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Dive into the research topics where Ohad S. Birk is active.

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Featured researches published by Ohad S. Birk.


Nature | 2000

The LIM homeobox gene Lhx9 is essential for mouse gonad formation.

Ohad S. Birk; Delane E. Casiano; Christopher A. Wassif; Tiziana Cogliati; Liping Zhao; Yangu Zhao; Alexander Grinberg; Sing-Ping Huang; Jordan A. Kreidberg; Keith L. Parker; Forbes D. Porter; Heiner Westphal

During mammalian embryonic development, the ovaries and testes develop from somatic cells of the urogenital ridges as indifferent gonads, harbouring primordial germ cells that have migrated there. After sex determination of the gonads, the testes produce testosterone and anti-Mullerian hormone which mediate male sexual differentiation, and the female developmental pathway ensues in their absence. Here we show that transcripts of the LIM homeobox gene Lhx9 are present in urogenital ridges of mice at embryonic day 9.5; later they localize to the interstitial region as morphological differentiation occurs. In mice lacking Lhx9 function, germ cells migrate normally, but somatic cells of the genital ridge fail to proliferate and a discrete gonad fails to form. In the absence of testosterone and anti-Mullerian hormone, genetically male mice are phenotypically female. The expression of steroidogenic factor 1 (Sf1), a nuclear receptor essential for gonadogenesis, is reduced to minimal levels in the Lhx9-deficient genital ridge, indicating that Lhx9 may lie upstream of Sf1 in a developmental cascade. Unlike mice lacking other genes that mediate early stages of gonadogenesis, Lhx9 mutants do not exhibit additional major developmental defects. Thus, LHX9 mutations may underlie certain forms of isolated gonadal agenesis in humans.


Diabetes | 1997

Hsp60 Peptide Therapy of NOD Mouse Diabetes Induces a Th2 Cytokine Burst and Downregulates Autoimmunity to Various β-Cell Antigens

Dana Elias; Aviram Meilin; Vitaly Ablamunits; Ohad S. Birk; Pnina Carmi; Stephanie Konen-Waisman; Irun R. Cohen

A peptide of the human 60-kDa heat-shock protein (hsp60), designated p277, was found to be useful as a therapeutic agent to arrest the autoimmune process responsible for diabetes in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. The effectiveness of peptide treatment was associated with the induction of peptide-specific antibodies of the IgG1 but not of the IgG2a isotype, suggesting the possibility that a Th2-type response may have been induced. We now report that the effectiveness of p277 treatment is associated with the transient activation of anti-p277 splenic T-cells that produce the Th2 cytokines interleukin-4 (IL-4) and IL-10. The Th2 response to p277 was associated with reduced Thl-type autoimmunity to hsp60 and to two other target antigens associated with diabetes: GAD and insulin. The Th2 shift appeared to be relatively specific; spontaneous T-cell reactivity to a bacterial antigen peptide remained in the Th1 mode in the p277-treated mice. Moreover, treatment with the bacterial peptide did not induce a change in cytokine profile, and it did not affect progression of the disease. Thus, effective peptide treatment of the diabetogenic process associated with the induction of antibodies may be explained by selective and transient activation of Th2 autoimmune reactivity.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

PLA2G6 Mutation Underlies Infantile Neuroaxonal Dystrophy

Shareef Khateeb; Hagit Flusser; Rivka Ofir; Ilan Shelef; Ginat Narkis; Gideon Vardi; Zamir Shorer; Rachel Levy; Aharon Galil; Khalil Elbedour; Ohad S. Birk

Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) is an autosomal recessive progressive neurodegenerative disease that presents within the first 2 years of life and culminates in death by age 10 years. Affected individuals from two unrelated Bedouin Israeli kindreds were studied. Brain imaging demonstrated diffuse cerebellar atrophy and abnormal iron deposition in the medial and lateral globus pallidum. Progressive white-matter disease and reduction of the N-acetyl aspartate : chromium ratio were evident on magnetic resonance spectroscopy, suggesting loss of myelination. The clinical and radiological diagnosis of INAD was verified by sural nerve biopsy. The disease gene was mapped to a 1.17-Mb locus on chromosome 22q13.1 (LOD score 4.7 at recombination fraction 0 for SNP rs139897), and an underlying mutation common to both affected families was identified in PLA2G6, the gene encoding phospholipase A2 group VI (cytosolic, calcium-independent). These findings highlight a role of phospholipase in neurodegenerative disorders.


Genome Research | 2012

Coding exons function as tissue-specific enhancers of nearby genes

Ramon Y. Birnbaum; E. Josephine Clowney; Orly Agamy; Mee J. Kim; Jingjing Zhao; Takayuki Yamanaka; Zachary Pappalardo; Shoa L. Clarke; Aaron M. Wenger; Loan Nguyen; Fiorella Gurrieri; David B. Everman; Charles E. Schwartz; Ohad S. Birk; Gill Bejerano; Stavros Lomvardas; Nadav Ahituv

Enhancers are essential gene regulatory elements whose alteration can lead to morphological differences between species, developmental abnormalities, and human disease. Current strategies to identify enhancers focus primarily on noncoding sequences and tend to exclude protein coding sequences. Here, we analyzed 25 available ChIP-seq data sets that identify enhancers in an unbiased manner (H3K4me1, H3K27ac, and EP300) for peaks that overlap exons. We find that, on average, 7% of all ChIP-seq peaks overlap coding exons (after excluding for peaks that overlap with first exons). By using mouse and zebrafish enhancer assays, we demonstrate that several of these exonic enhancer (eExons) candidates can function as enhancers of their neighboring genes and that the exonic sequence is necessary for enhancer activity. Using ChIP, 3C, and DNA FISH, we further show that one of these exonic limb enhancers, Dync1i1 exon 15, has active enhancer marks and physically interacts with Dlx5/6 promoter regions 900 kb away. In addition, its removal by chromosomal abnormalities in humans could cause split hand and foot malformation 1 (SHFM1), a disorder associated with DLX5/6. These results demonstrate that DNA sequences can have a dual function, operating as coding exons in one tissue and enhancers of nearby gene(s) in another tissue, suggesting that phenotypes resulting from coding mutations could be caused not only by protein alteration but also by disrupting the regulation of another gene.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Maternally inherited Birk Barel mental retardation dysmorphism syndrome caused by a mutation in the genomically imprinted potassium channel KCNK9.

Ortal Barel; Stavit A. Shalev; Rivka Ofir; Asi Cohen; Joël Zlotogora; Zamir Shorer; Galia Mazor; Gal Finer; Shareef Khateeb; Noam Zilberberg; Ohad S. Birk

We describe a maternally transmitted genomic-imprinting syndrome of mental retardation, hypotonia, and unique dysmorphism with elongated face. We mapped the disease-associated locus to approximately 7.27 Mb on chromosome 8q24 and demonstrated that the disease is caused by a missense mutation in the maternal copy of KCNK9 within this locus. KCNK9 is maternally transmitted (imprinted with paternal silencing) and encodes K(2P)9.1, a member of the two pore-domain potassium channel (K(2P)) subfamily. The mutation fully abolishes the channels currents--both when functioning as a homodimer or as a heterodimer with K(2P)3.1.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

Mutations Disrupting Selenocysteine Formation Cause Progressive Cerebello-Cerebral Atrophy

Orly Agamy; Bruria Ben Zeev; Dorit Lev; Barak Marcus; Dina Fine; Dan Su; Ginat Narkis; Rivka Ofir; Chen Hoffmann; Esther Leshinsky-Silver; Hagit Flusser; Sara Sivan; Dieter Söll; Tally Lerman-Sagie; Ohad S. Birk

The essential micronutrient selenium is found in proteins as selenocysteine (Sec), the only genetically encoded amino acid whose biosynthesis occurs on its cognate tRNA in humans. In the final step of selenocysteine formation, the essential enzyme SepSecS catalyzes the conversion of Sep-tRNA to Sec-tRNA. We demonstrate that SepSecS mutations cause autosomal-recessive progressive cerebellocerebral atrophy (PCCA) in Jews of Iraqi and Moroccan ancestry. Both founder mutations, common in these two populations, disrupt the sole route to the biosynthesis of the 21st amino acid, Sec, and thus to the generation of selenoproteins in humans.


Molecular Human Reproduction | 2008

Gene expression microarray profiles of cumulus cells in lean and overweight-obese polycystic ovary syndrome patients

Shlomit Kenigsberg; Yaakov Bentov; Vered Chalifa-Caspi; Gad Potashnik; Rivka Ofir; Ohad S. Birk

The aim of this work was to study gene expression patterns of cultured cumulus cells from lean and overweight-obese polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) patients using genome-wide oligonucleotide microarray. The study included 25 patients undergoing in vitro fertilization and intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection: 12 diagnosed with PCOS and 13 matching controls. Each of the groups was subdivided into lean (body mass index (BMI) < 24) and overweight (BMI > 27) subgroups. The following comparisons of gene expression data were made: lean PCOS versus lean controls, lean PCOS versus overweight PCOS, all PCOS versus all controls, overweight PCOS versus overweight controls, overweight controls versus lean controls and all overweight versus all lean. The largest number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs), with fold change (FC) |FC| >or= 1.5 and P-value < 0.01, was found in the lean PCOS versus lean controls comparison (487) with most of these genes being down-regulated in PCOS. The second largest group of DEGs originated from the comparison of lean PCOS versus overweight PCOS (305). The other comparisons resulted in a much smaller number of DEGs (174, 109, 125 and 12, respectively). In the comparison of lean PCOS with lean controls, most DEGs were transcription factors and components of the extracellular matrix and two pathways, Wnt/beta-catenin and mitogen-activated protein kinase. When comparing overweight PCOS with overweight controls, most DEGs were of pathways related to insulin signaling, metabolism and energy production. The finding of unique gene expression patterns in cumulus cells from the two PCOS subtypes is in agreement with other studies that have found the two to be separate entities with potentially different pathophysiologies.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Lethal Contractural Syndrome Type 3 (LCCS3) Is Caused by a Mutation in PIP5K1C, Which Encodes PIPKIγ of the Phophatidylinsitol Pathway

Ginat Narkis; Rivka Ofir; Daniella Landau; Esther Manor; Micha Volokita; Relly Hershkowitz; Khalil Elbedour; Ohad S. Birk

Lethal congenital contractural syndrome (LCCS) is a severe form of arthrogryposis. To date, two autosomal recessive forms of the disease (LCCS and LCCS2) have been described and mapped to chromosomes 9q34 and 12q13, respectively. We now describe a third LCCS phenotype (LCCS3)--similar to LCCS2 yet without neurogenic bladder. Using 10K single-nucleotide-polymorphism arrays, we mapped the disease-associated gene to 8.8 Mb on chromosome 19p13. Further analysis using microsatallite markers narrowed the locus to a 3.4-Mb region harboring 120 genes. Of these genes, 30 candidates were sequenced, which identified a single homozygous mutation in PIP5K1C. PIP5K1C encodes phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate 5-kinase, type I, gamma (PIPKI gamma ), an enzyme that phophorylates phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate to generate phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)). We demonstrate that the mutation causes substitution of aspartic acid with asparagine at amino acid 253 (D253N), abrogating the kinase activity of PIPKI gamma . Thus, a defect in the phosphatidylinositol pathway leading to a decrease in synthesis of PIP(2), a molecule active in endocytosis of synaptic vesicle proteins, culminates in lethal congenital arthrogryposis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Mitochondrial Complex III Deficiency Associated with a Homozygous Mutation in UQCRQ

Ortal Barel; Zamir Shorer; Hagit Flusser; Rivka Ofir; Ginat Narkis; Gal Finer; Hanah Shalev; Ahmad Nasasra; Ann Saada; Ohad S. Birk

A consanguineous Israeli Bedouin kindred presented with an autosomal-recessive nonlethal phenotype of severe psychomotor retardation and extrapyramidal signs, dystonia, athetosis and ataxia, mild axial hypotonia, and marked global dementia with defects in verbal and expressive communication skills. Metabolic workup was normal except for mildly elevated blood lactate levels. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed increased density in the putamen, with decreased density and size of the caudate and lentiform nuclei. Reduced activity specifically of mitochondrial complex III and variable decrease in complex I activity were evident in muscle biopsies. Homozygosity of affected individuals to UQCRB and to BCSIL, previously associated with isolated complex III deficiency, was ruled out. Genome-wide linkage analysis identified a homozygosity locus of approximately 9 cM on chromosome 5q31 that was further narrowed down to 2.14 cM, harboring 30 genes (logarithm of the odds [LOD] score 8.82 at theta = 0). All 30 genes were sequenced, revealing a single missense (p.Ser45Phe) mutation in UQCRQ (encoding ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase, complex III subunit VII, 9.5 kDa), one of the ten nuclear genes encoding proteins of mitochondrial complex III.


Human Genetics | 2004

CHX10 mutations cause non-syndromic microphthalmia/ anophthalmia in Arab and Jewish kindreds.

Udy Bar-Yosef; Izzeldin Abuelaish; Tamar Harel; Neta Hendler; Rivka Ofir; Ohad S. Birk

Microphthalmia/anophthalmia is a clinically heterogeneous disorder of eye formation, ranging from small size of a single eye to complete bilateral absence of ocular tissues. The genetic defect underlying isolated autosomal recessive microphthalmia/anophthalmia is yet unclear. We studied four families (two of Arab origin, one of Bedouin origin, and one of Persian-Jewish origin) with autosomal recessive microphthalmia/anophthalmia and no associated eye anomalies, and one Syrian–Jewish family with associated colobomas. Assuming a founder effect in each of the families, we performed homozygosity mapping using polymorphic markers adjacent to human homologues of genes known to be associated with eye absence in various species, namely EYA1, EYA2, EYA3, SIX4, SIX6, PAX6 and CHX10. No association was found with EYA1, EYA2, EYA3, SIX6 or PAX6. In two families, linkage analysis was consistent with possible association with SIX4, but no mutations were found in the coding region of the gene or its flanking intron sequences. In three of the five families, linkage analysis followed by sequencing demonstrated that affected individuals in each family were homozygous for a different CHX10 aberration: a mutation in the CVC domain and a deletion of the homeobox domain were found in two Arab families, and a mutation in the donor-acceptor site in the first intron in the Syrian-Jewish family. There was phenotypic variation between families having different mutations, but no significant phenotypic variation within each family. It has been previously shown that mutations in a particular nucleotide in CHX10 are associated with an autosomal recessive syndrome of microphthalmia/anophthalmia with iris colobomas and cataracts in two families. We now show that different mutations in other domains of the same gene underlie isolated microphthalmia/anophthalmia.

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Rivka Ofir

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Hagit Flusser

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Ginat Narkis

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Yonatan Perez

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Zamir Shorer

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Idan Cohen

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Sara Sivan

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Barak Markus

National Institute of Biotechnology

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Rotem Kadir

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Daniella Landau

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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