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Dive into the research topics where Hermann-Josef Lüdecke is active.

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Featured researches published by Hermann-Josef Lüdecke.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Expanding the clinical spectrum of the 'HDAC8-phenotype' - implications for molecular diagnostics, counseling and risk prediction

Ilaria Parenti; Cristina Gervasini; Jelena Pozojevic; Kerstin S. Wendt; Erwan Watrin; Jacopo Azzollini; Diana Braunholz; K. Buiting; Anna Cereda; Hartmut Engels; Livia Garavelli; R. Glazar; B. Graffmann; Lidia Larizza; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Milena Mariani; Maura Masciadri; Juan Pié; Feliciano J. Ramos; Silvia Russo; Angelo Selicorni; M Stefanova; Tim M. Strom; Ralf Werner; Jolanta Wierzba; Giuseppe Zampino; Gabriele Gillessen-Kaesbach; Dagmar Wieczorek; Frank J. Kaiser

Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a clinically heterogeneous disorder characterized by typical facial dysmorphism, cognitive impairment and multiple congenital anomalies. Approximately 75% of patients carry a variant in one of the five cohesin‐related genes NIPBL, SMC1A, SMC3, RAD21 and HDAC8. Herein we report on the clinical and molecular characterization of 11 patients carrying 10 distinct variants in HDAC8. Given the high number of variants identified so far, we advise sequencing of HDAC8 as an indispensable part of the routine molecular diagnostic for patients with CdLS or CdLS‐overlapping features. The phenotype of our patients is very broad, whereas males tend to be more severely affected than females, who instead often present with less canonical CdLS features. The extensive clinical variability observed in the heterozygous females might be at least partially associated with a completely skewed X‐inactivation, observed in seven out of eight female patients. Our cohort also includes two affected siblings whose unaffected mother was found to be mosaic for the causative mutation inherited to both affected children. This further supports the urgent need for an integration of highly sensitive sequencing technology to allow an appropriate molecular diagnostic, genetic counseling and risk prediction.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2008

Clinical and molecular characterization of a patient with Langer–Giedion syndrome and mosaic del(8)(q22.3q24.13)

Alan Shanske; Ankita Patel; Sou Saukam; Brynn Levy; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke

The tricho‐rhino‐phalangeal syndrome type II (TRPS II) is characterized by sparse scalp hair, a long nose with a bulbous tip, a long flat philtrum, cone‐shaped epiphyses of the phalanges, retarded bone age in infancy and multiple cartilaginous exostoses. All patients have a hemizygous deletion on chromosome 8q23.3‐24.11 which spans at least the 2.8 Mb‐region from TRPS1 through EXT1. Only patients with deletions that extend beyond this interval tend to have mental retardation. Here we describe a 14.5‐year‐old girl with mental retardation and TRPS II. Her facial features are only mild, but she has the typical skeletal features including cone‐shaped epiphyses at the phalanges, retarded bone age, multiple exostoses and short stature. She is the first patient with TRPS II and a molecularly proven mosaic interstitial deletion in 8q22.3‐q24.13. The deletion is one of the largest ever found in TRPS II, and spans 19.79 Mb and 50 genes or loci including TRPS1 and EXT1. The degree of mosaicism is 7% in lymphocytes from peripheral blood and 97% in skin fibroblasts.


Human Genetics | 2017

Heterozygous HNRNPU variants cause early onset epilepsy and severe intellectual disability

Nuria C. Bramswig; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Fadi F. Hamdan; Janine Altmüller; Filippo Beleggia; Nursel Elcioglu; Catharine Freyer; Erica H. Gerkes; Yasemin K Demirkol; Kelly G. Knupp; Alma Kuechler; Yun Li; Daniel H. Lowenstein; Jacques L. Michaud; Kristen Park; Alexander P.A. Stegmann; Hermine E. Veenstra-Knol; Thomas Wieland; Bernd Wollnik; Hartmut Engels; Tim M. Strom; Tjitske Kleefstra; Dagmar Wieczorek

Pathogenic variants in genes encoding subunits of the spliceosome are the cause of several human diseases, such as neurodegenerative diseases. The RNA splicing process is facilitated by the spliceosome, a large RNA–protein complex consisting of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs), and many other proteins, such as heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs). The HNRNPU gene (OMIM *602869) encodes the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein U, which plays a crucial role in mammalian development. HNRNPU is expressed in the fetal brain and adult heart, kidney, liver, brain, and cerebellum. Microdeletions in the 1q44 region encompassing HNRNPU have been described in patients with intellectual disability (ID) and other clinical features, such as seizures, corpus callosum abnormalities (CCA), and microcephaly. Recently, pathogenic HNRNPU variants were identified in large ID and epileptic encephalopathy cohorts. In this study, we provide detailed clinical information of five novels and review two of the previously published individuals with (likely) pathogenic de novo variants in the HNRNPU gene including three non-sense and two missense variants, one small intragenic deletion, and one duplication. The phenotype in individuals with variants in HNRNPU is characterized by early onset seizures (6/7), severe ID (6/6), severe speech impairment (6/6), hypotonia (6/7), and central nervous system (CNS) (5/6), cardiac (4/6), and renal abnormalities (3/4). In this study, we broaden the clinical and mutational HNRNPU-associated spectrum, and demonstrate that heterozygous HNRNPU variants cause epilepsy, severe ID with striking speech impairment and variable CNS, cardiac, and renal anomalies.


Human Genetics | 2015

'Splitting versus lumping': Temple-Baraitser and Zimmermann-Laband Syndromes

Nuria C. Bramswig; C. W. Ockeloen; Johanna Christina Czeschik; A.J. van Essen; Rolph Pfundt; Jan A.M. Smeitink; Bwee Tien Poll-The; Hartmut Engels; Tim M. Strom; Dagmar Wieczorek; Tjitske Kleefstra; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke

KCNH1 mutations have recently been described in six individuals with Temple–Baraitser syndrome (TMBTS) and six individuals with Zimmermann–Laband syndrome (ZLS). TMBTS is characterized by intellectual disability (ID), epilepsy, dysmorphic facial features, broad thumbs and great toes with absent/hypoplastic nails. ZLS is characterized by facial dysmorphism including coarsening of the face and a large nose, gingival enlargement, ID, hypoplasia of terminal phalanges and nails and hypertrichosis. In this study, we present four additional unrelated individuals with de novo KCNH1 mutations from ID cohorts. We report on a novel recurrent pathogenic KCNH1 variant in three individuals and add a fourth individual with a previously TMBTS-associated KCNH1 variant. Neither TMBTS nor ZLS was suspected clinically. KCNH1 encodes a voltage-gated potassium channel, which is not only highly expressed in the central nervous system, but also seems to play an important role during development. Clinical evaluation of our mutation-positive individuals revealed that one of the main characteristics of TMBTS/ZLS, namely the pronounced nail hypoplasia of the great toes and thumbs, can be mild and develop over time. Clinical comparison of all published KCNH1 mutation-positive individuals revealed a similar facial but variable limb phenotype. KCNH1 mutation-positive individuals present with severe ID, neonatal hypotonia, hypertelorism, broad nasal tip, wide mouth, nail a/hypoplasia, a proximal implanted and long thumb and long great toes. In summary, we show that the phenotypic variability of individuals with KCNH1 mutations is more pronounced than previously expected, and we discuss whether KCNH1 mutations allow for “lumping” or for “splitting” of TMBTS and ZLS.


Human Genetics | 2017

Heterozygosity for ARID2 loss-of-function mutations in individuals with a Coffin–Siris syndrome-like phenotype

Nuria C. Bramswig; O. Caluseriu; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; F. V. Bolduc; N. C. L. Noel; Thomas Wieland; H. M. Surowy; H.-J. Christen; Hartmut Engels; Tim M. Strom; Dagmar Wieczorek

Chromatin remodeling is a complex process shaping the nucleosome landscape, thereby regulating the accessibility of transcription factors to regulatory regions of target genes and ultimately managing gene expression. The SWI/SNF (switch/sucrose nonfermentable) complex remodels the nucleosome landscape in an ATP-dependent manner and is divided into the two major subclasses Brahma-associated factor (BAF) and Polybromo Brahma-associated factor (PBAF) complex. Somatic mutations in subunits of the SWI/SNF complex have been associated with different cancers, while germline mutations have been associated with autism spectrum disorder and the neurodevelopmental disorders Coffin–Siris (CSS) and Nicolaides–Baraitser syndromes (NCBRS). CSS is characterized by intellectual disability (ID), coarsening of the face and hypoplasia or absence of the fifth finger- and/or toenails. So far, variants in five of the SWI/SNF subunit-encoding genes ARID1B, SMARCA4, SMARCB1, ARID1A, and SMARCE1 as well as variants in the transcription factor-encoding gene SOX11 have been identified in CSS-affected individuals. ARID2 is a member of the PBAF subcomplex, which until recently had not been linked to any neurodevelopmental phenotypes. In 2015, mutations in the ARID2 gene were associated with intellectual disability. In this study, we report on two individuals with private de novo ARID2 frameshift mutations. Both individuals present with a CSS-like phenotype including ID, coarsening of facial features, other recognizable facial dysmorphisms and hypoplasia of the fifth toenails. Hence, this study identifies mutations in the ARID2 gene as a novel and rare cause for a CSS-like phenotype and enlarges the list of CSS-like genes.


Human Genetics | 2017

Identification of new TRIP12 variants and detailed clinical evaluation of individuals with non-syndromic intellectual disability with or without autism

Nuria C. Bramswig; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Maria Pettersson; Beate Albrecht; Raphael Bernier; Kirsten Cremer; Evan E. Eichler; D. Falkenstein; Jennifer Gerdts; Sandra Jansen; Alma Kuechler; Malin Kvarnung; Anna Lindstrand; Daniel Nilsson; Ann Nordgren; Rolph Pfundt; Liesbeth Spruijt; H. M. Surowy; B.B.A. de Vries; Thomas Wieland; Hartmut Engels; Tim M. Strom; Tjitske Kleefstra; Dagmar Wieczorek

The ubiquitin pathway is an enzymatic cascade including activating E1, conjugating E2, and ligating E3 enzymes, which governs protein degradation and sorting. It is crucial for many physiological processes. Compromised function of members of the ubiquitin pathway leads to a wide range of human diseases, such as cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and neurodevelopmental disorders. Mutations in the thyroid hormone receptor interactor 12 (TRIP12) gene (OMIM 604506), which encodes an E3 ligase in the ubiquitin pathway, have been associated with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In addition to autistic features, TRIP12 mutation carriers showed intellectual disability (ID). More recently, TRIP12 was postulated as a novel candidate gene for intellectual disability in a meta-analysis of published ID cohorts. However, detailed clinical information characterizing the phenotype of these individuals was not provided. In this study, we present seven novel individuals with private TRIP12 mutations including two splice site mutations, one nonsense mutation, three missense mutations, and one translocation case with a breakpoint in intron 1 of the TRIP12 gene and clinically review four previously published cases. The TRIP12 mutation-positive individuals presented with mild to moderate ID (10/11) or learning disability [intelligence quotient (IQ) 76 in one individual], ASD (8/11) and some of them with unspecific craniofacial dysmorphism and other anomalies. In this study, we provide detailed clinical information of 11 TRIP12 mutation-positive individuals and thereby expand the clinical spectrum of the TRIP12 gene in non-syndromic intellectual disability with or without ASD.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2018

Mutations in the BAF-Complex Subunit DPF2 Are Associated with Coffin-Siris Syndrome

Georgia Vasileiou; Silvia Vergarajauregui; Sabine Endele; Bernt Popp; Christian Büttner; Arif B. Ekici; Marion Gerard; Nuria C. Bramswig; Beate Albrecht; Jill Clayton-Smith; Jenny Morton; Susan Tomkins; Karen Low; Astrid Weber; Maren Wenzel; Janine Altmüller; Yun Li; Bernd Wollnik; George Hoganson; Maria-Renée Plona; Megan T. Cho; Christian Thiel; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Tim M. Strom; Eduardo Calpena; Andrew O.M. Wilkie; Dagmar Wieczorek; Felix B. Engel; André Reis

Variants affecting the function of different subunits of the BAF chromatin-remodelling complex lead to various neurodevelopmental syndromes, including Coffin-Siris syndrome. Furthermore, variants in proteins containing PHD fingers, motifs recognizing specific histone tail modifications, have been associated with several neurological and developmental-delay disorders. Here, we report eight heterozygous de novo variants (one frameshift, two splice site, and five missense) in the gene encoding the BAF complex subunit double plant homeodomain finger 2 (DPF2). Affected individuals share common clinical features described in individuals with Coffin-Siris syndrome, including coarse facial features, global developmental delay, intellectual disability, speech impairment, and hypoplasia of fingernails and toenails. All variants occur within the highly conserved PHD1 and PHD2 motifs. Moreover, missense variants are situated close to zinc binding sites and are predicted to disrupt these sites. Pull-down assays of recombinant proteins and histone peptides revealed that a subset of the identified missense variants abolish or impaire DPF2 binding to unmodified and modified H3 histone tails. These results suggest an impairment of PHD finger structural integrity and cohesion and most likely an aberrant recognition of histone modifications. Furthermore, the overexpression of these variants in HEK293 and COS7 cell lines was associated with the formation of nuclear aggregates and the recruitment of both wild-type DPF2 and BRG1 to these aggregates. Expression analysis of truncating variants found in the affected individuals indicated that the aberrant transcripts escape nonsense-mediated decay. Altogether, we provide compelling evidence that de novo variants in DPF2 cause Coffin-Siris syndrome and propose a dominant-negative mechanism of pathogenicity.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2017

De novo microdeletions and point mutations affecting SOX2 in three individuals with intellectual disability but without major eye malformations.

Nicola Dennert; Hartmut Engels; Kirsten Cremer; Jessica Becker; Eva Wohlleber; Beate Albrecht; Julia K. Ehret; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Mohnish Suri; Giulia Carignani; Alessandra Renieri; Guido M. Kukuk; Thomas Wieland; Joris Andrieux; Tim M. Strom; Dagmar Wieczorek; Anne Dieux-Coeslier; Alexander M. Zink

Loss‐of‐function mutations and deletions of the SOX2 gene are known to cause uni‐ and bilateral anophthalmia and microphthalmia as well as related disorders such as anophthalmia‐esophageal‐genital syndrome. Thus, anophthalmia/microphthalmia is the primary indication for targeted, “phenotype first” analyses of SOX2. However, SOX2 mutations are also associated with a wide range of non‐ocular abnormalities, such as postnatal growth retardation, structural brain anomalies, hypogenitalism, and developmental delay. The present report describes three patients without anophthalmia/microphthalmia and loss‐of‐function mutations or microdeletions of SOX2 who had been investigated in a “genotype first” manner due to intellectual disability/developmental delay using whole exome sequencing or chromosomal microarray analyses. This result prompted us to perform SOX2 Sanger sequencing in 192 developmental delay/intellectual disability patients without anophthalmia or microphthalmia. No additional SOX2 loss‐of‐function mutations were detected in this cohort, showing that SOX2 is clearly not a major cause of intellectual disability without anophthalmia/microphthalmia. In our three patients and four further, reported “genotype first” SOX2 microdeletion patients, anophthalmia/microphthalmia was present in less than half of the patients. Thus, SOX2 is another example of a gene whose clinical spectrum is broadened by the generation of “genotype first” findings using hypothesis‐free, genome‐wide methods.


Human Mutation | 2018

Severe neurocognitive and growth disorders due to variation in THOC2, an essential component of nuclear mRNA export machinery

Raman Kumar; Alison Gardner; Claire C. Homan; Evelyn Douglas; Mefford Hc; Dagmar Wieczorek; Hermann-Josef Lüdecke; Zornitza Stark; Simon Sadedin; Catherine Nowak; Jessica Douglas; Gretchen Parsons; Paul R. Mark; Lourdes Loidi; Gail E. Herman; Theresa Mihalic Mosher; Meredith K. Gillespie; Lauren Brady; Mark A. Tarnopolsky; Irene Madrigal; Jesús Eiris; Laura Domènech Salgado; Raquel Rabionet; Tim M. Strom; Naoko Ishihara; Hidehito Inagaki; Hiroki Kurahashi; Tracy Dudding-Byth; Elizabeth E. Palmer; Michael Field

Highly conserved TREX‐mediated mRNA export is emerging as a key pathway in neuronal development and differentiation. TREX subunit variants cause neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) by interfering with mRNA export from the cell nucleus to the cytoplasm. Previously we implicated four missense variants in the X‐linked THOC2 gene in intellectual disability (ID). We now report an additional six affected individuals from five unrelated families with two de novo and three maternally inherited pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in THOC2 extending the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum. These comprise three rare missense THOC2 variants that affect evolutionarily conserved amino acid residues and reduce protein stability and two with canonical splice‐site THOC2 variants that result in C‐terminally truncated THOC2 proteins. We present detailed clinical assessment and functional studies on a de novo variant in a female with an epileptic encephalopathy and discuss an additional four families with rare variants in THOC2 with supportive evidence for pathogenicity. Severe neurocognitive features, including movement and seizure disorders, were observed in this cohort. Taken together our data show that even subtle alterations to the canonical molecular pathways such as mRNA export, otherwise essential for cellular life, can be compatible with life, but lead to NDDs in humans.


Human Genetics | 2018

Genetic variants in components of the NALCN–UNC80–UNC79 ion channel complex cause a broad clinical phenotype (NALCN channelopathies)

Nuria C. Bramswig; Aida M. Bertoli-Avella; Beate Albrecht; Aida I. Al Aqeel; Amal Alhashem; Nouriya Al-Sannaa; Maissa Bah; Katharina Bröhl; Christel Depienne; Nathalie Dorison; Diane Doummar; Nadja Ehmke; Hasnaa M. Elbendary; Svetlana Gorokhova; Delphine Héron; Denise Horn; Kiely N. James; Boris Keren; Alma Kuechler; Samira Ismail; Mahmoud Y. Issa; Isabelle Marey; Michèle Mayer; Jennifer McEvoy-Venneri; André Mégarbané; Cyril Mignot; Sarar Mohamed; Caroline Nava; Nicole Philip; Cecile Ravix

NALCN is a conserved cation channel, which conducts a permanent sodium leak current and regulates resting membrane potential and neuronal excitability. It is part of a large ion channel complex, the “NALCN channelosome”, consisting of multiple proteins including UNC80 and UNC79. The predominant neuronal expression pattern and its function suggest an important role in neuronal function and disease. So far, biallelic NALCN and UNC80 variants have been described in a small number of individuals leading to infantile hypotonia, psychomotor retardation, and characteristic facies 1 (IHPRF1, OMIM 615419) and 2 (IHPRF2, OMIM 616801), respectively. Heterozygous de novo NALCN missense variants in the S5/S6 pore-forming segments lead to congenital contractures of the limbs and face, hypotonia, and developmental delay (CLIFAHDD, OMIM 616266) with some clinical overlap. In this study, we present detailed clinical information of 16 novel individuals with biallelic NALCN variants, 1 individual with a heterozygous de novo NALCN missense variant and an interesting clinical phenotype without contractures, and 12 individuals with biallelic UNC80 variants. We report for the first time a missense NALCN variantxa0located in the predicted S6 pore-forming unit inherited in an autosomal-recessive manner leading to mild IHPRF1. We show evidence of clinical variability, especially among IHPRF1-affected individuals, and discuss differences between the IHPRF1- and IHPRF2 phenotypes. In summary, we provide a comprehensive overview of IHPRF1 and IHPRF2 phenotypes based on the largest cohort of individuals reported so far and provide additional insights into the clinical phenotypes of these neurodevelopmental diseases to help improve counseling of affected families.

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Beate Albrecht

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Nuria C. Bramswig

University of Duisburg-Essen

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Tjitske Kleefstra

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Bernd Wollnik

University of Göttingen

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H. M. Surowy

University of Düsseldorf

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