Christoph Lengauer
Heidelberg University
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Featured researches published by Christoph Lengauer.
Archive | 2001
Prasad V. Jallepalli; Irene Waizenegger; Fred Bunz; Sabine Langer; Michael R. Speicher; Jan-Michael Peters; Kenneth W. Kinzler; Bert Vogelstein; Christoph Lengauer
Abnormalities of chromosome number are the most common genetic aberrations in cancer. The mechanisms regulating the fidelity of mitotic chromosome transmission in mammalian cells are therefore of great interest. Here we show that human cells without an hSecurin gene lose chromosomes at a high frequency. This loss was linked to abnormal anaphases during which cells underwent repetitive unsuccessful attempts to segregate their chromosomes. The abnormal mitoses were associated with biochemical defects in the activation of separin, the sister-separating protease, rendering it unable to cleave the cohesin subunit Scc1 efficiently. These results illuminate the function of mammalian securin and show that it is essential for the maintenance of euploidy.
Human Genetics | 1990
Christoph Lengauer; Harold Riethman; Thomas Cremer
SummarySpecific amplification of human sequences of up to several kb length has recently been accomplished in man-hamster and man-mouse somatic hybrid cell DNA by IRS-PCR (interspersed repetitive sequence — polymerase chain reaction). This approach is based on oligonucleotide primers that anneal specifically to human Alu- or L1-sequences and allows the amplification of any human sequences located between adequately spaced, inverted Alu- or L1-blocks. Here, we demonstrate that probe pools generated from two somatic hybrid cell lines by Alu- and L1-PCR can be used for chromosome painting in normal human lymphocyte metaphase spreads by chromosomal in situ suppression (CISS-) hybridization. The painted chromosomes and chromosome subregions directly represent the content of normal and deleted human chromosomes in the two somatic hybrid cell lines. The combination of IRS-PCR and CISS-hybridization will facilitate and improve the cytogenetic analysis of somatic hybrid cell panels, in particular, in cases where structurally aberrant human chromosomes or human chromosome segments involved in interspecies translocations cannot be unequivocally identified by classical banding techniques. Moreover, this new approach will help to generate probe pools for the specific delineation of human chromosome subregions for use in cytogenetic diagnostics and research without the necessity of cloning.
Chromosome Research | 1994
Johannes Wienberg; Anna Jauch; H. J. Lüdecke; G. Senger; Bernhard Horsthemke; Uwe Claussen; Thomas Cremer; Norbert Arnold; Christoph Lengauer
Fluorescencein situ hybridization (FISH) of microlibraries established from distinct chromosome subregions can test the evolutionary conservation of chromosome bands as well as chromosomal rearrangements that occurred during primate evolution and will help to clarify phylogenetic relationships. We used a DNA library established by microdissection and microcloning from the entire long arm of human chromosome 2 for fluorescencein situ hybridization and comparative mapping of the chromosomes of human, great apes (Pan troglodytes, Pan paniscus, Gorilla gorilla, Pongo pygmaeus) and Old World monkeys (Macaca fuscata andCercopithecus aethiops). Inversions were found in the pericentric region of the primate chromosome 2p homologs in great apes, and the hybridization pattern demonstrates the known phylogenetically derived telomere fusion in the line that leads to human chromosome 2. The hybridization of the 2q microlibrary to chromosomes of Old World monkeys gave a different pattern from that in the gorilla and the orang-utan, but a pattern similar to that of chimpanzees. This suggests convergence of chromosomal rearrangements in different phylogenetic lines.
Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 1991
Christoph Lengauer; A. Eckelt; A. Weith; N. Endlich; N. Ponelies; Peter Lichter; Karl Otto Greulich; Thomas Cremer
Painting of defined chromosomal regions provides a powerful tool for cytogenetic analyses. Here, we demonstrate that chromosomal in situ suppression (CISS)-hybridization of DNA libraries derived by microcloning laser-microdissected chromosomal regions can be applied to achieve this goal. As an example, we used unbanded metaphase spreads from a female patient carrying a balanced translocation. t(1;7)(1qter----1p36::7q11----7qter). Fragments from the long arms of 130 translocation chromosomes were microdissected. After microcloning, human inserts with an average size of about 3 kb were pooled from 400 recombinant bacteriophage DNA clones and used as a complex probe set in CISS-hybridization experiments. This resulted in painting of the translocation chromosome along the region 7q35 to 1p31. Painted chromosomal subregions in normal chromosomes 1 and 7 were consistent with this finding. This approach may be used to perform painting of any chromosome regions for which microlibraries can be established. Possible applications include the definition of marker chromosomes in clinical and tumor cytogenetics and studies of chromosomal evolution, as well as studies of nuclear chromosome topography in animal and plant species.
Human Genetics | 1993
Susanne Popp; Anna Jauch; Detlev Schindler; Michael R. Speicher; Christoph Lengauer; Helen Donis-Keller; Harold Riethman; Thomas Cremer
The identification of marker chromosomes in clinical and tumor cytogenetics by chromosome banding analysis can create problems. In this study, we present a strategy to define minute chromosomal rearrangements by multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with “whole chromosome painting” probes derived from chromosome-specific DNA libraries and Alu-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products of various region-specific yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones. To demonstrate the usefulness of this strategy for the characterization of chromosome rearrangements unidentifiable by banding techniques, an 8p+ marker chromosome with two extra bands present in the karyotype of a child with multiple anomalies, malformations, and severe mental retardation was investigated. A series of seven-color FISH experiments with sets of fluorochrome-labeled DNA library probes from flow-sorted chromosomes demonstrated that the additional segment on 8p+ was derived from chromosome 6. For a more detailed characterization of the marker chromosome, three-color FISH experiments with library probes specific to chromosomes 6 and 8 were performed in combination with newly established telomeric and subtelomeric YAC clones from 6q25, 6p23, and 8p23. These experiments demonstrated a trisomy 6pter→6p22 and a monosomy 8pter→8p23 in the patient. The present limitations for a broad application of this strategy and its possible improvements are discussed.
Human Genetics | 1991
Peter H. Vogt; R. Keil; M. Köhler; Christoph Lengauer; D. Lewe; G. Lewe
SummaryAn experimental approach towards the molecular analysis of the male fertility function, located in interval 6 of the human Y chromosome, is presented. This approach is not based on the knowledge of any gene product but on the assumption that the functional DNA structure of male fertility genes, evolutionary conserved with their position on the Y chromosome, may contain an evolutionary conserved frame structure or at least conserved sequence elements. We tested this hypothesis by using dhMiF1, a fertility gene sequence of the Y chromosome of Drosophila hydei, as a screening probe on a pool of cloned human Y-DNA sequences. We were able to select 10 human Y-DNA sequences of which 7 could be mapped to Y interval 6 (the pY6H sequence family). Since the only fertility gene of the human Y chromosome is mapped to the same Y interval, our working hypothesis seems to be strongly supported. Most interesting in this respect is the isolation of the Y-specific repetitive pY6H65 sequence. The pY6H65 locus extends to a length of at least 300 kb in Y interval 6 and has a locus-specific repetitive sequence organization, reminiscent of the functional DNA structure of Y chromosomal fertility genes of Drosophila. We identified the simple sequence family (CA)n as one sequence element conserved between the Drosophila dhMiFi fertility gene sequence and the homologous human Y-DNA sequences.
Human Evolution | 1991
Christoph Lengauer; Johannes Wienberg; Thomas Cremer; H. J. Lüdecke; B. Horsthemke
A DNA-library established from microdissected bands 8q23 to 8q24.1 of normal human chromosomes 8 (Lüdecke et al., 1989) was used as a probe for chromosomal in situ suppression (CISS-) hybridization to metaphase chromosomes of man and primates including Hylobates lar and Macaca fuscata. Comparative band mapping as first applied in this study shows the specific visualization of a single subchromosomal region in all three species and thus demonstrates that synteny of the bulk sequences of a specific human chromosome subregion has been conserved for more than 20 million years.
Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2001
Sabine Langer; I. Jentsch; R. Gangnus; Hai Yan; Christoph Lengauer; Michael R. Speicher
Recent evidence suggests that haplotype analysis is essential in recognizing genetic factors involved in the tendency toward a particular disease or pharmacogenetic phenotype, as well as to identify genes involved in multigenic disorders. Because of the increasing need for efficient haplotype tests, a new hybrid system, called conversion technology, was developed. Conversion technology aims at converting the diploid chromosome content into a haploid state so that hybrids contain a single copy of any desired chromosome. A number of mutations can now be identified easily, as they are no longer obscured by the normal sequence present on the other copy of the chromosome. However, the efficient use of this hybrid system depends on a complete analysis of both human and mouse chromosome complements in order to assess the stability of the hybrid cells and to accurately determine their human chromosome content. We describe a new multicolor FISH-based method capable of analyzing both genomes simultaneously in a single hybridization. This new technique should become an instrumental part of inexpensive, reliable haplotype tests.
Genetic Analysis: Biomolecular Engineering | 1994
Christoph Lengauer; Traudl Henn; Patrick Onyango; Fiona Francis; Hans Lehrach; Andreas Weith
A series of 80 microclone probes derived from the chromosomal region 1p36 was used to isolate corresponding clones from the ICRF human P1 library (see Francis et al., this issue). Hybridization screenings were performed using probe pools on high-density filter grids. A total of 87 P1 clones specific for 1p36 were isolated. This large-scale approach allowed a detailed evaluation of the complexity, quality, and utility of this library. The isolated P1 clones were used both for size determination by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and as probes for fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis. FISH of P1 clones is shown to be both easy and efficient to perform on metaphase chromosomes and interphase nuclei. This observation is expected to reveal new avenues for diagnosis of disease-related chromosomal changes. The use of P1 clones as a tool in clinical and tumor interphase cytogenetics is discussed and compared with FISH data of other long insert clones such as cosmids and YAC clones.
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1993
Masafumi Taniwaki; Michael R. Speicher; Christoph Lengauer; Anna Jauch; Susanne Popp; Thomas Cremer
A patient with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL), M5b according to French-American-British (FAB) classification, showed monosomy 16, an extra 1p-, and a 21q+. These derivative chromosomes could not be defined by GTG-banding. For better characterization, we performed two-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) experiments applying DNA libraries from sorted human chromosomes, chromosome-specific repetitive probes, and a band-specific YAC-clone. With these FISH studies the karyotype could be characterized as 46,XY, +der(1)t(1;21)(p11;?), -16,der(21)t(16;21) (p11.1;q22).