Ethylin Jabs - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Ethylin Jabs

Research paper thumbnail of Attitudes towards receiving personal results from genomics research: A structured interview study

Genomics research requires ever increasing numbers of people to participate and contribute their ... more Genomics research requires ever increasing numbers of people to participate and contribute their DNA. The question of whether personal results from genomics research should be returned to participating individuals is becoming more pressing. It is vital that voices are heard on this from diverse communities. This study examined ethnically diverse patients' attitudes towards receiving personal results from genomics research. Structured interviews were conducted with patients (n=205) attending an inner-city outpatient hospital clinic. The interview content focused on attitudes towards genetic research on four common diseases. Overall, 48% participants were Black/African American, 29% Hispanic/Latino, 10% White, 13% Other; 69% were female; mean age 50 (range 22-85) yrs. 52% participants said they would definitely participate in genetics research in which they were offered personal genetic information, whilst only 22% said they would definitely participate if they were not offered pe...

Research paper thumbnail of Identification of an HMGB3 frameshift mutation in a family with an X-linked colobomatous microphthalmia syndrome using whole-genome and X-exome sequencing

JAMA ophthalmology, 2014

Microphthalmias are rare disorders whose genetic bases are not fully understood. HMGB3 is a new c... more Microphthalmias are rare disorders whose genetic bases are not fully understood. HMGB3 is a new candidate gene for X-linked forms of this disease. To identify the causative gene in a pedigree with an X-linked colobomatous microphthalmos phenotype. Whole-genome sequencing and chromosome X-exome-targeted sequencing were performed at the High Throughput Sequencing Laboratory of the Genetic Resources Core Facility at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine on the DNA of the male proband and informatically filtered to identify rare variants. Polymerase chain reaction and Sanger sequencing were used to confirm the variant in the proband and the carrier status of his mother. Thirteen unrelated male patients with a similar phenotype were also screened. Whole-genome and X-exome sequencing to identify a frameshift variant in HMGB3. A 2-base pair frameshift insertion (c.477_478insTA, coding for p.Lys161Ilefs*54) in the HGMB3 gene was found in the proband and his carrier mother but not ...

Research paper thumbnail of Linkage Analysis Narrows the Critical Region for Oculodentodigital Dysplasia to Chromosome 6q22–q23

Research paper thumbnail of Connexin 43 (GJA1) Mutations Cause the Pleiotropic Phenotype of Oculodentodigital Dysplasia

The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2003

Research paper thumbnail of Development and preliminary evaluation of an online educational video about whole-genome sequencing for research participants, patients, and the general public

Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics, Jan 3, 2015

As whole-genome sequencing (WGS) increases in availability, WGS educational aids are needed for r... more As whole-genome sequencing (WGS) increases in availability, WGS educational aids are needed for research participants, patients, and the general public. Our aim was therefore to develop an accessible and scalable WGS educational aid. We engaged multiple stakeholders in an iterative process over a 1-year period culminating in the production of a novel 10-minute WGS educational animated video, "Whole Genome Sequencing and You" (https://goo.gl/HV8ezJ). We then presented the animated video to 281 online-survey respondents (the video-information group). There were also two comparison groups: a written-information group (n = 281) and a no-information group (n = 300). In the video-information group, 79% reported the video was easy to understand, satisfaction scores were high (mean 4.00 on 1-5 scale, where 5 = high satisfaction), and knowledge increased significantly. There were significant differences in knowledge compared with the no-information group but few differences compare...

Research paper thumbnail of Novel evidence of association with nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate was shown for single nucleotide polymorphisms in FOXF2 gene in an Asian population

Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology, Jan 17, 2015

The forkhead box F2 gene (FOXF2) located in chromosome 6p25.3 has been shown to play a crucial ro... more The forkhead box F2 gene (FOXF2) located in chromosome 6p25.3 has been shown to play a crucial role in palatal development in mouse and rat models. To date, no evidence of linkage or association has been reported for this gene in humans with oral clefts. Allelic transmission disequilibrium tests were used to robustly assess evidence of linkage and association with nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate for nine single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in and around FOXF2 in both Asian and European trios using PLINK. Statistically significant evidence of linkage and association was shown for two SNPs (rs1711968 and rs732835) in 216 Asian trios where the empiric P values with permutation tests were 0.0016 and 0.005, respectively. The corresponding estimated odds ratios for carrying the minor allele at these SNPs were 2.05 (95% confidence interval = 1.41, 2.98) and 1.77 (95% confidence interval = 1.26, 2.49), respectively. Our results provided statistical evidence of linkage...

Research paper thumbnail of Screening of TCOF1 in patients from different populations: confirmation of mutational hot spots and identification of a novel missense mutation that suggests an important functional domain in the protein treacle

Journal of Medical Genetics, 2002

Research paper thumbnail of Mild mandibulofacial dysostosis in a child with a deletion of 3p

American Journal of Medical Genetics, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of BCL11B expression in intramembranous osteogenesis during murine craniofacial suture development

Gene expression patterns : GEP, 2015

Sutures, where neighboring craniofacial bones are separated by undifferentiated mesenchyme, are m... more Sutures, where neighboring craniofacial bones are separated by undifferentiated mesenchyme, are major growth sites during craniofacial development. Pathologic fusion of bones within sutures occurs in a wide variety of craniosynostosis conditions and can result in dysmorphic craniofacial growth and secondary neurologic deficits. Our knowledge of the genes involved in suture formation is poor. Here we describe the novel expression pattern of the BCL11B transcription factor protein during murine embryonic craniofacial bone formation. We examined BCL11B protein expression at E14.5, E16.5, and E18.5 in 14 major craniofacial sutures of C57BL/6J mice. We found BCL11B expression to be associated with all intramembranous craniofacial bones examined. The most striking aspects of BCL11B expression were its high levels in suture mesenchyme and increasingly complementary expression with RUNX2 in differentiating osteoblasts during development. BCL11B was also expressed in mesenchyme at the non-su...

Research paper thumbnail of Closing the Gap: Genetic and Genomic Continuum from Syndromic to Nonsyndromic Craniosynostoses

Current Genetic Medicine Reports, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Physical mapping of the human ATX1 homologue (HAH1) to the critical region of the 5q- syndrome within 5q32, and immediately adjacent to the SPARC gene

Human genetics, 2000

The 5q- syndrome is a myelodysplastic syndrome with the 5q deletion as the sole karyotypic abnorm... more The 5q- syndrome is a myelodysplastic syndrome with the 5q deletion as the sole karyotypic abnormality. The human ATX1 homologue (HAH1), encodes a copper-binding protein with a role in antioxidant defence. We have mapped this gene to the 3 Mb critical region of gene loss of the 5q- syndrome within 5q32, flanked by the genes for ADRB2 and IL12B, using gene dosage analysis. Fine physical mapping of the HAH1 gene within this genomic interval was then performed by screening YAC and BAC contigs spanning the critical region of the 5q- syndrome using PCR amplification. The HAH1 gene maps immediately adjacent to the SPARC gene at 5q32, and is flanked by the genetic markers D5S1838 and D5S1419. The HAH1 gene is expressed in haematological tissues and plays a role in antioxidant defence. Antioxidant levels are low in most cancers and the importance of antioxidant enzymes in cancer genesis is well recognised. Genomic localisation, function and expression would suggest that the HAH1 gene repres...

Research paper thumbnail of A novel dysmorphic syndrome with open calvarial sutures and sutural cataracts maps to chromosome 14q13-q21

Human genetics, 2003

We describe a new dysmorphic syndrome in an inbred Saudi Arabian family with 21 members. Five mal... more We describe a new dysmorphic syndrome in an inbred Saudi Arabian family with 21 members. Five males and one female have similar craniofacial features including wide open calvarial sutures with large and late-closing anterior fontanels, frontal bossing, hyperpigmentation with capillary hemangioma of the forehead, significant hypertelorism, and a broad and prominent nose. In addition, these individuals have Y-shaped sutural cataracts diagnosed by 1-2 years of age. No chromosomal or biochemical abnormalities were identified. A genome-wide scan was performed, and two-point LOD score analysis, assuming autosomal recessive inheritance, detected linkage to chromosome 14q13-q21. The highest LOD scores were obtained for marker GATA136A04 (LOD=4.58 at theta=0.00) and for the adjacent telomeric marker D14S1048 (LOD=4.32 at theta=0.00). Multipoint linkage analysis resulted in a maximum LOD score of 5.44 between markers D14S1048 and GATA136A04. Model independent analysis by SIBPAL confirmed link...

Research paper thumbnail of Phenotypic variation within and between'genetically homogeneous' mouse litters

Research paper thumbnail of Developmental basis of morphological integration of brain and skull in craniosynostosis

Research paper thumbnail of Individual craniofacial bone volumes and relative densities in postnatal mice provide valuable phenotypic information

Research paper thumbnail of Developmental Aspects of the Upper Airway: Report from an NHLBI Workshop, March 5-6, 2009

Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Jackson-Weiss and Crouzon syndromes are allelic with mutations in fibroblast growth factor receptor 2

Research paper thumbnail of Characterization of the Nucleolar Gene Product, Treacle, in Treacher Collins Syndrome

Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of Joint testing of genotypic and gene-environment interaction identified novel association for BMP4 with non-syndromic CL/P in an Asian population using data from an International Cleft Consortium

PloS one, 2014

Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) is a common disorder with complex e... more Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) is a common disorder with complex etiology. The Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 gene (BMP4) has been considered a prime candidate gene with evidence accumulated from animal experimental studies, human linkage studies, as well as candidate gene association studies. The aim of the current study is to test for linkage and association between BMP4 and NSCL/P that could be missed in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) when genotypic (G) main effects alone were considered. We performed the analysis considering G and interactions with multiple maternal environmental exposures using additive conditional logistic regression models in 895 Asian and 681 European complete NSCL/P trios. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that passed the quality control criteria among 122 genotyped and 25 imputed single nucleotide variants in and around the gene were used in analysis. Selected maternal environmental exposures during 3 months prior ...

Research paper thumbnail of Macromolecular organization of human centromeric regions reveals high-frequency, polymorphic macro DNA repeats

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1989

To analyze the macromolecular organization of human centromeric regions, we used alpha-satellite,... more To analyze the macromolecular organization of human centromeric regions, we used alpha-satellite, or alphoid, repetitive DNA sequences specific to the centromeres of human chromosomes 6 (D6Z1), X (XC), and Y (YC-2) and the technique of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Genomic DNA from 24 normal, unrelated individuals was digested and separated into fragments ranging from 23 kilobases (kb) to 2 megabases (Mb) in length. Digestion with 12 different restriction enzymes with 4- to 8-base-pair recognition sequences and hybridization with alphoid sequences revealed chromosome-specific hybridization patterns. Similarities in the organization of the centromeric regions of the three chromosomes included NotI, SfiI, and SalI fragments of greater than 2 Mb and Sau3A1 and Alu I fragments of less than 150 kb. Each restriction enzyme with a 6-base-pair recognition sequence (Ava II, BamHI, HindIII, Hpa I, Pst I, Sal I, Sst I, and Xba I) detected polymorphic DNA fragments of 50 kb to 2 Mb. Forty percent or more of the individuals screened revealed a unique hybridization pattern with these enzymes and at least one of the three chromosome-specific alphoid probes. Five individuals differed from one another in hybridization pattern for each of the three enzymes HindIII, HpaI, and SstI and for each of the three centromeric probes. All 24 individuals could be distinguished on the basis of unique hybridization patterns with only two enzymes and one chromosome-specific alphoid probe. Family studies showed that these polymorphisms are inherited. The high frequency of these macro restriction fragment length polymorphisms illustrates the high degree of variability of the centromeric region among normal individuals and demonstrates its usefulness for DNA fingerprinting and pericentromeric mapping by linkage analysis.

Research paper thumbnail of Attitudes towards receiving personal results from genomics research: A structured interview study

Genomics research requires ever increasing numbers of people to participate and contribute their ... more Genomics research requires ever increasing numbers of people to participate and contribute their DNA. The question of whether personal results from genomics research should be returned to participating individuals is becoming more pressing. It is vital that voices are heard on this from diverse communities. This study examined ethnically diverse patients' attitudes towards receiving personal results from genomics research. Structured interviews were conducted with patients (n=205) attending an inner-city outpatient hospital clinic. The interview content focused on attitudes towards genetic research on four common diseases. Overall, 48% participants were Black/African American, 29% Hispanic/Latino, 10% White, 13% Other; 69% were female; mean age 50 (range 22-85) yrs. 52% participants said they would definitely participate in genetics research in which they were offered personal genetic information, whilst only 22% said they would definitely participate if they were not offered pe...

Research paper thumbnail of Identification of an HMGB3 frameshift mutation in a family with an X-linked colobomatous microphthalmia syndrome using whole-genome and X-exome sequencing

JAMA ophthalmology, 2014

Microphthalmias are rare disorders whose genetic bases are not fully understood. HMGB3 is a new c... more Microphthalmias are rare disorders whose genetic bases are not fully understood. HMGB3 is a new candidate gene for X-linked forms of this disease. To identify the causative gene in a pedigree with an X-linked colobomatous microphthalmos phenotype. Whole-genome sequencing and chromosome X-exome-targeted sequencing were performed at the High Throughput Sequencing Laboratory of the Genetic Resources Core Facility at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine on the DNA of the male proband and informatically filtered to identify rare variants. Polymerase chain reaction and Sanger sequencing were used to confirm the variant in the proband and the carrier status of his mother. Thirteen unrelated male patients with a similar phenotype were also screened. Whole-genome and X-exome sequencing to identify a frameshift variant in HMGB3. A 2-base pair frameshift insertion (c.477_478insTA, coding for p.Lys161Ilefs*54) in the HGMB3 gene was found in the proband and his carrier mother but not ...

Research paper thumbnail of Linkage Analysis Narrows the Critical Region for Oculodentodigital Dysplasia to Chromosome 6q22–q23

Research paper thumbnail of Connexin 43 (GJA1) Mutations Cause the Pleiotropic Phenotype of Oculodentodigital Dysplasia

The American Journal of Human Genetics, 2003

Research paper thumbnail of Development and preliminary evaluation of an online educational video about whole-genome sequencing for research participants, patients, and the general public

Genetics in medicine : official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics, Jan 3, 2015

As whole-genome sequencing (WGS) increases in availability, WGS educational aids are needed for r... more As whole-genome sequencing (WGS) increases in availability, WGS educational aids are needed for research participants, patients, and the general public. Our aim was therefore to develop an accessible and scalable WGS educational aid. We engaged multiple stakeholders in an iterative process over a 1-year period culminating in the production of a novel 10-minute WGS educational animated video, "Whole Genome Sequencing and You" (https://goo.gl/HV8ezJ). We then presented the animated video to 281 online-survey respondents (the video-information group). There were also two comparison groups: a written-information group (n = 281) and a no-information group (n = 300). In the video-information group, 79% reported the video was easy to understand, satisfaction scores were high (mean 4.00 on 1-5 scale, where 5 = high satisfaction), and knowledge increased significantly. There were significant differences in knowledge compared with the no-information group but few differences compare...

Research paper thumbnail of Novel evidence of association with nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate was shown for single nucleotide polymorphisms in FOXF2 gene in an Asian population

Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology, Jan 17, 2015

The forkhead box F2 gene (FOXF2) located in chromosome 6p25.3 has been shown to play a crucial ro... more The forkhead box F2 gene (FOXF2) located in chromosome 6p25.3 has been shown to play a crucial role in palatal development in mouse and rat models. To date, no evidence of linkage or association has been reported for this gene in humans with oral clefts. Allelic transmission disequilibrium tests were used to robustly assess evidence of linkage and association with nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate for nine single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in and around FOXF2 in both Asian and European trios using PLINK. Statistically significant evidence of linkage and association was shown for two SNPs (rs1711968 and rs732835) in 216 Asian trios where the empiric P values with permutation tests were 0.0016 and 0.005, respectively. The corresponding estimated odds ratios for carrying the minor allele at these SNPs were 2.05 (95% confidence interval = 1.41, 2.98) and 1.77 (95% confidence interval = 1.26, 2.49), respectively. Our results provided statistical evidence of linkage...

Research paper thumbnail of Screening of TCOF1 in patients from different populations: confirmation of mutational hot spots and identification of a novel missense mutation that suggests an important functional domain in the protein treacle

Journal of Medical Genetics, 2002

Research paper thumbnail of Mild mandibulofacial dysostosis in a child with a deletion of 3p

American Journal of Medical Genetics, 1993

Research paper thumbnail of BCL11B expression in intramembranous osteogenesis during murine craniofacial suture development

Gene expression patterns : GEP, 2015

Sutures, where neighboring craniofacial bones are separated by undifferentiated mesenchyme, are m... more Sutures, where neighboring craniofacial bones are separated by undifferentiated mesenchyme, are major growth sites during craniofacial development. Pathologic fusion of bones within sutures occurs in a wide variety of craniosynostosis conditions and can result in dysmorphic craniofacial growth and secondary neurologic deficits. Our knowledge of the genes involved in suture formation is poor. Here we describe the novel expression pattern of the BCL11B transcription factor protein during murine embryonic craniofacial bone formation. We examined BCL11B protein expression at E14.5, E16.5, and E18.5 in 14 major craniofacial sutures of C57BL/6J mice. We found BCL11B expression to be associated with all intramembranous craniofacial bones examined. The most striking aspects of BCL11B expression were its high levels in suture mesenchyme and increasingly complementary expression with RUNX2 in differentiating osteoblasts during development. BCL11B was also expressed in mesenchyme at the non-su...

Research paper thumbnail of Closing the Gap: Genetic and Genomic Continuum from Syndromic to Nonsyndromic Craniosynostoses

Current Genetic Medicine Reports, 2014

Research paper thumbnail of Physical mapping of the human ATX1 homologue (HAH1) to the critical region of the 5q- syndrome within 5q32, and immediately adjacent to the SPARC gene

Human genetics, 2000

The 5q- syndrome is a myelodysplastic syndrome with the 5q deletion as the sole karyotypic abnorm... more The 5q- syndrome is a myelodysplastic syndrome with the 5q deletion as the sole karyotypic abnormality. The human ATX1 homologue (HAH1), encodes a copper-binding protein with a role in antioxidant defence. We have mapped this gene to the 3 Mb critical region of gene loss of the 5q- syndrome within 5q32, flanked by the genes for ADRB2 and IL12B, using gene dosage analysis. Fine physical mapping of the HAH1 gene within this genomic interval was then performed by screening YAC and BAC contigs spanning the critical region of the 5q- syndrome using PCR amplification. The HAH1 gene maps immediately adjacent to the SPARC gene at 5q32, and is flanked by the genetic markers D5S1838 and D5S1419. The HAH1 gene is expressed in haematological tissues and plays a role in antioxidant defence. Antioxidant levels are low in most cancers and the importance of antioxidant enzymes in cancer genesis is well recognised. Genomic localisation, function and expression would suggest that the HAH1 gene repres...

Research paper thumbnail of A novel dysmorphic syndrome with open calvarial sutures and sutural cataracts maps to chromosome 14q13-q21

Human genetics, 2003

We describe a new dysmorphic syndrome in an inbred Saudi Arabian family with 21 members. Five mal... more We describe a new dysmorphic syndrome in an inbred Saudi Arabian family with 21 members. Five males and one female have similar craniofacial features including wide open calvarial sutures with large and late-closing anterior fontanels, frontal bossing, hyperpigmentation with capillary hemangioma of the forehead, significant hypertelorism, and a broad and prominent nose. In addition, these individuals have Y-shaped sutural cataracts diagnosed by 1-2 years of age. No chromosomal or biochemical abnormalities were identified. A genome-wide scan was performed, and two-point LOD score analysis, assuming autosomal recessive inheritance, detected linkage to chromosome 14q13-q21. The highest LOD scores were obtained for marker GATA136A04 (LOD=4.58 at theta=0.00) and for the adjacent telomeric marker D14S1048 (LOD=4.32 at theta=0.00). Multipoint linkage analysis resulted in a maximum LOD score of 5.44 between markers D14S1048 and GATA136A04. Model independent analysis by SIBPAL confirmed link...

Research paper thumbnail of Phenotypic variation within and between'genetically homogeneous' mouse litters

Research paper thumbnail of Developmental basis of morphological integration of brain and skull in craniosynostosis

Research paper thumbnail of Individual craniofacial bone volumes and relative densities in postnatal mice provide valuable phenotypic information

Research paper thumbnail of Developmental Aspects of the Upper Airway: Report from an NHLBI Workshop, March 5-6, 2009

Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Jackson-Weiss and Crouzon syndromes are allelic with mutations in fibroblast growth factor receptor 2

Research paper thumbnail of Characterization of the Nucleolar Gene Product, Treacle, in Treacher Collins Syndrome

Molecular Biology of the Cell, 2000

Research paper thumbnail of Joint testing of genotypic and gene-environment interaction identified novel association for BMP4 with non-syndromic CL/P in an Asian population using data from an International Cleft Consortium

PloS one, 2014

Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) is a common disorder with complex e... more Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCL/P) is a common disorder with complex etiology. The Bone Morphogenetic Protein 4 gene (BMP4) has been considered a prime candidate gene with evidence accumulated from animal experimental studies, human linkage studies, as well as candidate gene association studies. The aim of the current study is to test for linkage and association between BMP4 and NSCL/P that could be missed in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) when genotypic (G) main effects alone were considered. We performed the analysis considering G and interactions with multiple maternal environmental exposures using additive conditional logistic regression models in 895 Asian and 681 European complete NSCL/P trios. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that passed the quality control criteria among 122 genotyped and 25 imputed single nucleotide variants in and around the gene were used in analysis. Selected maternal environmental exposures during 3 months prior ...

Research paper thumbnail of Macromolecular organization of human centromeric regions reveals high-frequency, polymorphic macro DNA repeats

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1989

To analyze the macromolecular organization of human centromeric regions, we used alpha-satellite,... more To analyze the macromolecular organization of human centromeric regions, we used alpha-satellite, or alphoid, repetitive DNA sequences specific to the centromeres of human chromosomes 6 (D6Z1), X (XC), and Y (YC-2) and the technique of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. Genomic DNA from 24 normal, unrelated individuals was digested and separated into fragments ranging from 23 kilobases (kb) to 2 megabases (Mb) in length. Digestion with 12 different restriction enzymes with 4- to 8-base-pair recognition sequences and hybridization with alphoid sequences revealed chromosome-specific hybridization patterns. Similarities in the organization of the centromeric regions of the three chromosomes included NotI, SfiI, and SalI fragments of greater than 2 Mb and Sau3A1 and Alu I fragments of less than 150 kb. Each restriction enzyme with a 6-base-pair recognition sequence (Ava II, BamHI, HindIII, Hpa I, Pst I, Sal I, Sst I, and Xba I) detected polymorphic DNA fragments of 50 kb to 2 Mb. Forty percent or more of the individuals screened revealed a unique hybridization pattern with these enzymes and at least one of the three chromosome-specific alphoid probes. Five individuals differed from one another in hybridization pattern for each of the three enzymes HindIII, HpaI, and SstI and for each of the three centromeric probes. All 24 individuals could be distinguished on the basis of unique hybridization patterns with only two enzymes and one chromosome-specific alphoid probe. Family studies showed that these polymorphisms are inherited. The high frequency of these macro restriction fragment length polymorphisms illustrates the high degree of variability of the centromeric region among normal individuals and demonstrates its usefulness for DNA fingerprinting and pericentromeric mapping by linkage analysis.