmologie des Quinze-Vingts from December 2007 to August 2020. Data were analyzed from October 2019 to August 2020. Functional (best-corrected visual acuity, visual field, color vision, and full-field electroretinogram), morphological (multimodal retinal imaging), and clinical data from patients were collected and analyzed. Gene defect was identified by either next-generation sequencing or whole-exome sequencing and confirmed by Sanger sequencing, quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and cosegregation analysis. Of 1533 included patients, 843 (55.0%) were women and 690 (45.0%) were men. A total of 15 cases from 11 unrelated families harboring biallelic CLN3 variants were identified. All patients presented with nonsyndromic IRD. Two distinct patterns of retinal disease could be identified: a mild rod-cone degeneration of middle-age onset (n = 6; legal blindness threshold reached by 70s) and a severe retinal degeneration with early macular atrophic changes (n = 9; legal blindness threshold reached by 40s). Eleven distinct pathogenic variants were detected, of which 4 were novel. All but 1, p.(Arg405Trp), CLN3 point variants and their genotypic associations were clearly distinct between juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis and retina-restricted disease. Mild and severe forms of retina-restricted CLN3-linked IRDs also had different genetic background. These findings suggest CLN3 should be included in next-generation sequencing panels when investigating patients with nonsyndromic rod-cone dystrophy. These results document phenotype-genotype correlations associated with specific variants in CLN3. However, caution seems warranted regarding the potential neurological outcome if a pathogenic variant in CLN3 is detected in a case of presumed isolated IRD for the onset of neurological symptoms could be delayed. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1001/jamaophthalmol.2020.6089
CLN3