Ali G. Gharavi

Ali G. Gharavi

Columbia University in the City of New York

H-index: 68

North America-United States

About Ali G. Gharavi

Ali G. Gharavi, With an exceptional h-index of 68 and a recent h-index of 52 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Columbia University in the City of New York, specializes in the field of Human Genetics, Kidney Disease, IgA nephropathy, Congenital Kidney Defects, Precision Medicine.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Association of COVID-19 Versus COVID-19 Vaccination With Kidney Function and Disease Activity in Primary Glomerular Disease: A Report of the Cure Glomerulonephropathy Study

Genetic testing in kidney transplantation helped develop a morbidity gene panel for evaluation of kidney transplant recipients

Targeting WIP1 phosphatase promotes partial remission in experimental collapsing glomerulopathy

Genetic versus self-reported African ancestry of the recipient and neighborhood predictors of kidney transplantation outcomes in two multiethnic urban cohorts

The expanded spectrum of human disease associated with GREB1L likely includes complex congenital heart disease

Multi-population genome-wide association study implicates immune and non-immune factors in pediatric steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome

Age of onset and disease course in biopsy-proven minimal change disease: an analysis from the cure glomerulonephropathy network

Strong protective effect of the APOL1 p.N264K variant against G2-associated focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and kidney disease

Ali G. Gharavi Information

University

Columbia University in the City of New York

Position

Professor of Medicine & Chief Division of Nephrology

Citations(all)

23695

Citations(since 2020)

13378

Cited By

15013

hIndex(all)

68

hIndex(since 2020)

52

i10Index(all)

141

i10Index(since 2020)

114

Email

University Profile Page

Columbia University in the City of New York

Ali G. Gharavi Skills & Research Interests

Human Genetics

Kidney Disease

IgA nephropathy

Congenital Kidney Defects

Precision Medicine

Top articles of Ali G. Gharavi

Association of COVID-19 Versus COVID-19 Vaccination With Kidney Function and Disease Activity in Primary Glomerular Disease: A Report of the Cure Glomerulonephropathy Study

Authors

Chia-shi Wang,Dorey A Glenn,Margaret Helmuth,Abigail R Smith,Andrew S Bomback,Pietro A Canetta,Gaia M Coppock,Myda Khalid,Katherine R Tuttle,Raed Bou-Matar,Larry A Greenbaum,Bruce M Robinson,Lawrence B Holzman,William E Smoyer,Michelle N Rheault,Debbie Gipson,Laura H Mariani,Wooin Ahn,Gerald Appel,Paul Appelbaum,Revekka Babayev,Brenda Chan,Vivette Denise D’Agati,Samitri Dogra,Hilda Fernandez,Ali Gharavi,William Hines,Syed Ali Husain,Namrata Jain,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Fangming Lin,Maddalena Marasa,Glen Markowitz,Hila Milo Rasouly,Sumit Mohan,Nicola Mongera,Jordan Nestor,Thomas Nickolas,Jai Radhakrishnan,Maya Rao,Simone Sanna-Cherchi,Shayan Shirazian,Michael Barry Stokes,Natalie Uy,Anthony Valeri,Natalie Vena,Bartosz Foroncewicz,Barbara Moszczuk,Krzysztof Mucha,Agnieszka Perkowska-Ptasińska,Gian Marco Ghiggeri,Francesca Lugani,Josephine Ambruzs,Helen Liapis,Rossana Baracco,Amrish Jain,Isa Ashoor,Diego Aviles,Tarak Srivastava,Sun-Young Ahn,Prasad Devarajan,Elif Erkan,Donna Claes,Hillarey Stone,Sherene Mason,Rasheed Gbadegesin,Liliana Gomez-Mendez,Hong Julie Yin,Yi Cai,Goebel Jens,Julia Steinke,Donald Weaver,Jerome Lane,Carl Cramer,Cindy Pan,Neil Paloian,Rajasree Sreedharan,David Selewski,Katherine Twombley,Corinna Bowers,Mary Dreher,Mahmoud Kallash,John Mahan,Samantha Sharpe,Amira Al-Uzri,Sandra Iragorri,Craig Belsha,Joseph Alge,Michael Braun,AC Gomez,Scott Wenderfer,Tetyana Vasylyeva,Daniel Feig,Gabriel Cara Fuentes,Melisha Hannah,Carla Nester,Aftab Chishti,Jon Klein,Chryso Katsoufis,Wacharee Seeherunvong,Craig Wong,Nisha Mathews,John Barcia,Agnes Swiatecka-Urban,Sharon Bartosh,Tracy Hunley,Vikas Dharnidharka,Joseph Gaut,Louis-Philippe Laurin,Virginie Royal,Anand Achanti,Milos Budisavljevic,Sally Self,Cybele Ghossein,Yonatan Peleg,Shikha Wadhwani,Salem Almaani,Isabelle Ayoub,Tibor Nadasdy,Samir Parikh,Brad Rovin,Anthony Chang,Huma Fatima,Bruce Julian,Jan Novak,Matthew Renfrow,Dana Rizk,Dhruti Chen,Vimal Derebail,Ronald Falk,Keisha Gibson,Susan Hogan,Koyal Jain,J Charles Jennette,Amy Mottl,Caroline Poulton,Manish Kanti Saha,Agnes Fogo,Neil Sanghani,Jason Kidd,Selvaraj Muthusamy,Jean Hou,Kevin Lemley,Warren Mika,Pierre Russo,Michelle Denburg,Amy Kogon,Kevin Meyers,Madhura Pradhan,John O’Toole

Journal

American journal of kidney diseases

Published Date

2024/1/1

Rationale & ObjectivePatients with glomerular disease (GN) may be at increased risk of severe COVID-19, yet concerns over vaccines causing disease relapse may lead to vaccine hesitancy. We examined the associations of COVID-19 with longitudinal kidney function and proteinuria and compared these with similar associations with COVID-19 vaccination.Study DesignObservational cohort study from July 1, 2021, to January 1, 2023.Setting & ParticipantsA prospective observational study network of 71 centers from North America and Europe (CureGN) with children and adults with primary minimal change disease, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis, membranous nephropathy, or IgA nephropathy.ExposureCOVID-19 and COVID-19 vaccination.OutcomeRepeated measure of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR); recurrent time-to-event outcome of GN disease worsening as defined by doubling of the urinary …

Genetic testing in kidney transplantation helped develop a morbidity gene panel for evaluation of kidney transplant recipients

Authors

Becky M Ma,Naama Elefant,Martina Tedesco,Kelsie Bogyo,Natalie Vena,Sarath K Murthy,Shiraz A Bheda,Sandy Yang,Nikita Tomar,Jun Y Zhang,Syed Ali Husain,Sumit Mohan,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Hila Milo Rasouly,Ali G Gharavi

Journal

Kidney International

Published Date

2024/3/21

Cardiovascular disease, infection, malignancy, and thromboembolism are major causes of morbidity and mortality in kidney transplant recipients (KTR). Prospectively identifying monogenic conditions associated with post-transplant complications may enable personalized management. Therefore, we developed a transplant morbidity panel (355 genes) associated with major post-transplant complications including cardiometabolic disorders, immunodeficiency, malignancy, and thrombophilia. This gene panel was then evaluated using exome sequencing data from 1590 KTR. Additionally, genes associated with monogenic kidney and genitourinary disorders along with American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) secondary findings v3.2 were annotated. Altogether, diagnostic variants in 37 genes associated with Mendelian kidney and genitourinary disorders were detected in 9.9% (158/1590) of KTR; 25.9% (41 …

Targeting WIP1 phosphatase promotes partial remission in experimental collapsing glomerulopathy

Authors

Lou C Duret,Tynhinane Hamidouche,Nicholas J Steers,Catherine Pons,Nicolas Soubeiran,Delphine Buret,Eric Gilson,Ali G Gharavi,Vivette D D’Agati,Marina Shkreli

Journal

Kidney International

Published Date

2024/2/27

Collapsing focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), also known as collapsing glomerulopathy (CG), is the most aggressive variant of FSGS and is characterized by a rapid progression to kidney failure. Understanding CG pathogenesis represents a key step for the development of targeted therapies. Previous work implicated the telomerase protein component TERT in CG pathogenesis, as transgenic TERT expression in adult mice resulted in a CG resembling that seen in human primary CG and HIV-associated nephropathy (HIVAN). Here, we used the telomerase-induced mouse model of CG (i-TERTci mice) to identify mechanisms to inhibit CG pathogenesis. Inactivation of WIP1 phosphatase, a p53 target acting in a negative feedback loop, blocked disease initiation in i-TERTci mice. Repression of disease initiation upon WIP1 deficiency was associated with senescence enhancement and required transforming …

Genetic versus self-reported African ancestry of the recipient and neighborhood predictors of kidney transplantation outcomes in two multiethnic urban cohorts

Authors

Francesca Zanoni,Y Dana Neugut,Joy E Obayemi,Lili Liu,Jun Y Zhang,Lloyd E Ratner,David J Cohen,Sumit Mohan,Ali G Gharavi,Brendan Keating,Krzysztof Kiryluk

Journal

American Journal of Transplantation

Published Date

2024/2/6

African American (AA) kidney recipients have a higher risk of allograft rejection and failure compared to non-AAs, but to what extent these outcomes are due to genetic versus environmental effects is currently unknown. Herein, we tested the effects of recipient self-reported race versus genetic African admixture proportion (pAFR) and neighborhood socioeconomic status (SES) on kidney allograft outcomes in multiethnic kidney transplant recipients from Columbia University (N=1,083) and the University of Pennsylvania (N=738). All participants were genotyped with SNP arrays to estimate genetic admixture proportions. US census tract variables were used to analyze the effect of neighborhood factors. In both cohorts, self-reported recipient AA race and pAFR were individually associated with increased risk of rejection and failure after adjustment for known clinical risk factors and neighborhood SES factors. Joint …

The expanded spectrum of human disease associated with GREB1L likely includes complex congenital heart disease

Authors

Emily Zhao,Miles Bomback,Atlas Khan,Sarath Krishna Murthy,David Solowiejczyk,Neeta L Vora,Kelly L Gilmore,Jessica L Giordano,Ronald J Wapner,Simone Sanna‐Cherchi,Alex Lyford,Angie C Jelin,Ali G Gharavi,Thomas Hays

Journal

Prenatal Diagnosis

Published Date

2024/1/29

Objective GREB1L has been linked prenatally to Potter's sequence, as well as less severe anomalies of the kidney, uterus, inner ear, and heart. The full phenotypic spectrum is unknown. The purpose of this study was to characterize known and novel pre‐ and postnatal phenotypes associated with GREB1L. Methods We solicited cases from the Fetal Sequencing Consortium, screened a population‐based genomic database, and conducted a comprehensive literature search to identify disease cases associated with GREB1L. We present a detailed phenotypic spectrum and molecular changes. Results One hundred twenty‐seven individuals with 51 unique pathogenic or likely pathogenic GREB1L variants were identified. 24 (47%) variants were associated with isolated kidney anomalies, 19 (37%) with anomalies of multiple systems, including one case of hypoplastic left heart syndrome, five (10%) with isolated …

Multi-population genome-wide association study implicates immune and non-immune factors in pediatric steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome

Authors

Alexandra Barry,Michelle T McNulty,Xiaoyuan Jia,Yask Gupta,Hanna Debiec,Yang Luo,China Nagano,Tomoko Horinouchi,Seulgi Jung,Manuela Colucci,Dina F Ahram,Adele Mitrotti,Aditi Sinha,Nynke Teeninga,Gina Jin,Shirlee Shril,Gianluca Caridi,Monica Bodria,Tze Y Lim,Rik Westland,Francesca Zanoni,Maddalena Marasa,Daniel Turudic,Mario Giordano,Loreto Gesualdo,Riccardo Magistroni,Isabella Pisani,Enrico Fiaccadori,Jana Reiterova,Silvio Maringhini,William Morello,Giovanni Montini,Patricia L Weng,Francesco Scolari,Marijan Saraga,Velibor Tasic,Domenica Santoro,Joanna AE van Wijk,Danko Milošević,Yosuke Kawai,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Martin R Pollak,Ali Gharavi,Fangmin Lin,Ana Cristina Simœs e Silva,Ruth JF Loos,Eimear E Kenny,Michiel F Schreuder,Aleksandra Zurowska,Claire Dossier,Gema Ariceta,Magdalena Drozynska-Duklas,Julien Hogan,Augustina Jankauskiene,Friedhelm Hildebrandt,Larisa Prikhodina,Kyuyoung Song,Arvind Bagga,Hae Cheong,Gian Marco Ghiggeri,Prayong Vachvanichsanong,Kandai Nozu,Dongwon Lee,Marina Vivarelli,Soumya Raychaudhuri,Katsushi Tokunaga,Simone Sanna-Cherchi,Pierre Ronco,Kazumoto Iijima,Matthew G Sampson

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2023/4/29

Pediatric steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome (pSSNS) is the most common childhood glomerular disease. Previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) identified a risk locus in the HLA Class II region and three additional independent risk loci. But the genetic architecture of pSSNS, and its genetically driven pathobiology, is largely unknown. Here, we conduct a multi-population GWAS meta-analysis in 38,463 participants (2440 cases). We then conduct conditional analyses and population specific GWAS. We discover twelve significant associations—eight from the multi-population meta-analysis (four novel), two from the multi-population conditional analysis (one novel), and two additional novel loci from the European meta-analysis. Fine-mapping implicates specific amino acid haplotypes in HLA-DQA1 and HLA-DQB1 driving the HLA Class II risk locus. Non-HLA loci colocalize with eQTLs of monocytes and …

Age of onset and disease course in biopsy-proven minimal change disease: an analysis from the cure glomerulonephropathy network

Authors

Dhruti P Chen,Margaret E Helmuth,Abigail R Smith,Pietro A Canetta,Isabelle Ayoub,Krzysztof Mucha,Mahmoud Kallash,Jeffrey B Kopp,Rasheed Gbadegesin,Brenda W Gillespie,Larry A Greenbaum,Rulan S Parekh,Tracy E Hunley,C John Sperati,David T Selewski,Jason Kidd,Aftab Chishti,Kimberly Reidy,Amy K Mottl,Debbie S Gipson,Tarak Srivastava,Katherine E Twombley,Wooin Ahn,Gerald Appel,Paul Appelbaum,Revekka Babayev,Andrew Bomback,Brenda Chan,Vivette Denise D’Agati,Samitri Dogra,Hilda Fernandez,Ali Gharavi,William Hines,Syed Ali Husain,Namrata Jain,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Fangming Lin,Maddalena Marasa,Glen Markowitz,Hila Milo Rasouly,Sumit Mohan,Nicola Mongera,Jordan Nestor,Thomas Nickolas,Jai Radhakrishnan,Maya Rao,Simone Sanna-Cherchi,Shayan Shirazian,Michael Barry Stokes,Natalie Uy,Anthony Valeri,Natalie Vena,Bartosz Foroncewicz,Barbara Moszczuk,Agnieszka Perkowska-Ptasińska,Gian Marco Ghiggeri,Francesca Lugani,Josephine Ambruzs,Helen Liapis,Rossana Baracco,Amrish Jain,Isa Ashoor,Diego Aviles,Sun-Young Ahn,Prasad Devarajan,Elif Erkan,Donna Claes,Hillarey Stone,Sherene Mason,Liliana Gomez-Mendez,Chia-shi Wang,Hong Yin,Yi Cai,Goebel Jens,Julia Steinke,Donald Weaver,Jerome Lane,Carl Cramer,Cindy Pan,Neil Paloian,Rajasree Sreedharan,Corinna Bowers,Mary Dreher,John Mahan,Samantha Sharpe,William Smoyer,Amira Al-Uzri,Sandra Iragorri,Myda Khalid,Craig Belsha,Joseph Alge,Michael Braun,AC Gomez,Scott Wenderfer,Tetyana Vasylyeva,Daniel Feig,Gabriel Cara Fuentes,Melisha Hannah,Carla Nester,Jon Klein,Chryso Katsoufis,Wacharee Seeherunvong,Michelle Rheault,Craig Wong,Nisha Mathews,John Barcia,Agnes Swiatecka-Urban,Sharon Bartosh,Vikas Dharnidharka,Joseph Gaut,Louis-Philippe Laurin,Virginie Royal,Anand Achanti,Milos Budisavljevic,Sally Self,Cybele Ghossein,Yonatan Peleg,Shikha Wadhwani,Salem Almaani,Tibor Nadasdy,Brad Rovin,Anthony Chang,Huma Fatima,Bruce Julian,Jan Novak,Matthew Renfrow,Dana Rizk,Vimal Derebail,Ronald Falk,Keisha Gibson,Dorey Glenn,Susan Hogan,Koyal Jain,J Charles Jennette,Caroline Poulton,Manish Kanti Saha,Agnes Fogo,Neil Sanghani,Selvaraj Muthusamy,Jeffrey Schelling,Jean Hou,Kevin Lemley,Warren Mika,Pierre Russo,Michelle Denburg,Amy Kogon,Kevin Meyers,Madhura Pradhan,Raed Bou Matar,John O’Toole

Journal

American journal of kidney diseases

Published Date

2023/6/1

Rationale & ObjectiveAdolescent- and adult-onset minimal change disease (MCD) may have a clinical course distinct from childhood-onset disease. We characterized the course of children and adults with MCD in the Cure Glomerulonephropathy Network (CureGN) and assessed predictors of rituximab response.Study DesignProspective, multicenter, observational study.Study ParticipantsCureGN participants with proven MCD on biopsy.ExposureAge at disease onset, initiation of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) blockade, and immunosuppression including rituximab during the study period.OutcomeRelapse and remission, change in estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), and kidney failure.Analytical ApproachRemission and relapse probabilities were estimated using Kaplan-Meier curves and gap time recurrent event models. Linear regression models were used for the outcome of change in …

Strong protective effect of the APOL1 p.N264K variant against G2-associated focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and kidney disease

Authors

Yask Gupta,David J Friedman,Michelle T McNulty,Atlas Khan,Brandon Lane,Chen Wang,Juntao Ke,Gina Jin,Benjamin Wooden,Andrea L Knob,Tze Y Lim,Gerald B Appel,Kinsie Huggins,Lili Liu,Adele Mitrotti,Megan C Stangl,Andrew Bomback,Rik Westland,Monica Bodria,Maddalena Marasa,Ning Shang,David J Cohen,Russell J Crew,William Morello,Pietro Canetta,Jai Radhakrishnan,Jeremiah Martino,Qingxue Liu,Wendy K Chung,Angelica Espinoza,Yuan Luo,Wei-Qi Wei,Qiping Feng,Chunhua Weng,Yilu Fang,Iftikhar J Kullo,Mohammadreza Naderian,Nita Limdi,Marguerite R Irvin,Hemant Tiwari,Sumit Mohan,Maya Rao,Geoffrey K Dube,Ninad S Chaudhary,Orlando M Gutiérrez,Suzanne E Judd,Mary Cushman,Leslie A Lange,Ethan M Lange,Daniel L Bivona,Miguel Verbitsky,Cheryl A Winkler,Jeffrey B Kopp,Dominick Santoriello,Ibrahim Batal,Sérgio Veloso Brant Pinheiro,Eduardo Araújo Oliveira,Ana Cristina Simoes e Silva,Isabella Pisani,Enrico Fiaccadori,Fangming Lin,Loreto Gesualdo,Antonio Amoroso,Gian Marco Ghiggeri,Vivette D D’Agati,Riccardo Magistroni,Eimear E Kenny,Ruth JF Loos,Giovanni Montini,Friedhelm Hildebrandt,Dirk S Paul,Slavé Petrovski,David B Goldstein,Matthias Kretzler,Rasheed Gbadegesin,Ali G Gharavi,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Matthew G Sampson,Martin R Pollak,Simone Sanna-Cherchi

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2023/11/30

African Americans have a significantly higher risk of developing chronic kidney disease, especially focal segmental glomerulosclerosis -, than European Americans. Two coding variants (G1 and G2) in the APOL1 gene play a major role in this disparity. While 13% of African Americans carry the high-risk recessive genotypes, only a fraction of these individuals develops FSGS or kidney failure, indicating the involvement of additional disease modifiers. Here, we show that the presence of the APOL1 p.N264K missense variant, when co-inherited with the G2 APOL1 risk allele, substantially reduces the penetrance of the G1G2 and G2G2 high-risk genotypes by rendering these genotypes low-risk. These results align with prior functional evidence showing that the p.N264K variant reduces the toxicity of the APOL1 high-risk alleles. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the mechanisms of …

Rapid progression of focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in patients with high-risk APOL1 genotypes

Authors

Mahmoud Kallash,Yujie Wang,Abigail Smith,Howard Trachtman,Rasheed Gbadegesin,Carla Nester,Pietro Canetta,Chen Wang,Tracy E Hunley,C John Sperati,David Selewski,Isabelle Ayoub,Tarak Srivastava,Amy K Mottl,Jeffrey Kopp,Brenda Gillespie,Bruce Robinson,Dhruti Chen,Julia Steinke,Katherine Twombley,Kimberly Reidy,Krzysztof Mucha,Larry A Greenbaum,Brooke Blazius,Margaret Helmuth,Peleg Yonatan,Rulan S Parekh,Susan Hogan,Virginie Royal,Vivette D'Agati,Aftab Chishti,Ronald Falk,Ali Gharavi,Lawrence Holzman,Jon Klein,William Smoyer,Matthias Kretzler,Debbie Gipson,Jason M Kidd

Journal

Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology

Published Date

2023/3/1

BackgroundFSGS is a heterogeneous diagnosis with a guarded prognosis. Polymorphisms in the apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1) gene are associated with developing FSGS and faster progression to kidney failure in affected patients. Better understanding the natural history of patients with FSGS and APOL1 risk alleles is essential to improve patient care and support the design and interpretation of interventional studies. The objective of this study was to evaluate the quantitative association between APOL1 and kidney disease progression and the interaction with other clinical and laboratory factors.MethodsCureGN cohort study participants with biopsy diagnosis of FSGS, regardless of self-identified race, were included. The exposure of interest was two APOL1 risk alleles (high risk) versus zero to one risk alleles (low risk). The primary outcome was eGFR slope categorized as rapid progressor (eGFR slope≤− 5 ml/min …

Genetics of kidney disease: the unexpected role of rare disorders

Authors

Mark D Elliott,Hila Milo Rasouly,Ali G Gharavi

Published Date

2023/1/27

Hundreds of different genetic causes of chronic kidney disease are now recognized, and while individually rare, taken together they are significant contributors to both adult and pediatric diseases. Traditional genetics approaches relied heavily on the identification of large families with multiple affected members and have been fundamental to the identification of genetic kidney diseases. With the increased utilization of massively parallel sequencing and improvements to genotype imputation, we can analyze rare variants in large cohorts of unrelated individuals, leading to personalized care for patients and significant research advancements. This review evaluates the contribution of rare disorders to patient care and the study of genetic kidney diseases and highlights key advancements that utilize new techniques to improve our ability to identify new gene–disease associations.

Polygenic risk affects the penetrance of monogenic kidney disease

Authors

Atlas Khan,Ning Shang,Jordan G Nestor,Chunhua Weng,George Hripcsak,Peter C Harris,Ali G Gharavi,Krzysztof Kiryluk

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2023/5/10

Background:Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a genetically complex disease determined by an interplay of monogenic, polygenic, and environmental risks. Most forms of monogenic kidney diseases have incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity. It is presently unknown if some of the variability in penetrance can be attributed to polygenic factors.Methods:Using the UK Biobank (N= 469,835 participants) and the All of Us (N= 98,622 participants) datasets, we examined two most common forms of monogenic kidney disorders, autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) caused by deleterious variants in the PKD1 or PKD2 genes, and COL4A-associated nephropathy (COL4A-AN caused by deleterious variants in COL4A3, COL4A4, or COL4A5 genes). We used the eMERGE-III electronic CKD phenotype to define cases (estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)< 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 or kidney failure …

Strong protective effect of the APOL1 p. N264K variant against G2-associated FSGS and kidney disease

Authors

Y Gupta,DJ Friedman,M McNulty,A Khan,B Lane,C Wang,J Ke,G Jin,B Wooden,AL Knob,TY Lim,GB Appel,K Huggins,L Liu,A Mitrotti,MC Stangl,A Bomback,R Westland,M Bodria,M Marasa,N Shang,DJ Cohen,RJ Crew,W Morello,P Canetta,J Radhakrishnan,J Martino,Q Liu,WK Chung,A Espinoza,Y Luo,W Wei,Q Feng,C Weng,Y Fang,IJ Kullo,M Naderian,N Limdi,MR Irvin,H Tiwari,S Mohan,M Rao,G Dube,NS Chaudhary,OM Gutierrez,SE Judd,M Cushman,LA Lange,EM Lange,DL Bivona,M Verbitsky,CA Winkler,JB Kopp,D Santoriello,I Batal,SV Pinheiro,EA Oliveira,I Pisani,E Fiaccadori,F Lin,L Gesualdo,A Amoroso,GM Ghiggeri,VD Dagati,R Magistroni,EE Kenny,RJ Loos,G Montini,F Hildebrandt,DS Paul,S Petrovski,DB Goldstein,M Kretzler,R Gbadegesin,AG Gharavi,K Kiryluk,MG Sampson,MR Pollak,S Sanna-Cherchi

Published Date

2023/8/4

Black Americans have a significantly higher risk of developing chronic kidney disease (CKD), especially focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS), than European Americans. Two coding variants (G1 and G2) in the APOL1 gene play a major role in this disparity. While 13% of Black Americans carry the high-risk recessive genotypes, only a fraction of these individuals develops FSGS or kidney failure, indicating the involvement of additional disease modifiers. Here, we show that the presence of the APOL1 p. N264K missense variant, when co-inherited with the G2 APOL1 risk allele, substantially reduces the penetrance of the G1G2 and G2G2 high-risk genotypes by rendering these genotypes low-risk. These results align with prior functional evidence showing that the p. N264K variant reduces the toxicity of the APOL1 high-risk alleles. These findings have important implications for our understanding of the mechanisms of APOL1-associated nephropathy, as well as for the clinical management of individuals with high-risk genotypes that include the G2 allele.

261 Characterization of Glycosylation Patterns of Single IgA Molecules Using Single-Molecule Fluorescence Microscopy

Authors

Joseph Rubin,Milan Stojanovic,Ali Gharavi,Henry Hess

Journal

Journal of Clinical and Translational Science

Published Date

2023/4

OBJECTIVES/GOALS: IgA1 nephropathy, which can lead to kidney failure, is caused by complexes formed between aberrant galactose-deficient IgA1 and antibodies directed against it. Our goals are to characterize shifting glycosylation patterns at the level of single IgA1 molecules and to apply this to patient samples for early detection and understanding of the disease. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: To characterize glycosylation patterns on single IgA1 molecules, labelled IgA1 in low concentration was physisorbed to borosilicate glass in a fluidic cell and labelled Jacalin was flowed in to bind with Glycans on IgA1. The samples were observed with a Nikon TiE epi-fluorescence microscope. FRET images were created by exciting the Jacalin dye with a blue laser and recording the red emission of the IgA1 dye with an EMCCD camera. FRET emission intensities of individual IgA1 molecules over time were …

Polygenic risk alters the penetrance of monogenic kidney disease

Authors

Atlas Khan,Ning Shang,Jordan G Nestor,Chunhua Weng,George Hripcsak,Peter C Harris,Ali G Gharavi,Krzysztof Kiryluk

Journal

Nature communications

Published Date

2023/12/14

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is determined by an interplay of monogenic, polygenic, and environmental risks. Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) and COL4A-associated nephropathy (COL4A-AN) represent the most common forms of monogenic kidney diseases. These disorders have incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity, and we hypothesize that polygenic factors explain some of this variability. By combining SNP array, exome/genome sequence, and electronic health record data from the UK Biobank and All-of-Us cohorts, we demonstrate that the genome-wide polygenic score (GPS) significantly predicts CKD among ADPKD monogenic variant carriers. Compared to the middle tertile of the GPS for noncarriers, ADPKD variant carriers in the top tertile have a 54-fold increased risk of CKD, while ADPKD variant carriers in the bottom tertile have only a 3-fold increased risk of CKD …

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Acute Care Utilization Among Patients With Glomerular Disease

Authors

Jill R Krissberg,Michelle M O’Shaughnessy,Abigail R Smith,Margaret E Helmuth,Salem Almaani,Diego H Aviles,Kaye E Brathwaite,Yi Cai,Daniel Cattran,Rasheed Gbadegesin,Dorey A Glenn,Larry A Greenbaum,Sandra Iragorri,Koyal Jain,Myda Khalid,Jason Kidd,Jeffrey Kopp,Richard Lafayette,Jerome C Lane,Francesca Lugani,Jordan G Nestor,Rulan S Parekh,Kimberly Reidy,David T Selewski,Christine B Sethna,C John Sperati,Katherine Tuttle,Katherine Twombley,Tetyana L Vasylyeva,Donald J Weaver Jr,Scott E Wenderfer,Keisha Gibson,Wooin Ahn,Gerald Appel,Paul Appelbaum,Revekka Babayev,Andrew Bomback,Eric Brown,Pietro Canetta,Lucrezia Carlassara,Brenda Chan,Vivette Denise D’Agati,Samitri Dogra,Hilda Fernandez,Ali Gharavi,William Hines,Syed Ali Husain,Krzysztof Kiryluk,Fangming Lin,Maddalena Marasa,Glen Markowitz,Hila Milo Rasouly,Sumit Mohan,Nicola Mongera,Thomas Nickolas,Jai Radhakrishnan,Maya Rao,Simone Sanna-Cherchi,Shayan Shirazian,Michael Barry Stokes,Natalie Uy,Anthony Valeri,Natalie Vena,Bartosz Foroncewicz,Barbara Moszczuk,Krzysztof Mucha,Agnieszka Perkowska-Ptasińska,Gian Marco Ghiggeri,Josephine Ambruzs,Helen Liapis,Rossana Baracco,Amrish Jain,Isa Ashoor,Tarak Srivastava,Sun-Young Ahn,Prasad Devarajan,Elif Erkan,Donna Claes,Hillarey Stone,Sherene Mason,Cynthia Silva,Liliana Gomez-Mendez,Chia-shi Wang,Hong Julie Yin,Goebel Jens,Julia Steinke,Carl Cramer,Cindy Pan,Rajasree Sreedharan,Corinna Bowers,Mary Dreher,Mahmoud Kallash,John Mahan,Samantha Sharpe,William Smoyer,Amira Al-Uzri,Craig Belsha,Michael Braun,AC Gomez,Daniel Feig,Gabriel Cara Fuentes,Melisha Hannah,Carla Nester,Aftab Chishti,Jon Klein,Chryso Katsoufis,Wacharee Seeherunvong,Michelle Rheault,Craig Wong,Nisha Mathews,John Barcia,Agnes Swiatecka-Urban,Sharon Bartosh,Tracy Hunley,Vikas Dharnidharka,Joseph Gaut,Louis-Philippe Laurin,Virginie Royal,Anand Achanti,Milos Budisavljevic,Sally Self,Cybele Ghossein,Shikha Wadhwani,Isabelle Ayoub,Tibor Nadasdy,Samir Parikh,Brad Rovin,Anthony Chang,Huma Fatima,Jan Novak,Matthew Renfrow,Dana Rizk,Dhruti Chen,Vimal Derebail,Ronald Falk,Susan Hogan,J Charles Jennette,Amy Mottl,Caroline Poulton,Manish Kanti Saha,Agnes Fogo,Neil Sanghani,Hugh Massey,Selvaraj Muthusamy,Santhi Ganesan,Agustin Gonzalez-Vicente,Jeffrey Schelling,Jean Hou,Kevin Lemley,Warren Mika

Journal

American journal of kidney diseases

Published Date

2023/3/1

Rationale & ObjectiveThe effects of race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status (SES), and disease severity on acute care utilization in patients with glomerular disease are unknown.Study DesignProspective cohort study.Setting & Participants1,456 adults and 768 children with biopsy-proven glomerular disease enrolled in the Cure Glomerulonephropathy (CureGN) cohort.ExposureRace and ethnicity as a participant-reported social factor.OutcomeAcute care utilization defined as hospitalizations or emergency department visits.Analytical ApproachMultivariable recurrent event proportional rate models were used to estimate associations between race and ethnicity and acute care utilization.ResultsBlack or Hispanic participants had lower SES and more severe glomerular disease than White or Asian participants. Acute care utilization rates were 45.6, 29.5, 25.8, and 19.2 per 100 person-years in Black, Hispanic, White, and …

Emerging Genetic Insight into ATIN

Authors

Atlas Khan,Ali G Gharavi

Published Date

2023/5/1

2. Stark GR. On the reversible reaction of cyanate with sulfhydryl groups and the determination of NH2-terminal cysteine and cystine in proteins. J Biol Chem. 1964; 239 (5): 1411–1414. doi: 10.1016/s0021-9258 (18) 91330-x 3. Johnson WJ, Hagge WW, Wagoner RD, Dinapoli RP, Rosevear JW. Effects of urea loading in patients with far advanced renal failure. Mayo Clin Proc. 1972; 47 (1): 21–29.4. Kalim S, Zhao S, Rhee E, et al. Protein carbamylation and the risk of ESKD in patients with CKD. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2023; 34 (5): 876–885. doi: 10.1681/ASN. 0000000000000078 5. Cerami A, Manning JM. Potassium cyanate as an inhibitor of the sickling of erythrocytes in vitro. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 1971; 68 (6): 1180–1183. doi: 10.1073/pnas. 68.6. 1180

Implementation and feasibility of clinical genome sequencing embedded into the outpatient nephrology care for patients with proteinuric kidney disease

Authors

Maddalena Marasa,Dina F Ahram,Atteeq U Rehman,Adele Mitrotti,Avinash Abhyankar,Namrata G Jain,Patricia L Weng,Stacy E Piva,Hilda E Fernandez,Natalie S Uy,Debanjana Chatterjee,Byum H Kil,Jordan G Nestor,Vanessa Felice,Dino Robinson,Dilys Whyte,Ali G Gharavi,Gerald B Appel,Jai Radhakrishnan,Dominick Santoriello,Andrew Bomback,Fangming Lin,Vivette D D’Agati,Vaidehi Jobanputra,Simone Sanna-Cherchi

Journal

Kidney International Reports

Published Date

2023/8/1

IntroductionThe diagnosis and management of proteinuric kidney diseases such as focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) are challenging. Genetics holds the promise to improve clinical decision making for these diseases; however, it is often performed too late to enable timely clinical action and it is not implemented within routine outpatient nephrology visits.MethodsWe sought to test the implementation and feasibility of clinical rapid genome sequencing (GS) in guiding decision making in patients with proteinuric kidney disease in real-time and embedded in the outpatient nephrology setting.ResultsWe enrolled 10 children or young adults with biopsy-proven FSGS (9 cases) or minimal change disease (1 case). The mean age at enrollment was 16.2 years (range 2–30). The workflow did not require referral to external genetics clinics but was conducted entirely during the nephrology standard-of-care …

MP60-02 ATP2C1 IS A CANDIDATE FOR INTERSTITIAL CYSTITIS/BLADDER PAIN SYNDROME

Authors

Catherine Brownstein,Elicia Estrella,Shira Rockowitz,Marielle Thorne,Pressley Smith,Jeanette Petit,Veronica Zehnder,Richard Yu,Stuart Bauer,Charles Berde,Pankaj Agrawal,Alan Beggs,Louis Kunkel,Ali Gharavi

Journal

The Journal of Urology

Published Date

2023/4

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVEInterstitial Cystitis/Bladder Pain Syndrome (IC/BPS) is a chronic pain disorder causing symptoms of urinary frequency, urgency and bladder discomfort.METHODSWe performed genetic analyses of whole exome sequencing (ES) on a total of 109 individuals with IC/BPS (93 female and 16 male). Each individual had a cystoscopy, physical exam, urinalysis, and completed questionnaires including the O’Leary- Sant for women, and the NIH-CPSI for men. Our study urologist confirmed the IC/BPS diagnosis. Data was analyzed in Codified Genomics for Mendelian variants. SKAT analysis was performed in Genuity Science for a small list of candidate genes, based on the results of the Mendelian analysis.RESULTSOne family had a previously reported SIX5 variant (ENST00000317578.6:c.472G>A, p.Ala158Thr), consistent with Branchiootorenal syndrome 2 (BOR2). A likely pathogenic …

The diagnostic yield of exome sequencing in liver diseases from a curated gene panel

Authors

Xiao-Fei Kong,Kelsie Bogyo,Sheena Kapoor,Patrick R Shea,Emily E Groopman,Amanda Thomas-Wilson,Enrico Cocchi,Hila Milo Rasouly,Beishi Zheng,Siming Sun,Junying Zhang,Mercedes Martinez,Jennifer M Vittorio,Lorna M Dove,Maddalena Marasa,Timothy C Wang,Elizabeth C Verna,Howard J Worman,Ali G Gharavi,David B Goldstein,Julia Wattacheril

Journal

Scientific reports

Published Date

2023/12/6

Exome sequencing (ES) has been used in a variety of clinical settings but there are limited data on its utility for diagnosis and/or prediction of monogenic liver diseases. We developed a curated list of 502 genes for monogenic disorders associated with liver phenotypes and analyzed ES data for these genes in 758 patients with chronic liver diseases (CLD). For comparison, we examined ES data in 7856 self-declared healthy controls (HC), and 2187 patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Candidate pathogenic (P) or likely pathogenic (LP) variants were initially identified in 19.9% of participants, most of which were attributable to previously reported pathogenic variants with implausibly high allele frequencies. After variant annotation and filtering based on population minor allele frequency (MAF ≤ 10–4 for dominant disorders and MAF ≤ 10–3 for recessive disorders), we detected a significant enrichment of …

Mendelian Disorders in an Interstitial Cystitis/Bladder Pain Syndrome Cohort

Authors

Elicia Estrella,Shira Rockowitz,Marielle Thorne,Pressley Smith,Jeanette Petit,Veronica Zehnder,Richard N Yu,Stuart Bauer,Charles Berde,Pankaj B Agrawal,Alan H Beggs,Ali G Gharavi,Louis Kunkel,Catherine A Brownstein

Journal

Advanced Genetics

Published Date

2023/3

Interstitial cystitis/bladder pain syndrome (IC/BPS) is a chronic pain disorder causing symptoms of urinary frequency, urgency, and bladder discomfort or pain. Although this condition affects a large population, little is known about its etiology. Genetic analyses of whole exome sequencing are performed on 109 individuals with IC/BPS. One family has a previously reported SIX5 variant (ENST00000317578.6:c.472G>A, p.Ala158Thr), consistent with Branchiootorenal syndrome 2 (BOR2). A likely pathogenic heterozygous variant in ATP2A2 (ENST00000539276.2:c.235G>A, p.Glu79Lys) is identified in two unrelated probands, indicating possible Darier‐White disease. Two private heterozygous variants are identified in ATP2C1 (ENST00000393221.4:c.2358A>T, p.Glu786Asp (VUS/Likely Pathogenic) and ENST00000393221.4:c.989C>G, p.Thr330Ser (likely pathogenic)), indicative of Hailey‐Hailey Disease. Sequence …

See List of Professors in Ali G. Gharavi University(Columbia University in the City of New York)

Ali G. Gharavi FAQs

What is Ali G. Gharavi's h-index at Columbia University in the City of New York?

The h-index of Ali G. Gharavi has been 52 since 2020 and 68 in total.

What are Ali G. Gharavi's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Association of COVID-19 Versus COVID-19 Vaccination With Kidney Function and Disease Activity in Primary Glomerular Disease: A Report of the Cure Glomerulonephropathy Study

Genetic testing in kidney transplantation helped develop a morbidity gene panel for evaluation of kidney transplant recipients

Targeting WIP1 phosphatase promotes partial remission in experimental collapsing glomerulopathy

Genetic versus self-reported African ancestry of the recipient and neighborhood predictors of kidney transplantation outcomes in two multiethnic urban cohorts

The expanded spectrum of human disease associated with GREB1L likely includes complex congenital heart disease

Multi-population genome-wide association study implicates immune and non-immune factors in pediatric steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome

Age of onset and disease course in biopsy-proven minimal change disease: an analysis from the cure glomerulonephropathy network

Strong protective effect of the APOL1 p.N264K variant against G2-associated focal segmental glomerulosclerosis and kidney disease

...

are the top articles of Ali G. Gharavi at Columbia University in the City of New York.

What are Ali G. Gharavi's research interests?

The research interests of Ali G. Gharavi are: Human Genetics, Kidney Disease, IgA nephropathy, Congenital Kidney Defects, Precision Medicine

What is Ali G. Gharavi's total number of citations?

Ali G. Gharavi has 23,695 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Ali G. Gharavi?

The co-authors of Ali G. Gharavi are David B. Goldstein, Wendy Chung, George Hripcsak, Jai Radhakrishnan, Krzysztof Kiryluk, MD, R Ravazzolo.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 138
    David B. Goldstein

    David B. Goldstein

    Columbia University in the City of New York

    H-index: 122
    Wendy Chung

    Wendy Chung

    Columbia University in the City of New York

    H-index: 89
    George Hripcsak

    George Hripcsak

    Columbia University in the City of New York

    H-index: 72
    Jai Radhakrishnan

    Jai Radhakrishnan

    Columbia University in the City of New York

    H-index: 54
    Krzysztof Kiryluk, MD

    Krzysztof Kiryluk, MD

    Columbia University in the City of New York

    H-index: 53
    R Ravazzolo

    R Ravazzolo

    Università degli Studi di Genova

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