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Featured researches published by Johannes Dapprich.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

Microtubule Actin Crosslinking Factor 1 Regulates the Balbiani Body and Animal-Vegetal Polarity of the Zebrafish Oocyte

Tripti Gupta; Florence L. Marlow; Deborah Ferriola; Katarzyna Mackiewicz; Johannes Dapprich; Dimitri Monos; Mary C. Mullins

Although of fundamental importance in developmental biology, the genetic basis for the symmetry breaking events that polarize the vertebrate oocyte and egg are largely unknown. In vertebrates, the first morphological asymmetry in the oocyte is the Balbiani body, a highly conserved, transient structure found in vertebrates and invertebrates including Drosophila, Xenopus, human, and mouse. We report the identification of the zebrafish magellan (mgn) mutant, which exhibits a novel enlarged Balbiani body phenotype and a disruption of oocyte polarity. To determine the molecular identity of the mgn gene, we positionally cloned the gene, employing a novel DNA capture method to target region-specific genomic DNA of 600 kb for massively parallel sequencing. Using this technique, we were able to enrich for the genomic region linked to our mutation within one week and then identify the mutation in mgn using massively parallel sequencing. This is one of the first successful uses of genomic DNA enrichment combined with massively parallel sequencing to determine the molecular identity of a gene associated with a mutant phenotype. We anticipate that the combination of these technologies will have wide applicability for the efficient identification of mutant genes in all organisms. We identified the mutation in mgn as a deletion in the coding sequence of the zebrafish microtubule actin crosslinking factor 1 (macf1) gene. macf1 is a member of the highly conserved spectraplakin family of cytoskeletal linker proteins, which play diverse roles in polarized cells such as neurons, muscle cells, and epithelial cells. In mgn mutants, the oocyte nucleus is mislocalized; and the Balbiani body, localized mRNAs, and organelles are absent from the periphery of the oocyte, consistent with a function for macf1 in nuclear anchoring and cortical localization. These data provide the first evidence for a role for spectraplakins in polarization of the vertebrate oocyte and egg.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

SNP-specific extraction of haplotype-resolved targeted genomic regions

Johannes Dapprich; Deborah Ferriola; E. Magira; Mark Kunkel; Dimitri Monos

The availability of genotyping platforms for comprehensive genetic analysis of complex traits has resulted in a plethora of studies reporting the association of specific single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with common diseases or drug responses. However, detailed genetic analysis of these associated regions that would correlate particular polymorphisms to phenotypes has lagged. This is primarily due to the lack of technologies that provide additional sequence information about genomic regions surrounding specific SNPs, preferably in haploid form. Enrichment methods for resequencing should have the specificity to provide DNA linked to SNPs of interest with sufficient quality to be used in a cost-effective and high-throughput manner. We describe a simple, automated method of targeting specific sequences of genomic DNA that can directly be used in downstream applications. The method isolates haploid chromosomal regions flanking targeted SNPs by hybridizing and enzymatically elongating oligonucleotides with biotinylated nucleotides based on their selective binding to unique sequence elements that differentiate one allele from any other differing sequence. The targeted genomic region is captured by streptavidin-coated magnetic particles and analyzed by standard genotyping, sequencing or microarray analysis. We applied this technology to determine contiguous molecular haplotypes across a ∼150 kb genomic region of the major histocompatibility complex.


BMC Genomics | 2016

The next generation of target capture technologies - large DNA fragment enrichment and sequencing determines regional genomic variation of high complexity

Johannes Dapprich; Deborah Ferriola; Kate Mackiewicz; Peter M. Clark; Eric Rappaport; Monica D’Arcy; Ariella Sasson; Xiaowu Gai; Jonathan Schug; Klaus H. Kaestner; Dimitri Monos

BackgroundThe ability to capture and sequence large contiguous DNA fragments represents a significant advancement towards the comprehensive characterization of complex genomic regions. While emerging sequencing platforms are capable of producing several kilobases-long reads, the fragment sizes generated by current DNA target enrichment technologies remain a limiting factor, producing DNA fragments generally shorter than 1 kbp. The DNA enrichment methodology described herein, Region-Specific Extraction (RSE), produces DNA segments in excess of 20 kbp in length. Coupling this enrichment method to appropriate sequencing platforms will significantly enhance the ability to generate complete and accurate sequence characterization of any genomic region without the need for reference-based assembly.ResultsRSE is a long-range DNA target capture methodology that relies on the specific hybridization of short (20-25 base) oligonucleotide primers to selected sequence motifs within the DNA target region. These capture primers are then enzymatically extended on the 3’-end, incorporating biotinylated nucleotides into the DNA. Streptavidin-coated beads are subsequently used to pull-down the original, long DNA template molecules via the newly synthesized, biotinylated DNA that is bound to them. We demonstrate the accuracy, simplicity and utility of the RSE method by capturing and sequencing a 4 Mbp stretch of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Our results show an average depth of coverage of 164X for the entire MHC. This depth of coverage contributes significantly to a 99.94xa0% total coverage of the targeted region and to an accuracy that is over 99.99xa0%.ConclusionsRSE represents a cost-effective target enrichment method capable of producing sequencing templates in excess of 20 kbp in length. The utility of our method has been proven to generate superior coverage across the MHC as compared to other commercially available methodologies, with the added advantage of producing longer sequencing templates amenable to DNA sequencing on recently developed platforms. Although our demonstration of the method does not utilize these DNA sequencing platforms directly, our results indicate that the capture of long DNA fragments produce superior coverage of the targeted region.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

Global Mapping of Transposon Location

Abram Gabriel; Johannes Dapprich; Mark Kunkel; David Gresham; Stephen C. Pratt; Maitreya J. Dunham


Archive | 2005

Method for nucleic acid isolation and amplification

Johannes Dapprich; Nancy Murphy; Christian Korfhage


Tissue Antigens | 2007

Haplotype-specific extraction: a universal method to resolve ambiguous genotypes and detect new alleles – demonstrated on HLA-B

M. Nagy; P. Entz; P. Otremba; C. Schoenemann; N. Murphy; Johannes Dapprich


Tissue Antigens | 2007

Identification of a novel HLA‐DPB1 allele (DPB1*1902) by haplotype‐specific extraction and nucleotide sequencing†

Johannes Dapprich; E. Magira; M. A. Samonte; Kenneth D. Rosenman; Dimitri Monos


Human Immunology | 2007

Identification of a New HLA-B allele (B*1576) by haplotype specific extraction

Johannes Dapprich; K. Witter; Harrison W. Gabel; Nancy Murphy; Ekkehard D. Albert


Archive | 2013

Removing Cells from an Organism

Karl-Heinz Ott; Johannes Dapprich


Human Immunology | 2010

52-OR: Targeted Enrichment for Complete Characterization of 1.4Mb of the MHC With Next Generation Sequencing

Deborah Ferriola; Katarzyna Mackiewicz; Curt Lind; Xiaowu Gai; M. D'Arcy; Johannes Dapprich; Dimitri Monos

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Deborah Ferriola

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Dimitri Monos

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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E. Magira

University of Pennsylvania

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Xiaowu Gai

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Curt Lind

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Kate Mackiewicz

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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M. D'Arcy

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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P. Otremba

Humboldt State University

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