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Featured researches published by Gideon Bach.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Identification of the gene causing mucolipidosis type IV.

Ruth Bargal; Nili Avidan; Edna Ben-Asher; Zvia Olender; Marcia Zeigler; Ayala Frumkin; Annick Raas-Rothschild; Gustavo Glusman; Doron Lancet; Gideon Bach

Mucolipidosis type IV (MLIV) is an autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative, lysosomal storage disorder characterized by psychomotor retardation and ophthalmological abnormalities including corneal opacities, retinal degeneration and strabismus. Most patients reach a maximal developmental level of 12–15 months. The disease was classified as a mucolipidosis following observations by electron microscopy indicating the lysosomal storage of lipids together with water-soluble, granulated substances. Over 80% of the MLIV patients diagnosed are Ashkenazi Jews, including severely affected and mildly affected patients. The gene causing MLIV was previously mapped to human chromosome 19p13.2–13.3 in a region of approximately 1 cM (ref. 7). Haplotype analysis in the MLIV gene region of over 70 MLIV Ashkenazi chromosomes indicated the existence of two founder chromosomes among 95% of the Ashkenazi MLIV families: a major haplotype in 72% and a minor haplotype in 23% of the MLIV chromosomes (ref. 7, and G.B., unpublished data). The remaining 5% are distinct haplotypes found only in single patients. The basic metabolic defect causing the lysosomal storage in MLIV has not yet been identified. Thus, positional cloning was an alternative to identify the MLIV gene. We report here the identification of a new gene in this human chromosomal region in which MLIV-specific mutations were identified.


Journal of Cell Science | 2010

Heteromultimeric TRPML channel assemblies play a crucial role in the regulation of cell viability models and starvation-induced autophagy.

David A. Zeevi; Shaya Lev; Ayala Frumkin; Baruch Minke; Gideon Bach

The mucolipin (TRPML) subfamily of transient receptor potential (TRP) cation channels consists of three members that play various roles in the regulation of membrane and protein sorting along endo-lysosomal pathways. Loss-of-function mutations in TRPML1 cause the neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder, mucolipidosis type IV (MLIV), whereas a gain-of-function mutation in TRPML3 is principally implicated in the hearing-impaired and abnormally pigmented varitint-waddler mouse. Currently, TRPML2 is not implicated in any pathological disorder, but we have recently shown that it is a functional cation channel that physically interacts with TRPML1 and TRPML3 to potentially regulate lysosomal integrity. Here, we show that mutant TRPMLs heteromultimerize with other mutant and wild-type TRPMLs to regulate cell viability and starvation-induced autophagy, a process that mediates macromolecular and organellar turnover under cell starvation conditions. Heteromultimerization of dominant-negative TRPMLs with constitutively active TRPMLs rescues cells from the cytotoxic effects of TRPML constitutive activity. Moreover, dominant-negative TRPML1 channels, including a mutant channel directly implicated in MLIV pathology, also inhibit starvation-induced autophagy by interacting with and affecting native TRPML channel function. Collectively, our results indicate that heteromultimerization of TRPML channels plays a role in various TRPML-regulated mechanisms.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Constitutive Activity of the Human TRPML2 Channel Induces Cell Degeneration

Shaya Lev; David A. Zeevi; Ayala Frumkin; Vered Offen‐Glasner; Gideon Bach; Baruch Minke

The mucolipin (TRPML) ion channel proteins represent a distinct subfamily of channel proteins within the transient receptor potential (TRP) superfamily of cation channels. Mucolipin 1, 2, and 3 (TRPML1, -2, and -3, respectively) are channel proteins that share high sequence homology with each other and homology in the transmembrane domain with other TRPs. Mutations in the TRPML1 protein are implicated in mucolipidosis type IV, whereas mutations in TRPML3 are found in the varitint-waddler mouse. The properties of the wild type TRPML2 channel are not well known. Here we show functional expression of the wild type human TRPML2 channel (h-TRPML2). The channel is functional at the plasma membrane and characterized by a significant inward rectification similar to other constitutively active TRPML mutant isoforms. The h-TRPML2 channel displays nonselective cation permeability, which is Ca2+-permeable and inhibited by low extracytosolic pH but not Ca2+ regulated. In addition, constitutively active h-TRPML2 leads to cell death by causing Ca2+ overload. Furthermore, we demonstrate by functional mutation analysis that h-TRPML2 shares similar characteristics and structural similarities with other TRPML channels that regulate the channel in a similar manner. Hence, in addition to overall structure, all three TRPML channels also share common modes of regulation.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Mucolipidosis type IV: the origin of the disease in the Ashkenazi Jewish population

Annick Raas-Rothschild; Ruth Bargal; Sergio DellaPergola; Marcia Zeigler; Gideon Bach

Mucolipidosis type IV (MLIV) is a neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disease in which most of the patients diagnosed hitherto are Ashkenazi Jews. The basic metabolic defect causing this disease is still unknown and the relevant gene has not yet been mapped or cloned. Seventeen Israel Ashkenazi families with MLIV patients had been interviewed to study their family origin. Although the families immigrated to Israel from various European countries they all could trace their roots three to four generations back to northern Poland or the immediate neighbouring country, Lithuania. Furthermore, there are only one or two ultraorthodox families among the 70–80 Ashkenazi families with MLIV patients worldwide, a marked under-representation of this group which constitutes at least 10% of the Ashkenazi population. This data indicate that MLIV mutation occurred only around the 18th and 19th centuries, after the major expansion of this population, in a founder in this defined European region belonging to a more modern, secular family.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1985

Ganglioside sialidase distribution in Mucolipidosis type IV cultured fibroblasts

Marcia Zeigler; Gideon Bach

The subcellular distribution of ganglioside sialidase in Mucolipidosis IV (ML IV) cells was characterized by a series of Percoll gradients. Similar to normal cells, the enzyme cosedimented with plasma membrane markers, although this activity was reduced and exhibited decreased solubility in ML IV cells. Only trace amounts of ganglioside sialidase (less than 5%) was found in the lysosomes of normal cells. This activity was apparently reduced in ML IV cells but its minute activity in controls excluded further characterization of these differences. Plasma membranes on 6.7 and 5.6% Percoll gradients were biomodally distributed. Ganglioside sialidase in normal cells was found to be in both the heavier and the lighter membrane fractions, whereas the enzyme in ML IV cells was associated mainly with the denser membrane fraction. These data indicate that the enzyme in ML IV cells is characteristically different from normal in that it exhibits reduced activity and solubility and a different plasma membrane distribution.


Pediatrics | 1987

Mucolipidosis Type IV: Clinical Spectrum and Natural History

Naomi Amir; Joël Zlotogora; Gideon Bach


Human Mutation | 2001

Mucolipidosis type IV: novel MCOLN1 mutations in Jewish and non-Jewish patients and the frequency of the disease in the Ashkenazi Jewish population.

Ruth Bargal; Nili Avidan; T. Olender; Edna Ben Asher; Marcia Zeigler; Annick Raas-Rothschild; Ayala Frumkin; Omer Ben-Yoseph; Yechiel Friedlender; Doron Lancet; Gideon Bach


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1993

Molecular analysis of Hurler syndrome in Druze and Muslim Arab patients in Israel: multiple allelic mutations of the IDUA gene in a small geographic area.

Gideon Bach; Samuel M. Moskowitz; Phuong T. Tieu; Matynia A; Elizabeth F. Neufeld


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1996

Multiple mutations in a specific gene in a small geographic area: a common phenomenon?

Joel Zlotogora; Volkmar Gieselmann; Gideon Bach


Human Mutation | 1995

Molecular basis of late infantile metachromatic leukodystrophy in the Habbanite Jews

Joel Zlotogora; Gideon Bach; Claudia Böusenberg; Ygal Barak; Kurt von Figura; Volkmar Gieselmann

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Ayala Frumkin

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Ruth Bargal

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Phuong T. Tieu

University of California

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Baruch Minke

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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David A. Zeevi

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Doron Lancet

Weizmann Institute of Science

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