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Featured researches published by Christian Netzer.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Exome sequencing identifies truncating mutations in human SERPINF1 in autosomal-recessive osteogenesis imperfecta.

Jutta Becker; Oliver Semler; Christian Gilissen; Yun Li; Hanno J. Bolz; Cecilia Giunta; Carsten Bergmann; Marianne Rohrbach; Friederike Koerber; Katharina Zimmermann; Petra de Vries; Brunhilde Wirth; Eckhard Schoenau; Bernd Wollnik; Joris A. Veltman; Alexander Hoischen; Christian Netzer

Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a heterogeneous genetic disorder characterized by bone fragility and susceptibility to fractures after minimal trauma. After mutations in all known OI genes had been excluded by Sanger sequencing, we applied next-generation sequencing to analyze the exome of a single individual who has a severe form of the disease and whose parents are second cousins. A total of 26,922 variations from the human reference genome sequence were subjected to several filtering steps. In addition, we extracted the genotypes of all dbSNP130-annotated SNPs from the exome sequencing data and used these 299,494 genotypes as markers for the genome-wide identification of homozygous regions. A single homozygous truncating mutation, affecting SERPINF1 on chromosome 17p13.3, that was embedded into a homozygous stretch of 2.99 Mb remained. The mutation was also homozygous in the affected brother of the index patient. Subsequently, we identified homozygosity for two different truncating SERPINF1 mutations in two unrelated patients with OI and parental consanguinity. All four individuals with SERPINF1 mutations have severe OI. Fractures of long bones and severe vertebral compression fractures with resulting deformities were observed as early as the first year of life in these individuals. Collagen analyses with cultured dermal fibroblasts displayed no evidence for impaired collagen folding, posttranslational modification, or secretion. SERPINF1 encodes pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF), a secreted glycoprotein of the serpin superfamily. PEDF is a multifunctional protein and one of the strongest inhibitors of angiogenesis currently known in humans. Our data provide genetic evidence for PEDF involvement in human bone homeostasis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Attenuated BMP1 Function Compromises Osteogenesis, Leading to Bone Fragility in Humans and Zebrafish

P.V. Asharani; Katharina Keupp; Oliver Semler; Wenshen Wang; Yun Li; Holger Thiele; Gökhan Yigit; Esther Pohl; Jutta Becker; Peter Frommolt; Carmen Sonntag; Janine Altmüller; Katharina Zimmermann; Daniel S. Greenspan; Nurten Akarsu; Christian Netzer; Eckhard Schönau; Radu Wirth; Matthias Hammerschmidt; Peter Nürnberg; Bernd Wollnik; Thomas J. Carney

Bone morphogenetic protein 1 (BMP1) is an astacin metalloprotease with important cellular functions and diverse substrates, including extracellular-matrix proteins and antagonists of some TGFβ superfamily members. Combining whole-exome sequencing and filtering for homozygous stretches of identified variants, we found a homozygous causative BMP1 mutation, c.34G>C, in a consanguineous family affected by increased bone mineral density and multiple recurrent fractures. The mutation is located within the BMP1 signal peptide and leads to impaired secretion and an alteration in posttranslational modification. We also characterize a zebrafish bone mutant harboring lesions in bmp1a, demonstrating conservation of BMP1 function in osteogenesis across species. Genetic, biochemical, and histological analyses of this mutant and a comparison to a second, similar locus reveal that Bmp1a is critically required for mature-collagen generation, downstream of osteoblast maturation, in bone. We thus define the molecular and cellular bases of BMP1-dependent osteogenesis and show the importance of this protein for bone formation and stability.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

LRP4 Mutations Alter Wnt/β-Catenin Signaling and Cause Limb and Kidney Malformations in Cenani-Lenz Syndrome

Yun Li; Barbara Pawlik; Nursel Elcioglu; Mona Aglan; Hülya Kayserili; Gökhan Yigit; Ferda E. Percin; Frances Goodman; Gudrun Nürnberg; Asim Cenani; Jill Urquhart; Boi Dinh Chung; Samira Ismail; Khalda Amr; Ayca D. Aslanger; Christian Becker; Christian Netzer; Peter J. Scambler; Wafaa Eyaid; Hanan Hamamy; Jill Clayton-Smith; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Peter Nürnberg; Joachim Herz; Samia A. Temtamy; Bernd Wollnik

Cenani-Lenz syndrome (CLS) is an autosomal-recessive congenital disorder affecting distal limb development. It is characterized mainly by syndactyly and/or oligodactyly and is now shown to be commonly associated with kidney anomalies. We used a homozygosity-mapping approach to map the CLS1 locus to chromosome 11p11.2-q13.1. By sequencing candidate genes, we identified recessive LRP4 mutations in 12 families with CLS. LRP4 belongs to the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-related proteins (LRPs), which are essential for various developmental processes. LRP4 is known to antagonize LRP6-mediated activation of canonical Wnt signaling, a function that is lost by the identified mutations. Our findings increase the spectrum of congenital anomalies associated with abnormal lipoprotein receptor-dependent signaling.


Human Mutation | 2008

Novel CCM1, CCM2, and CCM3 mutations in patients with cerebral cavernous malformations: in-frame deletion in CCM2 prevents formation of a CCM1/CCM2/CCM3 protein complex.

Sonja Stahl; Sabine Gaetzner; Katrin Voss; Bettina Brackertz; Elisa Schleider; Oguzkan Sürücü; Ekkehard Kunze; Christian Netzer; Christoph Korenke; Ulrich Finckh; Mario Habek; Zdravka Poljaković; Miriam Elbracht; Sabine Rudnik-Schöneborn; Helmut Bertalanffy; Ulrich Sure; Ute Felbor

Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCM) are prevalent cerebrovascular lesions predisposing to chronic headaches, epilepsy, and hemorrhagic stroke. Using a combination of direct sequencing and MLPA analyses, we identified 15 novel and eight previously published CCM1 (KRIT1), CCM2, and CCM3 (PDCD10) mutations. The mutation detection rate was >90% for familial cases and >60% for isolated cases with multiple malformations. Splice site mutations constituted almost 20% of all CCM mutations identified. One of these proved to be a de novo mutation of the most 3′ acceptor splice site of the CCM1 gene resulting in retention of intron 19. A further mutation affected the 3′ splice site of CCM2 intron 2 leading to cryptic splice site utilization in both CCM2 and its transcript variant lacking exon 2. With the exception of one in‐frame deletion of CCM2 exon 2, which corresponds to the naturally occurring splice variant of CCM2 on the RNA level and is predicted to result in the omission of 58 amino acids (CCM2:p.P11_K68del), all mutations lead to the introduction of premature stop codons. To gain insight into the likely mechanisms underlying the only known CCM2 in‐frame deletion, we analyzed the functional consequences of loss of CCM2 exon 2. The CCM2:p.P11_K68del protein could be expressed in cell culture and complexed with CCM3. However, its ability to interact with CCM1 and to form a CCM1/CCM2/CCM3 complex was lost. These data are in agreement with a loss‐of‐function mechanism for CCM mutations, uncover an N‐terminal CCM2 domain required for CCM1 binding, and demonstrate full‐length CCM2 as the essential core protein in the CCM1/CCM2/CCM3 complex. Hum Mutat 29(5), 709–717, 2008.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Mutations in SEC24D, Encoding a Component of the COPII Machinery, Cause a Syndromic Form of Osteogenesis Imperfecta

Lutz Garbes; Kyung-Ho Kim; Angelika Rieß; Heike Hoyer-Kuhn; Filippo Beleggia; Andrea Bevot; Mi Jeong Kim; Yang Hoon Huh; Hee Seok Kweon; Ravi Savarirayan; David J. Amor; Purvi M. Kakadia; Tobias Lindig; Karl Oliver Kagan; Jutta Becker; Simeon A. Boyadjiev; Bernd Wollnik; Oliver Semler; Stefan K. Bohlander; Jinoh Kim; Christian Netzer

As a result of a whole-exome sequencing study, we report three mutant alleles in SEC24D, a gene encoding a component of the COPII complex involved in protein export from the ER: the truncating mutation c.613C>T (p.Gln205(∗)) and the missense mutations c.3044C>T (p.Ser1015Phe, located in a cargo-binding pocket) and c.2933A>C (p.Gln978Pro, located in the gelsolin-like domain). Three individuals from two families affected by a similar skeletal phenotype were each compound heterozygous for two of these mutant alleles, with c.3044C>T being embedded in a 14 Mb founder haplotype shared by all three. The affected individuals were a 7-year-old boy with a phenotype most closely resembling Cole-Carpenter syndrome and two fetuses initially suspected to have a severe type of osteogenesis imperfecta. All three displayed a severely disturbed ossification of the skull and multiple fractures with prenatal onset. The 7-year-old boy had short stature and craniofacial malformations including macrocephaly, midface hypoplasia, micrognathia, frontal bossing, and down-slanting palpebral fissures. Electron and immunofluorescence microscopy of skin fibroblasts of this individual revealed that ER export of procollagen was inefficient and that ER tubules were dilated, faithfully reproducing the cellular phenotype of individuals with cranio-lentico-sutural dysplasia (CLSD). CLSD is caused by SEC23A mutations and displays a largely overlapping craniofacial phenotype, but it is not characterized by generalized bone fragility and presented with cataracts in the original family described. The cellular and morphological phenotypes we report are in concordance with the phenotypes described for the Sec24d-deficient fish mutants vbi (medaka) and bulldog (zebrafish).


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2014

Two years’ experience with denosumab for children with Osteogenesis imperfecta type VI

Heike Hoyer-Kuhn; Christian Netzer; Friederike Koerber; Eckhard Schoenau; Oliver Semler

BackgroundOsteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a hereditary disease causing reduced bone mass, increased fracture rate, long bone deformities and vertebral compressions. Additional non skeletal findings are caused by impaired collagen function and include hyperlaxity of joints and blue sclera. Most OI cases are caused by dominant mutations in COL1A1/2 affecting bone formation. During the last years, recessive forms of OI have been identified, mostly affecting posttranslational modification of collagen. In 2011, mutations in SERPINF1 were identified as the molecular cause of OI type VI, and thereby a novel pathophysiology of the disease was elucidated. The subgroup of patients with OI type VI are affected by an increased bone resorption, leading to the same symptoms as observed in patients with an impaired bone formation. Severely affected children are currently treated with intravenous bisphosphonates regardless of the underlying mutation and pathophysiology. Patients with OI type VI are known to have a poor response to such a bisphosphonate treatment.MethodDeciphering the genetic cause of OI type VI in our 4 patients (three children and one adolescent) led to an immediate translational approach in the form of a treatment with the monoclonal RANKL antibody Denosumab (1 mg/kg body weight every 12 weeks).ResultsShort-term biochemical response to this treatment was reported previously. We now present the results after 2 years of treatment and demonstrate a long term benefit as well as an increase of bone mineral density, a normalization of vertebral shape, an increase of mobility, and a reduced fracture rate.ConclusionThis report presents the first two-year data of denosumab treatment in patients with Osteogenesis imperfecta type VI and in Osteogenesis imperfecta in general as an effective and apparently safe treatment option.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Novel mutations affecting LRP5 splicing in patients with osteoporosis-pseudoglioma syndrome (OPPG)

Christine M. Laine; Boi-Dinh Chung; Miki Susic; Trine Prescott; Oliver Semler; Torunn Fiskerstrand; Patrizia d'Eufemia; Marco Castori; Minna Pekkinen; Etienne Sochett; William G. Cole; Christian Netzer; Outi Mäkitie

Osteoporosis-pseudoglioma sydrome (OPPG) is an autosomal recessive disorder with early-onset severe osteoporosis and blindness, caused by biallelic loss-of-function mutations in the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 5 (LRP5) gene. Heterozygous carriers exhibit a milder bone phenotype. Only a few splice mutations in LRP5 have been published. We present clinical and genetic data for four patients with novel LRP5 mutations, three of which affect splicing. Patients were evaluated clinically and by radiography and bone densitometry. Genetic screening of LRP5 was performed on the basis of the clinical diagnosis of OPPG. Splice aberrances were confirmed by cDNA sequencing or exon trapping. The effect of one splice mutation on LRP5 protein function was studied. A novel splice-site mutation c.1584+4A>T abolished the donor splice site of exon 7 and activated a cryptic splice site, which led to an in-frame insertion of 21 amino acids (p.E528_V529ins21). Functional studies revealed severely impaired signal transduction presumably caused by defective intracellular transport of the mutated receptor. Exon trapping was used on two samples to confirm that splice-site mutations c.4112-2A>G and c.1015+1G>T caused splicing-out of exons 20 and 5, respectively. One patient carried a homozygous deletion of exon 4 causing the loss of exons 4 and 5, as demonstrated by cDNA analysis. Our results broaden the spectrum of mutations in LRP5 and provide the first functional data on splice aberrations.


Human Mutation | 2009

A mutation in the signal sequence of LRP5 in a family with an osteoporosis-pseudoglioma syndrome (OPPG)-like phenotype indicates a novel disease mechanism for trinucleotide repeats.

Boi-Dinh Chung; Hülya Kayserili; Minrong Ai; Jan Freudenberg; Abdullah Uzumcu; Oya Uyguner; Cynthia F. Bartels; Stefan Höning; Alfredo Ramirez; Franz-Georg Hanisch; Gudrun Nürnberg; Peter Nürnberg; Matthew L. Warman; Bernd Wollnik; Christian Kubisch; Christian Netzer

We extend the spectrum of phenotypes caused by mutations in the Wnt/Norrin coreceptor low‐density lipoprotein receptor‐related protein 5 (LRP5) by identifying two novel types of mutation in related individuals whose presenting features were profound muscle hypotonia, mild mental retardation, blindness, and growth retardation. One mutation removes 6 out of 9 consecutive leucine residues in the LRP5 signal peptide (c.43_60del or p.Leu15_Leu20del), which impairs polypeptide entry into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), trafficking to the cell membrane, and signal transduction. The second mutation resulted from nonhomologous recombination between Alu repeat sequences, which deleted exons 14–16 and would produce a nonfunctional, truncated, and frameshifted polypeptide, if expressed [chr11:g.(13871447_1387511)_(13879636_13879700)del (NW_925106.1) or p.Pro1010GlnfsX38]. We confirmed that the length of the LRP5 signal peptide poly‐leucine repeat is polymorphic in the general population, and, importantly, we were able to demonstrate in independent in vitro assays that different allele sizes affect receptor processing and signal transduction. Consequently, this polymorphism may have physiologic effects in vivo. This latter finding is relevant since through a genomewide search we identified nearly 400 human proteins that contain poly‐leucine repeats within their signal peptide. We chose 18 of these proteins and genotyped the underlying trinucleotide repeat in healthy Caucasian individuals. More than one length allele was observed in one‐half of the proteins. We therefore propose that natural variation in poly‐leucine‐stretches within signal peptides constitutes a currently unrecognized source of variability in protein translation and expression. Hum Mutat 0, 1–8, 2009.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 2006

Haplotype-based systematic association studies of ATP1A2 in migraine with aura

Christian Netzer; Unda Todt; A. Heinze; Jan Freudenberg; Vera Zumbroich; Tim Becker; Ingrid Goebel; Stephanie Ohlraun; Hartmut Goebel; Christian Kubisch

Mutations in ATP1A2 cause familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) type 2, a rare monogenic form of migraine with aura (MA). Moreover, rare ATP1A2 missense variants are found in familial clustering of common forms of migraine in single pedigrees. To determine whether also common ATP1A2 polymorphisms contribute to MA pathogenesis, we performed systematic case‐control association studies in 284 MA cases and 241 control individuals. By direct sequencing of the 23 coding exons and adjacent intronic regions in 45 MA patients, 16 polymorphisms (12 SNPs, 3 small indels, 1 microsatellite marker) were identified. The sequencing results were used to estimate seven common ATP1A2 haplotypes (with a frequency >5%) covering about 97% of total haplotype diversity for this region. Subsequently, six haplotype‐tagging SNPs/polymorphisms were genotyped in 95 individuals with a family history of MA, in 189 individuals with sporadic MA, and in a gender‐matched control sample. A haplotype analysis was performed using the program FAMHAP. No significant differences in the ATP1A2 haplotype distribution could be detected between MA patients (or patient subgroups) and the control group. In a single‐marker analysis the allele and genotype frequencies of ATP1A2 polymorphisms between cases and controls were compared. Neither the six ht‐SNPs nor a single allele of the microsatellite marker were significantly associated with MA. In summary, we found no evidence for a common contribution of ATP1A2 to the pathogenesis of complex inherited MA.


Human Mutation | 2016

Mutation Update for Kabuki Syndrome Genes KMT2D and KDM6A and Further Delineation of X-Linked Kabuki Syndrome Subtype 2.

Nina Bögershausen; Vincent Gatinois; Vera Riehmer; Hülya Kayserili; Jutta Becker; Michaela Thoenes; Pelin Ozlem Simsek-Kiper; Mouna Barat-Houari; Nursel Elcioglu; Dagmar Wieczorek; Sigrid Tinschert; Guillaume Sarrabay; Tim M. Strom; Aurelie Fabre; Gareth Baynam; Elodie Sanchez; Gudrun Nürnberg; Umut Altunoglu; Yline Capri; Bertrand Isidor; Didier Lacombe; Carole Corsini; Valérie Cormier-Daire; Damien Sanlaville; Fabienne Giuliano; Kim-Hanh Le Quan Sang; Honorine Kayirangwa; Peter Nürnberg; Thomas Meitinger; Koray Boduroglu

Kabuki syndrome (KS) is a rare but recognizable condition that consists of a characteristic face, short stature, various organ malformations, and a variable degree of intellectual disability. Mutations in KMT2D have been identified as the main cause for KS, whereas mutations in KDM6A are a much less frequent cause. Here, we report a mutation screening in a case series of 347 unpublished patients, in which we identified 12 novel KDM6A mutations (KS type 2) and 208 mutations in KMT2D (KS type 1), 132 of them novel. Two of the KDM6A mutations were maternally inherited and nine were shown to be de novo. We give an up‐to‐date overview of all published mutations for the two KS genes and point out possible mutation hot spots and strategies for molecular genetic testing. We also report the clinical details for 11 patients with KS type 2, summarize the published clinical information, specifically with a focus on the less well‐defined X‐linked KS type 2, and comment on phenotype–genotype correlations as well as sex‐specific phenotypic differences. Finally, we also discuss a possible role of KDM6A in Kabuki‐like Turner syndrome and report a mutation screening of KDM6C (UTY) in male KS patients.

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Bernd Wollnik

University of Göttingen

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