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Dive into the research topics where Dagmar Wieczorek is active.

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Featured researches published by Dagmar Wieczorek.


The Lancet | 2012

Range of genetic mutations associated with severe non-syndromic sporadic intellectual disability: an exome sequencing study

Anita Rauch; Dagmar Wieczorek; Elisabeth Graf; Thomas Wieland; Sabine Endele; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Beate Albrecht; Deborah Bartholdi; Jasmin Beygo; Nataliya Di Donato; Andreas Dufke; Kirsten Cremer; Maja Hempel; Denise Horn; Juliane Hoyer; Pascal Joset; Albrecht Röpke; Ute Moog; Angelika Riess; Christian Thiel; Andreas Tzschach; Antje Wiesener; Eva Wohlleber; Christiane Zweier; Arif B. Ekici; Alexander M. Zink; Andreas Rump; Christa Meisinger; Harald Grallert; Heinrich Sticht

BACKGROUND The genetic cause of intellectual disability in most patients is unclear because of the absence of morphological clues, information about the position of such genes, and suitable screening methods. Our aim was to identify de-novo variants in individuals with sporadic non-syndromic intellectual disability. METHODS In this study, we enrolled children with intellectual disability and their parents from ten centres in Germany and Switzerland. We compared exome sequences between patients and their parents to identify de-novo variants. 20 children and their parents from the KORA Augsburg Diabetes Family Study were investigated as controls. FINDINGS We enrolled 51 participants from the German Mental Retardation Network. 45 (88%) participants in the case group and 14 (70%) in the control group had de-novo variants. We identified 87 de-novo variants in the case group, with an exomic mutation rate of 1·71 per individual per generation. In the control group we identified 24 de-novo variants, which is 1·2 events per individual per generation. More participants in the case group had loss-of-function variants than in the control group (20/51 vs 2/20; p=0·022), suggesting their contribution to disease development. 16 patients carried de-novo variants in known intellectual disability genes with three recurrently mutated genes (STXBP1, SYNGAP1, and SCN2A). We deemed at least six loss-of-function mutations in six novel genes to be disease causing. We also identified several missense alterations with potential pathogenicity. INTERPRETATION After exclusion of copy-number variants, de-novo point mutations and small indels are associated with severe, sporadic non-syndromic intellectual disability, accounting for 45-55% of patients with high locus heterogeneity. Autosomal recessive inheritance seems to contribute little in the outbred population investigated. The large number of de-novo variants in known intellectual disability genes is only partially attributable to known non-specific phenotypes. Several patients did not meet the expected syndromic manifestation, suggesting a strong bias in present clinical syndrome descriptions. FUNDING German Ministry of Education and Research, European Commission 7th Framework Program, and Swiss National Science Foundation.


Nature | 2011

Deep sequencing reveals 50 novel genes for recessive cognitive disorders

Hossein Najmabadi; Hao Hu; Masoud Garshasbi; Tomasz Zemojtel; Seyedeh Sedigheh Abedini; Wei Chen; Masoumeh Hosseini; Farkhondeh Behjati; Stefan A. Haas; Payman Jamali; Agnes Zecha; Marzieh Mohseni; Lucia Püttmann; Leyla Nouri Vahid; Corinna Jensen; Lia Abbasi Moheb; Melanie Bienek; Farzaneh Larti; Ines Mueller; Robert Weissmann; Hossein Darvish; Klaus Wrogemann; Valeh Hadavi; Bettina Lipkowitz; Sahar Esmaeeli-Nieh; Dagmar Wieczorek; Roxana Kariminejad; Saghar Ghasemi Firouzabadi; Monika Cohen; Zohreh Fattahi

Common diseases are often complex because they are genetically heterogeneous, with many different genetic defects giving rise to clinically indistinguishable phenotypes. This has been amply documented for early-onset cognitive impairment, or intellectual disability, one of the most complex disorders known and a very important health care problem worldwide. More than 90 different gene defects have been identified for X-chromosome-linked intellectual disability alone, but research into the more frequent autosomal forms of intellectual disability is still in its infancy. To expedite the molecular elucidation of autosomal-recessive intellectual disability, we have now performed homozygosity mapping, exon enrichment and next-generation sequencing in 136 consanguineous families with autosomal-recessive intellectual disability from Iran and elsewhere. This study, the largest published so far, has revealed additional mutations in 23 genes previously implicated in intellectual disability or related neurological disorders, as well as single, probably disease-causing variants in 50 novel candidate genes. Proteins encoded by several of these genes interact directly with products of known intellectual disability genes, and many are involved in fundamental cellular processes such as transcription and translation, cell-cycle control, energy metabolism and fatty-acid synthesis, which seem to be pivotal for normal brain development and function.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Germline KRAS and BRAF mutations in cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome

Tetsuya Niihori; Yoko Aoki; Yoko Narumi; Giovanni Neri; Hélène Cavé; Alain Verloes; Nobuhiko Okamoto; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Dagmar Wieczorek; Maria Ines Kavamura; Kenji Kurosawa; Hirofumi Ohashi; Louise C. Wilson; Delphine Héron; Dominique Bonneau; Giuseppina Corona; Tadashi Kaname; Kenji Naritomi; Clarisse Baumann; Naomichi Matsumoto; Kumi Kato; Shigeo Kure; Yoichi Matsubara

Cardio-facio-cutaneous (CFC) syndrome is characterized by a distinctive facial appearance, heart defects and mental retardation. It phenotypically overlaps with Noonan and Costello syndrome, which are caused by mutations in PTPN11 and HRAS, respectively. In 43 individuals with CFC, we identified two heterozygous KRAS mutations in three individuals and eight BRAF mutations in 16 individuals, suggesting that dysregulation of the RAS-RAF-ERK pathway is a common molecular basis for the three related disorders.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Mutations in GRIN2A and GRIN2B encoding regulatory subunits of NMDA receptors cause variable neurodevelopmental phenotypes

Sabine Endele; Georg Rosenberger; Kirsten Geider; Bernt Popp; Ceyhun Tamer; Irina Stefanova; Mathieu Milh; Fanny Kortüm; Angela Fritsch; Friederike K. Pientka; Yorck Hellenbroich; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Jürgen Kohlhase; Ute Moog; Gudrun Rappold; Anita Rauch; Hans-Hilger Ropers; Sarah von Spiczak; Holger Tönnies; Nathalie Villeneuve; Laurent Villard; Bernhard Zabel; Martin Zenker; Bodo Laube; André Reis; Dagmar Wieczorek; Lionel Van Maldergem; Kerstin Kutsche

N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors mediate excitatory neurotransmission in the mammalian brain. Two glycine-binding NR1 subunits and two glutamate-binding NR2 subunits each form highly Ca2+-permeable cation channels which are blocked by extracellular Mg2+ in a voltage-dependent manner. Either GRIN2B or GRIN2A, encoding the NMDA receptor subunits NR2B and NR2A, was found to be disrupted by chromosome translocation breakpoints in individuals with mental retardation and/or epilepsy. Sequencing of GRIN2B in 468 individuals with mental retardation revealed four de novo mutations: a frameshift, a missense and two splice-site mutations. In another cohort of 127 individuals with idiopathic epilepsy and/or mental retardation, we discovered a GRIN2A nonsense mutation in a three-generation family. In a girl with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy, we identified the de novo GRIN2A mutation c.1845C>A predicting the amino acid substitution p.N615K. Analysis of NR1-NR2AN615K (NR2A subunit with the p.N615K alteration) receptor currents revealed a loss of the Mg2+ block and a decrease in Ca2+ permeability. Our findings suggest that disturbances in the neuronal electrophysiological balance during development result in variable neurological phenotypes depending on which NR2 subunit of NMDA receptors is affected.


Human Genetics | 1997

Distinct spectrum of CFTR gene mutations in congenital absence of vas deferens

Thilo Dörk; Bernd Dworniczak; Christa Aulehla-Scholz; Dagmar Wieczorek; Ingolf Böhm; Antonia Mayerová; Hans H. Seydewitz; Eberhard Nieschlag; Dieter Meschede; Jürgen Horst; Hans-Jürgen Pander; Herbert Sperling; Felix Ratjen; Eberhard Passarge; Jörg Schmidtke; Manfred Stuhrmann

Abstract Congenital absence of the vas deferens (CAVD) is a frequent cause for obstructive azoospermia and accounts for 1%–2% of male infertility. A high incidence of mutations of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene has recently been reported in males with CAVD. We have investigated a cohort of 106 German patients with congenital bilateral or unilateral absence of the vas deferens for mutations in the coding region, flanking intron regions and promotor sequences of the CFTR gene. Of the CAVD patients, 75% carried CFTR mutations or disease-associated CFTR variants, such as the “5T” allele, on both chromosomes. The distribution of mutation genotypes clearly differed from that observed in cystic fibrosis. None of the CAVD patients was homozygous for ΔF508 and none was compound heterozygous for ΔF508 and a nonsense or frameshift mutation. Instead, homozygosity was found for a few mild missense or splicing mutations, and the majority of CAVD mutations were missense substitutions. Twenty-one German CAVD patients were compound heterozygous for ΔF508 and R117H, which was the most frequent CAVD genotype in our study group. Haplotype analysis indicated a common origin for R117H in our population, whereas another frequent CAVD mutation, viz. the “5T allele” was a recurrent mutation on different intragenic haplotypes and multiple ethnic backgrounds. We identified a total of 46 different mutations and variants, of which 15 mutations have not previously been reported. Thirteen novel missense mutations and one unique amino-acid insertion may be confined to the CAVD phenotype. A few splice or missense variants, such as F508C or 1716 G→A, are proposed here as possible candidate CAVD mutations with an apparently reduced penetrance. Clinical examination of patients with CFTR mutations on both chromosomes revealed elevated sweat chloride concentrations and discrete symptoms of respiratory disease in a subset of patients. Thus, our collaborative study shows that CAVD without renal malformation is a primary genital form of cystic fibrosis in the vast majority of German patients and links the particular expression of clinical symptoms in CAVD with a distinct subset of CFTR mutation genotypes.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Heterozygous submicroscopic inversions involving olfactory receptor-gene clusters mediate the recurrent t(4;8)(p16;p23) translocation.

Sabrina Giglio; Vladimiro Calvari; Giuliana Gregato; Giorgio Gimelli; Silvia Camanini; Roberto Giorda; Angela Ragusa; Silvana Guerneri; Angelo Selicorni; Marcus Stumm; Holger Tönnies; Mario Ventura; Marcella Zollino; Giovanni Neri; John C K Barber; Dagmar Wieczorek; Mariano Rocchi; Orsetta Zuffardi

The t(4;8)(p16;p23) translocation, in either the balanced form or the unbalanced form, has been reported several times. Taking into consideration the fact that this translocation may be undetected in routine cytogenetics, we find that it may be the most frequent translocation after t(11q;22q), which is the most common reciprocal translocation in humans. Case subjects with der(4) have the Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome, whereas case subjects with der(8) show a milder spectrum of dysmorphic features. Two pairs of the many olfactory receptor (OR)-gene clusters are located close to each other, on both 4p16 and 8p23. Previously, we demonstrated that an inversion polymorphism of the OR region at 8p23 plays a crucial role in the generation of chromosomal imbalances through unusual meiotic exchanges. These findings prompted us to investigate whether OR-related inversion polymorphisms at 4p16 and 8p23 might also be involved in the origin of the t(4;8)(p16;p23) translocation. In seven case subjects (five of whom both represented de novo cases and were of maternal origin), including individuals with unbalanced and balanced translocations, we demonstrated that the breakpoints fell within the 4p and 8p OR-gene clusters. FISH experiments with appropriate bacterial-artificial-chromosome probes detected heterozygous submicroscopic inversions of both 4p and 8p regions in all the five mothers of the de novo case subjects. Heterozygous inversions on 4p16 and 8p23 were detected in 12.5% and 26% of control subjects, respectively, whereas 2.5% of them were scored as doubly heterozygous. These novel data emphasize the importance of segmental duplications and large-scale genomic polymorphisms in the evolution and pathology of the human genome.


Nature Genetics | 2011

CEP152 is a genome maintenance protein disrupted in Seckel syndrome

Ersan Kalay; Gökhan Yigit; Yakup Aslan; Karen E. Brown; Esther Pohl; Louise S. Bicknell; Hülya Kayserili; Yun Li; Beyhan Tüysüz; Gudrun Nürnberg; Wieland Kiess; Manfred Koegl; Ingelore Baessmann; Kurtulus Buruk; Bayram Toraman; Saadettin Kayipmaz; Sibel Kul; Mevlit Ikbal; Daniel J. Turner; Martin S. Taylor; Jan Aerts; Carol Scott; Karen Milstein; Hélène Dollfus; Dagmar Wieczorek; Han G. Brunner; Andrew P. Jackson; Anita Rauch; Peter Nürnberg; Ahmet Karagüzel

Functional impairment of DNA damage response pathways leads to increased genomic instability. Here we describe the centrosomal protein CEP152 as a new regulator of genomic integrity and cellular response to DNA damage. Using homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing, we identified CEP152 mutations in Seckel syndrome and showed that impaired CEP152 function leads to accumulation of genomic defects resulting from replicative stress through enhanced activation of ATM signaling and increased H2AX phosphorylation.


Nature Genetics | 2011

De novo nonsense mutations in ASXL1 cause Bohring-Opitz syndrome

Alexander Hoischen; Bregje W.M. van Bon; Benjamín Rodríguez-Santiago; Christian Gilissen; Lisenka E.L.M. Vissers; Petra de Vries; Irene M. Janssen; Bart van Lier; Rob Hastings; Sarah F. Smithson; Ruth Newbury-Ecob; Susanne Kjaergaard; Judith A. Goodship; Ruth McGowan; Deborah Bartholdi; Anita Rauch; Maarit Peippo; Jan M Cobben; Dagmar Wieczorek; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Joris A. Veltman; Han G. Brunner; Bert B.A. de Vries

Bohring-Opitz syndrome is characterized by severe intellectual disability, distinctive facial features and multiple congenital malformations. We sequenced the exomes of three individuals with Bohring-Opitz syndrome and in each identified heterozygous de novo nonsense mutations in ASXL1, which is required for maintenance of both activation and silencing of Hox genes. In total, 7 out of 13 subjects with a Bohring-Opitz phenotype had de novo ASXL1 mutations, suggesting that the syndrome is genetically heterogeneous.


Science | 2011

Mutations in U4atac snRNA, a Component of the Minor Spliceosome, in the Developmental Disorder MOPD I

Huiling He; Sandya Liyanarachchi; Keiko Akagi; Rebecca Nagy; Jingfeng Li; Rosemary C. Dietrich; Wei Li; Nikhil Sebastian; Bernard Wen; Baozhong Xin; Jarnail Singh; Pearlly S. Yan; Hansjuerg Alder; Eric Haan; Dagmar Wieczorek; Beate Albrecht; Erik G. Puffenberger; Heng Wang; Judith A. Westman; Richard A. Padgett; David E. Symer; Albert de la Chapelle

Minor RNA splicing defects can cause a major human developmental disorder. Small nuclear RNAs (snRNAs) are essential factors in messenger RNA splicing. By means of homozygosity mapping and deep sequencing, we show that a gene encoding U4atac snRNA, a component of the minor U12-dependent spliceosome, is mutated in individuals with microcephalic osteodysplastic primordial dwarfism type I (MOPD I), a severe developmental disorder characterized by extreme intrauterine growth retardation and multiple organ abnormalities. Functional assays showed that mutations (30G>A, 51G>A, 55G>A, and 111G>A) associated with MOPD I cause defective U12-dependent splicing. Endogenous U12-dependent but not U2-dependent introns were found to be poorly spliced in MOPD I patient fibroblast cells. The introduction of wild-type U4atac snRNA into MOPD I cells enhanced U12-dependent splicing. These results illustrate the critical role of minor intron splicing in human development.


Nature Genetics | 2011

Mutations in genes encoding subunits of RNA polymerases I and III cause Treacher Collins syndrome.

Johannes G. Dauwerse; Jill Dixon; Saskia Seland; Claudia Ruivenkamp; Arie van Haeringen; Lies H. Hoefsloot; Dorien J.M. Peters; Agnes Clement De Boers; Cornelia Daumer-Haas; Robert Maiwald; Christiane Zweier; Bronwyn Kerr; Ana M. Cobo; Joaquín F. Toral; A. Jeannette M. Hoogeboom; Dietmar R. Lohmann; Ute Hehr; Michael J. Dixon; Martijn H. Breuning; Dagmar Wieczorek

We identified a deletion of a gene encoding a subunit of RNA polymerases I and III, POLR1D, in an individual with Treacher Collins syndrome (TCS). Subsequently, we detected 20 additional heterozygous mutations of POLR1D in 252 individuals with TCS. Furthermore, we discovered mutations in both alleles of POLR1C in three individuals with TCS. These findings identify two additional genes involved in TCS, confirm the genetic heterogeneity of TCS and support the hypothesis that TCS is a ribosomopathy.

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Beate Albrecht

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Bernhard Horsthemke

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Martin Zenker

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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