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Dive into the research topics where Christian Büttner is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Büttner.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Null mutation in PGAP1 impairing Gpi-anchor maturation in patients with intellectual disability and encephalopathy.

Yoshiko Murakami; Hasan Tawamie; Yusuke Maeda; Christian Büttner; Rebecca Buchert; Farah Radwan; Stefanie Schaffer; Heinrich Sticht; Michael Aigner; André Reis; Taroh Kinoshita; Rami Abou Jamra

Many eukaryotic cell-surface proteins are anchored to the membrane via glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI). There are at least 26 genes involved in biosynthesis and remodeling of GPI anchors. Hypomorphic coding mutations in seven of these genes have been reported to cause decreased expression of GPI anchored proteins (GPI-APs) on the cell surface and to cause autosomal-recessive forms of intellectual disability (ARID). We performed homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing in a family with encephalopathy and non-specific ARID and identified a homozygous 3 bp deletion (p.Leu197del) in the GPI remodeling gene PGAP1. PGAP1 was not described in association with a human phenotype before. PGAP1 is a deacylase that removes an acyl-chain from the inositol of GPI anchors in the endoplasmic reticulum immediately after attachment of GPI to proteins. In silico prediction and molecular modeling strongly suggested a pathogenic effect of the identified deletion. The expression levels of GPI-APs on B lymphoblastoid cells derived from an affected person were normal. However, when those cells were incubated with phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC), GPI-APs were cleaved and released from B lymphoblastoid cells from healthy individuals whereas GPI-APs on the cells from the affected person were totally resistant. Transfection with wild type PGAP1 cDNA restored the PI-PLC sensitivity. These results indicate that GPI-APs were expressed with abnormal GPI structure due to a null mutation in the remodeling gene PGAP1. Our results add PGAP1 to the growing list of GPI abnormalities and indicate that not only the cell surface expression levels of GPI-APs but also the fine structure of GPI-anchors is important for the normal neurological development.


Human Genetics | 2015

De novo mutations in beta-catenin (CTNNB1) appear to be a frequent cause of intellectual disability: expanding the mutational and clinical spectrum.

Alma Kuechler; Marjolein H. Willemsen; Beate Albrecht; Carlos A. Bacino; Dennis Bartholomew; Hans van Bokhoven; Marie Jose H. van den Boogaard; Nuria C. Bramswig; Christian Büttner; Kirsten Cremer; Johanna Christina Czeschik; Hartmut Engels; Koen L.I. van Gassen; Elisabeth Graf; Mieke M. van Haelst; Weimin He; Jacob Hogue; Marlies Kempers; David A. Koolen; Glen R. Monroe; Sonja de Munnik; Matthew Pastore; André Reis; Miriam S. Reuter; David Tegay; Joris A. Veltman; Gepke Visser; Peter M. van Hasselt; Eric Smeets; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers

Recently, de novo heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in beta-catenin (CTNNB1) were described for the first time in four individuals with intellectual disability (ID), microcephaly, limited speech and (progressive) spasticity, and functional consequences of CTNNB1 deficiency were characterized in a mouse model. Beta-catenin is a key downstream component of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway. Somatic gain-of-function mutations have already been found in various tumor types, whereas germline loss-of-function mutations in animal models have been shown to influence neuronal development and maturation. We report on 16 additional individuals from 15 families in whom we newly identified de novo loss-of-function CTNNB1 mutations (six nonsense, five frameshift, one missense, two splice mutation, and one whole gene deletion). All patients have ID, motor delay and speech impairment (both mostly severe) and abnormal muscle tone (truncal hypotonia and distal hypertonia/spasticity). The craniofacial phenotype comprised microcephaly (typically −2 to −4 SD) in 12 of 16 and some overlapping facial features in all individuals (broad nasal tip, small alae nasi, long and/or flat philtrum, thin upper lip vermillion). With this detailed phenotypic characterization of 16 additional individuals, we expand and further establish the clinical and mutational spectrum of inactivating CTNNB1 mutations and thereby clinically delineate this new CTNNB1 haploinsufficiency syndrome.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2016

α-Synuclein-induced myelination deficit defines a novel interventional target for multiple system atrophy

Benjamin Ettle; Bilal E. Kerman; Elvira Valera; Clarissa Gillmann; Johannes C. M. Schlachetzki; Simone Reiprich; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; André Reis; Michael Wegner; Tobias Bäuerle; Markus J. Riemenschneider; Eliezer Masliah; Fred H. Gage; Jürgen Winkler

Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a rare atypical parkinsonian disorder characterized by a rapidly progressing clinical course and at present without any efficient therapy. Neuropathologically, myelin loss and neurodegeneration are associated with α-synuclein accumulation in oligodendrocytes, but underlying pathomechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we analyzed the impact of oligodendrocytic α-synuclein on the formation of myelin sheaths to define a potential interventional target for MSA. Post-mortem analyses of MSA patients and controls were performed to quantify myelin and oligodendrocyte numbers. As pre-clinical models, we used transgenic MSA mice, a myelinating stem cell-derived oligodendrocyte-neuron co-culture, and primary oligodendrocytes to determine functional consequences of oligodendrocytic α-synuclein overexpression on myelination. We detected myelin loss accompanied by preserved or even increased numbers of oligodendrocytes in post-mortem MSA brains or transgenic mouse forebrains, respectively, indicating an oligodendrocytic dysfunction in myelin formation. Corroborating this observation, overexpression of α-synuclein in primary and stem cell-derived oligodendrocytes severely impaired myelin formation, defining a novel α-synuclein-linked pathomechanism in MSA. We used the pro-myelinating activity of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonist benztropine to analyze the reversibility of the myelination deficit. Transcriptome profiling of primary pre-myelinating oligodendrocytes demonstrated that benztropine readjusts myelination-related processes such as cholesterol and membrane biogenesis, being compromised by oligodendrocytic α-synuclein. Additionally, benztropine restored the α-synuclein-induced myelination deficit of stem cell-derived oligodendrocytes. Strikingly, benztropine also ameliorated the myelin deficit in transgenic MSA mice, resulting in a prevention of neuronal cell loss. In conclusion, this study defines the α-synuclein-induced myelination deficit as a novel and crucial pathomechanism in MSA. Importantly, the reversible nature of this oligodendrocytic dysfunction opens a novel avenue for an intervention in MSA.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2017

Paradoxical antidepressant effects of alcohol are related to acid sphingomyelinase and its control of sphingolipid homeostasis.

Christian P. Müller; Liubov S. Kalinichenko; Jens Tiesel; Matthias Witt; Thomas Stöckl; Eva Sprenger; Jens Fuchser; Janine Beckmann; Marc Praetner; Sabine E. Huber; Davide Amato; Christiane Mühle; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; Irena Smaga; Lucyna Pomierny-Chamioło; Bartosz Pomierny; Małgorzata Filip; Volker Eulenburg; Erich Gulbins; Anbarasu Lourdusamy; Martin Reichel; Johannes Kornhuber

Alcohol is a widely consumed drug that can lead to addiction and severe brain damage. However, alcohol is also used as self-medication for psychiatric problems, such as depression, frequently resulting in depression-alcoholism comorbidity. Here, we identify the first molecular mechanism for alcohol use with the goal to self-medicate and ameliorate the behavioral symptoms of a genetically induced innate depression. An induced over-expression of acid sphingomyelinase (ASM), as was observed in depressed patients, enhanced the consumption of alcohol in a mouse model of depression. ASM hyperactivity facilitates the establishment of the conditioned behavioral effects of alcohol, and thus drug memories. Opposite effects on drinking and alcohol reward learning were observed in animals with reduced ASM function. Importantly, free-choice alcohol drinking—but not forced alcohol exposure—reduces depression-like behavior selectively in depressed animals through the normalization of brain ASM activity. No such effects were observed in normal mice. ASM hyperactivity caused sphingolipid and subsequent monoamine transmitter hypo-activity in the brain. Free-choice alcohol drinking restores nucleus accumbens sphingolipid- and monoamine homeostasis selectively in depressed mice. A gene expression analysis suggested strong control of ASM on the expression of genes related to the regulation of pH, ion transmembrane transport, behavioral fear response, neuroprotection and neuropeptide signaling pathways. These findings suggest that the paradoxical antidepressant effects of alcohol in depressed organisms are mediated by ASM and its control of sphingolipid homeostasis. Both emerge as a new treatment target specifically for depression-induced alcoholism.


Cell Reports | 2016

Leukemogenic MLL-ENL Fusions Induce Alternative Chromatin States to Drive a Functionally Dichotomous Group of Target Genes.

Maria-Paz Garcia-Cuellar; Christian Büttner; Christoph Bartenhagen; Martin Dugas; Robert K. Slany

MLL fusions are leukemogenic transcription factors that enhance transcriptional elongation through modification of chromatin and RNA Pol II. Global transcription rates and chromatin changes accompanying the transformation process induced by MLL-ENL were monitored by nascent RNA-seq and ChIP-seq, revealing 165 direct target genes separated into two distinct clades. ME5 genes bound MLL-ENL at the promoter, relied on DOT1L-mediated histone methylation, and coded preferentially for transcription factors, including many homeobox genes. A distinct ME3 group accumulated MLL-ENL beyond the termination site, was dependent on P-TEFb-mediated phosphorylation of RNA Pol II for transcription, and translated mainly into proteins involved in RNA biology and ribosome assembly. This dichotomy was reflected by a differential sensitivity toward small molecule inhibitors, suggesting the possibility of a combinatorial strategy for treatment of MLL-induced leukemia.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Genetic screening confirms heterozygous mutations in ACAN as a major cause of idiopathic short stature

Nadine N. Hauer; Heinrich Sticht; Sangamitra Boppudi; Christian Büttner; Cornelia Kraus; Udo Trautmann; Martin Zenker; Christiane Zweier; Antje Wiesener; Rami Abou Jamra; Dagmar Wieczorek; Jaqueline Kelkel; Anna-Maria Jung; Steffen Uebe; Arif B. Ekici; Tilman Rohrer; André Reis; H. G. Dörr; Christian Thiel

Short stature is a common pediatric disorder affecting 3% of the population. However, the clinical variability and genetic heterogeneity prevents the identification of the underlying cause in about 80% of the patients. Recently, heterozygous mutations in the ACAN gene coding for the proteoglycan aggrecan, a main component of the cartilage matrix, were associated with idiopathic short stature. To ascertain the prevalence of ACAN mutations and broaden the phenotypic spectrum in patients with idiopathic short stature we performed sequence analyses in 428 families. We identified heterozygous nonsense mutations in four and potentially disease-causing missense variants in two families (1.4%). These patients presented with a mean of −3.2 SDS and some suggestive clinical characteristics. The results suggest heterozygous mutations in ACAN as a common cause of isolated as well as inherited idiopathic short stature.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2017

EFhd2/Swiprosin-1 is a common genetic determinator for sensation-seeking/low anxiety and alcohol addiction

Dirk Mielenz; Martin Reichel; Tianye Jia; Erin Burke Quinlan; T Stöckl; M Mettang; D Zilske; E Kirmizi-Alsan; P Schönberger; M Praetner; Sabine E. Huber; Davide Amato; M Schwarz; Pavitra Purohit; Sebastian Brachs; Joachim Spranger; A Hess; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; Francesc Perez-Branguli; Beate Winner; Verena Rauschenberger; Tobias Banaschewski; Arun L.W. Bokde; Christian Büchel; Patricia J. Conrod; Sylvane Desrivières; Herta Flor; Vincent Frouin; J. Gallinat

In many societies, the majority of adults regularly consume alcohol. However, only a small proportion develops alcohol addiction. Individuals at risk often show a high sensation-seeking/low-anxiety behavioural phenotype. Here we asked which role EF hand domain containing 2 (EFhd2; Swiprosin-1) plays in the control of alcohol addiction-associated behaviours. EFhd2 knockout (KO) mice drink more alcohol than controls and spontaneously escalate their consumption. This coincided with a sensation-seeking and low-anxiety phenotype. A reversal of the behavioural phenotype with β-carboline, an anxiogenic inverse benzodiazepine receptor agonist, normalized alcohol preference in EFhd2 KO mice, demonstrating an EFhd2-driven relationship between personality traits and alcohol preference. These findings were confirmed in a human sample where we observed a positive association of the EFhd2 single-nucleotide polymorphism rs112146896 with lifetime drinking and a negative association with anxiety in healthy adolescents. The lack of EFhd2 reduced extracellular dopamine levels in the brain, but enhanced responses to alcohol. In confirmation, gene expression analysis revealed reduced tyrosine hydroxylase expression and the regulation of genes involved in cortex development, Eomes and Pax6, in EFhd2 KO cortices. These findings were corroborated in Xenopus tadpoles by EFhd2 knockdown. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in mice showed that a lack of EFhd2 reduces cortical volume in adults. Moreover, human MRI confirmed the negative association between lifetime alcohol drinking and superior frontal gyrus volume. We propose that EFhd2 is a conserved resilience factor against alcohol consumption and its escalation, working through Pax6/Eomes. Reduced EFhd2 function induces high-risk personality traits of sensation-seeking/low anxiety associated with enhanced alcohol consumption, which may be related to cortex function.


Genetics in Medicine | 2018

Clinical relevance of systematic phenotyping and exome sequencing in patients with short stature

Nadine N. Hauer; Bernt Popp; Eva Schoeller; Sarah Schuhmann; Karen E. Heath; Patricia Klinger; Cornelia Kraus; Udo Trautmann; Martin Zenker; Christiane Zweier; Antje Wiesener; Rami Abou Jamra; Erdmute Kunstmann; Dagmar Wieczorek; Steffen Uebe; Fulvia Ferrazzi; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; Anita Rauch; Heinrich Sticht; H. G. Dörr; André Reis; Christian Thiel

PurposeShort stature is a common condition of great concern to patients and their families. Mostly genetic in origin, the underlying cause often remains elusive due to clinical and genetic heterogeneity.MethodsWe systematically phenotyped 565 patients where common nongenetic causes of short stature were excluded, selected 200 representative patients for whole-exome sequencing, and analyzed the identified variants for pathogenicity and the affected genes regarding their functional relevance for growth.ResultsBy standard targeted diagnostic and phenotype assessment, we identified a known disease cause in only 13.6% of the 565 patients. Whole-exome sequencing in 200 patients identified additional mutations in known short-stature genes in 16.5% of these patients who manifested only part of the symptomatology. In 15.5% of the 200 patients our findings were of significant clinical relevance. Heterozygous carriers of recessive skeletal dysplasia alleles represented 3.5% of the cases.ConclusionA combined approach of systematic phenotyping, targeted genetic testing, and whole-exome sequencing allows the identification of the underlying cause of short stature in at least 33% of cases, enabling physicians to improve diagnosis, treatment, and genetic counseling. Exome sequencing significantly increases the diagnostic yield and consequently care in patients with short stature.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2018

Mutations in the BAF-Complex Subunit DPF2 Are Associated with Coffin-Siris Syndrome

Georgia Vasileiou; Silvia Vergarajauregui; Sabine Endele; Bernt Popp; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; Marion Gerard; Nuria C. Bramswig; Beate Albrecht; Jill Clayton-Smith; Jenny Morton; Susan Tomkins; Karen Low; Astrid Weber; Maren Wenzel; Janine Altmüller; Yun Li; Bernd Wollnik; George Hoganson; Maria-Renée Plona; Megan T. Cho; Christian Thiel; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Tim M. Strom; Eduardo Calpena; Andrew O.M. Wilkie; Dagmar Wieczorek; Felix B. Engel; André Reis

Variants affecting the function of different subunits of the BAF chromatin-remodelling complex lead to various neurodevelopmental syndromes, including Coffin-Siris syndrome. Furthermore, variants in proteins containing PHD fingers, motifs recognizing specific histone tail modifications, have been associated with several neurological and developmental-delay disorders. Here, we report eight heterozygous de novo variants (one frameshift, two splice site, and five missense) in the gene encoding the BAF complex subunit double plant homeodomain finger 2 (DPF2). Affected individuals share common clinical features described in individuals with Coffin-Siris syndrome, including coarse facial features, global developmental delay, intellectual disability, speech impairment, and hypoplasia of fingernails and toenails. All variants occur within the highly conserved PHD1 and PHD2 motifs. Moreover, missense variants are situated close to zinc binding sites and are predicted to disrupt these sites. Pull-down assays of recombinant proteins and histone peptides revealed that a subset of the identified missense variants abolish or impaire DPF2 binding to unmodified and modified H3 histone tails. These results suggest an impairment of PHD finger structural integrity and cohesion and most likely an aberrant recognition of histone modifications. Furthermore, the overexpression of these variants in HEK293 and COS7 cell lines was associated with the formation of nuclear aggregates and the recruitment of both wild-type DPF2 and BRG1 to these aggregates. Expression analysis of truncating variants found in the affected individuals indicated that the aberrant transcripts escape nonsense-mediated decay. Altogether, we provide compelling evidence that de novo variants in DPF2 cause Coffin-Siris syndrome and propose a dominant-negative mechanism of pathogenicity.


Addiction Biology | 2018

Prenatal androgen receptor activation determines adult alcohol and water drinking in a sex-specific way: Prenatal androgens and alcohol

Sabine E. Huber; Iulia Zoicas; Martin Reichel; Christiane Mühle; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; Volker Eulenburg; Bernd Lenz; Johannes Kornhuber; Christian P. Müller

Alcohol use disorders are major psychiatric disorders. Correlational studies in humans suggested organizational hormonal effects during embryonic development as a risk factor for adult alcohol dependence. Permanent changes can be induced by the activity of sex hormones, like testosterone. Here, we demonstrate a relationship between prenatal androgen receptor (AR)‐activation and adult alcohol as well as water drinking in mice in a sex‐dependent fashion. Prenatal AR inhibition using the antagonist flutamide decreased adult male alcohol consumption. In contrast, prenatal AR activation by dihydrotestosterone (DHT) led to an increase in adult alcohol consumption in females. These effects were different in adult water drinking, flutamide increased water consumption in females and DHT increased water consumption in males. Prenatal flutamide reduced locomotion and anxiety in adult males but was ineffective in females. We found that prenatal AR activation controls adult levels of monoaminergic modulatory transmitters in the brain and blood hormone levels in a sex‐specific way. RNA‐Seq analysis confirmed a prenatal AR mediated control of adult expression of alcohol drinking‐related genes like Bdnf and Per2. These findings demonstrate that prenatal androgen activity is a risk factor for the establishment of alcohol consumption in adults by its organizational effects.

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Dive into the Christian Büttner's collaboration.

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Arif B. Ekici

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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André Reis

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christian Thiel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Bernt Popp

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christiane Zweier

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Dagmar Wieczorek

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Heinrich Sticht

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Martin Reichel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Sabine E. Huber

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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