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Dive into the research topics where Elsebet Ostergaard is active.

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Featured researches published by Elsebet Ostergaard.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2010

Mutations in PCDH21 cause autosomal recessive cone-rod dystrophy

Elsebet Ostergaard; M Batbayli; Morten Duno; K Vilhelmsen; Thomas Rosenberg

Background Cone-rod dystrophy is a retinal dystrophy with early loss of cone photoreceptors and a parallel or subsequent loss of rod photoreceptors. It may be syndromic, but most forms are non-syndromic with autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive or X-linked recessive inheritance. Methods and results We identified a small consanguineous family with six patients with cone-rod dystrophy from the Faroe Islands. Homozygosity mapping revealed a single homozygous locus of 4.2 Mb on chromosome 10q23.1–q23.2, encompassing 11 genes. All patients were homozygous for a 1-bp duplication in PCDH21, c.524dupA, which results in a frameshift and a premature stop codon (p.Q175QfsX47). Conclusion To our knowledge, this is the first report of mutations in PCDH21 as a cause of human disease. PCDH21 is highly expressed in the retinal photoreceptor cells. It encodes protocadherin 21, which belongs to the cadherin superfamily of large cell surface proteins characterised by a variable number of extracellular cadherin domains. A PCDH21 knockout mouse model has previously shown loss of photoreceptor cells and abnormal cone and rod function, similar to the findings in the patients.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

The interplay between SUCLA2, SUCLG2, and mitochondrial DNA depletion

Chaya Miller; Liya Wang; Elsebet Ostergaard; Phyllis Dan; Ann Saada

SUCLA2-related mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion syndrome is a result of mutations in the β subunit of the ADP-dependent isoform of the Krebs cycle succinyl-CoA synthase (SCS). The mechanism of tissue specificity and mtDNA depletion is elusive but complementation by the GDP-dependent isoform encoded by SUCLG2, and the association with mitochondrial nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK), is a plausible link. We have investigated this relationship by studying SUCLA2 deficient fibroblasts derived from patients and detected normal mtDNA content and normal NDPK activity. However, knockdown of SUCLG2 by shRNA in both patient and control fibroblasts resulted in a significant decrease in mtDNA amount, decreased NDPK and cytochrome c oxidase activities, and a marked growth impairment. This suggests that, SUCLG2, to a higher degree than SUCLA2, is crucial for mtDNA maintenance and that mitochondrial NDPK is involved. Although results pertain to a cell culture system, the findings might explain the pathomechanism and tissue specificity in mtDNA depletion caused by defective SUCLA2.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2015

Mutations in COA3 cause isolated complex IV deficiency associated with neuropathy, exercise intolerance, obesity, and short stature

Elsebet Ostergaard; Woranontee Weraarpachai; Kirstine Ravn; Alfred Peter Born; Lars Jønson; Morten Duno; Eric A. Shoubridge; John Vissing

Background We investigated a subject with an isolated cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency presenting with an unusual phenotype characterised by neuropathy, exercise intolerance, obesity, and short stature. Methods and results Blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (BN-PAGE) analysis showed an almost complete lack of COX assembly in subject fibroblasts, consistent with the very low enzymatic activity, and pulse-labelling mitochondrial translation experiments showed a specific decrease in synthesis of the COX1 subunit, the core catalytic subunit that nucleates assembly of the holoenzyme. Whole exome sequencing identified compound heterozygous mutations (c.199dupC, c.215A>G) in COA3, a small inner membrane COX assembly factor, resulting in a pronounced decrease in the steady-state levels of COA3 protein. Retroviral expression of a wild-type COA3 cDNA completely rescued the COX assembly and mitochondrial translation defects, confirming the pathogenicity of the mutations, and resulted in increased steady-state levels of COX1 in control cells, demonstrating a role for COA3 in the stabilisation of this subunit. COA3 exists in an early COX assembly complex that contains COX1 and other COX assembly factors including COX14 (C12orf62), another single pass transmembrane protein that also plays a role in coupling COX1 synthesis with holoenzyme assembly. Immunoblot analysis showed that COX14 was undetectable in COA3 subject fibroblasts, and that COA3 was undetectable in fibroblasts from a COX14 subject, demonstrating the interdependence of these two COX assembly factors. Conclusions The mild clinical course in this patient contrasts with nearly all other cases of severe COX assembly defects that are usually fatal early in life, and underscores the marked tissue-specific involvement in mitochondrial diseases.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

CLPB variants associated with autosomal-recessive mitochondrial disorder with cataract, neutropenia, epilepsy, and methylglutaconic aciduria.

Carol J. Saunders; Laurie Smith; Kirstine Ravn; Peter Bross; Isabelle Thiffault; Mette Christensen; Andrea M. Atherton; Emily Farrow; Neil Miller; Stephen F. Kingsmore; Elsebet Ostergaard

3-methylglutaconic aciduria (3-MGA-uria) is a nonspecific finding associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, including defects of oxidative phosphorylation. 3-MGA-uria is classified into five groups, of which one, type IV, is genetically heterogeneous. Here we report five children with a form of type IV 3-MGA-uria characterized by cataracts, severe psychomotor regression during febrile episodes, epilepsy, neutropenia with frequent infections, and death in early childhood. Four of the individuals were of Greenlandic descent, and one was North American, of Northern European and Asian descent. Through a combination of homozygosity mapping in the Greenlandic individuals and exome sequencing in the North American, we identified biallelic variants in the caseinolytic peptidase B homolog (CLPB). The causative variants included one missense variant, c.803C>T (p.Thr268Met), and two nonsense variants, c.961A>T (p.Lys321*) and c.1249C>T (p.Arg417*). The level of CLPB protein was markedly decreased in fibroblasts and liver of affected individuals. CLPB is proposed to function as a mitochondrial chaperone involved in disaggregation of misfolded proteins, resulting from stress such as heat denaturation.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014

Report of a newly indentified patient with mutations in BMP1 and underlying pathogenetic aspects

María Valencia; José A. Caparrós-Martín; María Salomé Sirerol-Piquer; Jose Manuel Garcia-Verdugo; Víctor Martínez-Glez; Pablo Lapunzina; Samia A. Temtamy; Mona Aglan; Allan M. Lund; Peter G. J. Nikkels; Victor L. Ruiz-Perez; Elsebet Ostergaard

Osteogenesis imperfecta is a genetic condition characterized by bone fragility and recurrent fractures, which in the large majority of patients are caused by defects in the production of type I collagen. Mutations in the gene encoding bone morphogenetic protein 1 (BMP1, also known as procollagen C‐endopeptidase) have been associated with osteogenesis imperfecta in two sib pairs. In this report, we describe an additional patient with osteogenesis imperfecta with normal bone density and a recurrent, homozygous c.34G>C mutation in BMP1. Western blot analysis of dermal fibroblasts from this patient showed decreased protein levels of the two alternatively spliced products of BMP1 and abnormal cleavage of the C‐terminal propeptide of type I procollagen. In addition, fluorescence and electron microscopy showed impaired assembly of type I collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix of cultured fibroblasts derived from two patients: the patient described here and a previously reported patient with a homozygous BMP1 c.747C>G mutation. We conclude that BMP1 is essential for human type I collagen fibrilogenesis.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2016

The clinical, biochemical and genetic features associated with RMND1-related mitochondrial disease

Yi Shiau Ng; Charlotte L. Alston; Daria Diodato; A. A. M. Morris; Nicole Ulrick; Stanislav Kmoch; Josef Houštěk; Diego Martinelli; Alireza Haghighi; Mehnaz Atiq; Montserrat Anton Gamero; Elena Garcia-Martinez; Hana Kratochvilova; Saikat Santra; Ruth M Brown; Garry K Brown; Nicola Ragge; Ahmad Monavari; Karen Pysden; Kirstine Ravn; Jillian P. Casey; Arif Khan; Anupam Chakrapani; Grace Vassallo; Cas Simons; Karl McKeever; Siobhan O'Sullivan; Anne-Marie Childs; Elsebet Ostergaard; Adeline Vanderver

Background Mutations in the RMND1 (Required for Meiotic Nuclear Division protein 1) gene have recently been linked to infantile onset mitochondrial disease characterised by multiple mitochondrial respiratory chain defects. Methods We summarised the clinical, biochemical and molecular genetic investigation of an international cohort of affected individuals with RMND1 mutations. In addition, we reviewed all the previously published cases to determine the genotype–phenotype correlates and performed survival analysis to identify prognostic factors. Results We identified 14 new cases from 11 pedigrees that harbour recessive RMND1 mutations, including 6 novel variants: c.533C>A, p.(Thr178Lys); c.565C>T, p.(Gln189*); c.631G>A, p.(Val211Met); c.1303C>T, p.(Leu435Phe); c.830+1G>A and c.1317+1G>T. Together with all previously published cases (n=32), we show that congenital sensorineural deafness, hypotonia, developmental delay and lactic acidaemia are common clinical manifestations with disease onset under 2 years. Renal involvement is more prevalent than seizures (66% vs 44%). In addition, median survival time was longer in patients with renal involvement compared with those without renal disease (6 years vs 8 months, p=0.009). The neurological phenotype also appears milder in patients with renal involvement. Conclusions The clinical phenotypes and prognosis associated with RMND1 mutations are more heterogeneous than that were initially described. Regular monitoring of kidney function is imperative in the clinical practice in light of nephropathy being present in over 60% of cases. Furthermore, renal replacement therapy should be considered particularly in those patients with mild neurological manifestation as shown in our study that four recipients of kidney transplant demonstrate good clinical outcome to date.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

An N-terminal formyl methionine on COX 1 is required for the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase

Reetta Hinttala; Florin Sasarman; Tamiko Nishimura; Hana Antonicka; Catherine Brunel-Guitton; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Somayyeh Fahiminiya; Jacek Majewski; Denis Faubert; Elsebet Ostergaard; Jan A.M. Smeitink; Eric A. Shoubridge

Protein synthesis in mitochondria is initiated by formylmethionyl-tRNA(Met) (fMet-tRNA(Met)), which requires the activity of the enzyme MTFMT to formylate the methionyl group. We investigated the molecular consequences of mutations in MTFMT in patients with Leigh syndrome or cardiomyopathy. All patients studied were compound heterozygotes. Levels of MTFMT in patient fibroblasts were almost undetectable by immunoblot analysis, and BN-PAGE analysis showed a combined oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) assembly defect involving complexes I, IV and V. The synthesis of only a subset of mitochondrial polypeptides (ND5, ND4, ND1, COXII) was decreased, whereas all others were translated at normal or even increased rates. Expression of the wild-type cDNA rescued the biochemical phenotype when MTFMT was expressed near control levels, but overexpression produced a dominant-negative phenotype, completely abrogating assembly of the OXPHOS complexes, suggesting that MTFMT activity must be tightly regulated. fMet-tRNA(Met) was almost undetectable in control cells and absent in patient cells by high-resolution northern blot analysis, but accumulated in cells overexpressing MTFMT. Newly synthesized COXI was under-represented in complex IV immunoprecipitates from patient fibroblasts, and two-dimensional BN-PAGE analysis of newly synthesized mitochondrial translation products showed an accumulation of free COXI. Quantitative mass spectrophotometry of an N-terminal COXI peptide showed that the ratio of formylated to unmodified N-termini in the assembled complex IV was ∼350:1 in controls and 4:1 in patient cells. These results show that mitochondrial protein synthesis can occur with inefficient formylation of methionyl-tRNA(Met), but that assembly of complex IV is impaired if the COXI N-terminus is not formylated.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2016

Hearing impairment and renal failure associated with RMND1 mutations

Kirstine Ravn; Mette Neland; Morten Duno; Elsebet Ostergaard

Recently, two research groups reported that mutations in RMND1 were associated with encephalopathy, elevated lactate, hypotonia, and in some patients seizures or myoclonia in individuals from two consanguineous families. A combined respiratory chain deficiency and a defect in mitochondrial protein translation was found. In this study, we report two siblings who are compound heterozygous for the mutations, c.713A>G and c.1003delG, in RMND1. Respiratory chain enzymatic analysis and BN‐PAGE showed a combined OXPHOS deficiency. Western blot analysis indicated normal levels of RMND1, but the assembly of the RMND1 homopolymeric complex was highly impaired. The two siblings had a markedly milder phenotype and longer survival compared to previously reported patients. In addition, they had renal failure and hearing impairment. These two newly described patients contribute to delineation of the clinical spectrum associated with RMND1 aberrations.


JIMD Reports | 2012

Novel Mutations in the PC Gene in Patients with Type B Pyruvate Carboxylase Deficiency

Elsebet Ostergaard; Morten Duno; Lisbeth Birk Møller; H. Serap Kalkanoglu-Sivri; Ali Dursun; Didem Aliefendioglu; Helle Birgitte Leth; Marianne Dahl; Ernst Christensen

We have investigated seven patients with the type B form of pyruvate carboxylase (PC) deficiency. Mutation analysis revealed eight mutations, all novel. In a patient with exon skipping on cDNA analysis, we identified a homozygous mutation located in a potential branch point sequence, the first possible branch point mutation in PC. Two patients were homozygous for missense mutations (with normal protein amounts on western blot analysis), and two patients were homozygous for nonsense mutations. In addition, a duplication of one base pair was found in a patient who also harboured a splice site mutation. Another splice site mutation led to the activation of a cryptic splice site, shown by cDNA analysis.All patients reported until now with at least one missense mutation have had the milder type A form of PC deficiency. We thus report for the first time two patients with homozygous missense mutations with the severe type B deficiency, clinically indistinguishable from other patients with type B form of PC deficiency.The mutations found here are novel; it is noteworthy that four Turkish patients did not have any mutations in common, despite the rarity of PC deficiency. There is thus no evidence for recurrent mutations in the Turkish or other populations.


Acta Paediatrica | 2012

A novel RNASEH2B splice site mutation responsible for Aicardi–Goutieres syndrome in the Faroe Islands

Elsebet Ostergaard; Frodi Joensen; Karin Sundberg; Morten Duno; Flemming Juul Hansen; Mustafa Batbayli; Nicolina Sørensen; Alfred Peter Born

Aim:  The aim of the study was to identify the genetic background for Aicardi–Goutieres syndrome (AGS) in the Faroe Islands.

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Morten Duno

University of Copenhagen

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Kirstine Ravn

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Ernst Christensen

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Karin Naess

Karolinska University Hospital

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Niklas Darin

University of Gothenburg

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Alfred Peter Born

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Lotte Risom

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Mustafa Batbayli

Copenhagen University Hospital

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Irenaeus F.M. de Coo

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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