Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Christian Kranz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Christian Kranz.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

A mutation in the human MPDU1 gene causes congenital disorder of glycosylation type If (CDG-If)

Christian Kranz; Jonas Denecke; Mark A. Lehrman; Sutapa Ray; Petra Kienz; Gunilla Kreissel; Dijana Šagi; Jasna Peter-Katalinić; Hudson H. Freeze; Thomas Schmid; Sabine Jackowski-Dohrmann; Erik Harms; Thorsten Marquardt

We describe a new congenital disorder of glycosylation, CDG-If. The patient has severe psychomotor retardation, seizures, failure to thrive, dry skin and scaling with erythroderma, and impaired vision. CDG-If is caused by a defect in the gene MPDU1, the human homologue of hamster Lec35, and is the first disorder to affect the use, rather than the biosynthesis, of donor substrates for lipid-linked oligosaccharides. This leads to the synthesis of incomplete and poorly transferred precursor oligosaccharides lacking both mannose and glucose residues. The patient has a homozygous point mutation (221T-->C, L74S) in a semiconserved amino acid of MPDU1. Chinese hamster ovary Lec35 cells lack a functional Lec35 gene and synthesize truncated lipid-linked oligosaccharides similar to the patients. They lack glucose and mannose residues donated by Glc-P-Dol and Man-P-Dol. Transfection with the normal human MPDU1 allele nearly completely restores normal glycosylation, whereas transfection with the patients MPDU1 allele only weakly restores normal glycosylation. This work provides a new clinical picture for another CDG that may involve synthesis of multiple types of glycoconjugates.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

A Defect in Dolichol Phosphate Biosynthesis Causes a New Inherited Disorder with Death in Early Infancy

Christian Kranz; Christoph Jungeblut; Jonas Denecke; Anne Erlekotte; Christina Sohlbach; Volker Debus; Hans Gerd Kehl; Erik Harms; Anna Reith; Sonja Reichel; Helfried Gröbe; Gerhard Hammersen; Ulrich Schwarzer; Thorsten Marquardt

The following study describes the discovery of a new inherited metabolic disorder, dolichol kinase (DK1) deficiency. DK1 is responsible for the final step of the de novo biosynthesis of dolichol phosphate. Dolichol phosphate is involved in several glycosylation reactions, such as N-glycosylation, glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchor biosynthesis, and C- and O-mannosylation. We identified four patients who were homozygous for one of two mutations (c.295T-->A [99Cys-->Ser] or c.1322A-->C [441Tyr-->Ser]) in the corresponding hDK1 gene. The residual activity of mutant DK1 was 2%-4% when compared with control cells. The mutated alleles failed to complement the temperature-sensitive phenotype of DK1-deficient yeast cells, whereas the wild-type allele restored the normal growth phenotype. Affected patients present with a very severe clinical phenotype, with death in early infancy. Two of the patients died from dilative cardiomyopathy.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2007

Expanding spectrum of congenital disorder of glycosylation Ig (CDG-Ig): sibs with a unique skeletal dysplasia, hypogammaglobulinemia, cardiomyopathy, genital malformations, and early lethality.

Christian Kranz; Alice Basinger; Muge Gucsavas-Calikoglu; Liangwu Sun; Cynthia M. Powell; Frederick W. Henderson; Arthur S. Aylsworth; Hudson H. Freeze

In this report, we describe a brother and sister who presented at birth with short‐limb skeletal dysplasia, polyhydramnios, prematurity, and generalized edema. Dysmorphic features included broad nose, thick ears, thin lips, micrognathia, inverted nipples, ulnar deviation at the wrists, spatulate fingers, fifth finger camptodactyly, nail hypoplasia, and talipes equinovarus. Other features included short stature, microcephaly, psychomotor retardation, B‐cell lymphopenic hypogammaglobulinemia, sensorineural deafness, retinal detachment and blindness, intestinal malrotation with poor gastrointestinal motility, persistent hyponatremia, intermittent hypoglycemia, and thrombocytopenia. Cardiac anomalies included PDA, VSD, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and arrhythmias. The brother had a small penis with hypospadias, hypoplastic scrotum, and non‐palpable testes. Skeletal findings included absent ossification of cervical vertebral bodies, pubic bones, knee epiphyses, and tali. Both sibs died before age 2 years, one of overwhelming sepsis and the other of cardiorespiratory failure associated with her cardiomyopathy. Metabolic studies showed a type 1 pattern of abnormal serum transferrin glycosylation. Fibroblasts synthesized truncated LLOs, primarily Man7GlcNAc2, suggestive of CDG‐Ig. Both sibs were compound heterozygotes for a novel 301 G > A (G101R) mutation and a previously described 437 G > A (R146Q) mutation in ALG12. Congenital disorders of glycosylation should be considered for children with undiagnosed multi‐system disease including neurodevelopmental delay, skeletal dysplasia, immune deficiency, male genital hypoplasia, and cardiomyopathy.


Pediatric Research | 2005

Congenital Disorder of Glycosylation Type Id: Clinical Phenotype, Molecular Analysis, Prenatal Diagnosis, and Glycosylation of Fetal Proteins

Jonas Denecke; Christian Kranz; Juergen C. H. Von Kleist-Retzow; Kristin Bosse; Peter Herkenrath; O. Debus; Erik Harms; Thorsten Marquardt

Congenital disorder of glycosylation type Id is an inherited glycosylation disorder based on a defect of the first mannosyltransferase involved in N-glycan biosynthesis inside the endoplasmic reticulum. Only one patient with this disease has been described until now. In this article, a second patient and an affected fetus are described. The patient showed abnormal glycosylation of several plasma proteins as demonstrated by isoelectric focusing and Western blot. Lipid-linked oligosaccharides in the endoplasmic reticulum, reflecting early N-glycan assembly, revealed an accumulation of immature Man5GlcNAc2-glycans in fibroblasts of the patient. Chorion cells of the affected fetus showed the same characteristic lipid-linked oligosaccharides pattern. However, the fetus had a normal glycosylation of several plasma proteins. Some fetal glycoproteins are known to be derived from the mother, but even glycoproteins that do not cross the placenta were normally glycosylated in the affected fetus. Maternal or placental factors that partially compensate for the glycosylation defect in the fetal stage must be proposed and may be relevant for the therapy of these disorders in the future.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Agm1/Pgm3-Mediated Sugar Nucleotide Synthesis Is Essential for Hematopoiesis and Development

Kylie T. Greig; Jennifer Antonchuk; Donald Metcalf; Phillip O. Morgan; Danielle L. Krebs; Jian-Guo Zhang; Douglas F. Hacking; Lars Bode; Lorraine Robb; Christian Kranz; Carolyn A. de Graaf; Melanie Bahlo; Nicos A. Nicola; Stephen L. Nutt; Hudson H. Freeze; Warren S. Alexander; Douglas J. Hilton; Benjamin T. Kile

ABSTRACT Carbohydrate modification of proteins includes N-linked and O-linked glycosylation, proteoglycan formation, glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor synthesis, and O-GlcNAc modification. Each of these modifications requires the sugar nucleotide UDP-GlcNAc, which is produced via the hexosamine biosynthesis pathway. A key step in this pathway is the interconversion of GlcNAc-6-phosphate (GlcNAc-6-P) and GlcNAc-1-P, catalyzed by phosphoglucomutase 3 (Pgm3). In this paper, we describe two hypomorphic alleles of mouse Pgm3 and show there are specific physiological consequences of a graded reduction in Pgm3 activity and global UDP-GlcNAc levels. Whereas mice lacking Pgm3 die prior to implantation, animals with less severe reductions in enzyme activity are sterile, exhibit changes in pancreatic architecture, and are anemic, leukopenic, and thrombocytopenic. These phenotypes are accompanied by specific rather than wholesale changes in protein glycosylation, suggesting that while universally required, the functions of certain proteins and, as a consequence, certain cell types are especially sensitive to reductions in Pgm3 activity.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2007

CDG‐Id in two siblings with partially different phenotypes

Christian Kranz; Liangwu Sun; Erik A. Eklund; Donna Krasnewich; Janet R. Casey; Hudson H. Freeze

We present two sibs with congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG) type Id. Each shows severe global delay, failure to thrive, seizures, microcephaly, axial hypotonia, and disaccharidase deficiency. One sib has more severe digestive issues, while the other is more neurologically impaired. Each is compound heterozygous for a novel point mutation and an already known mutation in the ALG3 gene that leads to the synthesis of a severely truncated oligosaccharide precursor for N‐glycans. The defect is corrected by introduction of a normal ALG3 cDNA. CDG should be ruled out in all patients with severe seizures and failure to thrive.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Hypoglycosylation due to dolichol metabolism defects.

Jonas Denecke; Christian Kranz

Dolichol phosphate is a lipid carrier embedded in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane essential for the synthesis of N-glycans, GPI-anchors and protein C- and O-mannosylation. The availability of dolichol phosphate on the cytosolic site of the ER is rate-limiting for N-glycosylation. The abundance of dolichol phosphate is influenced by its de novo synthesis and the recycling of dolichol phosphate from the luminal leaflet to the cytosolic leaflet of the ER. Enzymatic defects affecting the de novo synthesis and the recycling of dolichol phosphate result in glycosylation defects in yeast or cell culture models, and are expected to cause glycosylation disorders in humans termed congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG). Currently only one disorder affecting the dolichol phosphate metabolism has been described. In CDG-Im, the final step of the de novo synthesis of dolichol phosphate catalyzed by the enzyme dolichol kinase is affected. The defect causes a severe phenotype with death in early infancy. The present review summarizes the biosynthesis of dolichol-phosphate and the recycling pathway with respect to possible defects of the dolichol phosphate metabolism causing glycosylation defects in humans.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2002

Membrane-permeant derivatives of mannose-1-phosphate

Synke Rutschow; Joachim Thiem; Christian Kranz; Thorsten Marquardt

For treatment of congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ia (CDG-Ia) membrane-permeant derivatives of mannose-1-phosphate are required. Employing biologically cleavable phosphate protecting groups advantageous precursor derivatives could be synthesized following a facile approach. Their enzymatic cleavages using esterase from porcine liver (E.C. 3.1.1.1) were investigated.


Current protocols in protein science | 2010

Endoglycosidase and Glycoamidase Release of N‐Linked Glycans

Hudson H. Freeze; Christian Kranz

Nearly all proteins entering the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) become glycosylated en route to a cellular organelle, the plasma membrane, or the extracellular space. Many glycans can be attached to proteins, but the most common are the N‐linked glycans (oligosaccharides). These chains are added very soon after a protein enters the ER, but they undergo extensive remodeling (processing), especially in the Golgi. Processing changes the sensitivity of the N‐glycan to enzymes that cleave entire sugar chains or individual monosaccharides, which also changes the migration of the protein on SDS gels. These changes can be used to indicate when a protein has passed a particular subcellular location. This unit details some of the methods used to track a protein as it trafficks from the ER to the Golgi toward its final location. Curr. Protoc. Mol. Biol. 89:17.13A.1‐17.13A.25.


Glycoconjugate Journal | 2008

Characterization of the N-glycosylation phenotype of erythrocyte membrane proteins in congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II (CDA II/HEMPAS)

Jonas Denecke; Christian Kranz; Manfred Nimtz; Harald S. Conradt; Thomas Brune; Hermann Heimpel; Thorsten Marquardt

Congenital dyserythropoetic anemia type II (CDA II) is characterized by bi- and multinucleated erythroblasts and an impaired N-glycosylation of erythrocyte membrane proteins. Several enzyme defects have been proposed to cause CDA II based on the investigation of erythrocyte membrane glycans pinpointing to defects of early Golgi processing steps. Hitherto no molecular defect could be elucidated. In the present study, N-glycosylation of erythrocyte membrane proteins of CDA II patients and controls was investigated by SDS-Page, lectin binding studies, and MALDI-TOF/MS mapping in order to allow an embracing view on the glycosylation defect in CDA II. Decreased binding of tomato lectin was a consistent finding in all typical CDA II patients. New insights into tomato lectin binding properties were found indicating that branched polylactosamines are the main target. The binding of Aleuria aurantia, a lectin preferentially binding to α1-6 core-fucose, was reduced in western blots of CDA II erythrocyte membranes. MALDI-TOF analysis of band 3 derived N-glycans revealed a broad spectrum of truncated structures showing the presence of high mannose and hybrid glycans and mainly a strong decrease of large N-glycans suggesting impairment of cis, medial and trans Golgi processing. Conclusion: Truncation of N-glycans is a consistent finding in CDA II erythrocytes indicating the diagnostic value of tomato-lectin studies. However, structural data of erythrocyte N-glycans implicate that CDA II is not a distinct glycosylation disorder but caused by a defect disturbing Golgi processing in erythroblasts.

Collaboration


Dive into the Christian Kranz's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erik Harms

University of Münster

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vladimir V. Lupashin

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. G. Koch

University of Münster

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge