DEBORA ROMEO BERTOLA

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
30
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto da Criança, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina - Médico
BIO, IB
LIM/36 - Laboratório de Pediatria Clínica, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 5 de 5
  • article 17 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Multiple, diffuse schwannomas in a RASopathy phenotype patient with germline KRAS mutation: a causal relationship?
    (2012) BERTOLA, D. R.; PEREIRA, A. C.; BRASIL, A. S.; SUZUKI, L.; LEITE, C.; FALZONI, R.; TANNURI, U.; POPLAWSKI, A. B.; JANOWSKI, K. M.; KIM, C. A.; MESSIAEN, L. M.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Vertebral segmentation defects in a Brazilian cohort: Clinical and molecular analysis focused on spondylocostal dysostosis
    (2022) LINNENKAMP, Bianca; GIRARDI, Raissa; ROCHA, Leticia; YAMAMOTO, Guilherme; CERONI, Jose Ricardo; MENDES, Antonia Elisabeth Cristhina; HONJO, Rachel; OLIVEIRA, Luiz Antonio; AMEMIYA, Raphael Bruno; QUAIO, Caio; OLIVEIRA FILHO, Joao Bosco de; KIM, Chong Ae; BERTOLA, Debora
  • article 4 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Congenital limb deficiency: Genetic investigation of 44 individuals presenting mainly longitudinal defects in isolated or syndromic forms
    (2021) ROCHA, Leticia Alves da; PIRES, Lucas Vieira Lacerda; YAMAMOTO, Guilherme Lopes; CERONI, Jose Ricardo Magliocco; HONJO, Rachel Sayuri; BISNETO, Edgard de Novaes Franca; OLIVEIRA, Luiz Antonio Nunes; ROSENBERG, Carla; KREPISCHI, Ana Cristina Victorino; PASSOS-BUENO, Maria Rita; KIM, Chong Ae; BERTOLA, Debora Romeo
    Congenital limb deficiency (CLD), one of the most common congenital anomalies, is characterized by hypoplasia/aplasia of one or more limb bones and can be isolated or syndromic. The etiology in CLD is heterogeneous, including environmental and genetic factors. A fraction remains with no etiological factor identified. We report the study of 44 Brazilian individuals presenting isolated or syndromic CLD, mainly with longitudinal defects. Genetic investigation included particularly next-generation sequencing (NGS) and/or chromosomal microarray. The overall diagnostic yield was 45.7%, ranging from 60.9% in the syndromic to 16.7% in the non-syndromic group. In TAR syndrome, a common variant in 3 ' UTR of RBM8A, in trans with 1q21.1 microdeletion, was detected, corroborating the importance of this recently reported variant in individuals of African ancestry. NGS established a diagnosis in three individuals in syndromes recently reported or still under delineation (an acrofacial dysostosis, Coats plus and Verheij syndromes), suggesting a broader phenotypic spectrum in these disorders. Although a low rate of molecular detection in non-syndromic forms was observed, it is still possible that variants in non-coding regions and small CNVs, not detected by the techniques applied in this study, could play a role in the etiology of CLD.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Imagawa-Matsumoto syndrome: SUZ12-related overgrowth disorder
    (2023) IMAGAWA, Eri; SEYAMA, Rie; AOI, Hiromi; UCHIYAMA, Yuri; MARCARINI, Bruno Guimaraes; FURQUIM, Isabel; HONJO, Rachel Sayuri; BERTOLA, Debora Romeo; KIM, Chong Ae; MATSUMOTO, Naomichi
    The SUZ12 gene encodes a subunit of polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2) that is essential for development by silencing the expression of multiple genes. Germline heterozygous variants in SUZ12 have been found in Imagawa-Matsumoto syndrome (IMMAS) characterized by overgrowth and multiple dysmorphic features. Similarly, both EZH2 and EED also encode a subunit of PRC2 each and their pathogenic variants cause Weaver syndrome and Cohen-Gibson syndrome, respectively. Clinical manifestations of these syndromes significantly overlap, although their different prevalence rates have recently been noted: generalized overgrowth, intellectual disability, scoliosis, and excessive loose skin appear to be less prevalent in IMMAS than in the other two syndromes. We could not determine any apparent genotype-phenotype correlation in IMMAS. The phenotype of neurofibromatosis type 1 arising from NF1 deletion was also shown to be modified by the deletion of SUZ12, 560 kb away. This review deepens our understanding of the clinical and genetic characteristics of IMMAS together with other overgrowth syndromes related to PRC2. We also report on a novel IMMAS patient carrying a splicing variant (c.1023+1G>C) in SUZ12. This patient had a milder phenotype than other previously reported IMMAS cases, with no macrocephaly or overgrowth phenotypes, highlighting the clinical variation in IMMAS.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Richieri-Costa-Pereira syndrome: Expanding its phenotypic and genotypic spectrum
    (2018) BERTOLA, D. R.; HSIA, G.; ALVIZI, L.; GARDHAM, A.; WAKELING, E. L.; YAMAMOTO, G. L.; HONJO, R. S.; OLIVEIRA, L. A. N.; FRANCESCO, R. C. Di; PEREZ, B. A.; KIM, C. A.; PASSOS-BUENO, M. R.
    Richieri-Costa-Pereira syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive acrofacial dysostosis that has been mainly described in Brazilian individuals. The cardinal features include Robin sequence, cleft mandible, laryngeal anomalies and limb defects. A biallelic expansion of a complex repeated motif in the 5 untranslated region of EIF4A3 has been shown to cause this syndrome, commonly with 15 or 16 repeats. The only patient with mild clinical findings harbored a 14-repeat expansion in 1 allele and a point mutation in the other allele. This proband is described here in more details, as well as is his affected sister, and 5 new individuals with Richieri-Costa-Pereira syndrome, including a patient from England, of African ancestry. This study has expanded the phenotype in this syndrome by the observation of microcephaly, better characterization of skeletal abnormalities, less severe phenotype with only mild facial dysmorphisms and limb anomalies, as well as the absence of cleft mandible, which is a hallmark of the syndrome. Although the most frequent mutation in this study was the recurrent 16-repeat expansion in EIF4A3, there was an overrepresentation of the 14-repeat expansion, with mild phenotypic expression, thus suggesting that the number of these motifs could play a role in phenotypic delineation.