Christina Lissewski
Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Christina Lissewski.
British Journal of Cancer | 2015
Christian P. Kratz; L Franke; H Peters; N Kohlschmidt; B Kazmierczak; U Finckh; A Bier; B Eichhorn; C Blank; Cornelia Kraus; J Kohlhase; Silke Pauli; G Wildhardt; Kerstin Kutsche; B Auber; A Christmann; N Bachmann; Diana Mitter; F W Cremer; Kenneth H. Mayer; C Daumer-Haas; C Nevinny-Stickel-Hinzpeter; F Oeffner; G Schlüter; M Gencik; B Überlacker; Christina Lissewski; Ina Schanze; M H Greene; Claudia Spix
Background:Somatic mutations affecting components of the Ras-MAPK pathway are a common feature of cancer, whereas germline Ras pathway mutations cause developmental disorders including Noonan, Costello, and cardio-facio-cutaneous syndromes. These ‘RASopathies’ also represent cancer-prone syndromes, but the quantitative cancer risks remain unknown.Methods:We investigated the occurrence of childhood cancer including benign and malignant tumours of the central nervous system in a group of 735 individuals with germline mutations in Ras signalling pathway genes by matching their information with the German Childhood Cancer Registry.Results:We observed 12 cases of cancer in the entire RASopathy cohort vs 1.12 expected (based on German population-based incidence rates). This corresponds to a 10.5-fold increased risk of all childhood cancers combined (standardised incidence ratio (SIR)=10.5, 95% confidence interval=5.4–18.3). The specific cancers included juvenile myelomonocytic leukaemia=4; brain tumour=3; acute lymphoblastic leukaemia=2; rhabdomyosarcoma=2; and neuroblastoma=1. The childhood cancer SIR in Noonan syndrome patients was 8.1, whereas that for Costello syndrome patients was 42.4.Conclusions:These data comprise the first quantitative evidence documenting that the germline mutations in Ras signalling pathway genes are associated with increased risks of both childhood leukaemia and solid tumours.
Human Mutation | 2015
Viviana Cordeddu; Jiani C Yin; Cecilia Gunnarsson; Carl Virtanen; Séverine Drunat; Francesca Lepri; Alessandro De Luca; Cesare Rossi; Andrea Ciolfi; Trevor J. Pugh; Alessandro Bruselles; James R. Priest; Len A. Pennacchio; Zhibin Lu; Arnavaz Danesh; Rene Quevedo; Alaa Hamid; Simone Martinelli; Francesca Pantaleoni; Maria Gnazzo; Paola Daniele; Christina Lissewski; Gianfranco Bocchinfuso; Lorenzo Stella; Sylvie Odent; Nicole Philip; Laurence Faivre; Marketa Vlckova; Eva Seemanova; Cristina Digilio
The RASopathies constitute a family of autosomal‐dominant disorders whose major features include facial dysmorphism, cardiac defects, reduced postnatal growth, variable cognitive deficits, ectodermal and skeletal anomalies, and susceptibility to certain malignancies. Noonan syndrome (NS), the commonest RASopathy, is genetically heterogeneous and caused by functional dysregulation of signal transducers and regulatory proteins with roles in the RAS/extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK) signal transduction pathway. Mutations in known disease genes account for approximately 80% of affected individuals. Here, we report that missense mutations altering Son of Sevenless, Drosophila, homolog 2 (SOS2), which encodes a RAS guanine nucleotide exchange factor, occur in a small percentage of subjects with NS. Four missense mutations were identified in five unrelated sporadic cases and families transmitting NS. Disease‐causing mutations affected three conserved residues located in the Dbl homology (DH) domain, of which two are directly involved in the intramolecular binding network maintaining SOS2 in its autoinhibited conformation. All mutations were found to promote enhanced signaling from RAS to ERK. Similar to NS‐causing SOS1 mutations, the phenotype associated with SOS2 defects is characterized by normal development and growth, as well as marked ectodermal involvement. Unlike SOS1 mutations, however, those in SOS2 are restricted to the DH domain.
The Journal of Pediatrics | 2012
Gerhard Binder; Sabrina Grathwol; Karoline von Loeper; Gunnar Blumenstock; Renate Kaulitz; Clemens Freiberg; Martin Webel; Christina Lissewski; Martin Zenker; Thomas Paul
OBJECTIVE To obtain information on health and quality of life in adults with Noonan syndrome. STUDY DESIGN From a cohort of 144 children with the diagnosis of Noonan syndrome whose height data had been published 23 years ago, 103 pediatric files providing adequate data were identified. Participants were sent questionnaires and asked to provide saliva for DNA analysis and to return for physical examination. RESULTS Ten of 103 individuals had died, 3 of them suddenly (standardized mortality ratio, 3.00; 95% CI, 1.44-5.52). Eighty-one individuals could be contacted by mail, with a positive response from 45. Genotyping in 36 of 45 participants revealed characteristic mutations in 61%. Median age at follow-up was 42.8 years. Mean adult heights were 169.2 cm (men) and 154.4 cm (women). In comparison with the general population, participants had lower educational status and lived more frequently without any partner. According to the response to the Short Form-36 questionnaire, quality of life was not impaired. CONCLUSIONS Individuals with Noonan syndrome have higher mortality, lower education, and rarely partnership. Quality of life according to self-reported Short Form-36 was good. Men grew taller than previously reported from this cohort.
Clinical Genetics | 2013
Pö Şimşek-Kiper; Yasemin Alanay; B Gülhan; Christina Lissewski; D Türkyılmaz; D Alehan; M Çetin; Ge Ütine; Martin Zenker; Koray Boduroglu
Şimşek‐Kiper PÖ, Alanay Y, Gülhan B, Lissewski C, Türkyılmaz D, Alehan D, Çetin M, Utine GE, Zenker M, Boduroğlu K. Clinical and molecular analysis of patients with RASopathies in Turkish patients.
Genetics in Medicine | 2016
Karim Kouz; Christina Lissewski; Stephanie Spranger; Diana Mitter; Angelika Riess; Vanesa López-González; Sabine Lüttgen; Hatip Aydin; Florian von Deimling; Christina Evers; Andreas Hahn; Maja Hempel; Ulrike Issa; Anne-Karin Kahlert; Adrian Lieb; Pablo Villavicencio-Lorini; María Juliana Ballesta-Martínez; Sheela Nampoothiri; Angela Ovens-Raeder; Alena Puchmajerová; Robin Satanovskij; Heide Seidel; Stephan Unkelbach; Bernhard Zabel; Kerstin Kutsche; Martin Zenker
Purpose:Noonan syndrome (NS) is an autosomal-dominant disorder characterized by craniofacial dysmorphism, growth retardation, cardiac abnormalities, and learning difficulties. It belongs to the RASopathies, which are caused by germ-line mutations in genes encoding components of the RAS mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. RIT1 was recently reported as a disease gene for NS, but the number of published cases is still limited.Methods:We sequenced RIT1 in 310 mutation-negative individuals with a suspected RASopathy and prospectively in individuals who underwent genetic testing for NS. Using a standardized form, we recorded clinical features of all RIT1 mutation-positive patients. Clinical and genotype data from 36 individuals with RIT1 mutation reported previously were reviewed.Results:Eleven different RIT1 missense mutations, three of which were novel, were identified in 33 subjects from 28 families; codons 57, 82, and 95 represent mutation hotspots. In relation to NS of other genetic etiologies, prenatal abnormalities, cardiovascular disease, and lymphatic abnormalities were common in individuals with RIT1 mutation, whereas short stature, intellectual problems, pectus anomalies, and ectodermal findings were less frequent.Conclusion:RIT1 is one of the major genes for NS. The RIT1-associated phenotype differs gradually from other NS subtypes, with a high prevalence of cardiovascular manifestations, especially hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and lymphatic problems.Genet Med 18 12, 1226–1234.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2013
Sybille Lorenz; Christina Lissewski; Pelin Özlem Simsek-Kiper; Yasemin Alanay; Koray Boduroglu; Martin Zenker; Georg Rosenberger
Costello syndrome is a congenital disorder comprising a characteristic face, severe feeding difficulties, skeletal, cardiac and skin abnormalities, intellectual disability and predisposition to malignancies. It is caused by heterozygous germline HRAS mutations mostly affecting Gly(12) or Gly(13), which impair HRAS-GTPase activity and result in increased downstream signal flow independent of incoming signals. Functional analyses of rarer HRAS mutations identified in individuals with attenuated Costello syndrome phenotypes revealed altered GDP/GTP nucleotide affinities (p.K117R) and inefficient effector binding (p.E37dup). Thus, both phenotypic and functional variability associated with HRAS mutations are evident. Here, we report on a novel heterozygous HRAS germline mutation (c.187_207dup, p.E63_D69dup) in a girl presenting with a phenotype at the milder end of the Costello syndrome spectrum. The p.E63_D69dup mutation impaired co-precipitation of recombinant HRAS with NF1 GTPase-activating protein (GAP) suggesting constitutive HRAS(E63_D69dup) activation due to GAP insensitivity. Indeed, we identified strongly augmented active HRAS(E63_D69dup) that co-precipitated with effectors RAF1, RAL guanine nucleotide dissociation stimulator and phospholipase C1. However, we could not pull down active HRAS(E63_D69dup) using the target protein PIK3CA, indicating a compromised association between active HRAS(E63_D69dup) and PIK3CA. Accordingly, overexpression of HRAS(E63_D69dup) increased steady-state phosphorylation of MEK1/2 and ERK1/2 downstream of RAF, whereas AKT phosphorylation downstream of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) was not enhanced. By analyzing signaling dynamics, we found that HRAS(E63_D69dup) has impaired reagibility to stimuli resulting in reduced and disrupted capacity to transduce incoming signals to the RAF-MAPK and PI3K-AKT cascade, respectively. We suggest that disrupted HRAS reagibility, as we demonstrate for the p.E63_D69dup mutation, is a previously unappreciated molecular pathomechanism underlying Costello syndrome.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2015
Christina Lissewski; Sarina G. Kant; Zornitza Stark; Ina Schanze; Martin Zenker
The RASopathies comprise a group of clinically overlapping developmental syndromes the common pathogenetic basis of which is dysregulated signal flow through the RAS‐MAPK pathway. Mutations in several components or modifiers of the pathway have been identified in Noonan syndrome and related disorders. Over the past years copy number variants (CNVs) encompassing RAS pathway genes (PTPN11, RAF1, MEK2, or SHOC2) have been reported in children with developmental syndromes. These observations raised speculations that the associated phenotypes represent RASopathies, implying that the increased or reduced expression of the respective RAS pathway component and a consecutive dysregulation of RAS pathway signalling is responsible for the clinical picture. Herein, we present two individuals and three of their relatives harboring duplications of either 3p25.2 including the RAF1 locus or 19p13.3 including the MEK2 locus. Duplication carriers exhibited variable clinical phenotypes including non‐specific facial dysmorphism, short stature, and learning difficulties. A careful review of the literature supported the impression that phenotypes associated with CNVs including RAS pathway genes commonly share non‐specific symptoms with RASopathies, while the characteristic “gestalt” is lacking. Considering the known molecular pathogenesis of RASopathies, it is questionable that a modest increase in the expression of a functionally normal signaling component can mimic the effects of a qualitatively abnormal (hyperactive) mutant protein. We thus argue that current empirical and biological evidence is still insufficient to allow the conclusion that an altered copy number of a RAS pathway component is indeed the mechanism that is critical for the phenotype associated with CNVs including RASopathy genes.
Human Mutation | 2015
Simone Martinelli; Emilia Stellacci; Luca Pannone; Daniela D'Agostino; Federica Consoli; Christina Lissewski; Marianna Silvano; Giulia Cencelli; Francesca Lepri; Silvia Maitz; Silke Pauli; Anita Rauch; Giuseppe Zampino; Angelo Selicorni; Serge Melancon; Maria Cristina Digilio; Bruce D. Gelb; Alessandro De Luca; Bruno Dallapiccola; Martin Zenker; Marco Tartaglia
Noonan syndrome (NS) is a relatively common developmental disorder with a pleomorphic phenotype. Mutations causing NS alter genes encoding proteins involved in the RAS‐MAPK pathway. We and others identified Casitas B‐lineage lymphoma proto‐oncogene (CBL), which encodes an E3‐ubiquitin ligase acting as a tumor suppressor in myeloid malignancies, as a disease gene underlying a condition clinically related to NS. Here, we further explored the spectrum of germline CBL mutations and their associated phenotype. CBL mutation scanning performed on 349 affected subjects with features overlapping NS and no mutation in NS genes allowed the identification of five different variants with pathological significance. Among them, two splice‐site changes, one in‐frame deletion, and one missense mutation affected the RING domain and/or the adjacent linker region, overlapping cancer‐associated defects. A novel nonsense mutation generating a v‐Cbl‐like protein able to enhance signal flow through RAS was also identified. Genotype–phenotype correlation analysis performed on available records indicated that germline CBL mutations cause a variable phenotype characterized by a relatively high frequency of neurological features, predisposition to juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia, and low prevalence of cardiac defects, reduced growth, and cryptorchidism. Finally, we excluded a major contribution of two additional members of the CBL family, CBLB and CBLC, to NS and related disorders.
Human Mutation | 2017
Luca Pannone; Gianfranco Bocchinfuso; Elisabetta Flex; Cesare Rossi; Giuseppina Baldassarre; Christina Lissewski; Francesca Pantaleoni; Federica Consoli; Francesca Lepri; Monia Magliozzi; Massimiliano Anselmi; Silvia Delle Vigne; Giovanni Sorge; Kadri Karaer; Goran Cuturilo; Alessandro Sartorio; Sigrid Tinschert; Maria Accadia; Maria Cristina Digilio; Giuseppe Zampino; Alessandro De Luca; Hélène Cavé; Martin Zenker; Bruce D. Gelb; Bruno Dallapiccola; Lorenzo Stella; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Simone Martinelli; Marco Tartaglia
Germline mutations in PTPN11, the gene encoding the Src‐homology 2 (SH2) domain‐containing protein tyrosine phosphatase (SHP2), cause Noonan syndrome (NS), a relatively common, clinically variable, multisystem disorder. Here, we report on the identification of five different PTPN11 missense changes affecting residues Leu261, Leu262, and Arg265 in 16 unrelated individuals with clinical diagnosis of NS or with features suggestive for this disorder, specifying a novel disease‐causing mutation cluster. Expression of the mutant proteins in HEK293T cells documented their activating role on MAPK signaling. Structural data predicted a gain‐of‐function role of substitutions at residues Leu262 and Arg265 exerted by disruption of the N‐SH2/PTP autoinhibitory interaction. Molecular dynamics simulations suggested a more complex behavior for changes affecting Leu261, with possible impact on SHP2s catalytic activity/selectivity and proper interaction of the PTP domain with the regulatory SH2 domains. Consistent with that, biochemical data indicated that substitutions at codons 262 and 265 increased the catalytic activity of the phosphatase, while those affecting codon 261 were only moderately activating but impacted substrate specificity. Remarkably, these mutations underlie a relatively mild form of NS characterized by low prevalence of cardiac defects, short stature, and cognitive and behavioral issues, as well as less evident typical facial features.
Clinical Genetics | 2016
S. Boppudi; N. Bögershausen; H.B. Hove; E.F. Percin; D. Aslan; Radovan Dvorsky; G. Kayhan; Yun Li; C. Cursiefen; I. Tantcheva-Poor; P.B. Toft; Oliver Bartsch; Christina Lissewski; Ilse Wieland; Sibylle Jakubiczka; Bernd Wollnik; Mohammad Reza Ahmadian; L.M. Heindl; Martin Zenker
Oculoectodermal syndrome (OES) and encephalocraniocutaneous lipomatosis (ECCL) are rare disorders that share many common features, such as epibulbar dermoids, aplasia cutis congenita, pigmentary changes following Blaschko lines, bony tumor‐like lesions, and others. About 20 cases with OES and more than 50 patients with ECCL have been reported. Both diseases were proposed to represent mosaic disorders, but only very recently whole‐genome sequencing has led to the identification of somatic KRAS mutations, p.Leu19Phe and p.Gly13Asp, in affected tissue from two individuals with OES. Here we report the results of molecular genetic studies in three patients with OES and one with ECCL. In all four cases, Sanger sequencing of the KRAS gene in DNA from lesional tissue detected mutations affecting codon 146 (p.Ala146Val, p.Ala146Thr) at variable levels of mosaicism. Our findings thus corroborate the evidence of OES being a mosaic RASopathy and confirm the common etiology of OES and ECCL. KRAS codon 146 mutations, as well as the previously reported OES‐associated alterations, are known oncogenic KRAS mutations with distinct functional consequences. Considering the phenotype and genotype spectrum of mosaic RASopathies, these findings suggest that the wide phenotypic variability does not only depend on the tissue distribution but also on the specific genotype.