09:00 – 10:30 hrs | Concurrent Symposia S17-S20 & Educational Sessions E13-E14
Chairs: Kiran Musunuru, Joris Veltman
Room: Hall C
S17.1 Challenges and solutions to advance global collaboration to understand, diagnose, and develop therapies for rare diseases
Kym Boycott;
Canada
S17.2 EMBL-EBI and global data integration
Nick Goldman;
United Kingdom
S17.3 The NIH All of us program: Building a national research program of 1 million U.S. participants to advance precision medicine
Joshua Charles Denny;
United States
S17.4 Pulling the Strands Together: MEGA Steps to Drive European Genomics and Personalised Medicine
Denis Horgan;
Brussels, Belgium
Chairs: Tord Jonson, Matti Pirinen
Room: K2+K3
S18.1 Tales of Early Humans, Admixture, and Adaptation
Mattias Jakobsson;
Sweden
S18.2 Timing past admixture events and characterizing their consequences in contemporary human populations
Garrett Hellenthal;
United Kingdom
S18.3 Consequences of population genetic differences in genetic risk prediction across diverse human populations
Alicia Martin;
United States
Chairs: Brunella Franco, Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen
Room: F1+F2+F3
S19.1 Regeneration of the entire human epidermis using transgenic stem cells
Laura De Rosa;
Italy
S19.2 Gene therapy for inherited neuromuscular disorders
Francesco Muntoni;
United Kingdom
S19.3 Gene therapy for hemoglobinopathies
Giuliana Ferrari;
Italy
Chairs: Siren Berland, Lucy Raymond
Room: G2+G3
S20.1 Single Cell Epigenomic Analysis of the Anatomy and Neuronal Circuitry of the Brain
Joseph R. Ecker;
United States
S20.2 Genetic-epigenetic interactions: mechanistic insights and practical applications
Benjamin Tycko;
United States
S20.3 Functional genomics approaches for uncovering the role of regulatory sequences in developmental abnormalities and disease
Justin L. Cotney;
United States
Chair: Maris Laan
Room: F4+F5
E13.1 Novel discoveries of genes implicated in male and female infertility
Christophe Arnoult ;
France
E13.2 Population genetic carrier screening programs for reproductive purposes
Joël Zlotogora;
Israel
Chair: Jose Luis Costa
Room: K1
E14.1 Animal models of Machado-Joseph disease
Luis Pereira de Almeida;
Portugal
E14.2 CRISPR/Cas9 and TALENs fuel genetically engineered clinically relevant Xenopus tropicalis models.
Kris Vleminckx;
Belgium
10:30 – 11:00 hrs | Coffee Break
11:00 – 12:30 hrs | Concurrent Sessions C24-C29 from submitted abstracts
Chairs: Jill Clayton-Smith, Feliciano Ramos
Room: Hall C
C24.1 Analysis of Mosaicism for Sequence and Copy Number Variants in a Broad Diversity of Hereditary Disorders in a Large Clinical Cohort
SWAROOP ARADHYA, R. Truty, C. Kautzer, M. Kennemer, S. Lincoln, J. Rhees, A. Stafford, R. Nussbaum;
San Francisco, United States
C24.2 Uniparental disomy in the Rare Disease Programme of the UK’s 100,000 Genomes Project
Katherine R. Smith, M. Bleda, D. Kasperaviciute, K. Ibanez, A. Rueda Martin, E. Thomas, E. Baple, A. Tucci, M.J. Caulfield, A. Rendon;
London, United Kingdom
C24.3 Somatic mutation cell lineage analysis reveals progressive clonal determination in human embryo
Sara Bizzotto*, J. Ganz, Y. Dou, R.N. Doan, E. Maury, M. Kwon, T. Bae, A. Abyzov, P.J. Park, C.A. Walsh;
Boston, United States
C24.4 Basal and mutagen-driven somatic mutagenesis shape the genome of healthy human cells
Irene Franco*, H. Helgadottir, A. Moggio, M. Larsson, P. Vrtacnik, A. Johansson, N. Norgren, P. Lundin, D. Mas-Ponte, J. Nordström, T. Lundgren, P. Stenvinkel, L. Wennberg, F. Supek, M. Eriksson;
HUDDINGE, Sweden
C24.5 Genetic basis of mosaic pigmentary disorders of the skin and how to detect them: the M.U.S.T.A.R.D. cohort’s experience
Arthur SORLIN*, V. Carmignac, P. Kuentz, É. Tisserant, Y. Duffourd, M.U.S.T.A.R.D. cohort’s investigators, J. Rivière, P. Callier, C. Philippe, C. Thauvin, L. Faivre, P. Vabres;
Dijon, France
C24.6 The Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome mutation is a somatic mutation in chronic kidney disease
Maria Eriksson, H.T. Helgadottir, N. Viceconte, A. Witasp, E. Wallén Arzt, A. Sola Carvajal, G. Revechon, A. Thorell, D. McGuinness, P.G. Shiels, A. Wernerson, P. Stenvinkel;
Huddinge, Sweden
Chairs: Christian Gillisen, Daniel Nilsson
Room: K2+K3
C25.1 A transcriptome-wide Mendelian randomization study to uncover tissue-dependent regulatory mechanisms across the human phenome
Tom G. Richardson*, G. Hemani, T.R. Gaunt, C.L. Relton, G. Davey Smith;
Bristol, United Kingdom
C25.2 Multivariate GWAS of inflammatory markers reveals novel disease associations
Sanni E. Ruotsalainen*, J. Partanen, I. Surakka, M. Pirinen, V. Salomaa, M. Salmi, S. Jalkanen, M.J. Daly, S. Ripatti, J. Koskela;
Helsinki, Finland
C25.3 Analysis of genetic variants through aggregation of homologous human protein domains via MetaDome strongly improves diagnostic prediction of missense variants
Laurens Wiel*, C. Baakman, D. Gilissen, H. Venselaar, J.A. Veltman, G. Vriend, C. Gilissen;
Nijmegen, Netherlands
C25.4 reg2gene: predicting enhancer-gene associations using ensemble learning approaches
Inga Patarcic*, V. Franke, A. Akalin;
Berlin, Germany
C25.5 A GWAS on data-driven 3D facial phenotypes selected by matching siblings reveals 310 genetic loci
Hanne Hoskens*, K. Indencleef, J. Li, J.D. White, A. Ortega-Castrillon, J. Wysocka, S. Walsh, S. Richmond, J.R. Shaffer, S.M. Weinberg, M.D. Shriver, H. Peeters, P. Claes;
Leuven, Belgium
C25.6 GestaltMatcher: Identifying the second patient of its kind in the phenotype space
Tzung-Chien Hsieh*, A. Bar-Haim, D. Dukić, T.J. Pantel, M. Mensah, Y. Gurovich, N. Fleischer, Y. Hanani, G. Nadav, T. Kamphans, P. Krawitz;
Bonn, Germany
Chairs: Olaf Bodamer, Elsebet Østergaard
Room: F1+F2+F3
C26.1 Mutations in LIG3 are a novel cause of mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy
ELENA BONORA, F. Bianco, C. Bergamini, G. Kellaris, F. Ullah, F. Isidori, I. Liparulo, C. Diquigiovanni, L. Masin, M.G. Cratere, E. Boschetti, V. Papa, A. Maresca, G. Cenacchi, R. Casadio, P. Martelli, I. Matera, I. Ceccherini, R. Fato, G. Raiola, S. Arrigo, S. Signa, M.S. Severino, P. Striano, C. Fiorillo, P. Picco, V. Carelli, N. Katsanis, M. Seri, R. De Giorgio;
BOLOGNA, Italy
C26.2 Mutations in POLRMT impair mitochondrial transcription and are associated with a spectrum ofmitochondrial disease presentations
M. Oláhová, B. Peter, H. Diaz, Z. Szilagyi, E.W. Sommerville, E.L. Blakely, J. Collier, V. Stránecký, H. Hartmannová, A.J. Bleyer, K.L. McBride, S.A. Bowden, Z. Korandová, A. Pecinová, H. Ropers, K. Kimia, H. Najmabadi, M. Tarnopolsky, L.I. Brady, N. Weaver, C.E. Prada, T. Mráček, S. Kmoch, G.S. Gorman, M. Falkenberg, C. Gustafsson, Robert W. Taylor;
Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
C26.3 Mutations in the MRPS28 gene encoding the small mitoribosomal subunit protein bS1m in a patient with intrauterine growth retardation, craniofacial dysmorphism and multisystemic involvement
Juliette Pulman*, B. Ruzzenente, L. Bianchi, M. Rio, N. Boddaert, A. Munnich, A. Rötig, M. Metodiev;
Paris, France
C26.4 Brain-on-a-chip – a neurophysiological model of MELAS disease and comorbid psychopathology
Tamas Kozicz, T. Klein-Gunnewiek, D. Cassiman, T. Nelson, R. Rodenburg, E. Perales-Clemente, E. Morava, N. Nadif Kasri;
Rochester, United States
C26.5 The homozygous variant c.797G>A/p.(Cys266Tyr) in PISD is associated with a spondyloepimetaphyseal dysplasia with large epiphyses and disturbed mitochondrial function
Leonie von Elsner*, K.M. Girisha, K. Neethukrishna, M. Muranjan, A. Shukla, G.S. Bhavani, G. Nishimura, K. Kutsche, G. Mortier;
Hamburg, Germany
C26.6 SSBP1 mutations cause a complex optic atrophy spectrum disorder with mitochondrial DNA depletion
Tommaso Pippucci, V. Del Dotto, F. Ullah, I. Di Meo, P. Magini, M. Gusic, A. Maresca, L. Caporali, F. Palombo, F. Tagliavini, E.H. Baugh, C. La Morgia, P. Barboni, M. Carbonelli, M.L. Valentino, R. Liguori, V. Shashi, J. Sullivan, S. Nagaraj, E. Bertini, R. Carrozzo, F. Emma, I. Cutcutache, M. Armstrong, M. Page, N. Stong, E. Davies, D. Karall, S. Boesch, M. Seri, M. Falkenberg, H. Prokisch, N. Katsanis, V. Tiranti, V. Carelli;
Bologna, Italy
Chairs: Marta Bertoli, Trine Prescott
Room: F4+F5
C27.1 Diagnostic utility of genome-wide DNA methylation testing in genetically unsolved patients with suspected hereditary conditions
bekim sadikovic;
London, Canada
C27.2 Multiomics Approach to Diagnosing Undiagnosed Patients
Matthew T. Wheeler, J.N. Kohler, D.E. Bonner, D.B. Zastrow, C. Reuter, M. Majcherska, L. Fernandez, C. McCormack, S. Marwaha, C. Curnin, A. Dries, M. Ruzhnikov, J. Hom, J. Sampson, P.G. Fisher, Undiagnosed Diseases Network, E.A. Ashley, J.A. Bernstein;
Palo Alto, United States
C27.3 Mutated epigenetic modifiers in CYLD cutaneous syndrome
H.R. Davies, K. Hodgson, E. Schwalbe, J. Coxhead, N. Sinclair, X. Zou, S. Cockell, A. Husain, S. Nik-Zainal, Neil Rajan;
Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
C27.4 Identification and characterization of NEPRO-related skeletal dysplasia resembling cartilage hair hypoplasia
Dhanya Lakshmi Narayanan*, N. Kausthubham, G.S. Bhavani, H. Shah, A. Shukla, G. Mortier, K.M. Girisha;
Manipal, India
C27.5 Impact of ALPK1 causative variant in ROSAH syndrome, a newly characterised retinal and multisystem autosomal dominant disorder
Robyn V. Jamieson, A. Sabri, J.R. Grigg, A. Cheng, T.H. Loi;
Sydney, Australia
C27.6 New mechanism for retinal degeneration on chrXq27.1
Jessica C. Gardner, K. Jovanovich, D. Ottaviani, J. Jackson, A.T. Moore, K. Ziaka, K. Hau, A. Lane, M. Michaelides, M.E. Cheetham, A.J. Hardcastle;
London, United Kingdom
Chairs: Inga Prokopenko, Anna Lindstrand
Room: G2+G3
More information will follow in May.
Chairs: Luzia Garrido, Ulf Kristoffersson
Room: K1
C29.1 The public favours healthcare-mediated disclosure of hereditary cancer risk to at-risk relatives: a population-based survey in Sweden
A. Andersson, C. Hawranek, A. Öfverholm, H. Ehrencrona, K. Grill, S. Hajdarevic, B. Melin, E. Tham, B. Numan Hellquist, Anna Rosén;
Umeå, Sweden
C29.2 Communication across generations: disclosure of BRCA cancer risk with young adults
Alison L. Young*, P.N. Butow, P. Rhodes, K.M. Tucker, R. Williams, E. Healey, C.E. Wakefield;
Sydney, Australia
C29.3 High-Risk Women’s Responses and Understanding of Polygenic Breast Cancer Risk Information
Tatiane Yanes*, R. Kaur, B. Meiser, M. Scheepers-Joynt, S. McInerny, K. Barlow-Stewart, Y. Antill, L. Salmon, C. Smyth, J. Halliday, P. James, M. Young;
Sydney, Australia
C29.4 Families’ and healthcare professionals’ uncertainties in the era of cancer precision medicine: results from PRISM
Janine Vetsch*, C.E. Wakefield, M. Warby, K. Tucker, E. Duve, G. Marshall, T. Trahair, T. O’Brien, L. Lau, D. Ziegler;
Randwick, Australia
C29.5 Advanced cancer patient perspectives on consenting to molecular tumour profiling
Megan Best*, P. Butow, N. Bartley, C. Jacobs, I. Juraskova, A. Newson, D. Goldstein, J. Savard, B. Meiser, M. Ballinger, B. Biesecker, D. Thomas;
Sydney, Australia
C29.6 Dimensions of grief and loss for families living with Li Fraumeni Syndrome
Allison Werner-Lin, S.L. Merrill, J.L. Young, C.D. Wilsnack, V. Groner, J.T. Loud, R.C. Bremer, J.A. Peters, M.H. Greene, S.A. Savage, P.P. Khincha;
Philadelphia, United States
12:30 – 13:30 hrs | Lunch Break
13:30 – 14:15 hrs | Plenary Session PL3
Chairs: Alexandre Reymond, Joris Veltman
Room: Hall C
PL3.1 Mendel Lecture: A 25 Year Genomic Odyssey
Craig Venter;
La Jolla, United States
14:15 – 15:00 hrs | Plenary Session PL4
Chairs: Alexandre Reymond, Joris Veltman
Room: Hall C
PL4.1 ESHG Award Lecture: We and our second genome: two key players in common complex diseases
Cisca Wijmenga;
Groningen, The Netherlands
15:00 – 16:00 hrs | Plenary Session PL5
Chairs: Alexandre Reymond, Joris Veltman
Room: Hall C
EJHG-SN Citation Awards
ESHG Awards for Best Presentations by Young Investigators
European DNA Day Contest
Closing Address