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Dive into the research topics where Laura S. Schmidt is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura S. Schmidt.


Cancer Cell | 2002

Mutations in a novel gene lead to kidney tumors, lung wall defects, and benign tumors of the hair follicle in patients with the Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome

Michael L. Nickerson; Michelle B. Warren; Jorge R. Toro; Vera Matrosova; Gladys M. Glenn; Maria L. Turner; Paul H. Duray; Maria J. Merino; Peter L. Choyke; Christian P. Pavlovich; Nirmala Sharma; McClellan M. Walther; David J. Munroe; Robert Hill; Eamonn R. Maher; Cheryl R. Greenberg; Michael I. Lerman; W. Marston Linehan; Berton Zbar; Laura S. Schmidt

Birt-Hogg-Dubé (BHD) syndrome is a rare inherited genodermatosis characterized by hair follicle hamartomas, kidney tumors, and spontaneous pneumothorax. Recombination mapping in BHD families delineated the susceptibility locus to 700 kb on chromosome 17p11.2. Protein-truncating mutations were identified in a novel candidate gene in a panel of BHD families, with a 44% frequency of insertion/deletion mutations within a hypermutable C(8) tract. Tissue expression of the 3.8 kb transcript was widespread, including kidney, lung, and skin. The full-length BHD sequence predicted a novel protein, folliculin, that was highly conserved across species. Discovery of disease-causing mutations in BHD, a novel kidney cancer gene associated with renal oncocytoma or chromophobe renal cancer, will contribute to understanding the role of folliculin in pathways common to skin, lung, and kidney development.


Human Mutation | 1996

Germline mutations in the Von Hippel-Lindau disease (VHL) gene in families from North America, Europe, and Japan

Berton Zbar; Takeshi Kishida; Fan Chen; Laura S. Schmidt; Eamonn R. Maher; Frances M. Richards; Paul A. Crossey; Andrew R. Webster; Nabeel A. Affara; Malcolm A. Ferguson-Smith; Hiltrud Brauch; Damjan Glavač; Hartmut P. H. Neumann; Sam Tisherman; John J. Mulvihill; David J. Gross; Taro Shuin; Jean M. Whaley; Berndt Seizinger; Nickolai Kley; Sylviane Olschwang; Cécile Boisson; Stéphane Richard; C.H.M. Lips; W. Marston Linehan; Michael I. Lerman

Germline mutation analysis was performed in 469 VHL families from North America, Europe, and Japan. Germline mutations were identified in 300/469 (63%) of the families tested; 137 distinct intragenic germline mutations were detected. Most of the germline VHL mutations (124/137) occurred in 1–2 families; a few occured in four or more families. The common germline VHL mutations were: delPhe76, Asn78Ser, Arg161Stop, Arg167Gln, Arg167Trp, and Leu178Pro. In this large series, it was possible to compare the effects of identical germline mutations in different populations. Germline VHL mutations produced similar cancer phenotypes in Caucasian and Japanese VHL families. Germline VHL mutations were identified that produced three distinct cancer phenotypes: (1) renal carcinoma without pheochromocytoma, (2) renal carcinoma with pheochromocytoma, and (3) pheochromocytoma alone. The catalog of VHL germline mutations with phenotype information should be useful for diagnostic and prognostic studies of VHL and for studies of genotype‐phenotype correlations in VHL.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Mutations in the Fumarate Hydratase Gene Cause Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Cancer in Families in North America

Jorge R. Toro; Michael L. Nickerson; Ming-Hui Wei; Michelle B. Warren; Gladys M. Glenn; Maria L. Turner; Laveta Stewart; Paul H. Duray; Ousman Tourre; Nirmala Sharma; Peter L. Choyke; Pamela Stratton; Maria J. Merino; McClellan M. Walther; W. Marston Linehan; Laura S. Schmidt; Berton Zbar

Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer (HLRCC) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by smooth-muscle tumors of the skin and uterus and/or renal cancer. Although the identification of germline mutations in the fumarate hydratase (FH) gene in European families supports it as the susceptibility gene for HLRCC, its role in families in North America has not been studied. We screened for germline mutations in FH in 35 families with cutaneous leiomyomas. Sequence analysis revealed mutations in FH in 31 families (89%). Twenty different mutations in FH were identified, of which 18 were novel. Of these 20 mutations, 2 were insertions, 5 were small deletions that caused frameshifts leading to premature truncation of the protein, and 13 were missense mutations. Eleven unrelated families shared a common mutation: R190H. Eighty-one individuals (47 women and 34 men) had cutaneous leiomyomas. Ninety-eight percent (46/47) of women with cutaneous leiomyomas also had uterine leiomyomas. Eighty-nine percent (41/46) of women with cutaneous and uterine leiomyomas had a total hysterectomy, 44% at age < or =30 years. We identified 13 individuals in 5 families with unilateral and solitary renal tumors. Seven individuals from four families had papillary type II renal cell carcinoma, and another individual from one of these families had collecting duct carcinoma of the kidney. The present study shows that mutations in FH are associated with HLRCC in North America. HLRCC is associated with clinically significant uterine fibroids and aggressive renal tumors. The present study also expands the histologic spectrum of renal tumors and FH mutations associated with HLRCC.


Nature Reviews Urology | 2010

The genetic basis of kidney cancer: a metabolic disease.

W. Marston Linehan; Ramaprasad Srinivasan; Laura S. Schmidt

Kidney cancer is not a single disease but comprises a number of different types of cancer that occur in the kidney, each caused by a different gene with a different histology and clinical course that responds differently to therapy. Each of the seven known kidney cancer genes, VHL, MET, FLCN, TSC1, TSC2, FH and SDH, is involved in pathways that respond to metabolic stress or nutrient stimulation. The VHL protein is a component of the oxygen and iron sensing pathway that regulates hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) levels in the cell. HGF–MET signaling affects the LKB1–AMPK energy sensing cascade. The FLCN–FNIP1–FNIP2 complex binds AMPK and, therefore, might interact with the cellular energy and nutrient sensing pathways AMPK–TSC1/2–mTOR and PI3K–Akt–mTOR. TSC1–TSC2 is downstream of AMPK and negatively regulates mTOR in response to cellular energy deficit. FH and SDH have a central role in the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle, which is coupled to energy production through oxidative phosphorylation. Mutations in each of these kidney cancer genes result in dysregulation of metabolic pathways involved in oxygen, iron, energy or nutrient sensing, suggesting that kidney cancer is a disease of cell metabolism. Targeting the fundamental metabolic abnormalities in kidney cancer provides a unique opportunity for the development of more-effective forms of therapy for this disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Folliculin encoded by the BHD gene interacts with a binding protein, FNIP1, and AMPK, and is involved in AMPK and mTOR signaling

Masaya Baba; Seung-Beom Hong; Nirmala Sharma; Michelle B. Warren; Michael L. Nickerson; Akihiro Iwamatsu; Dominic Esposito; William K. Gillette; Ralph F. Hopkins; James L. Hartley; Mutsuo Furihata; Shinya Oishi; Wei Zhen; Terrence R. Burke; W. Marston Linehan; Laura S. Schmidt; Berton Zbar

Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome, a hamartoma disorder characterized by benign tumors of the hair follicle, lung cysts, and renal neoplasia, is caused by germ-line mutations in the BHD(FLCN) gene, which encodes a tumor-suppressor protein, folliculin (FLCN), with unknown function. The tumor-suppressor proteins encoded by genes responsible for several other hamartoma syndromes, LKB1, TSC1/2, and PTEN, have been shown to be involved in the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway. Here, we report the identification of the FLCN-interacting protein, FNIP1, and demonstrate its interaction with 5′ AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a key molecule for energy sensing that negatively regulates mTOR activity. FNIP1 was phosphorylated by AMPK, and its phosphorylation was reduced by AMPK inhibitors, which resulted in reduced FNIP1 expression. AMPK inhibitors also reduced FLCN phosphorylation. Moreover, FLCN phosphorylation was diminished by rapamycin and amino acid starvation and facilitated by FNIP1 overexpression, suggesting that FLCN may be regulated by mTOR and AMPK signaling. Our data suggest that FLCN, mutated in Birt–Hogg–Dubé syndrome, and its interacting partner FNIP1 may be involved in energy and/or nutrient sensing through the AMPK and mTOR signaling pathways.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Improved Identification of von Hippel-Lindau Gene Alterations in Clear Cell Renal Tumors

Michael L. Nickerson; Erich Jaeger; Yangu Shi; Jeffrey Durocher; Sunil Mahurkar; David Zaridze; Vsevolod Matveev; Vladimir Janout; Hellena Kollarova; Vladimir Bencko; Marie Navratilova; Neonilia Szeszenia-Dabrowska; Dana Mates; Anush Mukeria; Ivana Holcatova; Laura S. Schmidt; Jorge R. Toro; Sara Karami; Rayjean J. Hung; Gary F. Gerard; W. Marston Linehan; Maria J. Merino; Berton Zbar; Paolo Boffetta; Paul Brennan; Nathaniel Rothman; Wong Ho Chow; Frederic M. Waldman; Lee E. Moore

Purpose: To provide a comprehensive, thorough analysis of somatic mutation and promoter hypermethylation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) gene in the cancer genome, unique to clear cell renal cancer (ccRCC). Identify relationships between the prevalence of VHL gene alterations and alteration subtypes with patient and tumor characteristics. Experimental Design: As part of a large kidney cancer case-control study conducted in Central Europe, we analyzed VHL mutations and promoter methylation in 205 well-characterized, histologically confirmed patient tumor biopsies using a combination of sensitive, high-throughput methods (endonuclease scanning and Sanger sequencing) and analysis of 11 CpG sites in the VHL promoter. Results: We identified mutations in 82.4% of cases, the highest VHL gene mutation prevalence reported to date. Analysis of 11 VHL promoter CpG sites revealed that 8.3% of tumors were hypermethylated and all were mutation negative. In total, 91% of ccRCCs exhibited alteration of the gene through genetic or epigenetic mechanisms. Analysis of patient and tumor characteristics revealed that certain mutation subtypes were significantly associated with Fuhrman nuclear grade, metastasis, node positivity, and self-reported family history of RCC. Conclusion: Detection of VHL gene alterations using these accurate, sensitive, and practical methods provides evidence that the vast majority of histologically confirmed ccRCC tumors possess genetic or epigenetic alteration of the VHL gene and support the hypothesis that VHL alteration is an early event in ccRCC carcinogenesis. These findings also indicate that VHL molecular subtypes can provide a sensitive marker of tumor heterogeneity among histologically similar ccRCC cases for etiologic, prognostic, and translational studies.


Oncogene | 2000

A novel germ line juxtamembrane Met mutation in human gastric cancer

Jae-Ho Lee; San-Uk Han; Hyeseong Cho; Barbara Jennings; Bernard Gerrard; Michael Dean; Laura S. Schmidt; Berton Zbar; George F. Vande Woude

Activating mutations in the Met receptor tyrosine kinase, both germline and somatic, have been identified in human papillary renal cancer. Here we report a novel germline missense Met mutation, P1009S, in a patient with primary gastric cancer. The dosage of the mutant Met DNA was elevated in the tumor when compared to its matched normal DNA. Therefore, as with hereditary renal papillary cancer, the mutant Met allele may also be selectively duplicated in the tumor. Different from previously reported Met mutations, which occur in the tyrosine kinase domain, this missense mutation is located at the juxtamembrane domain, and is not constitutively activated. However, following treatment with HGF/SF, the P1009S mutant Met protein, expressed in NIH3T3 cells, displays increased and persistent tyrosine phosphorylation compared to the wild-type Met. Importantly, these cells also form colonies in soft agar, and are highly tumorigenic in athymic nude mice. A second nucleotide change in this region of Met, T1010I, was found in a breast cancer biopsy and a large cell lung cancer cell line. Although this previously reported ‘polymorphism’ did not stimulate NIH3T3 cell growth in soft agar, it was more active than the wild-type Met in the athymic nude mice tumorigenesis assay, suggesting that it may have effects on tumorigenesis. Met has been shown to be highly expressed in human gastric carcinoma cell lines, and our results raise the possibility that activating missense Met mutations could contribute to tumorigenesis of gastric cancer.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome, a genodermatosis associated with spontaneous pneumothorax and kidney neoplasia, maps to chromosome 17p11.2.

Laura S. Schmidt; Michelle B. Warren; Michael L. Nickerson; Gregor Weirich; Vera Matrosova; Jorge R. Toro; Maria L. Turner; Paul H. Duray; Maria J. Merino; Stephen M. Hewitt; Christian P. Pavlovich; Gladys M. Glenn; Cheryl R. Greenberg; W. Marston Linehan; Berton Zbar

Birt-Hogg-Dubé syndrome (BHD), an inherited autosomal genodermatosis characterized by benign tumors of the hair follicle, has been associated with renal neoplasia, lung cysts, and spontaneous pneumothorax. To identify the BHD locus, we recruited families with cutaneous lesions and associated phenotypic features of the BHD syndrome. We performed a genomewide scan in one large kindred with BHD and, by linkage analysis, localized the gene locus to the pericentromeric region of chromosome 17p, with a LOD score of 4.98 at D17S740 (recombination fraction 0). Two-point linkage analysis of eight additional families with BHD produced a maximum LOD score of 16.06 at D17S2196. Haplotype analysis identified critical recombinants and defined the minimal region of nonrecombination as being within a <4-cM distance between D17S1857 and D17S805. One additional family, which had histologically proved fibrofolliculomas, did not show evidence of linkage to chromosome 17p, suggesting genetic heterogeneity for BHD. The BHD locus lies within chromosomal band 17p11.2, a genomic region that, because of the presence of low-copy-number repeat elements, is unstable and that is associated with a number of diseases. Identification of the gene for BHD may reveal a new genetic locus responsible for renal neoplasia and for lung and hair-follicle developmental defects.


Nature | 2005

The Ter mutation in the Dead-end gene causes germ cell loss and testicular germ cell tumours

Kirsten K. Youngren; Douglas Coveney; Xiaoning Peng; Chitralekha Bhattacharya; Laura S. Schmidt; Michael L. Nickerson; Bruce T. Lamb; Jian Min Deng; Richard R. Behringer; Blanche Capel; Edward M. Rubin; Joseph H. Nadeau; Angabin Matin

In mice, the Ter mutation causes primordial germ cell (PGC) loss in all genetic backgrounds. Ter is also a potent modifier of spontaneous testicular germ cell tumour (TGCT) susceptibility in the 129 family of inbred strains, and markedly increases TGCT incidence in 129-Ter/Ter males. In 129-Ter/Ter mice, some of the remaining PGCs transform into undifferentiated pluripotent embryonal carcinoma cells, and after birth differentiate into various cells and tissues that compose TGCTs. Here, we report the positional cloning of Ter, revealing a point mutation that introduces a termination codon in the mouse orthologue (Dnd1) of the zebrafish dead end (dnd) gene. PGC deficiency is corrected both with bacterial artificial chromosomes that contain Dnd1 and with a Dnd1-encoding transgene. Dnd1 is expressed in fetal gonads during the critical period when TGCTs originate. DND1 has an RNA recognition motif and is most similar to the apobec complementation factor, a component of the cytidine to uridine RNA-editing complex. These results suggest that Ter may adversely affect essential aspects of RNA biology during PGC development. DND1 is the first protein known to have an RNA recognition motif directly implicated as a heritable cause of spontaneous tumorigenesis. TGCT development in the 129-Ter mouse strain models paediatric TGCT in humans. This work will have important implications for our understanding of the genetic control of TGCT pathogenesis and PGC biology.


Nature Genetics | 1998

Trisomy 7-harbouring non-random duplication of the mutant MET allele in hereditary papillary renal carcinomas

Zhengping Zhuang; Won-Sang Park; Svetlana Pack; Laura S. Schmidt; Alexander O. Vortmeyer; Evgenia Pak; Thu Pham; Robert J. Weil; Sonja Candidus; Irina A. Lubensky; W. Marston Linehan; Berton Zbar; Gregor Weirich

The gene defect for hereditary papillary renal carcinoma (HPRC) has recently been mapped to chromosome 7q, and germline mutations of MET (also known as c-met) at 7q31 have been detected in patients with HPRC (ref. 2). Tumours from these patients commonly show trisomy of chromosome 7 when analysed by cytogenetic studies and comparative genomic hybridization (CGH). However, the relationship between trisomy 7 and MET germline mutations is not clear. We studied 16 renal tumours from two patients with documented germline mutations in exon 16 of MET. Flourescent in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis showed trisomy 7 in all tumours. To determine whether the chromosome bearing the mutant or wild-type MET gene was duplicated, we performed duplex PCR and phosphoimage densitometry using polymorphic microsatellite markers D7S1801 and D7S1822, which were linked to the disease gene locus, and D1S1646 as an internal control. We determined the parental origin of chromosome alleles by genotyping parental DNA. In all 16 tumours there was an increased signal intensity (2:1 ratio) of the microsatellite allele from the chromosome bearing the mutant MET compared with the allele from the chromosome bearing the wild-type MET. Our study demonstrates a non-random duplication of the chromosome bearing the mutated MET in HPRC and implicates this event in tumorigenesis.

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W. Marston Linehan

National Institutes of Health

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Berton Zbar

National Institutes of Health

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Masaya Baba

Science Applications International Corporation

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Michael I. Lerman

National Institutes of Health

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Gladys M. Glenn

National Institutes of Health

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Michael L. Nickerson

National Institutes of Health

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Peter L. Choyke

National Center for Research Resources

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Cathy D. Vocke

National Institutes of Health

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McClellan M. Walther

National Institutes of Health

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