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Mystery Patients: Using genomic tools to help diagnose and treat rare disease Stuart Turvey MBBS DPhil FRCPC Director of Clinical Research, CFRI Aubrey.

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Presentation on theme: "Mystery Patients: Using genomic tools to help diagnose and treat rare disease Stuart Turvey MBBS DPhil FRCPC Director of Clinical Research, CFRI Aubrey."— Presentation transcript:

1 Mystery Patients: Using genomic tools to help diagnose and treat rare disease Stuart Turvey MBBS DPhil FRCPC Director of Clinical Research, CFRI Aubrey J. Tingle Professor of Pediatric Immunology Professor, Department of Pediatrics, UBC

2 15yo female child with a unique disease Defining clinical features include: –severe eczema –recurrent pneumonia with lung damage –inflammatory bowel disease –severe gum disease –failure to thrive –multiple fractures after minor trauma The Patient

3 Family Tree

4 Growth Failure

5 Pathological Fractures

6 Extensive GI Inflammation

7 Profound Lymphocytic Infiltration Patient

8 Diagnosis?

9 Working diagnosis = undefined immunodeficiency Treatment = try to address various symptoms

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11 Current Candidate Approach to Genetic Diagnosis

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13 Our genome

14 Human genome = 3 billion nucleotides. Only ~1.5% are actually translated into proteins.

15 Exome sequencing and bioinformatic filtering strategy

16 Exome Sequencing Results

17 The Mutation single base pair substitution in the MALT1 gene (NM_006785:c.1739G>C) predicted to convert a tryptophan to serine (NP_006776.1:p.Trp580Ser) in the C terminal domain of the MALT1 protein

18 MALT1: dual functions as a scaffold protein and caspase-like protease Paracapsase activity cleaving: BCL10, A20, NIK (NF-κB-inducing kinase), CYLD, and RelB Turvey SE, et al. (2014) J Allergy Clin Immunol 134(2):276-84.

19 MALT1 mutation results in very low expression of MALT1 protein

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24 Rare Diseases and the Power of Genomics Rare diseases affect 1-in-12 Canadians Most rare diseases present in childhood –1/3 rd of patients at BC Children’s Hospital have a rare disease New genomic technology is allowing us to diagnose many children Diagnosis empowers ‘precision medicine’


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