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Dive into the research topics where Milan Macek is active.

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Featured researches published by Milan Macek.


Current Biology | 2008

Correlation between Genetic and Geographic Structure in Europe

Oscar Lao; Timothy Lu; Michael Nothnagel; Olaf Junge; Sandra Freitag-Wolf; Amke Caliebe; Miroslava Balascakova; Jaume Bertranpetit; Laurence A. Bindoff; David Comas; Gunilla Holmlund; Anastasia Kouvatsi; Milan Macek; Isabelle Mollet; Walther Parson; Jukka U. Palo; Rafał Płoski; Antti Sajantila; Adriano Tagliabracci; Ulrik Gether; Thomas Werge; Fernando Rivadeneira; Albert Hofman; André G. Uitterlinden; Christian Gieger; Heinz-Erich Wichmann; Andreas Rüther; Stefan Schreiber; Christian Becker; Peter Nürnberg

Understanding the genetic structure of the European population is important, not only from a historical perspective, but also for the appropriate design and interpretation of genetic epidemiological studies. Previous population genetic analyses with autosomal markers in Europe either had a wide geographic but narrow genomic coverage [1, 2], or vice versa [3-6]. We therefore investigated Affymetrix GeneChip 500K genotype data from 2,514 individuals belonging to 23 different subpopulations, widely spread over Europe. Although we found only a low level of genetic differentiation between subpopulations, the existing differences were characterized by a strong continent-wide correlation between geographic and genetic distance. Furthermore, mean heterozygosity was larger, and mean linkage disequilibrium smaller, in southern as compared to northern Europe. Both parameters clearly showed a clinal distribution that provided evidence for a spatial continuity of genetic diversity in Europe. Our comprehensive genetic data are thus compatible with expectations based upon European population history, including the hypotheses of a south-north expansion and/or a larger effective population size in southern than in northern Europe. By including the widely used CEPH from Utah (CEU) samples into our analysis, we could show that these individuals represent northern and western Europeans reasonably well, thereby confirming their assumed regional ancestry.


Journal of Cystic Fibrosis | 2008

Consensus on the use and interpretation of cystic fibrosis mutation analysis in clinical practice

Carlo Castellani; Harry Cuppens; Milan Macek; Jean-Jacques Cassiman; Eitan Kerem; Peter R. Durie; Elizabeth Tullis; Baroukh M. Assael; Cristina Bombieri; A. Brown; Teresa Casals; Mireille Claustres; Garry R. Cutting; Els Dequeker; John A. Dodge; I. Doull; Philip M. Farrell; Claude Férec; Emmanuelle Girodon; Marie Johannesson; Batsheva Kerem; Anne Munck; Pier Franco Pignatti; Dragica Radojkovic; Paolo Rizzotti; Martin Schwarz; Manfred Stuhrmann; Maria Tzetis; Julian Zielenski; J.S. Elborn

It is often challenging for the clinician interested in cystic fibrosis (CF) to interpret molecular genetic results, and to integrate them in the diagnostic process. The limitations of genotyping technology, the choice of mutations to be tested, and the clinical context in which the test is administered can all influence how genetic information is interpreted. This paper describes the conclusions of a consensus conference to address the use and interpretation of CF mutation analysis in clinical settings. Although the diagnosis of CF is usually straightforward, care needs to be exercised in the use and interpretation of genetic tests: genotype information is not the final arbiter of a clinical diagnosis of CF or CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) protein related disorders. The diagnosis of these conditions is primarily based on the clinical presentation, and is supported by evaluation of CFTR function (sweat testing, nasal potential difference) and genetic analysis. None of these features are sufficient on their own to make a diagnosis of CF or CFTR-related disorders. Broad genotype/phenotype associations are useful in epidemiological studies, but CFTR genotype does not accurately predict individual outcome. The use of CFTR genotype for prediction of prognosis in people with CF at the time of their diagnosis is not recommended. The importance of communication between clinicians and medical genetic laboratories is emphasized. The results of testing and their implications should be reported in a manner understandable to the clinicians caring for CF patients.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Genetic Structure of Europeans: A View from the North–East

Mari Nelis; Tonu Esko; Reedik Mägi; Fritz Zimprich; Alexander Zimprich; Draga Toncheva; Sena Karachanak; T. Piskackova; I. Balascak; Leena Peltonen; Eveliina Jakkula; Karola Rehnström; Mark Lathrop; Simon Heath; Pilar Galan; Stefan Schreiber; Thomas Meitinger; Arne Pfeufer; H-Erich Wichmann; Béla Melegh; Noémi Polgár; Daniela Toniolo; Paolo Gasparini; Pio D'Adamo; Janis Klovins; Liene Nikitina-Zake; Vaidutis Kučinskas; Jūratė Kasnauskienė; Jan Lubinski; Tadeusz Dębniak

Using principal component (PC) analysis, we studied the genetic constitution of 3,112 individuals from Europe as portrayed by more than 270,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped with the Illumina Infinium platform. In cohorts where the sample size was >100, one hundred randomly chosen samples were used for analysis to minimize the sample size effect, resulting in a total of 1,564 samples. This analysis revealed that the genetic structure of the European population correlates closely with geography. The first two PCs highlight the genetic diversity corresponding to the northwest to southeast gradient and position the populations according to their approximate geographic origin. The resulting genetic map forms a triangular structure with a) Finland, b) the Baltic region, Poland and Western Russia, and c) Italy as its vertexes, and with d) Central- and Western Europe in its centre. Inter- and intra- population genetic differences were quantified by the inflation factor lambda (λ) (ranging from 1.00 to 4.21), fixation index (Fst) (ranging from 0.000 to 0.023), and by the number of markers exhibiting significant allele frequency differences in pair-wise population comparisons. The estimated lambda was used to assess the real diminishing impact to association statistics when two distinct populations are merged directly in an analysis. When the PC analysis was confined to the 1,019 Estonian individuals (0.1% of the Estonian population), a fine structure emerged that correlated with the geography of individual counties. With at least two cohorts available from several countries, genetic substructures were investigated in Czech, Finnish, German, Estonian and Italian populations. Together with previously published data, our results allow the creation of a comprehensive European genetic map that will greatly facilitate inter-population genetic studies including genome wide association studies (GWAS).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Association of human aging with a functional variant of klotho

Dan E. Arking; Alice Krebsova; Milan Macek; Albert Arking; I. Saira Mian; Linda P. Fried; Ada Hamosh; Srabani Dey; Iain McIntosh; Harry C. Dietz

Mice deficient in Klotho gene expression exhibit a syndrome resembling premature human aging. To determine whether variation in the human KLOTHO locus contributes to survival, we applied two newly characterized polymorphic microsatellite markers flanking the gene in a population-based association study. In a cohort chosen for its homogeneity, Bohemian Czechs, we demonstrated significant differences in selected marker allele frequencies between newborn and elderly individuals (P < 0.05). These results precipitated a search for functional variants of klotho. We identified an allele, termed KL-VS, containing six sequence variants in complete linkage disequilibrium, two of which result in amino acid substitutions F352V and C370S. Homozygous elderly individuals were underrepresented in three distinct populations: Bohemian Czechs, Baltimore Caucasians, and Baltimore African-Americans [combined odds ratio (OR) = 2.59, P < 0.0023]. In a transient transfection assay, secreted levels of klotho harboring V352 are reduced 6-fold, whereas extracellular levels of the S370 form are increased 2.9-fold. The V352/S370 double mutant exhibits an intermediate phenotype (1.6-fold increase), providing a rare example of intragenic complementation in cis by human single nucleotide polymorphisms. The remarkable conservation of F352 among homologous proteins suggests that it is functionally important. The corresponding substitution, F289V, in the closest human klotho paralog with a known substrate, cBGL1, completely eliminates its ability to cleave p-nitrophenyl-β-d-glucoside. These results suggest that the KL-VS allele influences the trafficking and catalytic activity of klotho, and that variation in klotho function contributes to heterogeneity in the onset and severity of human age-related phenotypes.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Chymotrypsin C (CTRC) variants that diminish activity or secretion are associated with chronic pancreatitis.

Jonas Rosendahl; Heiko Witt; Richárd Szmola; Eesh Bhatia; Béla Ózsvári; Olfert Landt; Hans Ulrich Schulz; Thomas M. Gress; Roland H. Pfützer; Matthias Löhr; Peter Kovacs; Matthias Blüher; Michael Stumvoll; Gourdas Choudhuri; Péter Hegyi; Rene H. M. te Morsche; Joost P. H. Drenth; Kaspar Truninger; Milan Macek; Gero Puhl; Ulrike Witt; Hartmut Schmidt; Carsten Büning; Johann Ockenga; Andreas Kage; David A. Groneberg; Renate Nickel; Thomas Berg; Bertram Wiedenmann; Hans Bödeker

Chronic pancreatitis is a persistent inflammatory disease of the pancreas, in which the digestive protease trypsin has a fundamental pathogenetic role. Here we have analyzed the gene encoding the trypsin-degrading enzyme chymotrypsin C (CTRC) in German subjects with idiopathic or hereditary chronic pancreatitis. Two alterations in this gene, p.R254W and p.K247_R254del, were significantly overrepresented in the pancreatitis group, being present in 30 of 901 (3.3%) affected individuals but only 21 of 2,804 (0.7%) controls (odds ratio (OR) = 4.6; confidence interval (CI) = 2.6–8.0; P = 1.3 × 10−7). A replication study identified these two variants in 10 of 348 (2.9%) individuals with alcoholic chronic pancreatitis but only 3 of 432 (0.7%) subjects with alcoholic liver disease (OR = 4.2; CI = 1.2–15.5; P = 0.02). CTRC variants were also found in 10 of 71 (14.1%) Indian subjects with tropical pancreatitis but only 1 of 84 (1.2%) healthy controls (OR = 13.6; CI = 1.7–109.2; P = 0.0028). Functional analysis of the CTRC variants showed impaired activity and/or reduced secretion. The results indicate that loss-of-function alterations in CTRC predispose to pancreatitis by diminishing its protective trypsin-degrading activity.


Nature Genetics | 2009

A common variant on chromosome 11q13 is associated with atopic dermatitis.

Stephan Weidinger; Regina Fölster-Holst; Anja Bauerfeind; Franz Rüschendorf; Giannino Patone; Klaus Rohde; Ingo Marenholz; Florian Schulz; Tamara Kerscher; Norbert Hubner; Ulrich Wahn; Stefan Schreiber; Andre Franke; Rainer Vogler; Simon Heath; Hansjörg Baurecht; Natalija Novak; Elke Rodriguez; Thomas Illig; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Michael Kurek; T. Piskackova; Milan Macek; Young-Ae Lee; Andreas Ruether

We conducted a genome-wide association study in 939 individuals with atopic dermatitis and 975 controls as well as 270 complete nuclear families with two affected siblings. SNPs consistently associated with atopic dermatitis in both discovery sets were then investigated in two additional independent replication sets totalling 2,637 cases and 3,957 controls. Highly significant association was found with allele A of rs7927894 on chromosome 11q13.5, located 38 kb downstream of C11orf30 (Pcombined = 7.6 × 10−10). Approximately 13% of individuals of European origin are homozygous for rs7927894[A], and their risk of developing atopic dermatitis is 1.47 times that of noncarriers.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Variation in a Repeat Sequence Determines Whether a Common Variant of the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Gene Is Pathogenic or Benign

Joshua D. Groman; Timothy W. Hefferon; Teresa Casals; Lluís Bassas; Xavier Estivill; Marie des Georges; Caroline Guittard; Monika Koudova; M. Daniele Fallin; Krisztina Németh; György Fekete; Ludovit Kadasi; Ken Friedman; Martin Schwarz; Cristina Bombieri; Pier Franco Pignatti; Emmanuel Kanavakis; Maria Tzetis; Marianne Schwartz; Giuseppe Novelli; Maria Rosaria D’Apice; Agnieszka Sobczyńska-Tomaszewska; Jerzy Bal; Manfred Stuhrmann; Milan Macek; Mireille Claustres; Garry R. Cutting

An abbreviated tract of five thymidines (5T) in intron 8 of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene is found in approximately 10% of individuals in the general population. When found in trans with a severe CFTR mutation, 5T can result in male infertility, nonclassic cystic fibrosis, or a normal phenotype. To test whether the number of TG repeats adjacent to 5T influences disease penetrance, we determined TG repeat number in 98 patients with male infertility due to congenital absence of the vas deferens, 9 patients with nonclassic CF, and 27 unaffected individuals (fertile men). Each of the individuals in this study had a severe CFTR mutation on one CFTR gene and 5T on the other. Of the unaffected individuals, 78% (21 of 27) had 5T adjacent to 11 TG repeats, compared with 9% (10 of 107) of affected individuals. Conversely, 91% (97 of 107) of affected individuals had 12 or 13 TG repeats, versus only 22% (6 of 27) of unaffected individuals (P<.00001). Those individuals with 5T adjacent to either 12 or 13 TG repeats were substantially more likely to exhibit an abnormal phenotype than those with 5T adjacent to 11 TG repeats (odds ratio 34.0, 95% CI 11.1-103.7, P<.00001). Thus, determination of TG repeat number will allow for more accurate prediction of benign versus pathogenic 5T alleles.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Detection of a cystic fibrosis modifier locus for meconium ileus on human chromosome 19q13

Julian Zielenski; Mary Corey; Richard Rozmahel; Danuta Markiewicz; Isabel Aznarez; Teresa Casals; Sara Larriba; Bernard Mercier; Garry R. Cutting; Alice Krebsova; Milan Macek; Elinor Langfelder-Schwind; Bruce C. Marshall; Joan DeCelie-Germana; Mirreille Claustres; Ana Palacio; Jerzy Bal; Aleksandra Nowakowska; Claude Férec; Xavier Estivill; Peter R. Durie; Lap-Chee Tsui

Detection of a cystic fibrosis modifier locus for meconium ileus on human chromosome 19q13


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene mutations in allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis

P. W. Miller; Ada Hamosh; Milan Macek; P. A. Greenberger; J. MacLean; S. M. Walden; R. G. Slavin; Garry R. Cutting

The etiology of allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (ABPA) is not well understood. A clinical phenotype resembling the pulmonary disease seen in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients can occur in some individuals with ABPA. Reports of familial occurrence of ABPA and increased incidence in CF patients suggest a possible genetic basis for the disease. To test this possibility, the entire coding region of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) gene was analyzed in 11 individuals who met strict criteria for the diagnosis of ABPA and had normal sweat electrolytes (< or = 40 mmol/liter). One patient carried two CF mutations (deltaF508/R347H), and five were found to carry one CF mutation (four deltaF508; one R117H). The frequency of the deltaF508 mutation in patients with ABPA was significantly higher than in 53 Caucasian patients with chronic bronchitis (P < .0003) and the general population (P < .003). These results suggest that CFTR plays an etiologic role in a subset of ABPA patients.


Nature Genetics | 2006

A degradation-sensitive anionic trypsinogen (PRSS2) variant protects against chronic pancreatitis

Heiko Witt; Miklós Sahin-Tóth; Olfert Landt; Jian-Min Chen; Thilo Kähne; Joost P. H. Drenth; Zoltán Kukor; Edit Szepessy; Walter Halangk; Stefan Dahm; Klaus Rohde; Hans Ulrich Schulz; Cédric Le Maréchal; Nejat Akar; Rudolf W. Ammann; Kaspar Truninger; Mario Bargetzi; Eesh Bhatia; Carlo Castellani; Giulia Martina Cavestro; Milos Cerny; Giovanni Destro-Bisol; Gabriella Spedini; Jan B.M.J. Jansen; Monika Koudova; Eva Rausova; Milan Macek; Núria Malats; Francisco X. Real; Hans Jürgen Menzel

Chronic pancreatitis is a common inflammatory disease of the pancreas. Mutations in the genes encoding cationic trypsinogen (PRSS1) and the pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (SPINK1) are associated with chronic pancreatitis. Because increased proteolytic activity owing to mutated PRSS1 enhances the risk for chronic pancreatitis, mutations in the gene encoding anionic trypsinogen (PRSS2) may also predispose to disease. Here we analyzed PRSS2 in individuals with chronic pancreatitis and controls and found, to our surprise, that a variant of codon 191 (G191R) is overrepresented in control subjects: G191R was present in 220/6,459 (3.4%) controls but in only 32/2,466 (1.3%) affected individuals (odds ratio 0.37; P = 1.1 × 10−8). Upon activation by enterokinase or trypsin, purified recombinant G191R protein showed a complete loss of trypsin activity owing to the introduction of a new tryptic cleavage site that renders the enzyme hypersensitive to autocatalytic proteolysis. In conclusion, the G191R variant of PRSS2 mitigates intrapancreatic trypsin activity and thereby protects against chronic pancreatitis.

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Dive into the Milan Macek's collaboration.

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V. Skalicka

Charles University in Prague

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V. Vavrova

Charles University in Prague

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T. Piskackova

Charles University in Prague

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A. Holubová

Charles University in Prague

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Garry R. Cutting

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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D. Zemkova

Charles University in Prague

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Felix Votava

Charles University in Prague

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A Stambergova

Charles University in Prague

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Veronika Krulisova

Charles University in Prague

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