Browsing by Author "Mota-Vieira, L."
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- Epidemiology of autism spectrum disorder in Portugal: prevalence, clinical characterization, and medical conditionsPublication . Oliveira, G.; Ataíde, A.; Marques, C.; Miguel, T.S.; Coutinho, A.M.; Mota-Vieira, L.; Gonçalves, E.; Lopes, N.M.; Rodrigues, V.; Carmona da Mota, H.; Vicente, A.M.The objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence of autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) and identify its clinical characterization, and medical conditions in a paediatric population in Portugal. A school survey was conducted in elementary schools, targeting 332,808 school-aged children in the mainland and 10,910 in the Azores islands. Referred children were directly assessed using the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th edn), the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, and the Childhood Autism Rating Scale. Clinical history and a laboratory investigation was performed. In parallel, a systematic multi-source search of children known to have autism was carried out in a restricted region. The global prevalence of ASD per 10,000 was 9.2 in mainland, and 15.6 in the Azores, with intriguing regional differences. A diversity of associated medical conditions was documented in 20%, with an unexpectedly high rate of mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders.
- Linkage disequilibrium and diversity for three genomic regions in Azoreans and mainland PortuguesePublication . Branco, C.C.; Pacheco, P.R.; Cabrol, E.; Cabral, R.; Vicente, A.M.; Mota-Vieira, L.Studies on linkage disequilibrium (LD) across the genome and populations have been used in recent years with the main objective of improving gene mapping of complex traits. Here, we characterize the patterns of genetic diversity of HLA loci and evaluate LD (D') extent in three genomic regions: Xq13.3, NRY and HLA. In addition, we examine the distribution of DXS1225-DXS8082 haplotype diversity in Azoreans and mainland Portuguese. Allele distribution has demonstrated that the São Miguel population is genetically very diverse; haplotype analysis revealed 100% discriminatory power for X- and Y-markers and 94.3% for HLA markers. Standardized multiallelic D' in these three genomic regions shows values lower than 0.33, thereby suggesting there is no extensive LD in the São Miguel population. Data regarding the distribution of DXS1225-DXS8082 haplotypes indicate that there are no significant differences among all the populations studied, (Azorean geographical groups, the Azores archipelago and mainland Portugal). Moreover, in these as well as in other European populations, the most frequent DXS1225-DXS8082 haplotype is 210-219. Even though São Miguel islanders and Azoreans do not constitute isolated populations and show LD for only very short physical distances, certain characteristics, such as the absence of genetic structure, the same environment and the possibility of constructing extensive pedigrees through church and civil records, offer an opportunity for dissecting the genetic background of complex diseases in these populations.
- Low frequency of CD4+CD25+ Treg in SLE patients: a heritable trait associated with CTLA4 and TGFbeta gene variantsPublication . Barreto, M.; Ferreira, R.C.; Lourenço, L.; Moraes-Fontes, M.F.; Santos, E.; Alves, M.; Carvalho, C.; Martins, B.; Andreia, R.; Viana, J.F.; Vasconcelos, C.; Mota-Vieira, L.; Ferreira, C.; Demengeot, J.; Vicente, A.M.CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells play an essential role in maintaining immune homeostasis and preventing autoimmunity. Therefore, defects in Treg development, maintenance or function have been associated with several human autoimmune diseases including Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE), a systemic autoimmune disease characterized by loss of tolerance to nuclear components and significantly more frequent in females. RESULTS: To investigate the involvement of Treg in SLE pathogenesis, we determined the frequency of CD4+CD25+CD45RO+ T cells, which encompass the majority of Treg activity, in the PBMC of 148 SLE patients (76 patients were part of 54 families), 166 relatives and 117 controls. SLE patients and their relatives were recruited in several Portuguese hospitals and through the Portuguese Lupus Association. Control individuals were blood donors recruited from several regional blood donor centers. Treg frequency was significantly lower in SLE patients than healthy controls (z = -6.161, P < 0.00001) and intermediate in the relatives' group. Remarkably, this T cell subset was also lower in females, most strikingly in the control population (z = 4.121, P < 0.001). We further ascertained that the decreased frequency of Treg in SLE patients resulted from the specific reduction of bona fide FOXP3+CD4+CD25+ Treg. Treg frequency was negatively correlated with SLE activity index (SLEDAI) and titers of serum anti-dsDNA antibodies. Both Treg frequency and disease activity were modulated by IVIg treatment in a documented SLE case. The segregation of Treg frequency within the SLE families was indicative of a genetic trait. Candidate gene analysis revealed that specific variants of CTLA4 and TGFbeta were associated with the decreased frequency of Treg in PBMC, while FOXP3 gene variants were associated with affection status, but not with Treg frequency. CONCLUSION: SLE patients have impaired Treg production or maintenance, a trait strongly associated with SLE disease activity and autoantibody titers, and possibly resulting from the inability to convert FOXP3+CD25- into FOXP3+CD25+ T cells. Treg frequency is highly heritable within SLE families, with specific variants of the CTLA4 and TGFbeta genes contributing to this trait, while FOXP3 contributes to SLE through mechanisms not involving a modulation of Treg frequency. These findings establish that the genetic components in SLE pathogenesis include genes related to Treg generation or maintenance.
- MECP2 coding sequence and 3'UTR variation in 172 unrelated autistic patientsPublication . Coutinho, A.M.; Oliveira, G.; Katz, C.; Feng, J.; Yan, J.; Yang, C.; Marques, C.; Ataíde, A.; Miguel, T.S.; Borges, L.; Almeida, J.; Correia, C.; Currais, A.; Bento, C.; Mota-Vieira, L.; Temudo, T.; Santos, M.; Maciel, P.; Sommer, S.S.; Vicente, A.M.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.
