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Dive into the research topics where Filip Sköldberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Filip Sköldberg.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Gene Mutations in the Succinate Dehydrogenase Subunit SDHB Cause Susceptibility to Familial Pheochromocytoma and to Familial Paraganglioma

Dewi Astuti; Farida Latif; Ashraf Dallol; Patricia L.M. Dahia; Fiona Douglas; Emad George; Filip Sköldberg; Eystein S. Husebye; Charis Eng; Eamonn R. Maher

The pheochromocytomas are an important cause of secondary hypertension. Although pheochromocytoma susceptibility may be associated with germline mutations in the tumor-suppressor genes VHL and NF1 and in the proto-oncogene RET, the genetic basis for most cases of nonsyndromic familial pheochromocytoma is unknown. Recently, pheochromocytoma susceptibility has been associated with germline SDHD mutations. Germline SDHD mutations were originally described in hereditary paraganglioma, a dominantly inherited disorder characterized by vascular tumors in the head and the neck, most frequently at the carotid bifurcation. The gene products of two components of succinate dehydrogenase, SDHC and SDHD, anchor the gene products of two other components, SDHA and SDHB, which form the catalytic core, to the inner-mitochondrial membrane. Although mutations in SDHC and in SDHD may cause hereditary paraganglioma, germline SDHA mutations are associated with juvenile encephalopathy, and the phenotypic consequences of SDHB mutations have not been defined. To investigate the genetic causes of pheochromocytoma, we analyzed SDHB and SDHC, in familial and in sporadic cases. Inactivating SDHB mutations were detected in two of the five kindreds with familial pheochromocytoma, two of the three kindreds with pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma susceptibility, and 1 of the 24 cases of sporadic pheochromocytoma. These findings extend the link between mitochondrial dysfunction and tumorigenesis and suggest that germline SDHB mutations are an important cause of pheochromocytoma susceptibility.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Pulmonary autoimmunity as a feature of autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 and identification of KCNRG as a bronchial autoantigen

Mohammad Alimohammadi; Noémie Dubois; Filip Sköldberg; Åsa Hallgren; Isabelle Tardivel; Håkan Hedstrand; Jan Haavik; Eystein S. Husebye; Jan Gustafsson; Fredrik Rorsman; Antonella Meloni; Christer Janson; Bernard Vialettes; Merja Kajosaari; William Egner; Ravishankar Sargur; Fredrik Pontén; Zahir Amoura; Alain Grimfeld; Filippo De Luca; Corrado Betterle; Jaakko Perheentupa; Olle Kämpe; Jean-Claude Carel

Patients with autoimmune polyendocrine syndrome type 1 (APS-1) suffer from multiple organ-specific autoimmunity with autoantibodies against target tissue-specific autoantigens. Endocrine and nonendocrine organs such as skin, hair follicles, and liver are targeted by the immune system. Despite sporadic observations of pulmonary symptoms among APS-1 patients, an autoimmune mechanism for pulmonary involvement has not been elucidated. We report here on a subset of APS-1 patients with respiratory symptoms. Eight patients with pulmonary involvement were identified. Severe airway obstruction was found in 4 patients, leading to death in 2. Immunoscreening of a cDNA library using serum samples from a patient with APS-1 and obstructive respiratory symptoms identified a putative potassium channel regulator (KCNRG) as a pulmonary autoantigen. Reactivity to recombinant KCNRG was assessed in 110 APS-1 patients by using immunoprecipitation. Autoantibodies to KCNRG were present in 7 of the 8 patients with respiratory symptoms, but in only 1 of 102 APS-1 patients without respiratory symptoms. Expression of KCNRG messenger RNA and protein was found to be predominantly restricted to the epithelial cells of terminal bronchioles. Autoantibodies to KCNRG, a protein mainly expressed in bronchial epithelium, are strongly associated with pulmonary involvement in APS-1. These findings may facilitate the recognition, diagnosis, characterization, and understanding of the pulmonary manifestations of APS-1.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2009

Autoantibodies in autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type I patients react with major brain neurotransmitter systems

Sergueï O. Fetissov; Sophie Bensing; Jan Mulder; Erwan Le Maître; Anna-Lena Hulting; Tibor Harkany; Olov Ekwall; Filip Sköldberg; Eystein S. Husebye; Jaakko Perheentupa; Fredrik Rorsman; Olle Kämpe; Tomas Hökfelt

Patients with autoimmune polyglandular syndrome type I (APS1) often display high titers of autoantibodies (autoAbs) directed against aromatic L‐amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH), and glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD). Neurological symptoms, including stiff‐man syndrome and cerebellar ataxia, can occur in subjects with high levels of GAD autoAbs, particularly when patient sera can immunohistochemically stain γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurons. However, it was not known if APS1 sera can also stain major monoamine systems in the brain. Therefore, in this work we applied sera from 17 APS1 patients known to contain autoAbs against AADC, TH, TPH, and/or GAD to rat brain sections and processed the sections according to the sensitive immunohistochemical tyramide signal amplification method. We found that autoAbs in sera from 11 patients were able to stain AADC‐containing dopaminergic, serotonergic, and noradrenergic as well as AADC only (D‐group) neurons and fibers in the rat brain, in several cases with a remarkably high quality and sensitivity (dilution up to 1:1,000,000); and, since they are human antibodies, they offer a good opportunity for performing multiple‐labeling experiments using antibodies from other species. Six APS1 sera also stained GABAergic neuronal circuitries. Similar results were obtained in the mouse and primate brain. Our data demonstrate that many APS1 sera can immunostain the major monoamine and GABA systems in the brain. Only in a few cases, however, there was evidence that these autoAbs can be associated with neurological manifestations in APS1 patients, as, e.g., shown in previous studies in stiff‐man syndrome. J. Comp. Neurol. 513:1–20, 2009.


Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology | 2016

A population-based case-control study on statin exposure and risk of acute diverticular disease.

Filip Sköldberg; Tobias Svensson; Ola Olén; Fredrik Hjern; Peter T. Schmidt; Rickard Ljung

Abstract Objective: A reduced risk of perforated diverticular disease among individuals with current statin exposure has been reported. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether statins reduce the risk of acute diverticular disease. Material and methods: A nation-wide population-based case–control study was performed, including 13,127 cases hospitalised during 2006–2010 with a first-time diagnosis of colonic diverticular disease, and 128,442 control subjects (matched for sex, age, county of residence and calendar year). Emergency surgery, assumed to be a proxy for complicated diverticulitis, was performed on 906 of the cases during the index admission, with 8818 matched controls. Statin exposure was classified as “current” or “former” if a statin prescription was last dispensed ≤125 days or >125 days before index date, respectively. The association between statin exposure and acute diverticular disease was investigated by conditional logistic regression, including models adjusting for country of birth, educational level, marital status, comorbidities, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug/steroid exposure and healthcare utilisation. Results: A total of 1959 cases (14.9%) and 16,456 controls (12.8%) were current statin users (crude OR 1.23 [95% CI 1.17–1.30]; fully adjusted OR 1.00 [0.94–1.06]). One hundred and thirty-two of the cases subjected to surgery (14.6%), and 1441 of the corresponding controls (16.3%) were current statin users (crude OR 0.89 [95% CI 0.73–1.08]; fully adjusted OR 0.70 [0.55–0.89]). Conclusions: The results do not indicate that statins affect the development of symptomatic diverticular disease in general. However, current statin use was associated with a reduced risk of emergency surgery for diverticular disease.


Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology | 2018

Lifestyle Factors in Late Adolescence Associate With Later Development of Diverticular Disease Requiring Hospitalization

M. Ellionore Järbrink-Sehgal; Peter T. Schmidt; Filip Sköldberg; Tomas Hemmingsson; Hannes Hagström; Anna Andreasson

Background & Aims The burden of diverticular disease on society is high and is increasing with an aging population. It is therefore important to identify risk factors for disease development or progression. Many lifestyle behaviors during adolescence affect risk for later disease. We searched for adolescent lifestyle factors that affect risk of diverticular disease later in life. Methods We performed a retrospective analysis of data from 43,772 men (age, 18–20 y) conscripted to military service in Sweden from 1969 through 1970, with a follow‐up period of 39 years. All conscripts underwent an extensive mental and physical health examination and completed questionnaires covering alcohol consumption, smoking, and use of recreational drugs; cardiovascular fitness was assessed using an ergometer cycle at the time of conscription. Outcome data were collected from national registers to identify discharge diagnoses of diverticular disease until the end of 2009. We performed Cox regression analysis to determine whether body mass index, cardiovascular fitness, smoking, use of recreational drugs, alcohol consumption, and risky use of alcohol, at time of conscription are independent risk factors for development of diverticular disease. Results Overweight and obese men had a 2‐fold increased risk of diverticular disease compared to normal‐weight men (hazard ratio, 2.00; P < .001). A high level of cardiovascular fitness was associated with a reduced risk of diverticular disease requiring hospitalization (P = .009). Smoking (P = .003), but not use of recreational drugs (P = .11), was associated with an increased risk of diverticular disease requiring hospitalization. Risky use of alcohol, but not alcohol consumption per se, was associated with a 43% increase in risk of diverticular disease requiring hospitalization (P = .007). Conclusions In a retrospective analysis of data from 43,772 men in Sweden, we associated being overweight or obese, a smoker, a high‐risk user of alcohol, and/or having a low level of cardiovascular fitness in late adolescence with an increased risk of developing diverticular disease requiring hospitalization later in life. Improving lifestyle factors among adolescents might reduce the economic burden of diverticular disease decades later.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2003

Histidine Decarboxylase, a Pyridoxal Phosphate-Dependent Enzyme, Is an Autoantigen of Gastric Enterochromaffin-Like Cells

Filip Sköldberg; Guida M. Portela-Gomes; Lars Grimelius; Gunnar Nilsson; Jaakko Perheentupa; Corrado Betterle; Eystein S. Husebye; Jan Gustafsson; Anders Rönnblom; Fredrik Rorsman; Olle Kämpe


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2004

Analysis of Antibody Reactivity against Cysteine Sulfinic Acid Decarboxylase, A Pyridoxal Phosphate-Dependent Enzyme, in Endocrine Autoimmune Disease

Filip Sköldberg; Fredrik Rorsman; Jaakko Perheentupa; Mona Landin-Olsson; Eystein S. Husebye; Jan Gustafsson; Olle Kämpe


Neurochemistry International | 2015

Mammalian CSAD and GADL1 have distinct biochemical properties and patterns of brain expression

Ingeborg Winge; Knut Teigen; Agnete Fossbakk; Elaheh Mahootchi; Rune Kleppe; Filip Sköldberg; Olle Kämpe; Jan Haavik


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Importance of Absent Neoplastic Epithelium in Patients Treated With Cytoreductive Surgery and Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy

Malin Enblad; Helgi Birgisson; Alkwin Wanders; Filip Sköldberg; Wilhelm Graf


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2007

Epitope mapping of human aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase.

Eirik Bratland; Anette S. B. Wolff; Jan Haavik; Olle Kämpe; Filip Sköldberg; Jaakko Perheentupa; Geir Bredholt; Per M. Knappskog; Eystein S. Husebye

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Jan Haavik

Haukeland University Hospital

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Peter T. Schmidt

Karolinska University Hospital

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Ola Olén

Karolinska Institutet

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