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Featured researches published by Günter Rudolph.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

CNGA3 Mutations in Hereditary Cone Photoreceptor Disorders

Bernd Wissinger; Daphne Gamer; Herbert Jägle; Roberto Giorda; Tim Marx; Simone Mayer; Sabine Tippmann; Martina Broghammer; Bernhard Jurklies; Thomas Rosenberg; Samuel G. Jacobson; E. Cumhur Sener; Sinan Tatlipinar; Carel B. Hoyng; Claudio Castellan; Pierre Bitoun; Sten Andréasson; Günter Rudolph; Ulrich Kellner; Birgit Lorenz; Gerhard Wolff; Christine Verellen-Dumoulin; Marianne Schwartz; Frans P.M. Cremers; Eckart Apfelstedt-Sylla; Eberhart Zrenner; Roberto Salati; Lindsay T. Sharpe; Susanne Kohl

We recently showed that mutations in the CNGA3 gene encoding the alpha-subunit of the cone photoreceptor cGMP-gated channel cause autosomal recessive complete achromatopsia linked to chromosome 2q11. We now report the results of a first comprehensive screening for CNGA3 mutations in a cohort of 258 additional independent families with hereditary cone photoreceptor disorders. CNGA3 mutations were detected not only in patients with the complete form of achromatopsia but also in incomplete achromats with residual cone photoreceptor function and (rarely) in patients with evidence for severe progressive cone dystrophy. In total, mutations were identified in 53 independent families comprising 38 new CNGA3 mutations, in addition to the 8 mutations reported elsewhere. Apparently, both mutant alleles were identified in 47 families, including 16 families with presumed homozygous mutations and 31 families with two heterozygous mutations. Single heterozygous mutations were identified in six additional families. The majority of all known CNGA3 mutations (39/46) are amino acid substitutions compared with only four stop-codon mutations, two 1-bp insertions and one 3-bp in-frame deletion. The missense mutations mostly affect amino acids conserved among the members of the cyclic nucleotide gated (CNG) channel family and cluster at the cytoplasmic face of transmembrane domains (TM) S1 and S2, in TM S4, and in the cGMP-binding domain. Several mutations were identified recurrently (e.g., R277C, R283W, R436W, and F547L). These four mutations account for 41.8% of all detected mutant CNGA3 alleles. Haplotype analysis suggests that the R436W and F547L mutant alleles have multiple origins, whereas we found evidence that the R283W alleles, which are particularly frequent among patients from Scandinavia and northern Italy, have a common origin.


Human Mutation | 2011

Large deletions of the KCNV2 gene are common in patients with cone dystrophy with supernormal rod response

Bernd Wissinger; Simone Schaich; Britta Baumann; Michael Bonin; Herbert Jägle; Christoph Friedburg; Balázs Varsányi; Carel B. Hoyng; Hélène Dollfus; John R. Heckenlively; Thomas Rosenberg; Günter Rudolph; Ulrich Kellner; Roberto Salati; Astrid S. Plomp; Elfride De Baere; Monika Andrassi-Darida; Alexandra Sauer; Christiane Wolf; Ditta Zobor; Antje Bernd; Bart P. Leroy; Péter Enyedi; Frans P.M. Cremers; Birgit Lorenz; Eberhart Zrenner; Susanne Kohl

Cone dystrophy with supernormal rod response (CDSRR) is considered to be a very rare autosomal recessive retinal disorder. CDSRR is associated with mutations in KCNV2, a gene that encodes a modulatory subunit (Kv8.2) of a voltage‐gated potassium channel. In this study, we found that KCNV2 mutations are present in a substantial fraction (2.2–4.3%) of a sample of 367 independent patients with a variety of initial clinical diagnoses of cone malfunction, indicating that CDSRR is underdiagnosed and more common than previously thought. In total, we identified 20 different KCNV2 mutations; 15 of them are novel. A new finding of this study is the substantial proportion of large deletions at the KCNV2 locus that accounts for 15.5% of the mutant alleles in our sample. We determined the breakpoints and size of all five different deletions, which ranged between 10.9 and 236.8 kb. Two deletions encompass the entire KCNV2 gene and one also includes the adjacent VLDLR gene. Furthermore, we investigated N‐terminal amino acid substitution mutations for its effect on interaction with Kv2.1 using yeast two‐hybrid technology. We found that these mutations dramatically reduce or abolish this interaction suggesting a lack of assembly of heteromeric Kv channels as one underlying pathomechanism of CDSRR. 32:1398–1406, 2011. ©2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Angewandte Chemie | 1965

Farbe und Konstitution bei Azoverbindungen

Hans Bock; Günter Rudolph; E. Baltin; J. Kroner


Angewandte Chemie | 1965

Color and Constitution of Azo Compounds

Hans Bock; Günter Rudolph; E. Baltin; J. Kroner


Chemische Berichte | 1965

Notiz zur Oxydation 1.2-disubstituierter Hydrazine mit N-Brom-succinimid

Hans Bock; Günter Rudolph; E. Baltin


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1994

Growth hormone (GH), insulin‐like growth factors (IGFs), and IGF‐binding protein‐3 (IGFBP‐3) in a child with Proteus syndrome

Günter Rudolph; Werner F. Blum; Enno W. Jenne; Martin Schöning; Herbert Enders; Thomas Meitinger; Jan Murken; Anselm Kampik


Chemische Berichte | 1965

Azo-Verbindungen, V: Substituenten-Effekte bei Azo-Phosphorsäure-Derivaten

Hans Bock; Günter Rudolph


Chemische Berichte | 1961

Neue anorganische Azo‐Verbindungen: Derivate der Azo‐diphosphonsäure

H. Bock; Günter Rudolph


Angewandte Chemie | 1963

Über Zusammenhänge zwischen Farbe und Konstitution bei Azo-phosphonsäure-Derivaten

Hans Bock; E. Baltin; Günter Rudolph


Angewandte Chemie | 1964

Zusammenhänge zwischen Farbe und Konstitution bei Azo‐Verbindungen

Hans Bock; E. Baltin; J. Kroner; Günter Rudolph

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Herbert Jägle

University of Regensburg

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Susanne Kohl

University of Tübingen

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Roberto Salati

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Carel B. Hoyng

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Frans P.M. Cremers

Radboud University Nijmegen

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