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Featured researches published by Ingo Kurth.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Mutations in CHD7, Encoding a Chromatin-Remodeling Protein, Cause Idiopathic Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism and Kallmann Syndrome

Hyung Goo Kim; Ingo Kurth; Fei Lan; Irene Meliciani; Wolfgang Wenzel; Soo Hyun Eom; Gil Bu Kang; Georg Rosenberger; Mustafa Tekin; Metin Ozata; David P. Bick; Richard J. Sherins; Steven L. Walker; Yang Shi; James F. Gusella; Lawrence C. Layman

CHARGE syndrome and Kallmann syndrome (KS) are two distinct developmental disorders sharing overlapping features of impaired olfaction and hypogonadism. KS is a genetically heterogeneous disorder consisting of idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (IHH) and anosmia, and is most commonly due to KAL1 or FGFR1 mutations. CHARGE syndrome, a multisystem autosomal-dominant disorder, is caused by CHD7 mutations. We hypothesized that CHD7 would be involved in the pathogenesis of IHH and KS (IHH/KS) without the CHARGE phenotype and that IHH/KS represents a milder allelic variant of CHARGE syndrome. Mutation screening of the 37 protein-coding exons of CHD7 was performed in 101 IHH/KS patients without a CHARGE phenotype. In an additional 96 IHH/KS patients, exons 6-10, encoding the conserved chromodomains, were sequenced. RT-PCR, SIFT, protein-structure analysis, and in situ hybridization were performed for additional supportive evidence. Seven heterozygous mutations, two splice and five missense, which were absent in > or = 180 controls, were identified in three sporadic KS and four sporadic normosmic IHH patients. Three mutations affect chromodomains critical for proper CHD7 function in chromatin remodeling and transcriptional regulation, whereas the other four affect conserved residues, suggesting that they are deleterious. CHD7s role is further corroborated by specific expression in IHH/KS-relevant tissues and appropriate developmental expression. Sporadic CHD7 mutations occur in 6% of IHH/KS patients. CHD7 represents the first identified chromatin-remodeling protein with a role in human puberty and the second gene to cause both normosmic IHH and KS in humans. Our findings indicate that both normosmic IHH and KS are mild allelic variants of CHARGE syndrome and are caused by CHD7 mutations.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

The Na+-dependent chloride-bicarbonate exchanger SLC4A8 mediates an electroneutral Na+ reabsorption process in the renal cortical collecting ducts of mice.

Françoise Leviel; Christian A. Hübner; Pascal Houillier; Luciana Morla; Soumaya El Moghrabi; Gaelle Brideau; Hassan Hatim; Mark D. Parker; Ingo Kurth; Alexandra Kougioumtzes; Anne Sinning; Vladimir Pech; Kent A. Riemondy; R. Lance Miller; Edith Hummler; Gary E. Shull; Peter S. Aronson; Alain Doucet; Susan M. Wall; Régine Chambrey; Dominique Eladari

Regulation of sodium balance is a critical factor in the maintenance of euvolemia, and dysregulation of renal sodium excretion results in disorders of altered intravascular volume, such as hypertension. The amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is thought to be the only mechanism for sodium transport in the cortical collecting duct (CCD) of the kidney. However, it has been found that much of the sodium absorption in the CCD is actually amiloride insensitive and sensitive to thiazide diuretics, which also block the Na-Cl cotransporter (NCC) located in the distal convoluted tubule. In this study, we have demonstrated the presence of electroneutral, amiloride-resistant, thiazide-sensitive, transepithelial NaCl absorption in mouse CCDs, which persists even with genetic disruption of ENaC. Furthermore, hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) increased excretion of Na+ and Cl- in mice devoid of the thiazide target NCC, suggesting that an additional mechanism might account for this effect. Studies on isolated CCDs suggested that the parallel action of the Na+-driven Cl-/HCO3- exchanger (NDCBE/SLC4A8) and the Na+-independent Cl-/HCO3- exchanger (pendrin/SLC26A4) accounted for the electroneutral thiazide-sensitive sodium transport. Furthermore, genetic ablation of SLC4A8 abolished thiazide-sensitive NaCl transport in the CCD. These studies establish what we believe to be a novel role for NDCBE in mediating substantial Na+ reabsorption in the CCD and suggest a role for this transporter in the regulation of fluid homeostasis in mice.


Nature | 2015

Regulation of endoplasmic reticulum turnover by selective autophagy

Aliaksandr Khaminets; Theresa Heinrich; Muriel Mari; Paolo Grumati; Antje K. Huebner; Masato Akutsu; Lutz Liebmann; Alexandra Stolz; Sandor Nietzsche; Nicole Koch; Mario Mauthe; Istvan Katona; Britta Qualmann; Joachim Weis; Fulvio Reggiori; Ingo Kurth; Christian A. Hübner; Ivan Dikic

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is the largest intracellular endomembrane system, enabling protein and lipid synthesis, ion homeostasis, quality control of newly synthesized proteins and organelle communication. Constant ER turnover and modulation is needed to meet different cellular requirements and autophagy has an important role in this process. However, its underlying regulatory mechanisms remain unexplained. Here we show that members of the FAM134 reticulon protein family are ER-resident receptors that bind to autophagy modifiers LC3 and GABARAP, and facilitate ER degradation by autophagy (‘ER-phagy’). Downregulation of FAM134B protein in human cells causes an expansion of the ER, while FAM134B overexpression results in ER fragmentation and lysosomal degradation. Mutant FAM134B proteins that cause sensory neuropathy in humans are unable to act as ER-phagy receptors. Consistently, disruption of Fam134b in mice causes expansion of the ER, inhibits ER turnover, sensitizes cells to stress-induced apoptotic cell death and leads to degeneration of sensory neurons. Therefore, selective ER-phagy via FAM134 proteins is indispensable for mammalian cell homeostasis and controls ER morphology and turnover in mice and humans.


Nature Genetics | 2013

A de novo gain-of-function mutation in SCN11A causes loss of pain perception

Enrico Leipold; Lutz Liebmann; G. Christoph Korenke; Theresa Heinrich; Sebastian Gießelmann; Jonathan Baets; Matthias Ebbinghaus; R. Oliver Goral; Tommy Stödberg; J. Christopher Hennings; Markus Bergmann; Janine Altmüller; Holger Thiele; Andrea Wetzel; Peter Nürnberg; Vincent Timmerman; Robert Blum; Hans-Georg Schaible; Joachim Weis; Stefan H. Heinemann; Christian A. Hübner; Ingo Kurth

The sensation of pain protects the body from serious injury. Using exome sequencing, we identified a specific de novo missense mutation in SCN11A in individuals with the congenital inability to experience pain who suffer from recurrent tissue damage and severe mutilations. Heterozygous knock-in mice carrying the orthologous mutation showed reduced sensitivity to pain and self-inflicted tissue lesions, recapitulating aspects of the human phenotype. SCN11A encodes Nav1.9, a voltage-gated sodium ion channel that is primarily expressed in nociceptors, which function as key relay stations for the electrical transmission of pain signals from the periphery to the central nervous system. Mutant Nav1.9 channels displayed excessive activity at resting voltages, causing sustained depolarization of nociceptors, impaired generation of action potentials and aberrant synaptic transmission. The gain-of-function mechanism that underlies this channelopathy suggests an alternative way to modulate pain perception.


Nature | 2016

Formation of new chromatin domains determines pathogenicity of genomic duplications

Martin Franke; Daniel M. Ibrahim; Guillaume Andrey; Wibke Schwarzer; Verena Heinrich; Robert Schöpflin; Katerina Kraft; Rieke Kempfer; Ivana Jerković; Wing Lee Chan; Malte Spielmann; Bernd Timmermann; Lars Wittler; Ingo Kurth; Paola Cambiaso; Orsetta Zuffardi; Gunnar Houge; Lindsay Lambie; Francesco Brancati; Ana Pombo; Martin Vingron; François Spitz; Stefan Mundlos

Chromosome conformation capture methods have identified subchromosomal structures of higher-order chromatin interactions called topologically associated domains (TADs) that are separated from each other by boundary regions. By subdividing the genome into discrete regulatory units, TADs restrict the contacts that enhancers establish with their target genes. However, the mechanisms that underlie partitioning of the genome into TADs remain poorly understood. Here we show by chromosome conformation capture (capture Hi-C and 4C-seq methods) that genomic duplications in patient cells and genetically modified mice can result in the formation of new chromatin domains (neo-TADs) and that this process determines their molecular pathology. Duplications of non-coding DNA within the mouse Sox9 TAD (intra-TAD) that cause female to male sex reversal in humans, showed increased contact of the duplicated regions within the TAD, but no change in the overall TAD structure. In contrast, overlapping duplications that extended over the next boundary into the neighbouring TAD (inter-TAD), resulted in the formation of a new chromatin domain (neo-TAD) that was isolated from the rest of the genome. As a consequence of this insulation, inter-TAD duplications had no phenotypic effect. However, incorporation of the next flanking gene, Kcnj2, in the neo-TAD resulted in ectopic contacts of Kcnj2 with the duplicated part of the Sox9 regulatory region, consecutive misexpression of Kcnj2, and a limb malformation phenotype. Our findings provide evidence that TADs are genomic regulatory units with a high degree of internal stability that can be sculptured by structural genomic variations. This process is important for the interpretation of copy number variations, as these variations are routinely detected in diagnostic tests for genetic disease and cancer. This finding also has relevance in an evolutionary setting because copy-number differences are thought to have a crucial role in the evolution of genome complexity.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

WDR11, a WD protein that interacts with transcription factor EMX1, is mutated in idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and Kallmann syndrome.

Hyung Goo Kim; Jang Won Ahn; Ingo Kurth; Reinhard Ullmann; Hyun Taek Kim; Anita S. Kulharya; Kyung Soo Ha; Yasuhide Itokawa; Irene Meliciani; Wolfgang Wenzel; Deresa Lee; Georg Rosenberger; Metin Ozata; David P. Bick; Richard J. Sherins; Takahiro Nagase; Mustafa Tekin; Soo-Hyun Kim; Cheol-Hee Kim; Hans-Hilger Ropers; James F. Gusella; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Cheol Yong Choi; Lawrence C. Layman

By defining the chromosomal breakpoint of a balanced t(10;12) translocation from a subject with Kallmann syndrome and scanning genes in its vicinity in unrelated hypogonadal subjects, we have identified WDR11 as a gene involved in human puberty. We found six patients with a total of five different heterozygous WDR11 missense mutations, including three alterations (A435T, R448Q, and H690Q) in WD domains important for β propeller formation and protein-protein interaction. In addition, we discovered that WDR11 interacts with EMX1, a homeodomain transcription factor involved in the development of olfactory neurons, and that missense alterations reduce or abolish this interaction. Our findings suggest that impaired pubertal development in these patients results from a deficiency of productive WDR11 protein interaction.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Mice with targeted Slc4a10 gene disruption have small brain ventricles and show reduced neuronal excitability

Stefan Jacobs; Eva Ruusuvuori; Sampsa T. Sipilä; Aleksi Haapanen; Helle Hasager Damkier; Ingo Kurth; Moritz Hentschke; Michaela Schweizer; York Rudhard; Linda M. Laatikainen; Jaana Tyynelä; Jeppe Praetorius; Juha Voipio; Christian A. Hübner

Members of the SLC4 bicarbonate transporter family are involved in solute transport and pH homeostasis. Here we report that disrupting the Slc4a10 gene, which encodes the Na+-coupled Cl−–HCO3− exchanger Slc4a10 (NCBE), drastically reduces brain ventricle volume and protects against fatal epileptic seizures in mice. In choroid plexus epithelial cells, Slc4a10 localizes to the basolateral membrane. These cells displayed a diminished recovery from an acid load in KO mice. Slc4a10 also was expressed in neurons. Within the hippocampus, the Slc4a10 protein was abundant in CA3 pyramidal cells. In the CA3 area, propionate-induced intracellular acidification and attenuation of 4-aminopyridine-induced network activity were prolonged in KO mice. Our data indicate that Slc4a10 is involved in the control of neuronal pH and excitability and may contribute to the secretion of cerebrospinal fluid. Hence, Slc4a10 is a promising pharmacological target for the therapy of epilepsy or elevated intracranial pressure.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Mice with a Targeted Disruption of the Cl−/HCO3− Exchanger AE3 Display a Reduced Seizure Threshold

Moritz Hentschke; Martin Wiemann; Suna Hentschke; Ingo Kurth; Irm Hermans-Borgmeyer; Thomas Seidenbecher; Thomas J. Jentsch; Andreas Gal; Christian A. Hübner

ABSTRACT Neuronal activity results in significant pH shifts in neurons, glia, and interstitial space. Several transport mechanisms are involved in the fine-tuning and regulation of extra- and intracellular pH. The sodium-independent electroneutral anion exchangers (AEs) exchange intracellular bicarbonate for extracellular chloride and thereby lower the intracellular pH. Recently, a significant association was found with the variant Ala867Asp of the anion exchanger AE3, which is predominantly expressed in brain and heart, in a large cohort of patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsy. To analyze a possible involvement of AE3 dysfunction in the pathogenesis of seizures, we generated an AE3-knockout mouse model by targeted disruption of Slc4a3. AE3-knockout mice were apparently healthy, and neither displayed gross histological and behavioral abnormalities nor spontaneous seizures or spike wave complexes in electrocorticograms. However, the seizure threshold of AE3-knockout mice exposed to bicuculline, pentylenetetrazole, or pilocarpine was reduced, and seizure-induced mortality was significantly increased compared to wild-type littermates. In the pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampal CA3 region, where AE3 is strongly expressed, disruption of AE3 abolished sodium-independent chloride-bicarbonate exchange. These findings strongly support the hypothesis that AE3 modulates seizure susceptibility and, therefore, are of significance for understanding the role of intracellular pH in epilepsy.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Mutations in FAM134B , encoding a newly identified Golgi protein, cause severe sensory and autonomic neuropathy

Ingo Kurth; Pamminger T; Hennings Jc; Soehendra D; Antje K. Huebner; Rotthier A; Jonathan Baets; Jan Senderek; Haluk Topaloglu; Farrell Sa; Gudrun Nürnberg; Peter Nürnberg; De Jonghe P; Andreas Gal; Kaether C; Timmerman; Christian A. Hübner

Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type II (HSAN II) leads to severe mutilations because of impaired nociception and autonomic dysfunction. Here we show that loss-of-function mutations in FAM134B, encoding a newly identified cis-Golgi protein, cause HSAN II. Fam134b knockdown results in structural alterations of the cis-Golgi compartment and induces apoptosis in some primary dorsal root ganglion neurons. This implicates FAM134B as critical in long-term survival of nociceptive and autonomic ganglion neurons.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Duplications of noncoding elements 5' of SOX9 are associated with brachydactyly-anonychia.

Ingo Kurth; Eva Klopocki; Sigmar Stricker; Jolieke van Oosterwijk; Sebastian Vanek; Jens Altmann; Heliosa G. Santos; Jeske van Harssel; Thomy de Ravel; Andrew O.M. Wilkie; Andreas Gal; Stefan Mundlos

Duplications of noncoding elements 5′ of SOX9 are associated with brachydactyly-anonychia

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