ELISANGELA PEREIRA DE SOUZA QUEDAS

(Fonte: Lattes)
Índice h a partir de 2011
7
Projetos de Pesquisa
Unidades Organizacionais
Instituto Central, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/25 - Laboratório de Endocrinologia Celular e Molecular, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

Resultados de Busca

Agora exibindo 1 - 10 de 14
  • article 14 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Germline mutation landscape of multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 using full gene next-generation sequencing
    (2018) CARVALHO, Rafael A.; URTREMARI, Betsaida; JORGE, Alexander A. L.; SANTANA, Lucas S.; QUEDAS, Elisangela P. S.; SEKIYA, Tomoko; LONGUINI, Viviane C.; MONTENEGRO, Fabio L. M.; LERARIO, Antonio M.; TOLEDO, Sergio P. A.; MARX, Stephen J.; TOLEDO, Rodrigo A.; JR, Delmar M. Lourenco
    Background: Loss-of-function germline MEN1 gene mutations account for 75-95% of patients with multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1). It has been postulated that mutations in non-coding regions of MEN1 might occur in some of the remaining patients; however, this hypothesis has not yet been fully investigated. Objective: To sequence for the entire MEN1 including promoter, exons and introns in a large MEN1 cohort and determine the mutation profile. Methods and patients: A target next-generation sequencing (tNGS) assay comprising 7.2 kb of the full MEN1 was developed to investigate germline mutations in 76 unrelated MEN1 probands (49 familial, 27 sporadic). tNGS results were validated by Sanger sequencing (SS), and multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) assay was applied when no mutations were identifiable by both tNGS and SS. Results: Germline MEN1 variants were verified in coding region and splicing sites of 57/76 patients (74%) by both tNGS and SS (100% reproducibility). Thirty-eight different pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants were identified, including 13 new and six recurrent variants. Three large deletions were detected by MLPA only. No mutation was detected in 16 patients. In untranslated, regulatory or in deep intronic MEN1 regions of the 76 MEN1 cases, no point or short indel pathogenic variants were found in untranslated, although 33 benign/likely benign and three new VUS variants were detected. Conclusions: Our study documents that point or short indel mutations in non-coding regions of MEN1 are very rare events. Also, tNGS proved to be a highly effective technology for routine genetic MEN1 testing.
  • conferenceObject
    Genetic evaluation in children with self-limited pubertal delay discloses new candidate genes
    (2023) REZENDE, Raissa; SCHAFER, Evan; KAISINGER, Lena; HE, Wen; ANDRADE, Nathalia; DANTAS, Naiara; CELLIN, Laurana; QUEDAS, Elisangela; PERRY, John; HOWARD, Sasha; LATRONICO, Ana Claudia; CHAN, Yee-Ming; JORGE, Alexander
  • article 17 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Clinical application of ACMG-AMP guidelines in HNF1A and GCK variants in a cohort of MODY families
    (2017) SANTANA, L. S.; CAETANO, L. A.; COSTA-RIQUETTO, A. D.; QUEDAS, E. P. S.; NERY, M.; COLLETT-SOLBERG, P.; BOGUSZEWSKI, M. C. S.; VENDRAMINI, M. F.; CRISOSTOMO, L. G.; FLOH, F. O.; ZARABIA, Z. I.; KOHARA, S. K.; GUASTAPAGLIA, L.; PASSONE, C. G. B.; SEWAYBRICKER, L. E.; JORGE, A. A. L.; TELES, M. G.
    Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) is a form of monogenic diabetes with autosomal dominant inheritance. GCK-MODY and HNF1A-MODY are the prevalent subtypes. Currently, there is growing concern regarding the correct interpretation of molecular genetic findings. The American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) updated guidelines to interpret and classify molecular variants. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of MODY (GCK/HNF1A) in a large cohort of Brazilian families, to report variants related to phenotype, and to classify them according to ACMG guidelines. One hundred and nine probands were investigated, 45% with clinical suspicion of GCK-MODY and 55% with suspicion of HNF1A-MODY. Twenty-five different variants were identified in GCK gene (30 probands61% of ositivity), and 7 variants in HNF1A (10 probands17% of positivity). Fourteen of them werenovel (12GCK/2HNF1A). ACMG guidelines were able to classify a large portion of variants as athogenic (36%GCK/86%HNF1A) and likely pathogenic (44%GCK/14%HNF1A), with 16% (5/32) as uncertain significance. This allows us to determine the pathogenicity classification more efficiently, and also reinforces the suspected associations with the phenotype among novel variants.
  • conferenceObject
    Several new candidate genes for self-limited delayed puberty revealed by whole exome sequencing
    (2023) REZENDE, Raissa; SCHAFER, Evan; KAISINGER, Lena; DANTAS, Naiara; ANDRADE, Nathalia; CELLIN, Laurana; QUEDAS, Elisangela; HE, Wen; PERRY, John; XAVIER, Ana Claudia Latronico; HOWARD, Sasha; CHAN, Yee-Ming; JORGE, Alexander
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Autosomal recessive form of isolated growth hormone deficiency is more frequent than the autosomal dominant form in a Brazilian cohort
    (2014) LIDO, Andria C. V.; FRANCA, Marcela M.; CORREA, Fernanda A.; OTTO, Aline P.; CARVALHO, Luciani R.; QUEDAS, Elisangela P. S.; NISHI, Mirian Y.; MENDONCA, Berenice B.; ARNHOLD, Ivo J. P.; JORGE, Alexander A. L.
    Background: In most studies, the autosomal dominant (type II) form of isolated growth hormone deficiency (IGHD) has been more frequent than the autosomal recessive (type I) form. Our aim was to assess defects in the GH1 in short Brazilian children with different GH secretion status. Subjects and methods: We selected 135 children with postnatal short stature and classified according to the highest GH peak at stimulation tests in: severe IGHD (peak GH <= 3.3 mu g/L, n = 38, all with normal pituitary magnetic resonance imaging); GH peak between 3.3 and 10 mu g/L (n = 76); and GH peak >10 mu g/L (n = 21). The entire coding region of GH1 was sequenced and complete GH1 deletions were assessed by Multiplex Ligation Dependent Probe Amplification and restriction enzyme digestion. Results: Patients with severe IGHD had a higher frequency of consanguinity, were shorter, had lower levels of IGF-1 and IGFBP-3, and despite treatment with lower GH doses had a greater growth response than patients with GH peak >= 3.3 mu g/L. Mutations were found only in patients with severe IGHD (GH peak <3.3 mu g/L). Eight patients had autosomal recessive IGHD: Seven patients were homozygous for GH1 deletions and one patient was compound heterozygous for a GH1 deletion and the novel c.171 + 5G>C point mutation in intron 2, predicted to abolish the donor splice site. Only one patient, who was heterozygous for the c.291 + 1G>T mutation located at the universal donor splice site of intron 3 and predicts exon 3 skipping, had an autosomal dominant form. Conclusion: Analysis of GH1 in a cohort of Brazilian patients revealed that the autosomal recessive form of IGHD was more common than the dominant one, and both were found only in severe IGHD.
  • article 8 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Noonan syndrome patients beyond the obvious phenotype: A potential unfavorable metabolic profile
    (2021) NORONHA, Renata M.; VILLARES, Sandra M. F.; TORRES, Natalia; QUEDAS, Elisangela P. S.; HOMMA, Thais Kataoka; ALBUQUERQUE, Edoarda V. A.; MORAES, Michelle B.; FUNARI, Mariana F. A.; BERTOLA, Debora R.; JORGE, Alexander A. L.; MALAQUIAS, Alexsandra C.
    Noonan syndrome (NS) and NS related disorders (NRD) are frequent monogenic diseases. Pathogenic variants in PTPN11 are observed in approximately 50% of these NS patients. Several pleiotropic phenotypes have previously been described in this condition. This study aimed at characterizing glucose and lipid profiles in patients with NS/NRD. We assessed fasting blood glucose, insulin, cholesterol (total and fractions), and triglyceride (TG) levels in 112 prepubertal children and 73 adults. Additionally, an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was performed in 40 children and 54 adults. Data were analyzed between age groups according to the presence (+) or absence (-) of PTPN11 mutation. Prepubertal patients with NS/NRD were also compared with a control group. Despite the lean phenotype of children with NS/NRD, they presented an increased frequency of low HDL-cholesterol (63% in PTPN11+, 59% in PTPN11- and 16% in control, p < .001) and high TG levels (29% in PTPN11+, 18% in PTPN11- and 2.3% in control). PTPN11+ patients had a higher median HOMA-IR (1.0, ranged from 0.3 to 3.2) in comparison with PTPN11- (0.6; 0.2 to 4.4) and controls (0.6; 0.4 to 1.4, p = .027). Impaired glucose tolerance was observed in 19% (10:54) of lean adults with NS/NRD assessed by OGTT. Moreover, women with PTPN11 mutations had lower HDL-cholesterol levels than those without. Our results suggest that children and young adult patients with NS/NRD have an unfavorable metabolic profile characterized by low HDL, a tendency of elevated TGs, and glucose metabolism impairment despite a lean phenotype.
  • article 16 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Impact of Growth Hormone Therapy on Adult Height in Patients with PTPN11 Mutations Related to Noonan Syndrome
    (2019) MALAQUIAS, Alexsandra C.; NORONHA, Renata M.; SOUZA, Thaiana T. O.; HOMMA, Thais K.; FUNARI, Mariana F. A.; YAMAMOTO, Guilherme L.; SILVA, Fernanda Viana; MORAES, Michelle B.; HONJO, Rachel S.; KIM, Chong A.; NESI-FRANCA, Suzana; CARVALHO, Julienne A. R.; QUEDAS, Elisangela P. S.; BERTOLA, Debora R.; JORGE, Alexander A. L.
    Objectives: The aim of this study was to evaluate the response to recombinant human growth hormone (rhGH) treatment in patients with Noonan syndrome (NS). Materials and Methods: Forty-two patients (35 PTPN11+) were treated with rhGH, and 17 were followed-up until adult height. The outcomes were changes in growth velocity (GV) and height standard deviation scores (SDS) for normal (height-CDC SDS) and Noonan standards (height-NS SDS). Results: The pretreatment chronological age was 10.3 +/- 3.5 years. Height-CDC SDS and height-NS SDS were -3.1 +/- 0.7 and -0.5 +/- 0.6, respectively. PTPN11+ patients had a better growth response than PTPN11- patients. GV SDS increased from -1.2 +/- 1.8 to 3.1 +/- 2.8 after the first year of therapy in PTPN11+ patients, and from -1.9 +/- 2.6 to -0.1 +/- 2.6 in PTPN11- patients. The gain in height-CDC SDS during the first year was higher in PTPN11+ than PTPN11- (0.6 +/- 0.4 vs. 0.1 +/- 0.2, p = 0.008). Similarly, the gain was observed in height-NS SDS (0.6 +/- 0.3 vs. 0.2 +/- 0.2, respectively, p < 0.001). Among the patients that reached adult height (n = 17), AH-CDC SDS and AH-NS SDS were -2.1 +/- 0.7 and 0.7 +/- 0.8, respectively. The total increase in height SDS was 1.3 +/- 0.7 and 1.5 +/- 0.6 for normal and NS standards, respectively. Conclusions: This study supports the advantage of rhGH therapy on adult height in PTPN11+ patients. In comparison, PTPN11- patients showed a poor response to rhGH. However, this PTPN11- group was small, preventing an adequate comparison among different genotypes and no guarantee of response to therapy in genes besides PTPN11. (C) 2019 S. Karger AG, Basel
  • article 24 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Congenital Muscular Dystrophy With Dropped Head Linked to the LMNA Gene in a Brazilian Cohort
    (2014) PASQUALIN, Livia M. A.; REED, Umbertina C.; COSTA, Thais V. M. M.; QUEDAS, Elisangela; ALBUQUERQUE, Marco A. V.; RESENDE, Maria B. D.; RUTKOWSKI, Anne; CHADI, Gerson; ZANOTELI, Edmar
    BACKGROUND: Congenital muscular dystrophy is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of myopathies. Congenital muscular dystrophy related to lamin A/C is rare and characterized by early-onset hypotonia with axial muscle weakness typically presenting with a loss in motor acquisitions within the first year of life and a dropped-head phenotype. METHODS: Here we report the clinical and histological characteristics of four unrelated Brazilian patients with dropped-head syndrome and mutations in the LMNA gene. RESULTS: All patients had previously described mutations (p.E358K, p.R249W, and p.N39S) and showed pronounced cervical muscle weakness, elevation of serum creatine kinase, dystrophic pattern on muscle biopsy, and respiratory insufficiency requiring ventilatory support. Three of the patients manifested cardiac arrhythmias, and one demonstrated a neuropathic pattern on nerve conduction study. CONCLUSION: Although lamin A/C related congenital muscular dystrophy is a clinically distinct and recognizable phenotype, genotype/phenotype correlation, ability to anticipate onset of respiratory and cardiac involvement, and need for nutritional support remain difficult.
  • article 2 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Genetic investigation of patients with tall stature
    (2020) ALBUQUERQUE, Edoarda Vasco de Albuquerque; FUNARI, Mariana Ferreira de Assis; QUEDAS, Elisangela Pereira de Souza; KAWAHIRA, Rachel Sayuri Honjo; JALLAD, Raquel Soares; HOMMA, Thais Kataoka; MARTIN, Regina Matsunaga; BRITO, Vinicius Nahime; MALAQUIAS, Alexsandra Christianne; LERARIO, Antonio Marcondes; ROSENBERG, Carla; KREPISCHI, Ana Cristina Victorino; KIM, Chong Ae; ARNHOLD, Ivo Jorge Prado; JORGE, Alexander Augusto de Lima
    Context: Patients with tall stature often remain undiagnosed after clinical investigation and few studies have genetically assessed this group, most of them without a systematic approach. Objective: To assess prospectively a group of individuals with tall stature, with and without syndromic features, and to establish a molecular diagnosis for their growth disorder. Design: Screening by karyotype (n = 42), chromosome microarray analyses (CMA) (n = 16), MS-MLPA (n = 2) targeted panel (n = 12) and whole-exome sequencing (n = 31). Patients and methods: We selected 42 patients with tall stature after exclusion of pathologies in GH/IGF1 axis and divided them into syndromic (n = 30) and non-syndromic (n = 12) subgroups. Main outcome measures: Frequencies of pathogenic findings. Results: We identified two patients with chromosomal abnormalities including SHOX trisomy by karyotype, one 9q22.3 microdeletion syndrome by CMA, two cases of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome by targeted MS-MLPA analysis and nine cases with heterozygous pathogenic or likely pathogenic genetic variants by multigene analysis techniques (FBN1 = 3, NSD1 = 2, NFIX = 1, SUZ12 = 1, CHD8 = 1, MC4R = 1). Three of 20 patients analyzed by WES had their diagnosis established. Only one non-syndromic patient had a definitive diagnosis. The sequential genetic assessment diagnosed 14 out of 42 (33.3%) tall patients. Conclusion: A systematic molecular approach of patients with tall stature was able to identify the etiology in 13 out of 30 (43.3%) syndromic and 1 out of 12 (8.3%) non-syndromic patients, contributing to the genetic counseling and avoiding unfavorable outcomes in the syndromic subgroup.
  • conferenceObject
    Novel Mutations in GCK and HNF1A-MODY in a Large Cohort of Brazilian Diabetic Families
    (2015) CAETANO, Lilian A.; SANTANA, Lucas S.; QUEDAS, Elisangela S.; NERY, Marcia; JORGE, Alexander L.; TELES, Milena G.