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Dive into the research topics where Christof Lamberti is active.

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Featured researches published by Christof Lamberti.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998

Muir-Torre Phenotype Has a Frequency of DNA Mismatch-Repair-Gene Mutations Similar to That in Hereditary Nonpolyposis Colorectal Cancer Families Defined by the Amsterdam Criteria

Roland Kruse; Arno Rütten; Christof Lamberti; Hamid Reza Hosseiny-Malayeri; Yaping Wang; Corina Ruelfs; Matthias Jungck; Micaela Mathiak; Thomas Ruzicka; Wolfgang Hartschuh; Michele Bisceglia; Waltraut Friedl; Peter Propping

Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS) is an autosomal dominant disease defined by the coincidence of at least one sebaceous skin tumor and one internal malignancy. About half of MTS patients are affected by colorectal cancer. In a subgroup of MTS patients the disease has an underlying DNA mismatch-repair (MMR) defect and thus is allelic to hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC). The purpose of this study was to examine to what extent germ-line mutations in DNA MMR genes are the underlying cause of the MTS phenotype. We ascertained 16 MTS patients with sebaceous skin tumors and colorectal cancer, and we examined their skin and visceral tumors for microsatellite instability. All the patients exhibited high genomic instability in at least one tumor. The search for germ-line mutations in the hMSH2 and hMLH1 genes in 13 of the MTS patients revealed truncating mutations in 9 (69%): eight mutations in the hMSH2 gene and one in the hMLH1 gene. This is the first systematic search for germ-line mutations in patients ascertained on the basis of sebaceous skin tumors. Our results indicate that (1) MTS patients exhibit significantly more mutations in the hMSH2 gene than in the hMLH1 gene; and (2) the subpopulation of MTS patients who are also affected by colorectal cancer, irrespective of family history and age at onset of tumors, may have a likelihood for an underlying DNA MMR defect similar to that for patients with a family history fulfilling the strict clinical criteria for HNPCC.


Human Genetics | 1996

Attenuated familial adenomatous polyposis due to a mutation in the 3′ part of the APC gene. A clue for understanding the function of the APC protein

Waltraut Friedl; Stephanie Meuschel; Reiner Caspari; Christof Lamberti; Stefan Krieger; Marlies Sengteller; Peter Propping

The identification of germline mutations in a large number of clinically well-characterised patients with familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) has allowed the unravelling of several genotype-phenotype relationships that can now be interpreted in the light of the structure and functional domains of the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) protein. An attenuated phenotype has been found to be associated with mutations at the 5′ end of the gene, while a severe clinical expression was found in patients with the most common mutation at codon 1309. So far, only few mutations in the 3′ half of the gene have been published. We report on two families with a rather mild phenotype due to a frameshift mutation at codon 1597. These families may represent a clue for defining a 5′ border for the occurrence of a second region of attenuated FAP that is localised in the 3′ part of the APC gene. We propose a model to explain the relationship between the severity of the disease and the size of the mutant APC protein.


International Journal of Cancer | 2003

Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer: frequent occurrence of large genomic deletions in MSH2 and MLH1 genes.

Yaping Wang; Waltraut Friedl; Christof Lamberti; Matthias Jungck; Micaela Mathiak; Constanze Pagenstecher; Peter Propping; Elisabeth Mangold

Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is often caused by a deficiency in DNA mismatch repair. By using conventional methods of mutation analysis, point mutations in the DNA mismatch repair genes MSH2 and MLH1 have been detected in up to 64% of patients suspected of HNPCC. However, large genomic deletions cannot be detected by these methods. In our study, we applied a semiquantitative multiplex PCR to detect the proportion of large deletions in patients meeting the Bethesda criteria whose tumours exhibited microsatellite instability (MSI). Of 368 unrelated patients, 180 exhibited MSI. In these patients, 68 disease‐causing point mutations (38%) had previously been detected in the MSH2 and MLH1 genes by SSCP, heteroduplex analysis or DHPLC followed by direct sequencing. The remaining 112 patients (including 24 patients with rare missense or other unclarified variants) were examined for large deletions. We identified deletions in 19 patients (10.6%); 11/19 (58%) deletions were located in MSH2 and 8/19 (42%) in MLH1, respectively. The size of deletions ranged from 1 exon to a deletion of a whole gene. Five breakpoints of deletions were sequenced; Alu‐repetitive elements were involved in all of them. In patients meeting the Amsterdam criteria the proportion of large deletions was 12.6%. A similar proportion of deletions was found in the group of patients with a positive family history for colorectal cancer and MSI tumours, not meeting the Amsterdam criteria. The results of our study suggest that large genomic deletions in both MSH2 and MLH1 genes play a considerable role in the pathogenesis of HNPCC and should be part of the routine HNPCC mutation detection protocols.


Human Genetics | 1996

Is the mismatch repair deficient type of Muir-Torre syndrome confined to mutations in the hMSH2 gene?

Roland Kruse; Christof Lamberti; Yaping Wang; Corina Ruelfs; Alexandra Bruns; Clemens Esche; Percy Lehmann; Thomas Ruzicka; Arno Rütten; Waltraut Friedl; Peter Propping

Abstract The Muir-Torre syndrome (MTS) is a rare autosomal-dominant condition characterized by the occurrence of sebaceous skin lesions and internal tumours in a patient. It has been demonstrated that at least a subgroup of MTS exhibits clinical and molecular genetic features of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, including microsatellite instability in skin and visceral tumours, because of mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes. We have identified germline mutations in the hMSH2 gene in two unrelated MTS patients ascertained because of their skin tumours. Our results, together with published MTS cases, support the hypothesis that MTS with its characteristic skin lesions is confined to mutations in the hMSH2 gene.


Digestion | 2006

Frequency of Hereditary Non-Polyposis Colorectal Cancer among Unselected Patients with Colorectal Cancer in Germany

Christof Lamberti; E. Mangold; C. Pagenstecher; Matthias Jungck; D. Schwering; M. Bollmann; J. Vogel; D. Kindermann; R. Nikorowitsch; Nicolaus Friedrichs; B. Schneider; F. Houshdaran; I.G.H. Schmidt-Wolf; W. Friedl; Peter Propping; Tilman Sauerbruch; Reinhard Büttner; Micaela Mathiak

Introduction: Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) is a major form of familial colorectal cancer (CRC). It is diagnosed when either the Amsterdam criteria (AC) are fulfilled or mutations in one of the mismatch repair (MMR) genes have been identified. This project aims at estimating the proportion of HNPCC among unselected patients with CRC. Patients and Methods: During a period of 2 years, a total of 351 non-selected patients with CRC were registered prospectively. 92 patients met the Bethesda criteria (9 of them fulfilled the AC) and 259 did not. 348 tumours were examined for microsatellite instability (MSI) and expression of MMR proteins. Results: MSI-H and MSI-L were identified in 17 and 6%, respectively. Loss of MSH2 or MLH1 was found in 1.5 and 8.8%, respectively. Based on the results of tumour tissue analyses, 80 patients with MSI and/or loss of MSH2 or MLH1 expression were identified as candidates for germline mutation screening. DNA of 40/80 patients was available. These patients were screened for MSH2 and MLH1 mutations; 19/40 patients with MSI and normal MSH2 or MLH1 expression were screened for mutations in MSH6. Three patients had relevant MMR gene mutations and six variants of unknown functional relevance were detected. Conclusions: After adjusting for the cases not evaluable for germline mutations, 1.7% of the CRC patients had HNPCC proven by molecular genetics.


Human Heredity | 1998

A Novel Missense Mutation in the DNA Mismatch Repair Gene hMLH1 Present among East Asians but Not among Europeans

Yaping Wang; Waltraut Friedl; Christof Lamberti; Markus M. Nöthen; Roland Kruse; Peter Propping

In a search for germline mutations in the DNA mismatch repair genes hMSH2 and hMLH1 in Chinese patients with colorectal cancer we identified a novel missense mutation (V384D) in exon 12 of the hMLH1 gene in 4 out of 26 individuals. This mutation had not been observed in any of 109 German patients who either fulfill the clinical criteria of hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer or had developed colorectal cancer at an early age. In a second series of experiments, DNA samples of 80 healthy Japanese and 100 healthy Germans were examined for the presence of the V384D mutation. It was observed in 4 Japanese, but in none of the German individuals. Thus, the V384D mutation seems to be confined to the East-Asian population. Since this missense mutation occurs at a less conserved region of the hMLH1 gene, it may represent a nonfunctional polymorphism. However, a role in the pathogenesis of colorectal cancer cannot be ruled out from the present study.


Pharmacogenetics | 2002

Arylamine N-acetyltransferase type 2 and glutathione S-transferases M1 and T1 polymorphisms in familial adenomatous polyposis

Christof Lamberti; Matthias Jungck; Michael Laarmann; Michael Knapp; Reiner Caspari; Waltraut Friedl; Tilman Sauerbruch; Peter Propping; Roland Kruse

Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP) exhibits a variable phenotype even in carriers of the same adenomatous polyposis coli germline mutation. Xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes such as N-acetyltransferases (NATs) and glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) were reported to modify the individual risk for colorectal cancer. We examined whether the polymorphisms of the NAT2, GSTM1, and GSTT1 enzymes affect age at diagnosis of first colorectal adenomas or extracolonic manifestations in 411 FAP patients. Neither age at diagnosis of colorectal adenomas nor occurrence of extra-intestinal tumors differed significantly between genotypes at the NAT2 and GSTM1 loci, whereas GSTT1 polymorphism showed an uncertain association with extra-intestinal manifestations. Combinations of supposed at risk genotypes of the three enzymes showed no significant differences either. Thus, NAT2, GSTM1, or GSTT1 are unlikely to modify the disease phenotype in FAP patients.


Human Genetics | 1997

Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer: causative role of a germline missense mutation in the hMLH1 gene confirmed by the independent occurrence of the same somatic mutation in tumour tissue.

Yaping Wang; Waltraut Friedl; Christof Lamberti; Corina Ruelfs; Roland Kruse; Peter Propping

Abstract Evaluation of the causative role of germline mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer (HNPCC) families can be difficult. Whereas nonsense, frameshift or splice-site mutations are presumed to lead to dysfunctional gene products and thus are generally considered to be causative, the evaluation of missense mutations often remains uncertain. We observed a novel germline mutation in the hMLH1 gene (His→Pro at codon 329) in an HNPCC family. The same missense mutation also occurred as a somatic event in the colonic tumours of two other HNPCC patients who had germline mutations at different sites of the hMLH1gene. Thus, the H329P mutation present in the germline can be considered as having an aetiological role in this HNPCC family.


Archive | 2001

Famlliäre adenomatöse Polyposis

Waltraut Friedl; Christof Lamberti

Die farniliare adenomatose Polyposis (FAP; OM1M *175100) ist eine autosomal-dominant erbliche Disposition zu multiplen, oft bis zu mehr eren tausend kolorektalen Adenomen sowie zu verschiedenen extrakolonischen Manifestat ionen. FAP-Patienten haben das bislang groste Risiko, an einem kolorekta len Karzinom zu erkranken. Die regelmafsigen Vorsorgeunt ersuchungen und die Weiterentwicklung der chirurgischen Techniken emoglichen heute bei dieser Patientengruppe eine effiziente Karzinomprophylaxe.


Case Reports | 2010

Massive hypercoagulable state despite full-dose anticoagulant treatment in a patient with occult malignancy: considerations concerning chemotherapy without definitive diagnosis.

Kathrin Ehren; Christof Lamberti; Bernd Poetzsch; Michael Majores; Katharina Strach; Tilman Sauerbruch; Jan-Christian Wasmuth

A 55-year-old female patient presented with recurrent deep venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism while on oral anticoagulant treatment using the vitamin K antagonist phenprocoumon. Hypercoagulable state was regarded to be paraneoplastic, but no underlying malignancy could be identified despite extensive screening for cancer, including gastroscopy and colonoscopy, a bone marrow biopsy, thoracoabdominal CT scans with subsequent biopsies of possibly malignant findings, octreotide scintigraphy, skeletal scintigraphy and gynaecological screening. In the course of her hospital stay she developed progressive right cardiac insufficiency due to the formation of new thromboses despite aggressive anticoagulant treatment and died of right-sided heart failure. The autopsy showed a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma in the middle lobe of the right lung. In addition, pulmonary lymphangiosis carcinomatosa, pleural and pericardial carcinosis, and lymph node metastases and osteoblastic vertebral body metastases were shown.

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Roland Kruse

University of Düsseldorf

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