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Monica Santos
Neurobehavioural phenotyping of mouse models of disease,
Center for Genomic Regulation - Barcelona Biomedical Research Park
Spain
monica.santos@crg.es

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Carvalho, Santos, Maciel, Rodrigues (2008)  T-1237C polymorphism of TLR9 gene is not associated with multiple sclerosis in the Portuguese population.   Mult Scler Jan  
Abstract: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease of the central nervous system, with disturbances of the immunological balance. As TLR9-null mice showed increased resistance to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and recent genetic investigations showed that T-1237C promoter polymorphism of TLR9, commonly implicated in autoimmune diseases, induces a deregulation of its expression, we performed an association study in a Portuguese population of 165 MS patients and unrelated healthy controls. Our results show no significant association with MS and no protective effect of T-1237C concerning age of onset, disease severity or disease subtype in MS patients.
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2007
 
DOI   
PMID 
T Temudo, P Oliveira, M Santos, K Dias, J Vieira, A Moreira, E Calado, I Carrilho, G Oliveira, A Levy, C Barbot, M Fonseca, A Cabral, A Dias, P Cabral, J Monteiro, L Borges, R Gomes, C Barbosa, G Mira, F Eusébio, J Sequeiros, P Maciel (2007)  Stereotypies in Rett syndrome: analysis of 83 patients with and without detected MECP2 mutations.   Neurology 68: 15. 1183-1187 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Hand stereotypies are considered a hallmark of Rett syndrome (RTT) and are usually described as symmetric movements at the midline. However, related pathologies may show the same type of involuntary movement. Furthermore, patients with RTT also have stereotypies with other localizations that are less well characterized. METHODS: We analyzed stereotypies in 83 patients with RTT, 53 with and 30 without a mutation detected in the MECP2 gene. Patients were observed and videotaped always by the same pediatric neurologist. Stereotypies were classified, and data were submitted to statistical analysis for comparison of mutation-positive and -negative patients and analysis of their evolution with the disease. RESULTS: All the patients showed hand stereotypies that coincided with or preceded the loss of purposeful hand movements in 62% of the patients with MECP2 mutations.The hair pulling stereotypy was more frequent in the group with detected mutations, whereas hand washing was not. Hand gaze was absent in all RTT patients with MECP2 mutations. Patients with MECP2 mutations also had more varied stereotypies, and the number of stereotypies displayed by each patient decreased significantly with age in this group. In all patients, stereotypies other than manual tended to disappear with the evolution of the disease. CONCLUSIONS: Although symmetric midline hand stereotypies were not specific to patients with an MECP2 mutation, some of the other stereotypies seemed to be more characteristic of this group. In patients younger than 10 years and meeting the necessary diagnostic criteria of Rett syndrome, the association of hand stereotypies without hand gaze, bruxism, and two or more of the other stereotypies seemed to be highly indicative of the presence of an MECP2 mutation.
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M Santos, A Silva-Fernandes, P Oliveira, Nuno Sousa, Patrícia Maciel (2007)  Evidence for abnormal early development in a mouse model of Rett syndrome.   Genes Brain Behav 6: 3. 277-286 Apr  
Abstract: Rett syndrome (RTT) is a neurodevelopmental disorder that affects mainly females, associated in most cases to mutations in the MECP2 gene. After an apparently normal prenatal and perinatal period, patients display an arrest in growth and in psychomotor development, with autistic behaviour, hand stereotypies and mental retardation. Despite this classical description, researchers always questioned whether RTT patients did have subtle manifestations soon after birth. This issue was recently brought to light by several studies using different approaches that revealed abnormalities in the early development of RTT patients. Our hypothesis was that, in the mouse models of RTT as in patients, early neurodevelopment might be abnormal, but in a subtle manner, given the first descriptions of these models as initially normal. To address this issue, we performed a postnatal neurodevelopmental study in the Mecp2(tm1.1Bird) mouse. These animals are born healthy, and overt symptoms start to establish a few weeks later, including features of neurological disorder (tremors, hind limb clasping, weight loss). Different maturational parameters and neurological reflexes were analysed in the pre-weaning period in the Mecp2-mutant mice and compared to wild-type littermate controls. We found subtle but significant sex-dependent differences between mutant and wild-type animals, namely a delay in the acquisition of the surface and postural reflexes, and impaired growth maturation. The mutant animals also show altered negative geotaxis and wire suspension behaviours, which may be early manifestations of later neurological symptoms. In the post-weaning period the juvenile mice presented hypoactivity that was probably the result of motor impairments. The early anomalies identified in this model of RTT mimic the early motor abnormalities reported in the RTT patients, making this a good model for the study of the early disease process.
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PMID 
Ana M Coutinho, Guiomar Oliveira, Cécile Katz, Jinong Feng, Jin Yan, Chunmei Yang, Carla Marques, Assunção Ataíde, Teresa S Miguel, Luís Borges, Joana Almeida, Catarina Correia, António Currais, Celeste Bento, Luísa Mota-Vieira, Teresa Temudo, Mónica Santos, Patrícia Maciel, Steve S Sommer, Astrid M Vicente (2007)  MECP2 coding sequence and 3'UTR variation in 172 unrelated autistic patients.   Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet 144: 4. 475-483 Jun  
Abstract: Mutations in the coding sequence of the methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 gene (MECP2), which cause Rett syndrome (RTT), have been found in male and female autistic subjects without, however, a causal relation having unequivocally been established. In this study, the MECP2 gene was scanned in a Portuguese autistic population, hypothesizing that the phenotypic spectrum of mutations extends beyond the traditional diagnosis of RTT and X-linked mental retardation, leading to a non-lethal phenotype in male autistic patients. The coding region, exon-intron boundaries, and the whole 3'UTR were scanned in 172 patients and 143 controls, by Detection of Virtually All Mutations-SSCP (DOVAM-S). Exon 1 was sequenced in 103 patients. We report 15 novel variants, not found in controls: one missense, two intronic, and 12 in the 3'UTR (seven in conserved nucleotides). The novel missense change, c.617G > C (p.G206A), was present in one autistic male with severe mental retardation and absence of language, and segregates in his maternal family. This change is located in a highly conserved residue within a region involved in an alternative transcriptional repression pathway, and likely alters the secondary structure of the MeCP2 protein. It is therefore plausible that it leads to a functional modification of MeCP2. MECP2 mRNA levels measured in four patients with 3'UTR conserved changes were below the control range, suggesting an alteration in the stability of the transcripts. Our results suggest that MECP2 can play a role in autism etiology, although very rarely, supporting the notion that MECP2 mutations underlie several neurodevelopmental disorders.
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Margarida Venâncio, Mónica Santos, Susana Aires Pereira, Patrícia Maciel, Jorge M Saraiva (2007)  An explanation for another familial case of Rett syndrome: maternal germline mosaicism.   Eur J Hum Genet 15: 8. 902-904 Aug  
Abstract: Rett syndrome (RTT; OMIM#312750) is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder that affects mainly girls. It has an estimated incidence of 1:10,000-15,000 females. Mutations in the X-linked gene methyl CpG-binding protein 2 (MECP2) have been found in most patients. The most accepted explanation for the sex bias is that the Rett mutation in sporadic cases has its origin in the paternal germline X chromosome and can thus only be transmitted to females. The majority of cases are sporadic (99.5%) but some familial cases have been described. These cases can either be explained by germline mosaicism or by asymptomatic carrier mothers with skewing of X-inactivation towards the wild-type MECP2 allele. We describe one of the few familial cases of RTT in which a maternal germline mosaicism is the most likely explanation. The mutation p.Arg270fs (c.808delC) was identified in both a girl with classical RTT and her brother who had the severe neurological phenotype usually described in males. The mutation was absent in DNA extracted from blood of both parents. These type of events must be taken into consideration in the genetic counselling of families after the diagnosis of a first case of RTT in a female or a MECP2 mutation in a male.
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2006
 
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M Santos, P A Coelho, P Maciel (2006)  Chromatin remodeling and neuronal function: exciting links.   Genes Brain Behav 5 Suppl 2: 80-91  
Abstract: Regulation of gene expression occurs at different levels, from DNA to protein, and through various mechanisms. One of them is modification of the chromatin structure, which is involved in the definition of transcriptional active and inactive regions of the chromosomes. These phenomena are associated with reversible chemical modifications of the genetic material rather than with variability within the DNA sequences inherited by the individual and are therefore called 'epigenetic' modifications. Ablation of the molecular players responsible for epigenetic modifications often gives rise to neurological and behavioral phenotypes in humans and in mouse models, suggesting a relevant function for chromatin remodeling in central nervous system function, particularly in the adaptive response of the brain to stimuli. We will discuss several human disorders that are due to altered epigenetic mechanisms, with special focus on Rett syndrome.
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R M Burwick, P P Ramsay, J L Haines, S L Hauser, J R Oksenberg, M A Pericak-Vance, S Schmidt, A Compston, S Sawcer, R Cittadella, G Savettieri, A Quattrone, C H Polman, B M J Uitdehaag, J N P Zwemmer, C P Hawkins, W E R Ollier, S Weatherby, C Enzinger, F Fazekas, H Schmidt, R Schmidt, J Hillert, T Masterman, P Hogh, M Niino, S Kikuchi, P Maciel, M Santos, M E Rio, H Kwiecinski, B Zakrzewska-Pniewska, N Evangelou, J Palace, L F Barcellos (2006)  APOE epsilon variation in multiple sclerosis susceptibility and disease severity: some answers.   Neurology 66: 9. 1373-1383 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous studies have examined the role of APOE variation in multiple sclerosis (MS), but have lacked the statistical power to detect modest genetic influences on risk and disease severity. The meta- and pooled analyses presented here utilize the largest collection, to date, of MS cases, controls, and families genotyped for the APOE epsilon polymorphism. METHODS: Studies of MS and APOE were identified by searches of PubMed, Biosis, Web of Science, Cochrane Review, and Embase. When possible, authors were contacted for individual genotype data. Meta-analyses of MS case-control data and family-based analyses were performed to assess the association of APOE epsilon genotype with disease risk. Pooled analyses of MS cases were also performed to assess the influence of APOE epsilon genotype on disease severity. RESULTS: A total of 22 studies (3,299 MS cases and 2,532 controls) were available for meta-analysis. No effect of epsilon2 or epsilon4 status on MS risk was observed (summary OR 1.14, 95% CI 0.96-1.34 and OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.78-1.01). Results obtained from analyses of APOE genotypes in 1,279 MS families were also negative (p = 0.61). Finally, results from pooled analyses of 4,048 MS cases also argue strongly that APOE epsilon status does not distinguish a relapsing-remitting from primary progressive disease course, or influence disease severity, as measured by the Expanded Disability Status Scale and disease duration. CONCLUSION: Overall, these findings do not support a role for APOE in multiple sclerosis, and underscore the importance of using large sample sizes to detect modest genetic effects, particularly in studies of genotype-phenotype relationships.
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PMID 
The Games Collaborative Group, Maria Ban, David Booth, Robert Heard, Graeme Stewart, An Goris, Koen Vandenbroeck, Bénédicte Dubois, Mikko Laaksonen, Jorma Ilonen, Mehdi Alizadeh, Gilles Edan, Marie Claude Babron, David Brassat, Michael Clanet, Isabelle Cournu-Rebeix, Bertrand Fontaine, Gilbert Semana, Rene Goedde, Jorg Epplen, Alexandra Weber, Carmen Infante-Duarte, Frauke Zipp, Cecilia Rajda, Krisztina Bencsik, László Vécsei, Shirley Heggarty, Colin Graham, Stanley Hawkins, Maria Liguori, Patricia Momigliano-Richiardi, Domenico Caputo, Luigi M E Grimaldi, Maurizio Leone, Luca Massacesi, Clara Milanese, Marco Salvetti, Giovani Savettieri, Maria Trojano, Bartosz Bielecki, Marcin P Mycko, Krzysztof Selmaj, Monica Santos, Patricia Maciel, Clara Pereira, Ana Silva, Berta Martins Silva, Francesca Coraddu, Maria Giovanna Marrosu, Eva Akesson, Jan Hillert, Pameli Datta, Annette Oturai, Hanne F Harbo, Anne Spurkland, Robert Goertsches, Pablo Villoslada, Mefkure Eraksoy, Anke Hensiek, Alastair Compston, Efrosini Setakis, Julia Gray, Tai Wai Yeo, Stephen Sawcer (2006)  Linkage disequilibrium screening for multiple sclerosis implicates JAG1 and POU2AF1 as susceptibility genes in Europeans.   J Neuroimmunol 179: 1-2. 108-116 Oct  
Abstract: By combining all the data available from the Genetic Analysis of Multiple sclerosis in EuropeanS (GAMES) project, we have been able to identify 17 microsatellite markers showing consistent evidence for apparent association. As might be expected five of these markers map within the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) and are in LD with HLA-DRB1. Individual genotyping of the 12 non-MHC markers confirmed association for three of them--D11S1986, D19S552 and D20S894. Association mapping across the candidate genes implicated by these markers in 937 UK trio families revealed modestly associated haplotypes in JAG1 (p=0.019) on chromosome 20p12.2 and POU2AF1 (p=0.003) on chromosome 11q23.1.
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2005
 
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PMID 
Jinxiu Shi, Akane Shibayama, Qiang Liu, Vu Q Nguyen, Jinong Feng, Mónica Santos, Teresa Temudo, Patricia Maciel, Steve S Sommer (2005)  Detection of heterozygous deletions and duplications in the MECP2 gene in Rett syndrome by Robust Dosage PCR (RD-PCR).   Hum Mutat 25: 5. May  
Abstract: Fifty to eighty percent of Rett syndrome (RTT) cases have point mutations in the gene encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein-2 (MECP2). A fraction of MECP2 negative classical RTT patients has large heterozygous deletions. Robust Dosage PCR (RD-PCR) assays were developed as a rapid, convenient and accurate method to detect large heterozygous deletions and duplications. A blinded analysis was performed for 65 RTT cases from Portugal by RD-PCR in the coding exons 2-4 of the MECP2 gene. Neither the patients with point mutations nor the non-classical RTT patients without point mutation had a deletion or duplication. One of remaining eight female patients with classical RTT without point mutation had a heterozygous deletion. This is the first report of a deletion spanning the entire MECP2 gene. The deletion was confirmed by Southern blotting analysis and the deletion junction was localized 37 kb upstream from exon 1 and 18 kb downstream from exon 4. No duplications were detected. Our results suggest that RD-PCR is an accurate and convenient molecular diagnostic method.
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2004
 
PMID 
Mónica Santos, Maria do do Costa, Maria Edite Rio, Sá Maria José, Marta Monteiro, Angela Valença, S á Alfredo, José Dinis, José Figueiredo, Luís Bigotte de Almeida, António Valongueiro, Isabel Coelho, Maria Teresa Matamá, Jorge Pinto-Basto, Jorge Sequeiros, Patrícia Maciel (2004)  Genotypes at the APOE and SCA2 loci do not predict the course of multiple sclerosis in patients of Portuguese origin.   Mult Scler 10: 2. 153-157 Apr  
Abstract: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease that affects about one in 500 young Europeans. In order to test the previously proposed influence of the APOE and SCA2 loci on susceptibility to MS, we studied these loci in 243 Portuguese patients and 192 healthy controls and both parents of 92 patients. We did not detect any significant difference when APOE and SCA2 allele frequencies of cases and controls were compared, or when we compared cases with different forms of the disease. Disequilibrium of transmission was tested for both loci in the 92 trios, and we did not observe segregation distortion. To test the influence of the APOE epsilon4 and SCA2 22 CAGs alleles on severity of disease, we compared age at onset and progression rate between groups with and without those alleles. We did not observe an association of the epsilon4 or the 22 CAGs alleles with rate of progression in our total patient population; allele epsilon4 was associated with increased rate of progression of MS in a subset of patients with less than 10 years of the disease. However, globally in the Portuguese population, the APOE and SCA2 genes do not seem to be useful in the clinical context as prognostic markers of this disorder.
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2003
 
PMID 
M Santos, J Pinto-Basto, M J Sá M E Rio, A Sá A Valença, J Dinis, J Figueiredo, L Bigotte de Almeida, I Coelho, S Sawcer, E Setakis, A Compston, J Sequeiros, P Maciel (2003)  A whole genome screen for association with multiple sclerosis in Portuguese patients.   J Neuroimmunol 143: 1-2. 112-115 Oct  
Abstract: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is common in Europe affecting up to 1:500 people. In an effort to identify genes influencing susceptibility to the disease, we have performed a population-based whole genome screen for association. In this study, 6000 microsatellite markers were typed in separately pooled DNA samples from MS patients (n=188) and matched controls (n=188). Interpretable data was obtained from 4661 of these markers. Refining analysis of the most promising markers identified 10 showing potential evidence for association.
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