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Dive into the research topics where Davor Lessel is active.

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Featured researches published by Davor Lessel.


Human Genetics | 2010

WRN mutations in Werner syndrome patients: genomic rearrangements, unusual intronic mutations and ethnic-specific alterations

Katrin Friedrich; Lin Lee; Dru F. Leistritz; Gudrun Nürnberg; Bidisha Saha; Fuki M. Hisama; Daniel Eyman; Davor Lessel; Peter Nürnberg; Chumei Li; María J. Garcia-F-Villalta; Carolien M. Kets; Joerg Schmidtke; Vítor Tedim Cruz; Peter C. van den Akker; Joseph Boak; Dincy Peter; Goli Compoginis; Kivanc Cefle; Sukru Ozturk; Norberto López; Theda Wessel; Martin Poot; P. F. Ippel; Birgit Groff-Kellermann; Holger Hoehn; George M. Martin; Christian Kubisch; Junko Oshima

Werner syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive segmental progeroid syndrome caused by null mutations at the WRN locus, which codes for a member of the RecQ family of DNA helicases. Since 1988, the International Registry of Werner syndrome had enrolled 130 molecularly confirmed WS cases from among 110 worldwide pedigrees. We now report 18 new mutations, including two genomic rearrangements, a deep intronic mutation resulting in a novel exon, a splice consensus mutation leading to utilization of the nearby splice site, and two rare missense mutations. We also review evidence for founder mutations among various ethnic/geographic groups. Founder WRN mutations had been previously reported in Japan and Northern Sardinia. Our Registry now suggests characteristic mutations originated in Morocco, Turkey, The Netherlands and elsewhere.


Nature Genetics | 2014

Mutations in SPRTN cause early onset hepatocellular carcinoma, genomic instability and progeroid features

Davor Lessel; Bruno Vaz; Swagata Halder; Paul J. Lockhart; Ivana Marinović-Terzić; Jaime Lopez-Mosqueda; Melanie Philipp; Joe C H Sim; Katherine R. Smith; Judith Oehler; Elisa Cabrera; Raimundo Freire; Kate Pope; Amsha Nahid; Fiona Norris; Richard J. Leventer; Martin B. Delatycki; Gotthold Barbi; Simon von Ameln; Josef Högel; Marina Degoricija; Regina Fertig; Martin D. Burkhalter; Kay Hofmann; Holger Thiele; Janine Altmüller; Gudrun Nürnberg; Peter Nürnberg; Melanie Bahlo; George M. Martin

Age-related degenerative and malignant diseases represent major challenges for health care systems. Elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying carcinogenesis and age-associated pathologies is thus of growing biomedical relevance. We identified biallelic germline mutations in SPRTN (also called C1orf124 or DVC1) in three patients from two unrelated families. All three patients are affected by a new segmental progeroid syndrome characterized by genomic instability and susceptibility toward early onset hepatocellular carcinoma. SPRTN was recently proposed to have a function in translesional DNA synthesis and the prevention of mutagenesis. Our in vivo and in vitro characterization of identified mutations has uncovered an essential role for SPRTN in the prevention of DNA replication stress during general DNA replication and in replication-related G2/M-checkpoint regulation. In addition to demonstrating the pathogenicity of identified SPRTN mutations, our findings provide a molecular explanation of how SPRTN dysfunction causes accelerated aging and susceptibility toward carcinoma.


Nature Communications | 2014

Chromatin retention of DNA damage sensors DDB2 and XPC through loss of p97 segregase causes genotoxicity

Marjo-Riitta Puumalainen; Davor Lessel; Peter Rüthemann; Nina Kaczmarek; Karin Bachmann; Kristijan Ramadan; Hanspeter Naegeli

DNA damage recognition subunits like DDB2 and XPC protect the human skin from ultraviolet (UV) light-induced genome instability and cancer, as demonstrated by the devastating inherited syndrome xeroderma pigmentosum. Here, we show that the beneficial DNA repair response triggered by these two genome caretakers critically depends on a dynamic spatiotemporal regulation of their homeostasis. The prolonged retention of DDB2 and XPC in chromatin, due to a failure to readily remove both recognition subunits by the ubiquitin-dependent p97/VCP/Cdc48 segregase complex, leads to impaired DNA excision repair of UV lesions. Surprisingly, the ensuing chromosomal aberrations in p97-deficient cells are alleviated by a concomitant down regulation of DDB2 or XPC. Also, genome instability resulting from an excess of DDB2 persisting in UV-irradiated cells is prevented by concurrent p97 over-expression. Our findings demonstrate that DNA damage sensors and repair initiators acquire unexpected genotoxic properties if not controlled by timely extraction from chromatin.


Genome Medicine | 2017

Lessons learned from additional research analyses of unsolved clinical exome cases

Mohammad K. Eldomery; Zeynep Coban-Akdemir; Tamar Harel; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Tomasz Gambin; Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen; Sébastien Küry; Sandra Mercier; Davor Lessel; Jonas Denecke; Wojciech Wiszniewski; Samantha Penney; Pengfei Liu; Weimin Bi; Seema R. Lalani; Christian P. Schaaf; Michael F. Wangler; Carlos A. Bacino; Richard Alan Lewis; Lorraine Potocki; Brett H. Graham; John W. Belmont; Fernando Scaglia; Jordan S. Orange; Shalini N. Jhangiani; Theodore Chiang; Harsha Doddapaneni; Jianhong Hu; Donna M. Muzny; Fan Xia

BackgroundGiven the rarity of most single-gene Mendelian disorders, concerted efforts of data exchange between clinical and scientific communities are critical to optimize molecular diagnosis and novel disease gene discovery.MethodsWe designed and implemented protocols for the study of cases for which a plausible molecular diagnosis was not achieved in a clinical genomics diagnostic laboratory (i.e. unsolved clinical exomes). Such cases were recruited to a research laboratory for further analyses, in order to potentially: (1) accelerate novel disease gene discovery; (2) increase the molecular diagnostic yield of whole exome sequencing (WES); and (3) gain insight into the genetic mechanisms of disease. Pilot project data included 74 families, consisting mostly of parent–offspring trios. Analyses performed on a research basis employed both WES from additional family members and complementary bioinformatics approaches and protocols.ResultsAnalysis of all possible modes of Mendelian inheritance, focusing on both single nucleotide variants (SNV) and copy number variant (CNV) alleles, yielded a likely contributory variant in 36% (27/74) of cases. If one includes candidate genes with variants identified within a single family, a potential contributory variant was identified in a total of ~51% (38/74) of cases enrolled in this pilot study. The molecular diagnosis was achieved in 30/63 trios (47.6%). Besides this, the analysis workflow yielded evidence for pathogenic variants in disease-associated genes in 4/6 singleton cases (66.6%), 1/1 multiplex family involving three affected siblings, and 3/4 (75%) quartet families. Both the analytical pipeline and the collaborative efforts between the diagnostic and research laboratories provided insights that allowed recent disease gene discoveries (PURA, TANGO2, EMC1, GNB5, ATAD3A, and MIPEP) and increased the number of novel genes, defined in this study as genes identified in more than one family (DHX30 and EBF3).ConclusionAn efficient genomics pipeline in which clinical sequencing in a diagnostic laboratory is followed by the detailed reanalysis of unsolved cases in a research environment, supplemented with WES data from additional family members, and subject to adjuvant bioinformatics analyses including relaxed variant filtering parameters in informatics pipelines, can enhance the molecular diagnostic yield and provide mechanistic insights into Mendelian disorders. Implementing these approaches requires collaborative clinical molecular diagnostic and research efforts.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2011

Coronary artery disease in a Werner syndrome‐like form of progeria characterized by low levels of progerin, a splice variant of lamin A

Fuki M. Hisama; Davor Lessel; Dru F. Leistritz; Katrin Friedrich; Kim L. McBride; Matthew Pastore; Gary S. Gottesman; Bidisha Saha; George M. Martin; Christian Kubisch; Junko Oshima

Classical Hutchinson–Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) is caused by LMNA mutations that generate an alternatively spliced form of lamin A, termed progerin. HGPS patients present in early childhood with atherosclerosis and striking features of accelerated aging. We report on two pedigrees of adult‐onset coronary artery disease with progeroid features, who were referred to our International Registry of Werner Syndrome (WS) because of clinical features consistent with the diagnosis. No mutations were identified in the WRN gene that is responsible for WS, among these patients. Instead, we found two novel heterozygous mutations at the junction of exon 10 and intron 11 of the LMNA gene. These mutations resulted in the production of progerin at a level substantially lower than that of HGPS. Our findings indicate that LMNA mutations may result in coronary artery disease presenting in the fourth to sixth decades along with short stature and a progeroid appearance resembling WS. The absence of early‐onset cataracts in this setting should suggest the diagnosis of progeroid laminopathy. This study illustrates the evolving genotype–phenotype relationship between the amount of progerin produced and the age of onset among the spectrum of restrictive dermopathy, HGPS, and atypical forms of WS.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

De Novo Mutations in CHAMP1 Cause Intellectual Disability with Severe Speech Impairment.

Maja Hempel; Kirsten Cremer; Charlotte W. Ockeloen; Klaske D. Lichtenbelt; Johanna C. Herkert; Jonas Denecke; Tobias B. Haack; Alexander M. Zink; Jessica Becker; Eva Wohlleber; Jessika Johannsen; Bader Alhaddad; Rolph Pfundt; Sigrid Fuchs; Dagmar Wieczorek; Tim M. Strom; Koen L.I. van Gassen; Tjitske Kleefstra; Christian Kubisch; Hartmut Engels; Davor Lessel

CHAMP1 encodes a protein with a function in kinetochore-microtubule attachment and in the regulation of chromosome segregation, both of which are known to be important for neurodevelopment. By trio whole-exome sequencing, we have identified de novo deleterious mutations in CHAMP1 in five unrelated individuals affected by intellectual disability with severe speech impairment, motor developmental delay, muscular hypotonia, and similar dysmorphic features including short philtrum and a tented upper and everted lover lip. In addition to two frameshift and one nonsense mutations, we found an identical nonsense mutation, c.1192C>T (p.Arg398*), in two affected individuals. All mutations, if resulting in a stable protein, are predicted to lead to the loss of the functionally important zinc-finger domains in the C terminus of the protein, which regulate CHAMP1 localization to chromosomes and the mitotic spindle, thereby providing a mechanistic understanding for their pathogenicity. We thus establish deleterious de novo mutations in CHAMP1 as a cause of intellectual disability.


Human Mutation | 2015

POLD1 Germline Mutations in Patients Initially Diagnosed with Werner Syndrome.

Davor Lessel; Fuki M. Hisama; Katalin Szakszon; Bidisha Saha; Alexander Barrios Sanjuanelo; Bonnie Anne Salbert; Pamela D. Steele; Jennifer Baldwin; W. Ted Brown; Charles Piussan; Henri Plauchu; Judit Szilvássy; Edit Horkay; Josef Högel; George M. Martin; Alan J. Herr; Junko Oshima; Christian Kubisch

Segmental progeroid syndromes are rare, heterogeneous disorders characterized by signs of premature aging affecting more than one tissue or organ. A prototypic example is the Werner syndrome (WS), caused by biallelic germline mutations in the Werner helicase gene (WRN). While heterozygous lamin A/C (LMNA) mutations are found in a few nonclassical cases of WS, another 10%–15% of patients initially diagnosed with WS do not have mutations in WRN or LMNA. Germline POLD1 mutations were recently reported in five patients with another segmental progeroid disorder: mandibular hypoplasia, deafness, progeroid features syndrome. Here, we describe eight additional patients with heterozygous POLD1 mutations, thereby substantially expanding the characterization of this new example of segmental progeroid disorders. First, we identified POLD1 mutations in patients initially diagnosed with WS. Second, we describe POLD1 mutation carriers without clinically relevant hearing impairment or mandibular underdevelopment, both previously thought to represent obligate diagnostic features. These patients also exhibit a lower incidence of metabolic abnormalities and joint contractures. Third, we document postnatal short stature and premature greying/loss of hair in POLD1 mutation carriers. We conclude that POLD1 germline mutations can result in a variably expressed and probably underdiagnosed segmental progeroid syndrome.


Human Mutation | 2017

WRN Mutation Update: Mutation Spectrum, Patient Registries, and Translational Prospects

Koutaro Yokote; Sirisak Chanprasert; Lin Lee; Katharina Eirich; Minoru Takemoto; Aki Watanabe; Naoko Koizumi; Davor Lessel; Takayasu Mori; Fuki M. Hisama; Paula D. Ladd; Brad Angle; Hagit N. Baris; Kivanc Cefle; Sukru Palanduz; Sukru Ozturk; Antoinette Chateau; Kentaro Deguchi; T.K.M Easwar; Antonio Federico; Amy Fox; Theresa A. Grebe; Beverly N. Hay; Sheela Nampoothiri; Karen Seiter; Elizabeth A. Streeten; Raul E. Piña-Aguilar; G. Poke; Martin Poot; Renata Posmyk

Werner syndrome (WS) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by a constellation of adult onset phenotypes consistent with an acceleration of intrinsic biological aging. It is caused by pathogenic variants in the WRN gene, which encodes a multifunctional nuclear protein with exonuclease and helicase activities. WRN protein is thought to be involved in optimization of various aspects of DNA metabolism, including DNA repair, recombination, replication, and transcription. In this update, we summarize a total of 83 different WRN mutations, including eight previously unpublished mutations identified by the International Registry of Werner Syndrome (Seattle, WA) and the Japanese Werner Consortium (Chiba, Japan), as well as 75 mutations already reported in the literature. The Seattle International Registry recruits patients from all over the world to investigate genetic causes of a wide variety of progeroid syndromes in order to contribute to the knowledge of basic mechanisms of human aging. Given the unusually high prevalence of WS patients and heterozygous carriers in Japan, the major goal of the Japanese Consortium is to develop effective therapies and to establish management guidelines for WS patients in Japan and elsewhere. This review will also discuss potential translational approaches to this disorder, including those currently under investigation.


Carcinogenesis | 2012

Replication of genetic susceptibility loci for testicular germ cell cancer in the Croatian population

Davor Lessel; Marija Gamulin; Tomislav Kuliš; Mohammad R. Toliat; Mislav Grgić; Katrin Friedrich; Renata Žunec; Melita Balija; Peter Nürnberg; Zeljko Kastelan; Josef Högel; Christian Kubisch

Genome-wide association studies in patients with testicular germ-cell tumors (TGCT) from Great Britain and the United States have identified six susceptibility loci in or near biologically plausible candidate genes. However, these loci have not been replicated in an independent European sample. We performed a genetic replication study of previously identified TGCT susceptibility loci in a Croatian case-control sample and performed additional analyses as concerning histological subtypes or tumor staging. We analyzed six single-nucleotide polymorphisms [rs2900333 (ATF7IP), rs210138 (BAK1), rs755383 (DMRT1), rs995030 (KITLG), rs4624820 (SPRY4), and rs4635969 (TERT/CLPTM1L)], each representing one of the published susceptibility loci/genes. Five susceptibility loci were found to be also associated in the Croatian population with P-values between 2.1e-10 (rs995030; odds ratio [OR] 3.08) and 0.01739 (rs4635969; OR 1.37), which remained statistically significant after correction for multiple testing. Although rs2900333 near ATF7IP just showed borderline association with all-TGCT (OR 1.24, P = 0.062), it showed significant association with the more aggressive forms of the tumor (OR 1.51, P = 0.0067)-a clinically interesting finding, which however has to be replicated in an independent sample. Assessment of cumulative risks revealed that men with at least seven risk alleles have a more than 2.5-fold increased disease risk (OR = 2.73, 95% confidence interval = 1.98-3.79). In summary, we independently replicated the majority of TGCT susceptibility loci identified previously in a Croatian sample and suggested a possible role of genetic variation near ATF7IP in regulating disease progression.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Dysfunction of the MDM2/p53 axis is linked to premature aging

Davor Lessel; Danyi Wu; Carlos Trujillo; Thomas Ramezani; Ivana Lessel; Mohammad K. Alwasiyah; Bidisha Saha; Fuki M. Hisama; Katrin Rading; Ingrid Goebel; Petra Schütz; Günter Speit; Josef Högel; Holger Thiele; Gudrun Nürnberg; Peter Nürnberg; Matthias Hammerschmidt; Yan Zhu; David R. Tong; Chen Katz; George M. Martin; Junko Oshima; Carol Prives; Christian Kubisch

The tumor suppressor p53, a master regulator of the cellular response to stress, is tightly regulated by the E3 ubiquitin ligase MDM2 via an autoregulatory feedback loop. In addition to its well-established role in tumorigenesis, p53 has also been associated with aging in mice. Several mouse models with aberrantly increased p53 activity display signs of premature aging. However, the relationship between dysfunction of the MDM2/p53 axis and human aging remains elusive. Here, we have identified an antiterminating homozygous germline mutation in MDM2 in a patient affected by a segmental progeroid syndrome. We show that this mutation abrogates MDM2 activity, thereby resulting in enhanced levels and stability of p53. Analysis of the patients primary cells, genome-edited cells, and in vitro and in vivo analyses confirmed the MDM2 mutations aberrant regulation of p53 activity. Functional data from a zebrafish model further demonstrated that mutant Mdm2 was unable to rescue a p53-induced apoptotic phenotype. Altogether, our findings indicate that mutant MDM2 is a likely driver of the observed segmental form of progeria.

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Junko Oshima

University of Washington

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Bidisha Saha

University of Washington

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Fuki M. Hisama

University of Washington

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