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Dive into the research topics where Heike Göbel is active.

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Featured researches published by Heike Göbel.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Mutations in NEK8 link multiple organ dysplasia with altered Hippo signalling and increased c-MYC expression

Valeska Frank; Sandra Habbig; Malte P. Bartram; Tobias Eisenberger; Hermine E. Veenstra-Knol; Christian Decker; Reinder A.C. Boorsma; Heike Göbel; Gudrun Nürnberg; Anabel Griessmann; Mareike Franke; Lori Borgal; Priyanka Kohli; Linus A. Völker; Jörg Dötsch; Peter Nürnberg; Thomas Benzing; Hanno J. Bolz; Colin A. Johnson; Erica H. Gerkes; Bernhard Schermer; Carsten Bergmann

Mutations affecting the integrity and function of cilia have been identified in various genes over the last decade accounting for a group of diseases called ciliopathies. Ciliopathies display a broad spectrum of phenotypes ranging from mild manifestations to lethal combinations of multiple severe symptoms and most of them share cystic kidneys as a common feature. Our starting point was a consanguineous pedigree with three affected fetuses showing an early embryonic phenotype with enlarged cystic kidneys, liver and pancreas and developmental heart disease. By genome-wide linkage analysis, we mapped the disease locus to chromosome 17q11 and identified a homozygous nonsense mutation in NEK8/NPHP9 that encodes a kinase involved in ciliary dynamics and cell cycle progression. Missense mutations in NEK8/NPHP9 have been identified in juvenile cystic kidney jck mice and in patients suffering from nephronophthisis (NPH), an autosomal-recessive cystic kidney disease. This work confirmed a complete loss of NEK8 expression in the affected fetuses due to nonsense-mediated decay. In cultured fibroblasts derived from these fetuses, the expression of prominent polycystic kidney disease genes (PKD1 and PKD2) was decreased, whereas the oncogene c-MYC was upregulated, providing potential explanations for the observed renal phenotype. We furthermore linked NEK8 with NPHP3, another NPH protein known to cause a very similar phenotype in case of null mutations. Both proteins interact and activate the Hippo effector TAZ. Taken together, our study demonstrates that NEK8 is essential for organ development and that the complete loss of NEK8 perturbs multiple signalling pathways resulting in a severe early embryonic phenotype.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Polyhydramnios, Transient Antenatal Bartter’s Syndrome, and MAGED2 Mutations

Kamel Laghmani; Bodo B. Beck; Sung-Sen Yang; Elie Seaayfan; Andrea Wenzel; Björn Reusch; Helga Vitzthum; Dario Priem; Sylvie Demaretz; Klasien Bergmann; Leonie K. Duin; Heike Göbel; Christoph J. Mache; Holger Thiele; Malte P. Bartram; Carlos Dombret; Janine Altmüller; Peter Nürnberg; Thomas Benzing; Elena Levtchenko; Hannsjörg W. Seyberth; Günter Klaus; Gökhan Yigit; Shih-Hua Lin; Albert Timmer; Tom J. de Koning; Sicco A. Scherjon; Karl P. Schlingmann; Mathieu J.M. Bertrand; Markus M. Rinschen

BACKGROUND Three pregnancies with male offspring in one family were complicated by severe polyhydramnios and prematurity. One fetus died; the other two had transient massive salt-wasting and polyuria reminiscent of antenatal Bartters syndrome. METHODS To uncover the molecular cause of this possibly X-linked disease, we performed whole-exome sequencing of DNA from two members of the index family and targeted gene analysis of other members of this family and of six additional families with affected male fetuses. We also evaluated a series of women with idiopathic polyhydramnios who were pregnant with male fetuses. We performed immunohistochemical analysis, knockdown and overexpression experiments, and protein-protein interaction studies. RESULTS We identified a mutation in MAGED2 in each of the 13 infants in our analysis who had transient antenatal Bartters syndrome. MAGED2 encodes melanoma-associated antigen D2 (MAGE-D2) and maps to the X chromosome. We also identified two different MAGED2 mutations in two families with idiopathic polyhydramnios. Four patients died perinatally, and 11 survived. The initial presentation was more severe than in known types of antenatal Bartters syndrome, as reflected by an earlier onset of polyhydramnios and labor. All symptoms disappeared spontaneously during follow-up in the infants who survived. We showed that MAGE-D2 affects the expression and function of the sodium chloride cotransporters NKCC2 and NCC (key components of salt reabsorption in the distal renal tubule), possibly through adenylate cyclase and cyclic AMP signaling and a cytoplasmic heat-shock protein. CONCLUSIONS We found that MAGED2 mutations caused X-linked polyhydramnios with prematurity and a severe but transient form of antenatal Bartters syndrome. MAGE-D2 is essential for fetal renal salt reabsorption, amniotic fluid homeostasis, and the maintenance of pregnancy. (Funded by the University of Groningen and others.).


Human Mutation | 2014

Mutation of POC1B in a Severe Syndromic Retinal Ciliopathy

Bodo B. Beck; Jennifer B. Phillips; Malte P. Bartram; Jeremy Wegner; Michaela Thoenes; Andrea Pannes; Josephina Sampson; Raoul Heller; Heike Göbel; Friederike Koerber; Antje Neugebauer; Andrea M. Hedergott; Gudrun Nürnberg; Peter Nürnberg; Holger Thiele; Janine Altmüller; Mohammad R. Toliat; Simon Staubach; Kym M. Boycott; Enza Maria Valente; Andreas R. Janecke; Tobias Eisenberger; Carsten Bergmann; Lars Tebbe; Yang Wang; Yun-Dong Wu; Andrew M. Fry; Monte Westerfield; Uwe Wolfrum; Hanno J. Bolz

We describe a consanguineous Iraqi family with Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), Joubert syndrome (JBTS), and polycystic kidney disease (PKD). Targeted next‐generation sequencing for excluding mutations in known LCA and JBTS genes, homozygosity mapping, and whole‐exome sequencing identified a homozygous missense variant, c.317G>C (p.Arg106Pro), in POC1B, a gene essential for ciliogenesis, basal body, and centrosome integrity. In silico modeling suggested a requirement of p.Arg106 for the formation of the third WD40 repeat and a protein interaction interface. In human and mouse retina, POC1B localized to the basal body and centriole adjacent to the connecting cilium of photoreceptors and in synapses of the outer plexiform layer. Knockdown of Poc1b in zebrafish caused cystic kidneys and retinal degeneration with shortened and reduced photoreceptor connecting cilia, compatible with the human syndromic ciliopathy. A recent study describes homozygosity for p.Arg106ProPOC1B in a family with nonsyndromic cone‐rod dystrophy. The phenotype associated with homozygous p.Arg106ProPOC1B may thus be highly variable, analogous to homozygous p.Leu710Ser in WDR19 causing either isolated retinitis pigmentosa or Jeune syndrome. Our study indicates that POC1B is required for retinal integrity, and we propose POC1B mutations as a probable cause for JBTS with severe PKD.


Expert Opinion on Investigational Drugs | 2013

Hyperoxaluria and systemic oxalosis: an update on current therapy and future directions

Bodo B. Beck; Heike Hoyer-Kuhn; Heike Göbel; Sandra Habbig; Bernd Hoppe

Introduction: The primary hyperoxalurias (PH) are rare, but underdiagnosed disorders where the loss of enzymatic activity in key compounds of glyoxylate metabolism results in excessive endogenous oxalate generation. Clinically, they are characterized by recurrent urolithiasis and/or nephrocalcinosis. PH type I is the most frequent and most devastating subtype often leading to early end-stage renal failure. Areas covered: Profound overview of clinical, diagnostic, and currently available treatment options with a focus on PH I at different stages of the disease. Discussion of future therapeutic avenues including pharmacological chaperones (small molecules rescuing protein function), gene therapy with safer adenoviral vectors, and potential application of cell-based transplantation strategies is provided. Expert opinion: Due to lack of familiarity with PH and its heterogeneous clinical expression, diagnosis is often delayed until advanced disease is present, a condition, requiring intensive hemodialysis and timely transplantation. Achieving the most beneficial outcome largely depends on the knowledge of the clinical spectrum, early diagnosis, and initiation of treatment before renal failure ensues. A number of preconditions required for substantial improvement in the care of orphan disease like PH have now been achieved or soon will come within reach, so new treatment options can be expected in the near future.


Ndt Plus | 2013

Monoclonal gammopathy-associated pauci-immune extracapillary-proliferative glomerulonephritis successfully treated with bortezomib.

Franziska Grundmann; Marco Witthus; Heike Göbel; Tuelay Kisner; Rainer Siewert; Thomas Benzing; Christine Kurschat

Extracapillary-proliferative glomerulonephritis is a rare complication of multiple myeloma. Partial remission of kidney involvement with cyclophosphamide therapy has previously been described. We report the case of a 60-year-old male patient diagnosed with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis associated with IgG kappa monoclonal gammopathy. His kidney biopsy revealed pauci-immune extracapillary-proliferative glomerulonephritis without cryoglobulinaemia. Treatment with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib induced rapid clinical and histological remission of his kidney disease. The patients renal function remained stable on bortezomib maintenance therapy. Our findings suggest that bortezomib is a promising therapeutic approach to ameliorate severe kidney damage in monoclonal gammopathy- and myeloma-associated pauci-immune extracapillary-proliferative glomerulonephritis.


Kidney International | 2017

Magnetic resonance T2 mapping and diffusion-weighted imaging for early detection of cystogenesis and response to therapy in a mouse model of polycystic kidney disease

Mareike Franke; Bettina Baeßler; Jan Vechtel; Claudia Dafinger; Martin Höhne; Lori Borgal; Heike Göbel; Friederike Koerber; David Maintz; Thomas Benzing; Bernhard Schermer; Thorsten Persigehl

Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is among the leading causes of end-stage renal disease. Increasing evidence exists that molecular therapeutic strategies targeted to cyst formation and growth might be more efficacious in early disease stages, highlighting the growing need for sensitive biomarkers. Here we apply quantitative magnetic resonance imaging techniques of T2 mapping and diffusion-weighted imaging in the jck mouse model for PKD using a clinical 3.0 T scanner. We tested whether kidney T2 values and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) are superior to anatomical imaging parameters in the detection of early cystogenesis, as shown on macro- and histopathology. We also tested whether kidney T2 values and ADC have the potential to monitor early treatment effects of therapy with the V2 receptor antagonist Mozavaptane. Kidney T2 values and to a lesser degree ADC were found to be highly sensitive markers of early cystogenesis and superior to anatomical-based imaging parameters. Furthermore, kidney T2 values exhibited a nearly perfect correlation to the histological cystic index, allowing a clear separation of the two mouse genotypes. Additionally, kidney T2 values and ADC were able to monitor early treatment effects in the jck mouse model in a proof-of-principle experiment. Thus, given the superiority of kidney T2 values and ADC over anatomical-based imaging in mice, further studies are needed to evaluate the translational impact of these techniques in patients with PKD.


Ophthalmology | 2016

Primary Orbital Hydatid Cyst.

Anna M. Lentzsch; Heike Göbel; Ludwig M. Heindl

Primary Orbital Hydatid Cyst A 5-year-old girl presented with painless proptosis and downward displacement of her left eye for 2 years (Fig 1A). Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a large cyst-like retrobulbar mass (Fig 1B). Serology for echinococcosis was negative. After surgical removal by lateral transosseous orbitotomy, histopathology revealed multiple scolices provided with hooklets (Fig 1C and D) adjacent to a thick membrane (Fig 1D, asterisk), consistent with a hydatid cyst of the larval form of the dog tapeworm Echinococcus granulosus. Hydatid cysts rarely occur isolated in the orbit. Postoperative therapy included 2 cycles of albendazole for 28 days.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Oral Supplementation of Glucosamine Fails to Alleviate Acute Kidney Injury in Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion Damage

Marc Johnsen; Martin R. Späth; Martin S. Denzel; Heike Göbel; Torsten Kubacki; Karla Johanna Ruth Hoyer; Yvonne Hinze; Thomas Benzing; Bernhard Schermer; Adam Antebi; Volker Burst; Roman-Ulrich Müller

Acute kidney injury is a leading contributor to morbidity and mortality in the ageing population. Proteotoxic stress response pathways have been suggested to contribute to the development of acute renal injury. Recent evidence suggests that increased synthesis of N-glycan precursors in the hexosamine pathway as well as feeding of animals with aminosugars produced in the hexosamine pathway may increase stress resistance through reducing proteotoxic stress and alleviate pathology in model organisms. As feeding of the hexosamine pathway metabolite glucosamine to aged mice increased their life expectancy we tested whether supplementation of this aminosugar may also protect mice from acute kidney injury after renal ischemia and reperfusion. Animals were fed for 4 weeks ad libitum with standard chow or standard chow supplemented with 0.5% N-acetylglucosamine. Preconditioning with caloric restriction for four weeks prior to surgery served as a positive control for protective dietary effects. Whereas caloric restriction demonstrated the known protective effect both on renal function as well as survival in the treated animals, glucosamine supplementation failed to promote any protection from ischemia-reperfusion injury. These data show that although hexosamine pathway metabolites have a proven role in enhancing protein quality control and survival in model organisms oral glucosamine supplementation at moderate doses that would be amenable to humans does not promote protection from ischemia-reperfusion injury of the kidney.


Experimental and Molecular Medicine | 2018

Targeted deletion of the AAA-ATPase Ruvbl1 in mice disrupts ciliary integrity and causes renal disease and hydrocephalus

Claudia Dafinger; Markus M. Rinschen; Lori Borgal; Carolin Ehrenberg; Sander G. Basten; Mareike Franke; Martin Höhne; Manfred Rauh; Heike Göbel; Wilhelm Bloch; F. Thomas Wunderlich; Dorien J.M. Peters; Dirk Tasche; Tripti Mishra; Sandra Habbig; Jörg Dötsch; Roman-Ulrich Müller; Jens C. Brüning; Thorsten Persigehl; Rachel H. Giles; Thomas Benzing; Bernhard Schermer; Max C. Liebau

Ciliopathies comprise a large number of hereditary human diseases and syndromes caused by mutations resulting in dysfunction of either primary or motile cilia. Both types of cilia share a similar architecture. While primary cilia are present on most cell types, expression of motile cilia is limited to specialized tissues utilizing ciliary motility. We characterized protein complexes of ciliopathy proteins and identified the conserved AAA-ATPase Ruvbl1 as a common novel component. Here, we demonstrate that Ruvbl1 is crucial for the development and maintenance of renal tubular epithelium in mice: both constitutive and inducible deletion in tubular epithelial cells result in renal failure with tubular dilatations and fewer ciliated cells. Moreover, inducible deletion of Ruvbl1 in cells carrying motile cilia results in hydrocephalus, suggesting functional relevance in both primary and motile cilia. Cilia of Ruvbl1-negative cells lack crucial proteins, consistent with the concept of Ruvbl1-dependent cytoplasmic pre-assembly of ciliary protein complexes.Cell cilia: Protein crucial for function identifiedA protein involved in building and maintaining thin protrusions from cell surfaces called cilia is implicated in “ciliopathies”, diseases in which ciliary function is disrupted. These include polycystic kidney disease and disorders collectively known as ciliary dyskinesias. “Primary cilia” perform sensory functions, detecting external chemical and physical signals and initiating responses within cells. In addition, “motile cilia” beat rhythmically to move fluids surrounding cells. Researchers in Germany and the Netherlands, led by Bernhard Schermer and Max C. Liebau at the University of Cologne, studied a protein called Ruvbl1, known to interact with DNA and other proteins. The researchers found it is crucial for the functioning of both types of cilia. Deleting the gene for Ruvbl1 in mice caused kidney failure and a build-up of fluid in the brain known as hydrocephalus. The research could help understand and ultimately treat ciliopathies.


BMC Medical Genetics | 2017

Characterization of a splice-site mutation in the tumor suppressor gene FLCN associated with renal cancer

Malte P. Bartram; Tripti Mishra; Nadine Reintjes; Francesca Fabretti; Hakam Gharbi; Alexander C. Adam; Heike Göbel; Mareike Franke; Bernhard Schermer; Stefan Haneder; Thomas Benzing; Bodo B. Beck; Roman-Ulrich Müller

BackgroundRenal cell carcinoma is among the most prevalent malignancies. It is generally sporadic. However, genetic studies of rare familial forms have led to the identification of mutations in causative genes such as VHL and FLCN. Mutations in the FLCN gene are the cause of Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome, a rare tumor syndrome which is characterized by the combination of renal cell carcinoma, pneumothorax and skin tumors.MethodsUsing Sanger sequencing we identify a heterozygous splice-site mutation in FLCN in lymphocyte DNA of a patient suffering from renal cell carcinoma. Furthermore, both tumor DNA and DNA from a metastasis are analyzed regarding this mutation. The pathogenic effect of the sequence alteration is confirmed by minigene assays and the biochemical consequences on the protein are examined using TALEN-mediated transgenesis in cultured cells.ResultsHere we describe an FLCN mutation in a 55-year-old patient who presented himself with progressive weight loss, bilateral kidney cysts and renal tumors. He and members of his family had a history of recurrent pneumothorax during the last few decades. Histology after tumor nephrectomy showed a mixed kidney cancer consisting of elements of a chromophobe renal cell carcinoma and dedifferentiated small cell carcinoma component. Subsequent FLCN sequencing identified an intronic c.1177-5_-3delCTC alteration that most likely affected the correct splicing of exon 11 of the FLCN gene. We demonstrate skipping of exon 11 to be the consequence of this mutation leading to a shift in the reading frame and the insertion of a premature stop codon. Interestingly, the truncated protein was still expressed both in cell culture and in tumor tissue, though it was strongly destabilized and its subcellular localization differed from wild-type FLCN. Both, altered protein stability and subcellular localization could be partly reversed by blocking proteasomal and lysosomal degradation.ConclusionsIdentification of disease-causing mutations in BHD syndrome requires the analysis of intronic sequences. However, biochemical validation of the consecutive alterations of the resulting protein is especially important in these cases. Functional characterization of the disease-causing mutations in BHD syndrome may guide further research for the development of novel diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.

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Jörg Dötsch

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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