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Featured researches published by Michael R. Speicher.


Archive | 2001

ArticleSecurin Is Required for Chromosomal Stability in Human Cells

Prasad V. Jallepalli; Irene Waizenegger; Fred Bunz; Sabine Langer; Michael R. Speicher; Jan-Michael Peters; Kenneth W. Kinzler; Bert Vogelstein; Christoph Lengauer

Abnormalities of chromosome number are the most common genetic aberrations in cancer. The mechanisms regulating the fidelity of mitotic chromosome transmission in mammalian cells are therefore of great interest. Here we show that human cells without an hSecurin gene lose chromosomes at a high frequency. This loss was linked to abnormal anaphases during which cells underwent repetitive unsuccessful attempts to segregate their chromosomes. The abnormal mitoses were associated with biochemical defects in the activation of separin, the sister-separating protease, rendering it unable to cleave the cohesin subunit Scc1 efficiently. These results illuminate the function of mammalian securin and show that it is essential for the maintenance of euploidy.


Human Genetics | 1993

Detection of amplified DNA sequences by reverse chromosome painting using genomic tumor DNA as probe

Stefan Joos; Harry Scherthan; Michael R. Speicher; Jürgen Schlegel; Thomas Cremer; Peter Lichter

A modification of “reverse chromosome painting” was carried out using genomic DNA from tumor cells as a complex probe for chromosomal in situ suppression hybridization to normal metaphase chromsome spreads. Amplified DNA sequences contained in such probes showed specific signals, revealing the normal chromosome positions from which these sequences were derived. As a model system, genomic DNAs were analyzed from three tumor cell lines with amplification units including the proto-oncogene c-myc. The smallest amplification unit was about 90 kb and was present in 16–24 copies; the largest unit was bigger than 600 kb and was present in 16–32 copies. Specific signals that co-localized with a differently labeled c-myc probe on chromosome band 8q24 were obtained with genomic DNA from each cell line. In further experiments, genomic DNA derived from primary tumor material was used in the case of a male patient with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Southern blot analysis using an epidermal growth factor receptor gene (EGFR) probe that maps to 7p13 indicated the amplification of sequences from this gene. Using reverse chromosome painting, signals were found both on band 7p13 and bands 12q13–q15. Notably, the signal on 12q13–q15 was consistently stronger. The weaker 7p13 signal showed co-localization with the major signal of the differently labeled EGFR probe. A minor signal of this probe was seen on 12q13, suggesting cross-hybridization to ERB3 sequences homologous to EGFR. The results indicate co-amplification of sequences from bands 12q13–q15, in addition to sequences from band 7p13. Several oncogenes map to 12q13–q15 providing candidate genes for a tumor-associated proto-oncogene amplification. Although the nature of the amplified sequences needs to be clarified, this experiment demonstrates the potential of reverse chromosome painting with genomic tumor DNA for rapidly mapping the normal chromosomal localization of the DNA from which the amplified sequences were derived. In addition, a weaker staining of chromosomes 10 and X was consistently observed indicating that these chromosomes were present in only one copy in the GBM genome. This rapid approach can be used to analyze cases where no metaphase spreads from the tumor material are available. It does not require any preknowledge of amplified sequences and can be applied to screen large numbers of tumors.


Human Genetics | 1993

A strategy for the characterization of minute chromosome rearrangements using multiple color fluorescence in situ hybridization with chromosome-specific DNA libraries and YAC clones

Susanne Popp; Anna Jauch; Detlev Schindler; Michael R. Speicher; Christoph Lengauer; Helen Donis-Keller; Harold Riethman; Thomas Cremer

The identification of marker chromosomes in clinical and tumor cytogenetics by chromosome banding analysis can create problems. In this study, we present a strategy to define minute chromosomal rearrangements by multicolor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with “whole chromosome painting” probes derived from chromosome-specific DNA libraries and Alu-polymerase chain reaction (PCR) products of various region-specific yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones. To demonstrate the usefulness of this strategy for the characterization of chromosome rearrangements unidentifiable by banding techniques, an 8p+ marker chromosome with two extra bands present in the karyotype of a child with multiple anomalies, malformations, and severe mental retardation was investigated. A series of seven-color FISH experiments with sets of fluorochrome-labeled DNA library probes from flow-sorted chromosomes demonstrated that the additional segment on 8p+ was derived from chromosome 6. For a more detailed characterization of the marker chromosome, three-color FISH experiments with library probes specific to chromosomes 6 and 8 were performed in combination with newly established telomeric and subtelomeric YAC clones from 6q25, 6p23, and 8p23. These experiments demonstrated a trisomy 6pter→6p22 and a monosomy 8pter→8p23 in the patient. The present limitations for a broad application of this strategy and its possible improvements are discussed.


Human Genetics | 1996

Detection of a germline mutation and somatic homozygous loss of the von Hippel-Lindau tumor-suppressor gene in a family with a de novo mutation : A combined genetic study, including cytogenetics, PCR/SSCP, FISH, and CGH

Hans-Jochen Decker; Christine Neuhaus; Anna Jauch; Michael R. Speicher; Thomas Ried; Michael Bujard; Hiltrud Brauch; Stephen Störkel; M. Stöckle; Barbara Seliger; Christoph Huber

Abstractvon Hippel-Lindau (VHL) disease is a pleioropic disorder featuring a variety of malignant and benign tumors of the eye, central nervous system, kidney, and adrenal gland. Recently the VHL gene has been identified in the chromosomal region 3p25-26. Prognosis and successful management of VHL patients and their descendants depend on unambiguous diagnosis. Due to recurrent hemangioblastomas, a 29-year-old patient without familial history of VHL disease was diagnosed to be at risk for the disease. Histopathological examination of a small renal mass identified a clear cell tumor with a G1 grading. Genetic characterization of the germline and of the renal tumor was performed. Polymerase chain reaction/single strand conformation polymorphism (PCR/SSCP) analysis with primers from the VHL gene identified a deletion of a single nucleotide in exon 2 in the patients germline and in the tumor, but not in the DNA of his parents. This deletion therefore must be a de novo mutation. Comparative genome hybridization (CGH) and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis of the G1 tumor with differentially labelled yeast artifical chromosome (YAC) clones showed loss of 3p and of the 3p26 signals, respectively. In conclusion, we identified a de novo germline mutation in the VHL gene of a young patient and a somatic chromosome 3p loss at the homologous chromosome 3 in his renal tumor. Our results suggest a recessive mode of inactivation of the VHL gene, providing solid evidence for its tumor-suppressor gene characteristics. Our data show the diagnostic potential of genetic testing, especially in patients without VHL family history. Furthermore, the findings of homozygous inactivation of the VHL gene in a G1 tumor support the notion that the inactivation of the VHL gene is an early event in tumorigenesis of renal cell carcinoma.


Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1993

Characterization of two marker chromosomes in a patient with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia by two-color fluorescence in situ hybridization.

Masafumi Taniwaki; Michael R. Speicher; Christoph Lengauer; Anna Jauch; Susanne Popp; Thomas Cremer

A patient with acute nonlymphocytic leukemia (ANLL), M5b according to French-American-British (FAB) classification, showed monosomy 16, an extra 1p-, and a 21q+. These derivative chromosomes could not be defined by GTG-banding. For better characterization, we performed two-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) experiments applying DNA libraries from sorted human chromosomes, chromosome-specific repetitive probes, and a band-specific YAC-clone. With these FISH studies the karyotype could be characterized as 46,XY, +der(1)t(1;21)(p11;?), -16,der(21)t(16;21) (p11.1;q22).


Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 1993

Role of chromosome territories in the functional compartmentalization of the cell nucleus

Thomas Cremer; A. Kurz; R. M. Zirbel; Steffen Dietzel; Bernd Rinke; Evelin Schröck; Michael R. Speicher; U. R. Mathieu; Anna Jauch; Patricia Emmerich; Harry Scherthan; Thomas Ried; Christoph Cremer; Peter Lichter


Journal of Cell Biology | 1996

Three-dimensional reconstruction of painted human interphase chromosomes: active and inactive X chromosome territories have similar volumes but differ in shape and surface structure.

Roland Eils; Steffen Dietzel; Etienne Bertin; Evelin Schröck; Michael R. Speicher; Thomas Ried; Michel Robert-Nicoud; Christoph Cremer; Thomas Cremer


Archive | 1996

Arrangement of nucleic acid sequences for comparative genomic hybridization

Thomas Cremer; Thomas Ried; Michael R. Speicher; Anna Jauch; Peter Lichter


Methods of Molecular Biology | 1994

FISH of Alu-PCR-amplified YAC clones and applications in tumor cytogenetics.

Christoph Lengauer; Michael R. Speicher; Thomas Cremer


Archive | 2014

METHOD FOR DIAGNOSING A DISEASE BASED ON PLASMA-DNA DISTRIBUTION

Jochen B. Geigl; Ellen Heitzer; Eva-maria Hoffmann; Michael R. Speicher

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Thomas Ried

National Institutes of Health

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Thomas Cremer

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

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Evelin Schröck

Dresden University of Technology

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