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Featured researches published by Gil Chernin.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

COQ6 mutations in human patients produce nephrotic syndrome with sensorineural deafness

Saskia F. Heeringa; Gil Chernin; Moumita Chaki; Weibin Zhou; Alexis Sloan; Ji Z; Letian X. Xie; Leonardo Salviati; Toby W. Hurd; Vega-Warner; Killen Pd; Raphael Y; Shazia Ashraf; Bugsu Ovunc; Dominik S. Schoeb; Heather M. McLaughlin; Rannar Airik; Christopher N. Vlangos; Rasheed Gbadegesin; Bernward Hinkes; Pawaree Saisawat; Eva Trevisson; Mara Doimo; Alberto Casarin; Pertegato; Giorgi G; Holger Prokisch; Agnès Rötig; Gudrun Nürnberg; Christian Becker

Steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) is a frequent cause of end-stage renal failure. Identification of single-gene causes of SRNS has generated some insights into its pathogenesis; however, additional genes and disease mechanisms remain obscure, and SRNS continues to be treatment refractory. Here we have identified 6 different mutations in coenzyme Q10 biosynthesis monooxygenase 6 (COQ6) in 13 individuals from 7 families by homozygosity mapping. Each mutation was linked to early-onset SRNS with sensorineural deafness. The deleterious effects of these human COQ6 mutations were validated by their lack of complementation in coq6-deficient yeast. Furthermore, knockdown of Coq6 in podocyte cell lines and coq6 in zebrafish embryos caused apoptosis that was partially reversed by coenzyme Q10 treatment. In rats, COQ6 was located within cell processes and the Golgi apparatus of renal glomerular podocytes and in stria vascularis cells of the inner ear, consistent with an oto-renal disease phenotype. These data suggest that coenzyme Q10-related forms of SRNS and hearing loss can be molecularly identified and potentially treated.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

A Systematic Approach to Mapping Recessive Disease Genes in Individuals from Outbred Populations

Friedhelm Hildebrandt; Saskia F. Heeringa; Franz Rüschendorf; Massimo Attanasio; Gudrun Nürnberg; Christian Becker; Dominik Seelow; Norbert Huebner; Gil Chernin; Christopher N. Vlangos; Weibin Zhou; John F. O'Toole; Bethan E. Hoskins; Matthias Wolf; Bernward Hinkes; Hassan Chaib; Shazia Ashraf; Dominik S. Schoeb; Bugsu Ovunc; Susan J. Allen; Virginia Vega-Warner; Eric Wise; Heather M. Harville; Robert H. Lyons; Joseph Washburn; James W. MacDonald; Peter Nürnberg; Edgar A. Otto

The identification of recessive disease-causing genes by homozygosity mapping is often restricted by lack of suitable consanguineous families. To overcome these limitations, we apply homozygosity mapping to single affected individuals from outbred populations. In 72 individuals of 54 kindred ascertained worldwide with known homozygous mutations in 13 different recessive disease genes, we performed total genome homozygosity mapping using 250,000 SNP arrays. Likelihood ratio Z-scores (ZLR) were plotted across the genome to detect ZLR peaks that reflect segments of homozygosity by descent, which may harbor the mutated gene. In 93% of cases, the causative gene was positioned within a consistent ZLR peak of homozygosity. The number of peaks reflected the degree of inbreeding. We demonstrate that disease-causing homozygous mutations can be detected in single cases from outbred populations within a single ZLR peak of homozygosity as short as 2 Mb, containing an average of only 16 candidate genes. As many specialty clinics have access to cohorts of individuals from outbred populations, and as our approach will result in smaller genetic candidate regions, the new strategy of homozygosity mapping in single outbred individuals will strongly accelerate the discovery of novel recessive disease genes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

ARHGDIA mutations cause nephrotic syndrome via defective RHO GTPase signaling

Heon Yung Gee; Pawaree Saisawat; Shazia Ashraf; Toby W. Hurd; Virginia Vega-Warner; Humphrey Fang; Bodo B. Beck; Olivier Gribouval; Weibin Zhou; Katrina A. Diaz; Sivakumar Natarajan; Roger C. Wiggins; Svjetlana Lovric; Gil Chernin; Dominik S. Schoeb; Bugsu Ovunc; Yaacov Frishberg; Neveen A. Soliman; Hanan M. Fathy; Heike Goebel; Julia Hoefele; Lutz T. Weber; Jeffrey W. Innis; Christian Faul; Zhe Han; Joseph Washburn; Corinne Antignac; Shawn Levy; Edgar A. Otto; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Nephrotic syndrome (NS) is divided into steroid-sensitive (SSNS) and -resistant (SRNS) variants. SRNS causes end-stage kidney disease, which cannot be cured. While the disease mechanisms of NS are not well understood, genetic mapping studies suggest a multitude of unknown single-gene causes. We combined homozygosity mapping with whole-exome resequencing and identified an ARHGDIA mutation that causes SRNS. We demonstrated that ARHGDIA is in a complex with RHO GTPases and is prominently expressed in podocytes of rat glomeruli. ARHGDIA mutations (R120X and G173V) from individuals with SRNS abrogated interaction with RHO GTPases and increased active GTP-bound RAC1 and CDC42, but not RHOA, indicating that RAC1 and CDC42 are more relevant to the pathogenesis of this SRNS variant than RHOA. Moreover, the mutations enhanced migration of cultured human podocytes; however, enhanced migration was reversed by treatment with RAC1 inhibitors. The nephrotic phenotype was recapitulated in arhgdia-deficient zebrafish. RAC1 inhibitors were partially effective in ameliorating arhgdia-associated defects. These findings identify a single-gene cause of NS and reveal that RHO GTPase signaling is a pathogenic mediator of SRNS.


PLOS ONE | 2009

A Novel TRPC6 Mutation That Causes Childhood FSGS

Saskia F. Heeringa; Clemens C. Möller; Lixia Yue; Bernward Hinkes; Gil Chernin; Christopher N. Vlangos; Peter F. Hoyer; Jochen Reiser; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Background TRPC6, encoding a member of the transient receptor potential (TRP) superfamily of ion channels, is a calcium-permeable cation channel, which mediates capacitive calcium entry into the cell. Until today, seven different mutations in TRPC6 have been identified as a cause of autosomal-dominant focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) in adults. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we report a novel TRPC6 mutation that leads to early onset FSGS. We identified one family in whom disease segregated with a novel TRPC6 mutation (M132T), that also affected pediatric individuals as early as nine years of age. Twenty-one pedigrees compatible with an autosomal-dominant mode of inheritance and biopsy-proven FSGS were selected from a worldwide cohort of 550 families with steroid resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS). Whole cell current recordings of the mutant TRPC6 channel, compared to the wild-type channel, showed a 3 to 5-fold increase in the average out- and inward TRPC6 current amplitude. The mean inward calcium current of M132T was 10-fold larger than that of wild-type TRPC6. Interestingly, M132T mutants also lacked time-dependent inactivation. Generation of a novel double mutant M132T/N143S did not further augment TRPC6 channel activity. Conclusions In summary, our data shows that TRPC6 mediated FSGS can also be found in children. The large increase in channel currents and impaired channel inactivation caused by the M132T mutant leads to an aggressive phenotype that underlines the importance of calcium dose channeled through TRPC6.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Exome sequencing reveals cubilin mutation as a single-gene cause of proteinuria.

Bugsu Ovunc; Edgar A. Otto; Virginia Vega-Warner; Pawaree Saisawat; Shazia Ashraf; Gokul Ramaswami; Hanan M. Fathy; Dominik S. Schoeb; Gil Chernin; Robert H. Lyons; Engin Yilmaz; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

In two siblings of consanguineous parents with intermittent nephrotic-range proteinuria, we identified a homozygous deleterious frameshift mutation in the gene CUBN, which encodes cubulin, using exome capture and massively parallel re-sequencing. The mutation segregated with affected members of this family and was absent from 92 healthy individuals, thereby identifying a recessive mutation in CUBN as the single-gene cause of proteinuria in this sibship. Cubulin mutations cause a hereditary form of megaloblastic anemia secondary to vitamin B(12) deficiency, and proteinuria occurs in 50% of cases since cubilin is coreceptor for both the intestinal vitamin B(12)-intrinsic factor complex and the tubular reabsorption of protein in the proximal tubule. In summary, we report successful use of exome capture and massively parallel re-sequencing to identify a rare, single-gene cause of nephropathy.


Clinical Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2010

Genotype/Phenotype Correlation in Nephrotic Syndrome Caused by WT1 Mutations

Gil Chernin; Virginia Vega-Warner; Dominik S. Schoeb; Saskia F. Heeringa; Bugsu Ovunc; Pawaree Saisawat; Roxana Cleper; Fatih Ozaltin; Friedhelm Hildebrandt; A. Arbeiter; A. Bakkalogulu; M. Benz; Detlef Bockenhauer; Radovan Bogdanovic; V. Chandha; Robert B. Ettenger; Cybele Ghossein; A. Goldberg; J. Heiliczer; D. Hooper; Bernd Hoppe; R. Jenkins; Bernard S. Kaplan; Markus J. Kemper; Martin Konrad; R. London; C. Mache; O. Mansoor; M. Mayr; Thomas J. Neuhaus

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES The risk of developing Wilms tumor (WT) can be present or absent in patients with nephrotic syndrome (NS) caused by WT1 mutations. Here, the genotype/phenotype correlation regarding the outcome and risk for WT in 52 patients from 51 families with NS due to WT1 mutations is described. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS This study followed 19 patients with mutations in intron 9 splice donor site (KTS mutations), 27 patients with missense mutations, 4 patients with nonsense mutations, 1 patient with a splice site mutation in intron 8, and 1 patient with a deletion. RESULTS Twenty-four different WT1 mutations were detected. Sixteen of the 19 patients with KTS mutations were females. These patients had isolated NS if karyotype was 46,XX and Frasier syndrome if karyotype was 46,XY. Patients with KTS mutations presented at a significantly older age and with a slower progression toward chronic kidney disease (CKD) stage 5, compared with missense mutations. Patients with nonsense mutations presented initially with WT. Six patients with missense mutations developed WT after the diagnosis of NS (interval-range from NS onset to WT of 0.1 to 1.4 years). CONCLUSIONS (1) KTS mutations cause isolated NS with absence of WT in 46,XX females. (2) KTS mutations cause Frasier syndrome with gonadoblastoma risk in 46,XY phenotypic females. (3) KTS mutations cause NS with a slower progression when compared with missense mutations. (4) Missense mutations can occur with and without WT. (5) WT1 analysis is important in young patients with NS for early detection and tumor prophylaxis.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2010

Nineteen novel NPHS1 mutations in a worldwide cohort of patients with congenital nephrotic syndrome (CNS)

Dominik S. Schoeb; Gil Chernin; Saskia F. Heeringa; Verena Matejas; Susanne Held; Virginia Vega-Warner; Detlef Bockenhauer; Christopher N. Vlangos; Khemchand N. Moorani; Thomas J. Neuhaus; Jameela A. Kari; James W. MacDonald; Pawaree Saisawat; Shazia Ashraf; Bugsu Ovunc; Martin Zenker; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

BACKGROUND Recessive mutations in the NPHS1 gene encoding nephrin account for approximately 40% of infants with congenital nephrotic syndrome (CNS). CNS is defined as steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) within the first 90 days of life. Currently, more than 119 different mutations of NPHS1 have been published affecting most exons. METHODS We here performed mutational analysis of NPHS1 in a worldwide cohort of 67 children from 62 different families with CNS. RESULTS We found bi-allelic mutations in 36 of the 62 families (58%) confirming in a worldwide cohort that about one-half of CNS is caused by NPHS1 mutations. In 26 families, mutations were homozygous, and in 10, they were compound heterozygous. In an additional nine patients from eight families, only one heterozygous mutation was detected. We detected 37 different mutations. Nineteen of the 37 were novel mutations (approximately 51.4%), including 11 missense mutations, 4 splice-site mutations, 3 nonsense mutations and 1 small deletion. In an additional patient with later manifestation, we discovered two further novel mutations, including the first one affecting a glycosylation site of nephrin. CONCLUSIONS Our data hereby expand the spectrum of known mutations by 17.6%. Surprisingly, out of the two siblings with the homozygous novel mutation L587R in NPHS1, only one developed nephrotic syndrome before the age of 90 days, while the other one did not manifest until the age of 2 years. Both siblings also unexpectedly experienced an episode of partial remission upon steroid treatment.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Screening for NPHS2 Mutations May Help Predict FSGS Recurrence after Transplantation

Therese Jungraithmayr; Katrin Hofer; Pierre Cochat; Gil Chernin; Gerard Cortina; Sonja Fargue; Paul C. Grimm; Tanja Knueppel; Andreas Kowarsch; Thomas Neuhaus; Philipp Pagel; Karl P. Pfeiffer; Franz Schäfer; Ulf Schönermarck; Tomáš Seeman; Burkhard Toenshoff; Stefanie Weber; Michelle P. Winn; Johannes Zschocke; Lothar Bernd Zimmerhackl

Steroid-resistant focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) often recurs after renal transplantation. In this international survey, we sought to identify genotype-phenotype correlations of recurrent FSGS. We surveyed 83 patients with childhood-onset primary FSGS who received at least one renal allograft and analyzed 53 of these patients for NPHS2 mutations. The mean age at diagnosis was 6.7 years, and the mean age at first renal transplantation was 13 years. FSGS recurred in 30 patients (36%) after a median of 13 days (range, 1.5 to 152 days). Twenty-three patients received a second kidney transplant, and FSGS recurred in 11 (48%) after a median of 16 days (range, 2.7 to 66 days). None of the 11 patients with homozygous or compound heterozygous NPHS2 mutations developed recurrent FSGS compared with 45% of patients without mutations. These data suggest that genetic testing for pathogenic mutations may be important for prognosis and treatment of FSGS both before and after transplantation.


Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2008

Thirteen novel NPHS1 mutations in a large cohort of children with congenital nephrotic syndrome

Saskia F. Heeringa; Christopher N. Vlangos; Gil Chernin; Bernward Hinkes; Rasheed Gbadegesin; Jinhong Liu; Bethan E. Hoskins; Fatih Ozaltin; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

BACKGROUND Congenital nephrotic syndrome (CNS) is de- fined as nephrotic syndrome that manifests at birth or within the first 3 months of life. Most patients develop end-stage renal disease (ESRD) within 2 to 3 years of life. CNS of the Finnish-type (CNF) features a rather specific renal histology and is caused by recessive mutations in the NPHS1 gene encoding nephrin, a major structural protein of the glomerular slit-diaphragm. So far, more than 80 different mutations of NPHS1 causing CNF have been published. METHODS Here, we performed mutation analysis of NPHS1 by exon sequencing in a worldwide cohort of 32 children with CNS from 29 different families. RESULTS Sixteen of the 29 families (55%) were found to have two disease-causing alleles in NPHS1. Two additional patients had a single heterozygous mutation in NPHS1. Thirteen of a total of 20 different mutations detected were novel (65%). These were five missense mutations, one nonsense mutation, three deletions, one insertion and three splice-site mutations. CONCLUSION Our data expand the spectrum of known NPHS1 mutations by >15% in a worldwide cohort. Surprisingly, two patients with disease-causing mutations showed a relatively mild phenotype, as one patient had a partial remission with steroid treatment and one patient had normal renal function 1 year after the onset of disease. The increased number of known mutations will facilitate future studies into genotype/phenotype correlations.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2008

Low prevalence of NPHS2 mutations in African American children with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome

Gil Chernin; Saskia F. Heeringa; Rasheed Gbadegesin; Jinhong Liu; Bernward Hinkes; Christopher N. Vlangos; Virginia Vega-Warner; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

In African American (AA) children, focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) is the leading cause of nephrotic syndrome (NS). It has been shown that AA children suffer from FSGS and steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS) at a higher frequency and with a more severe renal outcome in comparison with Caucasian children. Previous mutation analysis of large cohorts revealed that a high percentage of childhood SRNS is monogenic and that mutations in podocin (NPHS2) and Wilms’ tumor gene 1 (WT1) account for approximately 30% of SRNS in children. To test whether AA children with SRNS have a similar or a higher mutation rate, we performed mutation analysis of NPHS2 and WT1 in a cohort of AA children with SRNS. Direct sequencing was carried out for all exons of NPHS2 and for exons 8 and 9 of WT1. We ascertained 18 children of AA descent in whom renal biopsy findings showed FSGS in 13 patients (72%) and minimal-change disease in five patients (28%). In both NPHS2 and WT1, no disease-causing mutations were detected. Our data strongly suggest that in AA children with SRNS, the frequency of NPHS2 mutations is much lower than in large cohorts of pediatric SRNS patients in the general population. Knowledge of mutation rate of NPHS2 in different populations of SRNS patients facilitates the physician in planning a suitable genetic screening strategy for patients.

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Shazia Ashraf

Boston Children's Hospital

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Weibin Zhou

University of Michigan

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