Magdalena Gogiel
RWTH Aachen University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Magdalena Gogiel.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012
Matthias Begemann; Sabrina Spengler; Magdalena Gogiel; Ute Grasshoff; Michael Bonin; Regina C. Betz; Andreas Dufke; Isabel Spier; Thomas Eggermann
Among the clusters of imprinted genes in humans, one of the most relevant regions involved in human growth is localised in 11p15. Opposite epigenetic and genomic disturbances in this chromosomal region contribute to two distinct imprinting disorders associated with disturbed growth, Silver–Russell and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndromes. Due to the complexity of the 11p15 imprinting regions and their interactions, the interpretation of the copy number variations in that region is complicated. The clinical outcome in case of microduplications or microdeletions is therefore influenced by the size, the breakpoint positions and the parental inheritance of the imbalance as well as by the imprinting status of the affected genes. Based on their own new cases and those from the literature, the authors give an overview on the genotype–phenotype correlation in chromosomal rearrangements in 11p15 as the basis for a directed genetic counselling. The detailed characterisation of patients and families helps to further delineate risk figures for syndromes associated with 11p15 disturbances. Furthermore, these cases provide us with profound insights in the complex regulation of the (imprinted) factors localised in 11p15.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013
Magdalena Gogiel; Matthias Begemann; Sabrina Spengler; Lukas Soellner; Ulf Göretzlehner; Thomas Eggermann; Gertrud Strobl-Wildemann
Uniparental disomy (UPD) of single chromosomes is a well-known molecular aberration in a group of congenital diseases commonly known as imprinting disorders (IDs). Whereas maternal and/or paternal UPD of chromosomes 6, 7, 11, 14 and 15 are associated with specific IDs (Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus, Silver–Russell syndrome, Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), upd(14)-syndromes, Prader–Willi syndrome, Angelman Syndrome), the other autosomes are not. UPD of the whole genome is not consistent with life, in case of non-mosaic genome-wide paternal UPD (patUPD) it leads to hydatidiform mole. In contrast, mosaic genome-wide patUPD might be compatible with life. Here we present a 19-year-old woman with BWS features and initially diagnosed to be carrier of a mosaic patUPD of chromosome 11p15. However, the patient presented further clinical findings not typically associated with BWS, including nesidioblastosis, fibroadenoma, hamartoma of the liver, hypoglycaemia and ovarian steroid cell tumour. Additional molecular investigations revealed a mosaic genome-wide patUPD. So far, only nine cases with mosaic genome-wide patUPD and similar clinical findings have been reported, but these patients were nearly almost diagnosed in early childhood. Summarising the data from the literature and those from our patient, it can be concluded that the mosaic genome-wide patUPD (also known as androgenic/biparental mosaicism) might explain unusual BWS phenotypes. Thus, these findings emphasise the need for multilocus testing in IDs to efficiently detect cases with disturbances affecting more than one chromosome.
Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics | 2012
Thomas Eggermann; Sabrina Spengler; Magdalena Gogiel; Matthias Begemann; Miriam Elbracht
Silver–Russell syndrome (SRS) is a congenital imprinting disorder characterized by intrauterine and postnatal growth restriction and further characteristic features. SRS is genetically heterogenous: 7–10% of patients carry a maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 7; >38% show a hypomethylation in imprinting control region 1 in 11p15; and a further class of mutations are copy number variations affecting different chromosomes, but mainly 11p15 and 7. The diagnostic work-up should thus aim to detect these three molecular subtypes. Numerous techniques are currently applied in genetic SRS testing, but none of them covers all known (epi)mutations, and they should therefore be used synergistically. However, future next-generation sequencing approaches will allow a comprehensive analysis of all types of alterations in SRS.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014
Renata Posmyk; Ryszard Leśniewicz; Magdalena Gogiel; Monika Chorąży; Alina Bakunowicz-Łazarczyk; Danuta Sielicka; Joris Vermeesch; Beata Nowakowska
We report on a de novo interstitial deletion of 20q11.21–q11.23 in a 2‐year‐old girl with a set of dysmorphic features, cleft palate, heart defect, severe feeding problems, failure to thrive, developmental delay, preaxial polydactyly (right thumb), and retinal dysplasia. Interstitial microdeletions of the long arm of chromosome 20 are rare. Exclusively rare are proximal microdeletions involving 20q11–q12 region. Our patient is the fourth described so far and has the smallest deleted region 20q11.21–q11.23 of 5.7 Mb. The defined clinical phenotype of our patient is very similar to previously published cases and confirms the existence of retinal dysplasia and skeletal abnormalities as a part of phenotypic spectrum for deletion 20q11–q12. Description of four similar patients, including two almost identical, suggests a new distinct, phenotypicaly recognizable microdeletion syndrome associated with the loss of 20q11–q12 region.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2012
Thomas Eggermann; Matthias Begemann; Magdalena Gogiel; María Palomares; Elena Vallespín; Luis Fernández; Rosario Cazorla; Sabrina Spengler; Sixto García-Miñaúr
Chromosomal duplications and deletions in 7p12.2 have been described in patients with growth disturbance phenotypes, that is, Silver–Russell and Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (SRS, BWS). The region harbors the imprinted GRB10/Grb10 gene which has been postulated to belong to a major fetal growth pathway. Based on its genomic localization, its physiological function and its imprinting status, GRB10/Grb10 was considered as a candidate for growth disturbance disorders. However, based on case reports with imbalances of the GRB10 locus it has been suggested that the altered GRB10 copy number should be responsible for the aberrant growth phenotype rather than an altered imprinting status of the gene. We now report on a patient with an increased height and weight in his first years of life carrying a de‐novo duplication (5.1 Mb) of paternal 7p12.2 material. The increased growth in this patient again contradicts the hypothesis that a gain of GRB10 copies leads to growth restriction. Indeed, it is necessary to compare the regions of imbalances in 7p12 and the affected genes in the different patients as other genes than GRB10 in 7p12 might cause these aberrant growth phenotypes.
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2014
Gesa Schwanitz; Javad Karimzad Hagh; Isa Abdi Rad; Mir Davood Omrani; Ulrike Gamerdinger; Regine Schubert; Miriam Elbracht; Thomas Eggermann; Katja Eggermann; Sabrina Spengler; Herdit M. Schüler; Magdalena Gogiel
The genetic relevance of small supernumerary marker chromosomes (sSMCs) depends on their content of euchromatin. In case of mosaicism, the phenotype of the carrier furthermore is influenced by the distribution of the marker in the body. In the majority of reported cases no correlation of the degree of mosaicism in the tissue(s) analyzed and the phenotype could be detected. In particular, non‐acrocentric derived sSMCs show a strong tendency to appear in mosaic state irrespective of the clinical picture. We present a patient with cognitive disability and mild craniofacial dysmorphisms with mosaicism of three different autosomal marker chromosomes. The extra chromosomes were analyzed by a combination of SNP array and a variety of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) probes. All three markers were identified as ring chromosomes containing different amounts of euchromatic material derived from chromosome 1 (1p12 → q21), 12 (12p13.1 → q13.11) and 18 (18p11.21 → q11.2). The size and the frequency of the sSMCs were strikingly different, besides, we observed an unequal combination of the three derivates.
International Journal of Human Genetics | 2009
Magdalena Gogiel; Sabrina Spengler; Isabelle Leisten; Nadine Schönherr; Gesa Schwanitz; Alina T. Midro; Gerhard Binder; Thomas Eggermann
Abstract Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS) is a heterogeneous disorder associated with intrauterine and postnatal growth retardation, skeletal asymmetry and facial dysmorphisms. In 7-10% of patients maternal uniparental disomy for chromosome 7 can be observed, nearly 50% of patients carry an epimutation resulting in hypomethylation of the imprinting center region 1 (ICR1) in 11p15. This leaves 40% of patients with unknown genetic aetiology. Based on the observation that the CTCFhomologue BORISis involved in imprinted gene expression and that it binds to methylated alleles we assumed that loss-of-function mutations in BORISmight have similar functional consequences as an ICR1 hypomethylation. On the other hand, there is evidence that BORISmutations may disturb the methylation process and therefore cause hypomethylation in the ICR1. In our study we searched for BORISgene mutations in a mixed cohort of SRS patients with and without 11p15 hypomethylation to determine whether this gene is involved in SRS aetiology. Mutation analyses revealed eight genomic variants but pathogenic mutations were not observed. Thus we conclude that alterations of the BORISgene are probably not associated with SRS.
European Journal of Medical Genetics | 2009
Sabrina Spengler; Magdalena Gogiel; Nadine Schönherr; Gerhard Binder; Thomas Eggermann
Postępy Nauk Medycznych | 2015
Renata Posmyk; Beata Bugała-Musiatowicz; Ryszard Leśniewicz; Magdalena Gogiel; Izabela Radowska; Marcin Musiatowicz; Izabela Szarmach
Archive | 2015
Renata Posmyk; Beata Bugała-Musiatowicz; Magdalena Gogiel; Izabela Radowska; Marcin Musiatowicz; Izabela Szarmach; Alina Bakunowicz-Łazarczyk