Christine Herold
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
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Publication
Featured researches published by Christine Herold.
Nature Genetics | 2010
Ulrike Hüffmeier; Steffen Uebe; Arif B. Ekici; John Bowes; Emiliano Giardina; Eleanor Korendowych; Kristina Juneblad; Maria Apel; Ross McManus; Pauline Ho; Ian N. Bruce; Anthony W. Ryan; Frank Behrens; Jesús Lascorz; Beate Böhm; Heiko Traupe; Jörg Lohmann; Christian Gieger; Heinz-Erich Wichmann; Christine Herold; Michael Steffens; Lars Klareskog; Thomas F. Wienker; Oliver FitzGerald; Gerd-Marie Alenius; Neil McHugh; Giuseppe Novelli; Harald Burkhardt; Anne Barton; André Reis
Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is an inflammatory joint disease that is distinct from other chronic arthritides and which is frequently accompanied by psoriasis vulgaris (PsV) and seronegativity for rheumatoid factor. We conducted a genome-wide association study in 609 German individuals with PsA (cases) and 990 controls with replication in 6 European cohorts including a total of 5,488 individuals. We replicated PsA associations at HLA-C and IL12B and identified a new association at TRAF3IP2 (rs13190932, P = 8.56 × 10−17). TRAF3IP2 was also associated with PsV in a German cohort including 2,040 individuals (rs13190932, P = 1.95 × 10−3). Sequencing of the exons of TRAF3IP2 identified a coding variant (p.Asp10Asn, rs33980500) as the most significantly associated SNP (P = 1.13 × 10−20, odds ratio = 1.95). Functional assays showed reduced binding of this TRAF3IP2 variant to TRAF6, suggesting altered modulation of immunoregulatory signals through altered TRAF interactions as a new and shared pathway for PsA and PsV.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Hendrik P. N. Scholl; Monika Fleckenstein; Lars G. Fritsche; Steffen Schmitz-Valckenberg; Arno P. Göbel; Christine Adrion; Christine Herold; Claudia N. Keilhauer; Friederike Mackensen; A. Mößner; Daniel Pauleikhoff; Andreas W. A. Weinberger; Ulrich Mansmann; Frank G. Holz; Tim Becker; Bernhard H. F. Weber
Background Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a prevalent cause of blindness in Western societies. Variants in the genes encoding complement factor H (CFH), complement component 3 (C3) and age-related maculopathy susceptibility 2 (ARMS2) have repeatedly been shown to confer significant risks for AMD; however, their role in disease progression and thus their potential relevance for interventional therapeutic approaches remains unknown. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, we analyzed association between variants in CFH, C3 and ARMS2 and disease progression of geographic atrophy (GA) due to AMD. A quantitative phenotype of disease progression was computed based on longitudinal observations by fundus autofluorescence imaging. In a subset of 99 cases with pure bilateral GA, variants in CFH (Y402H), C3 (R102G), and ARMS2 (A69S) are associated with disease (P = 1.6×10−9, 3.2×10−3, and P = 2.6×10−12, respectively) when compared to 612 unrelated healthy control individuals. In cases, median progression rate of GA over a mean follow-up period of 3.0 years was 1.61 mm2/year with high concordance between fellow eyes. No association between the progression rate and any of the genetic risk variants at the three loci was observed (P>0.13). Conclusions/Significance This study confirms that variants at CFH, C3, and ARMS2 confer significant risks for GA due to AMD. In contrast, our data indicate no association of these variants with disease progression which may have important implications for future treatment strategies. Other, as yet unknown susceptibilities may influence disease progression.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2009
Johannes Schumacher; Gonzalo Laje; Rami Abou Jamra; Tim Becker; Thomas W. Mühleisen; Catalina Vasilescu; Manuel Mattheisen; Stefan Herms; Per Hoffmann; Axel M. Hillmer; Alexander Georgi; Christine Herold; Thomas G. Schulze; Peter Propping; Marcella Rietschel; Francis J. McMahon; Markus M. Nöthen; Sven Cichon
Association studies, as well as the initial translocation family study, identified the gene Disrupted-In-Schizophrenia-1 (DISC1) as a risk factor for schizophrenia. DISC1 encodes a multifunctional scaffold protein involved in neurodevelopmental processes implicated in the etiology of schizophrenia. The present study explores the contribution of the DISC locus to schizophrenia using three different approaches: (i) systematic association mapping aimed at detecting DISC risk variants in a schizophrenia sample from a central European population (556 SNPs, n = 1621 individuals). In this homogenous sample, a circumscribed DISC1 interval in intron 9 was significantly associated with schizophrenia in females (P = 4 x 10(-5)) and contributed most strongly to early-onset cases (P = 9 x 10(-5)). The odds ratios (ORs) were in the range of 1.46-1.88. (ii) The same sample was used to test for the locus-specific SNP-SNP interaction most recently associated with schizophrenia. Our results confirm the SNP interplay effect between rs1538979 and rs821633 that significantly conferred disease risk in male patients with schizophrenia (P = 0.016, OR 1.57). (iii) In order to detect additional schizophrenia variants, a meta-analysis was performed using nine schizophrenia samples from different European populations (50 SNPs, n = 10 064 individuals maximum, n = 3694 minimum). We found evidence for a common schizophrenia risk interval within DISC1 intron 4-6 (P = 0.002, OR 1.27). The findings point to a complex association between schizophrenia and DISC, including the presence of different risk loci and SNP interplay effects. Furthermore, our phenotype-genotype results--including the consideration of sex-specific effects--highlight the value of homogenous samples in mapping risk genes for schizophrenia in general, and at the DISC locus in particular.
Bioinformatics | 2009
Christine Herold; Tim Becker
UNLABELLED FAMHAP is an established software for haplotype association analysis of nuclear families. We have released a major update that comprises various new features for case-control data. Furthermore, weprovide an additional program runFamhap that allows users to start the same method repeatedly for varying sets of genetic markers. In addition, a platform-independent graphical user interface (GUI) was developed to simplify the usage of both FAMHAP and runFamhap. The runFamhap program greatly facilitates the application of FAMHAP to genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and supports flexible genome-wide haplotype analysis. As an example, we describe application to HapMap data. AVAILABILITY The software is available at http://famhap.meb.uni-bonn.de
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2012
Dagny Jagielska; Silke Redler; Felix F. Brockschmidt; Christine Herold; Sandra M. Pasternack; Natalie Garcia Bartels; S. Hanneken; Sibylle Eigelshoven; Melanie Refke; Sandra Barth; Kathrin A. Giehl; Roland Kruse; Gerhard Lutz; Hans Wolff; Bettina Blaumeiser; Markus Böhm; Ulrike Blume-Peytavi; Tim Becker; Markus M. Nöthen; Regina C. Betz
Recently, the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) of alopecia areata (AA) was conducted in a North-American sample, and this identified eight susceptibility loci surpassing genome-wide significance. The aim of the present follow-up association analysis was to confirm five of these eight loci (single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from the CTLA4, IL-2RA, and HLA regions were not included due to previous own findings) and test 12 other loci from the GWAS, which did not surpass the threshold for genome-wide significance. Twenty-three SNPs from the 17 loci were investigated using a sample of 1,702 Central European AA patients and 1,723 controls. Of the five loci with previously reported genome-wide significance, association was confirmed for all of these: ULBP3/ULBP6, PRDX5, IL-2/IL-21, STX17, and IKZF4/ERBB3 (P-value <0.05). To detect robust evidence for association among the 12 other loci, a meta-analysis of the present association data and the data of the recent GWAS was performed. Genome-wide significant association was found for rs20541 (P(comb)=7.52 × 10(-10); odds ratio (OR)=1.30 (1.23-1.38)) and rs998592 (P(comb)=1.11 × 10(-11); OR=1.28 (1.21-1.36)), thus establishing IL-13 and KIAA0350/CLEC16A as susceptibility loci for AA. Interestingly, IL-13 and KIAA0350/CLEC16A are susceptibility loci for other autoimmune diseases, supporting the hypothesis of shared pathways of autoimmune susceptibility.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2013
Stefanie Heilmann; Amy K. Kiefer; Nadine Fricker; Dmitriy Drichel; Axel M. Hillmer; Christine Herold; Joyce Y. Tung; Nicholas Eriksson; Silke Redler; Regina C. Betz; Rui Li; Ari Karason; Dale R. Nyholt; Kijoung Song; Sita H. Vermeulen; Stavroula Kanoni; George Dedoussis; Nicholas G. Martin; Lambertus A. Kiemeney; Vincent Mooser; Kari Stefansson; J. Brent Richards; Tim Becker; Felix F. Brockschmidt; David A. Hinds; Markus M. Nöthen
The pathogenesis of androgenetic alopecia (AGA, male-pattern baldness) is driven by androgens, and genetic predisposition is the major prerequisite. Candidate gene and genome-wide association studies have reported that single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at eight different genomic loci are associated with AGA development. However, a significant fraction of the overall heritable risk still awaits identification. Furthermore, the understanding of the pathophysiology of AGA is incomplete, and each newly associated locus may provide novel insights into contributing biological pathways. The aim of this study was to identify unknown AGA risk loci by replicating SNPs at the 12 genomic loci that showed suggestive association (5 × 10(-8)<P<10(-5)) with AGA in a recent meta-analysis. We analyzed a replication set comprising 2,759 cases and 2,661 controls of European descent to confirm the association with AGA at these loci. Combined analysis of the replication and the meta-analysis data identified four genome-wide significant risk loci for AGA on chromosomes 2q35, 3q25.1, 5q33.3, and 12p12.1. The strongest association signal was obtained for rs7349332 (P=3.55 × 10(-15)) on chr2q35, which is located intronically in WNT10A. Expression studies in human hair follicle tissue suggest that WNT10A has a functional role in AGA etiology. Thus, our study provides genetic evidence supporting an involvement of WNT signaling in AGA development.
British Journal of Dermatology | 2011
Felix F. Brockschmidt; Stefanie Heilmann; Justine A. Ellis; Sibylle Eigelshoven; S. Hanneken; Christine Herold; Susanne Moebus; Margrieta Alblas; B. Lippke; Nadine Kluck; Lutz Priebe; Franziska Degenhardt; Rami Abou Jamra; Christian Meesters; Karl-Heinz Jöckel; Raimund Erbel; Stephen B. Harrap; Johannes Schumacher; Holger Fröhlich; Rudolf Kruse; Axel M. Hillmer; Tim Becker; Markus M. Nöthen
Background Male‐pattern baldness (androgenetic alopecia, AGA) is the most common form of hair loss among humans. Research has shown that it is caused by genetic factors. Numerous studies have unequivocally identified two major genetic risk loci for AGA: the X‐chromosomal AR/EDA2R locus, and the PAX1/FOXA2 locus on chromosome 20.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2014
Alfredo Ramirez; Wiesje M. van der Flier; Christine Herold; David Ramonet; Stefanie Heilmann; Piotr Lewczuk; Julius Popp; André Lacour; Dmitriy Drichel; Eva Louwersheimer; Markus P. Kummer; Carlos Cruchaga; Per Hoffmann; Charlotte E. Teunissen; Henne Holstege; Johannes Kornhuber; Oliver Peters; Adam C. Naj; Vincent Chouraki; Céline Bellenguez; Amy Gerrish; Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative; Reiner Heun; Lutz Frölich; Michael Hüll; Lara Buscemi; Stefan Herms; Heike Kölsch; Philip Scheltens; Monique M.B. Breteler
Cerebrospinal fluid amyloid-beta 1-42 (Aβ1-42) and phosphorylated Tau at position 181 (pTau181) are biomarkers of Alzheimers disease (AD). We performed an analysis and meta-analysis of genome-wide association study data on Aβ1-42 and pTau181 in AD dementia patients followed by independent replication. An association was found between Aβ1-42 level and a single-nucleotide polymorphism in SUCLG2 (rs62256378) (P = 2.5×10(-12)). An interaction between APOE genotype and rs62256378 was detected (P = 9.5 × 10(-5)), with the strongest effect being observed in APOE-ε4 noncarriers. Clinically, rs62256378 was associated with rate of cognitive decline in AD dementia patients (P = 3.1 × 10(-3)). Functional microglia experiments showed that SUCLG2 was involved in clearance of Aβ1-42.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2012
Lina M Forstbauer; Felix F. Brockschmidt; Valentina Moskvina; Christine Herold; Silke Redler; Alexandra Herzog; Axel M. Hillmer; Christian Meesters; Stefanie Heilmann; Florian Albert; Margrieta Alblas; S. Hanneken; Sibylle Eigelshoven; Kathrin A. Giehl; Dagny Jagielska; Ulrike Blume-Peytavi; Natalie Garcia Bartels; Jennifer Kuhn; Hans Christian Hennies; Matthias Goebeler; Andreas Jung; Wiebke K. Peitsch; Anne-Katrin Kortüm; Ingrid Moll; Roland Kruse; Gerhard Lutz; Hans Wolff; Bettina Blaumeiser; Markus Böhm; George Kirov
Alopecia areata (AA) is a common hair loss disorder, which is thought to be a tissue-specific autoimmune disease. Previous research has identified a few AA susceptibility genes, most of which are implicated in autoimmunity. To identify new genetic variants and further elucidate the genetic basis of AA, we performed a genome-wide association study using the strategy of pooled DNA genotyping (729 cases, 656 controls). The strongest association was for variants in the HLA region, which confirms the validity of the pooling strategy. The selected top 61 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were analyzed in an independent replication sample (454 cases, 1364 controls). Only one SNP outside of the HLA region (rs304650) showed significant association. This SNP was then analyzed in a second independent replication sample (537 cases, 657 controls). The finding was not replicated on a significant level, but showed the same tendency. A combined analysis of the two replication samples was then performed, and the SNP rs304650 showed significant association with P=3.43 × 10−4 (OR=1.24 (1.10–1.39)). This SNP maps to an intronic region of the SPATA5 (spermatogenesis-associated protein 5) gene on chromosome 4. The results therefore suggest the SPATA5 locus is a new susceptibility locus for AA.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2011
Karsten K-G John; Felix F. Brockschmidt; Silke Redler; Christine Herold; S. Hanneken; Sibylle Eigelshoven; Kathrin A. Giehl; Jozef De Weert; Gerhard Lutz; Roland Kruse; Hans Wolff; Bettina Blaumeiser; Markus Böhm; Tim Becker; Markus M. Nöthen; Regina C. Betz
K. Bhattacharya, Richard A. Smith, Patti L. Johnson, Jianjun Chen, Kathleen E. Nelson, Robert C. Tuckey, Duane Miller, Yan Jiao, Weikuan Gu and Arnold E. Postlethwaite Department of Pathology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Orthopedic Surgery, College of Pharmacy, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Department of Biology, Christian Brothers University, Memphis, Tennessee, USA; School of Biomedical, Biomolecular and Chemical Sciences, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia; Division of Connective Tissue Diseases, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee, USA and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Christian Brothers University, Memphis, Tennessee, USA E-mail: [email protected]