Michael Triebwasser
Washington University in St. Louis
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Triebwasser.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Johanna M. Seddon; Yi Yu; Elizabeth C. Miller; Robyn Reynolds; Perciliz L. Tan; Sivakumar Gowrisankar; Jacqueline I. Goldstein; Michael Triebwasser; Holly E. Anderson; Jennyfer Zerbib; David J. Kavanagh; Eric H. Souied; Nicholas Katsanis; Mark J. Daly; John P. Atkinson; Soumya Raychaudhuri
To define the role of rare variants in advanced age-related macular degeneration (AMD) risk, we sequenced the exons of 681 genes within all reported AMD loci and related pathways in 2,493 cases and controls. We first tested each gene for increased or decreased burden of rare variants in cases compared to controls. We found that 7.8% of AMD cases compared to 2.3% of controls are carriers of rare missense CFI variants (odds ratio (OR) = 3.6; P = 2 × 10−8). There was a predominance of dysfunctional variants in cases compared to controls. We then tested individual variants for association with disease. We observed significant association with rare missense alleles in genes other than CFI. Genotyping in 5,115 independent samples confirmed associations with AMD of an allele in C3 encoding p.Lys155Gln (replication P = 3.5 × 10−5, OR = 2.8; joint P = 5.2 × 10−9, OR = 3.8) and an allele in C9 encoding p.Pro167Ser (replication P = 2.4 × 10−5, OR = 2.2; joint P = 6.5 × 10−7, OR = 2.2). Finally, we show that the allele of C3 encoding Gln155 results in resistance to proteolytic inactivation by CFH and CFI. These results implicate loss of C3 protein regulation and excessive alternative complement activation in AMD pathogenesis, thus informing both the direction of effect and mechanistic underpinnings of this disorder.
PLOS Medicine | 2011
Jane E. Salmon; Cara Heuser; Michael Triebwasser; M. Kathryn Liszewski; David J. Kavanagh; Lubka T. Roumenina; D. Ware Branch; Timothy H.J. Goodship; Véronique Frémeaux-Bacchi; John P. Atkinson
Jane Salmon and colleagues studied 250 pregnant patients with SLE and/or antiphospholipid antibodies and found an association of risk variants in complement regulatory proteins in patients who developed preeclampsia, as well as in preeclampsia patients lacking autoimmune disease.
Molecular Immunology | 2014
Elizabeth C. Schramm; Simon J. Clark; Michael Triebwasser; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Johanna M. Seddon; John P. Atkinson
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a major cause of visual impairment in the western world. It is characterized by the presence of lipoproteinaceous deposits (drusen) in the inner layers of the retina. Immunohistochemistry studies identified deposition of complement proteins in the drusen as well as in the choroid. In the last decade, genetic studies have linked both common and rare variants in genes of the complement system to increased risk of development of AMD. Here, we review the variants described to date and discuss the functional implications of dysregulation of the alternative pathway of complement in AMD.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2014
Yi Yu; Michael Triebwasser; Edwin K. S. Wong; Elizabeth C. Schramm; Brett Thomas; Robyn Reynolds; Elaine R. Mardis; John P. Atkinson; Mark J. Daly; Soumya Raychaudhuri; David J. Kavanagh; Johanna M. Seddon
We sequenced the whole exome of 35 cases and 7 controls from 9 age-related macular degeneration (AMD) families in whom known common genetic risk alleles could not explain their high disease burden and/or their early-onset advanced disease. Two families harbored novel rare mutations in CFH (R53C and D90G). R53C segregates perfectly with AMD in 11 cases (heterozygous) and 1 elderly control (reference allele) (LOD = 5.07, P = 6.7 × 10(-7)). In an independent cohort, 4 out of 1676 cases but none of the 745 examined controls or 4300 NHBLI Exome Sequencing Project (ESP) samples carried the R53C mutation (P = 0.0039). In another family of six siblings, D90G similarly segregated with AMD in five cases and one control (LOD = 1.22, P = 0.009). No other sample in our large cohort or the ESP had this mutation. Functional studies demonstrated that R53C decreased the ability of FH to perform decay accelerating activity. D90G exhibited a decrease in cofactor-mediated inactivation. Both of these changes would lead to a loss of regulatory activity, resulting in excessive alternative pathway activation. This study represents an initial application of the whole-exome strategy to families with early-onset AMD. It successfully identified high impact alleles leading to clearer functional insight into AMD etiopathogenesis.
Human Molecular Genetics | 2015
David J. Kavanagh; Yi Yu; Elizabeth C. Schramm; Michael Triebwasser; Erin K. Wagner; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Mark J. Daly; John P. Atkinson; Johanna M. Seddon
To assess a potential diagnostic and therapeutic biomarker for age-related macular degeneration (AMD), we sequenced the complement factor I gene (CFI) in 2266 individuals with AMD and 1400 without, identifying 231 individuals with rare genetic variants. We evaluated the functional impact by measuring circulating serum factor I (FI) protein levels in individuals with and without rare CFI variants. The burden of very rare (frequency <1/1000) variants in CFI was strongly associated with disease (P = 1.1 × 10(-8)). In addition, we examined eight coding variants with counts ≥5 and saw evidence for association with AMD in three variants. Individuals with advanced AMD carrying a rare CFI variant had lower mean FI compared with non-AMD subjects carrying a variant (P < 0.001). Further new evidence that FI levels drive AMD risk comes from analyses showing individuals with a CFI rare variant and low FI were more likely to have advanced AMD (P = 5.6 × 10(-5)). Controlling for covariates, low FI increased the risk of advanced AMD among those with a variant compared with individuals without advanced AMD with a rare CFI variant (OR 13.6, P = 1.6 × 10(-4)), and also compared with control individuals without a rare CFI variant (OR 19.0, P = 1.1 × 10(-5)). Thus, low FI levels are strongly associated with rare CFI variants and AMD. Enhancing FI activity may be therapeutic and measuring FI provides a screening tool for identifying patients who are most likely to benefit from complement inhibitory therapy.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015
Michael Triebwasser; Elisha D. O. Roberson; Yi Yu; Elizabeth C. Schramm; Erin K. Wagner; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Johanna M. Seddon; John P. Atkinson
PURPOSE Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) has a substantial genetic risk component, as evidenced by the risk from common genetic variants uncovered in the first genome-wide association studies. More recently, it has become apparent that rare genetic variants also play an independent role in AMD risk. We sought to determine if rare variants in complement factor H (CFH) played a role in AMD risk. METHODS We had previously collected DNA from a large population of patients with advanced age-related macular degeneration (A-AMD) and controls for targeted deep sequencing of candidate AMD risk genes. In this analysis, we tested for an increased burden of rare variants in CFH in 1665 cases and 752 controls from this cohort. RESULTS We identified 65 missense, nonsense, or splice-site mutations with a minor allele frequency ≤ 1%. Rare variants with minor allele frequency ≤ 1% (odds ratio [OR] = 1.5, P = 4.4 × 10⁻²), 0.5% (OR = 1.6, P = 2.6 × 10⁻²), and all singletons (OR = 2.3, P = 3.3 × 10⁻²) were enriched in A-AMD cases. Moreover, we observed loss-of-function rare variants (nonsense, splice-site, and loss of a conserved cysteine) in 10 cases and serum levels of FH were decreased in all 5 with an available sample (haploinsufficiency). Further, rare variants in the major functional domains of CFH were increased in cases (OR = 3.2; P = 1.4 × 10⁻³) and the magnitude of the effect correlated with the disruptive nature of the variant, location in an active site, and inversely with minor allele frequency. CONCLUSIONS In this large A-AMD cohort, rare variants in the CFH gene were enriched and tended to be located in functional sites or led to low serum levels. These data, combined with those indicating a similar, but even more striking, increase in rare variants found in CFI, strongly implicate complement activation in A-AMD etiopathogenesis as CFH and CFI interact to inhibit the alternative pathway.
Hypertension | 2017
A. Inkeri Lokki; Emma Daly; Michael Triebwasser; Mitja I. Kurki; Elisha D. O. Roberson; Paavo Häppölä; Kirsi Auro; Markus Perola; Seppo Heinonen; Eero Kajantie; Juha Kere; Katja Kivinen; Anneli Pouta; Jane E. Salmon; Seppo Meri; Mark J. Daly; John P. Atkinson; Hannele Laivuori
Preeclampsia is a common pregnancy-specific vascular disorder characterized by new-onset hypertension and proteinuria during the second half of pregnancy. Predisposition to preeclampsia is in part heritable. It is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease later in life. We have sequenced 124 candidate genes implicated in preeclampsia to pinpoint genetic variants contributing to predisposition to or protection from preeclampsia. First, targeted exomic sequencing was performed in 500 preeclamptic women and 190 controls from the FINNPEC cohort (Finnish Genetics of Preeclampsia Consortium). Then 122 women with a history of preeclampsia and 1905 parous women with no such history from the National FINRISK Study (a large Finnish population survey on risk factors of chronic, noncommunicable diseases) were included in the analyses. We tested 146 rare and low-frequency variants and found an excess (observed 13 versus expected 7.3) nominally associated with preeclampsia (P<0.05). The most significantly associated sequence variants were protective variants rs35832528 (E982A; P=2.49E-4; odds ratio=0.387) and rs141440705 (R54S; P=0.003; odds ratio=0.442) in Fms related tyrosine kinase 1. These variants are enriched in the Finnish population with minor allele frequencies 0.026 and 0.017, respectively. They may also be associated with a lower risk of heart failure in 11 257 FINRISK women. This study provides the first evidence of maternal protective genetic variants in preeclampsia.
American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2018
Michael Triebwasser; Xiaobo Wu; Paula Bertram; Dennis E. Hourcade; Donald Michael Nelson; John P. Atkinson
Crry is a widely expressed type 1 transmembrane complement regulatory protein in rodents which protects self‐tissue by downregulating C3 activation. Crry−/− concepti produced by Crry+/− × Crry+/− matings are attacked by maternal complement system leading to loss before day 10. The membrane attack complex is not the mediator of this death. We hypothesized that the ability of C3b to engage the alternative pathways feedback loop relatively unchecked on placental membranes induces the lesion yielding the demise of the Crry−/− mouse.
American Journal of Pathology | 2014
Valeriy V. Lyzogubov; Xiaobo Wu; Purushottam Jha; Ruslana Tytarenko; Michael Triebwasser; Grant Kolar; Paula Bertram; Puran S. Bora; John P. Atkinson; Nalini S. Bora
Molecular Immunology | 2010
Jane E. Salmon; Michael Triebwasser; M. Kathryn Liszewski; David J. Kavanagh; Cara Heuser; Lubka T. Roumenina; Ware Branch; Timothy H.J. Goodship; Véronique Frémeaux-Bacchi; John P. Atkinson