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Dive into the research topics where Paul W.J. van Vught is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul W.J. van Vught.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Genome-wide association study identifies 19p13.3 (UNC13A) and 9p21.2 as susceptibility loci for sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Michael A. van Es; Jan H. Veldink; Christiaan G.J. Saris; Hylke M. Blauw; Paul W.J. van Vught; Anna Birve; Robin Lemmens; Helenius J. Schelhaas; Ewout J.N. Groen; Mark H. B. Huisman; Anneke J. van der Kooi; Marianne de Visser; Caroline Dahlberg; Karol Estrada; Fernando Rivadeneira; Albert Hofman; Machiel J. Zwarts; Perry T.C. van Doormaal; Dan Rujescu; Eric Strengman; Ina Giegling; Pierandrea Muglia; Barbara Tomik; Agnieszka Slowik; André G. Uitterlinden; Corinna Hendrich; Stefan Waibel; Thomas Meyer; Albert C. Ludolph; Jonathan D. Glass

We conducted a genome-wide association study among 2,323 individuals with sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and 9,013 control subjects and evaluated all SNPs with P < 1.0 × 10−4 in a second, independent cohort of 2,532 affected individuals and 5,940 controls. Analysis of the genome-wide data revealed genome-wide significance for one SNP, rs12608932, with P = 1.30 × 10−9. This SNP showed robust replication in the second cohort (P = 1.86 × 10−6), and a combined analysis over the two stages yielded P = 2.53 × 10−14. The rs12608932 SNP is located at 19p13.3 and maps to a haplotype block within the boundaries of UNC13A, which regulates the release of neurotransmitters such as glutamate at neuromuscular synapses. Follow-up of additional SNPs showed genome-wide significance for two further SNPs (rs2814707, with P = 7.45 × 10−9, and rs3849942, with P = 1.01 × 10−8) in the combined analysis of both stages. These SNPs are located at chromosome 9p21.2, in a linkage region for familial ALS with frontotemporal dementia found previously in several large pedigrees.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Genetic variation in DPP6 is associated with susceptibility to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Michael A. van Es; Paul W.J. van Vught; Hylke M. Blauw; Lude Franke; Christiaan G.J. Saris; Ludo Van Den Bosch; Sonja W. de Jong; Vianney de Jong; Frank Baas; Ruben van 't Slot; Robin Lemmens; Helenius J. Schelhaas; Anna Birve; K Sleegers; Christine Van Broeckhoven; Jennifer C. Schymick; Bryan J. Traynor; John H. J. Wokke; Cisca Wijmenga; Wim Robberecht; Peter Andersen; Jan H. Veldink; Roel A. Ophoff; Leonard H. van den Berg

We identified a SNP in the DPP6 gene that is consistently strongly associated with susceptibility to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) in different populations of European ancestry, with an overall P value of 5.04 × 10−8 in 1,767 cases and 1,916 healthy controls and with an odds ratio of 1.30 (95% confidence interval (CI) of 1.18–1.43). Our finding is the first report of a genome-wide significant association with sporadic ALS and may be a target for future functional studies.


Lancet Neurology | 2007

ITPR2 as a susceptibility gene in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a genome-wide association study

Michael A. van Es; Paul W.J. van Vught; Hylke M. Blauw; Lude Franke; Christiaan G.J. Saris; Peter Andersen; Ludo Van Den Bosch; Sonja W. de Jong; Ruben van 't Slot; Anna Birve; Robin Lemmens; Vianney de Jong; Frank Baas; Helenius J. Schelhaas; Kristel Sleegers; Christine Van Broeckhoven; John H. J. Wokke; Cisca Wijmenga; Wim Robberecht; Jan H. Veldink; Roel A. Ophoff; Leonard H. van den Berg

BACKGROUND Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating disease characterised by progressive degeneration of motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. ALS is thought to be multifactorial, with both environmental and genetic causes. Our aim was to identify genetic variants that predispose for sporadic ALS. METHODS We did a three-stage genome-wide association study in 461 patients with ALS and 450 controls from The Netherlands, using Illumina 300K single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chips. The SNPs that were most strongly associated with ALS were analysed in a further 876 patients and 906 controls in independent sample series from The Netherlands, Belgium, and Sweden. We also investigated the possible pathological functions of associated genes using expression data from whole blood of patients with sporadic ALS and of control individuals who were included in the genome-wide association study. FINDINGS A genetic variant in the inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor 2 gene (ITPR2) was associated with ALS (p=0.012 after Bonferroni correction). Combined analysis of all samples (1337 patients and 1356 controls) confirmed this association (p=3.28x10(-6), odds ratio 1.58, 95% CI 1.30-1.91). ITPR2 expression was greater in the peripheral blood of 126 ALS patients than in that of 126 healthy controls (p=0.00016). INTERPRETATION Genetic variation in ITPR2 is a susceptibility factor for ALS. ITPR2 is a strong candidate susceptibility gene for ALS because it is involved in glutamate-mediated neurotransmission, is one of the main regulators of intracellular calcium concentrations, and has an important role in apoptosis.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Variants of the elongator protein 3 (ELP3) gene are associated with motor neuron degeneration

Claire L. Simpson; Robin Lemmens; Katarzyna Miskiewicz; Wendy J. Broom; Valerie K. Hansen; Paul W.J. van Vught; John Landers; Peter Sapp; Ludo Van Den Bosch; Joanne Knight; Benjamin M. Neale; Martin Turner; Jan H. Veldink; Roel A. Ophoff; Vineeta Tripathi; Ana Beleza; Meera N. Shah; Petroula Proitsi; Annelies Van Hoecke; Peter Carmeliet; H. Robert Horvitz; P. Nigel Leigh; Christopher Shaw; Leonard H. van den Berg; Pak Sham; John Powell; Patrik Verstreken; Robert H. Brown; Wim Robberecht; Ammar Al-Chalabi

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a spontaneous, relentlessly progressive motor neuron disease, usually resulting in death from respiratory failure within 3 years. Variation in the genes SOD1 and TARDBP accounts for a small percentage of cases, and other genes have shown association in both candidate gene and genome-wide studies, but the genetic causes remain largely unknown. We have performed two independent parallel studies, both implicating the RNA polymerase II component, ELP3, in axonal biology and neuronal degeneration. In the first, an association study of 1884 microsatellite markers, allelic variants of ELP3 were associated with ALS in three human populations comprising 1483 people (P = 1.96 × 10−9). In the second, an independent mutagenesis screen in Drosophila for genes important in neuronal communication and survival identified two different loss of function mutations, both in ELP3 (R475K and R456K). Furthermore, knock down of ELP3 protein levels using antisense morpholinos in zebrafish embryos resulted in dose-dependent motor axonal abnormalities [Pearson correlation: −0.49, P = 1.83 × 10−12 (start codon morpholino) and −0.46, P = 4.05 × 10−9 (splice-site morpholino), and in humans, risk-associated ELP3 genotypes correlated with reduced brain ELP3 expression (P = 0.01). These findings add to the growing body of evidence implicating the RNA processing pathway in neurodegeneration and suggest a critical role for ELP3 in neuron biology and of ELP3 variants in ALS.


Nature Medicine | 2012

EPHA4 is a disease modifier of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in animal models and in humans

Annelies Van Hoecke; Lies Schoonaert; Robin Lemmens; Mieke Timmers; Kim Staats; Angela S. Laird; Elke Peeters; Thomas Philips; An Goris; Bénédicte Dubois; Peter Andersen; Ammar Al-Chalabi; Vincent Thijs; Ann M. Turnley; Paul W.J. van Vught; Jan H. Veldink; Orla Hardiman; Ludo Van Den Bosch; Paloma Gonzalez-Perez; Philip Van Damme; Robert H. Brown; Leonard H. van den Berg; Wim Robberecht

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease affecting motor neurons. Disease onset and progression are variable, with survival ranging from months to decades. Factors underlying this variability may represent targets for therapeutic intervention. Here, we have screened a zebrafish model of ALS and identified Epha4, a receptor in the ephrin axonal repellent system, as a modifier of the disease phenotype in fish, rodents and humans. Genetic as well as pharmacological inhibition of Epha4 signaling rescues the mutant SOD1 phenotype in zebrafish and increases survival in mouse and rat models of ALS. Motor neurons that are most vulnerable to degeneration in ALS express higher levels of Epha4, and neuromuscular re-innervation by axotomized motor neurons is inhibited by the presence of Epha4. In humans with ALS, EPHA4 expression inversely correlates with disease onset and survival, and loss-of-function mutations in EPHA4 are associated with long survival. Furthermore, we found that knockdown of Epha4 also rescues the axonopathy induced by expression of mutant TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43), another protein causing familial ALS, and the axonopathy induced by knockdown of survival of motor neuron 1, a model for spinomuscular atrophy. This suggests that Epha4 generically modulates the vulnerability of (motor) neurons to axonal degeneration and may represent a new target for therapeutic intervention.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Reduced expression of the Kinesin-Associated Protein 3 (KIFAP3) gene increases survival in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

John Landers; Judith Melki; Vincent Meininger; Jonathan D. Glass; Leonard H. van den Berg; Michael A. van Es; Peter Sapp; Paul W.J. van Vught; Diane McKenna-Yasek; Hylke M. Blauw; Ting Jan Cho; Meraida Polak; Lijia Shi; Anne Marie Wills; Wendy J. Broom; Nicola Ticozzi; Vincenzo Silani; Aslihan Ozoguz; Ildefonso Rodriguez-Leyva; Jan H. Veldink; Adrian J. Ivinson; Christiaan G.J. Saris; Betsy A. Hosler; Alayna Barnes-Nessa; Nicole R. Couture; John H. J. Wokke; Thomas J. Kwiatkowski; Roel A. Ophoff; Simon Cronin; Orla Hardiman

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is a degenerative disorder of motor neurons that typically develops in the 6th decade and is uniformly fatal, usually within 5 years. To identify genetic variants associated with susceptibility and phenotypes in sporadic ALS, we performed a genome-wide SNP analysis in sporadic ALS cases and controls. A total of 288,357 SNPs were screened in a set of 1,821 sporadic ALS cases and 2,258 controls from the U.S. and Europe. Survival analysis was performed using 1,014 deceased sporadic cases. Top results for susceptibility were further screened in an independent sample set of 538 ALS cases and 556 controls. SNP rs1541160 within the KIFAP3 gene (encoding a kinesin-associated protein) yielded a genome-wide significant result (P = 1.84 × 10−8) that withstood Bonferroni correction for association with survival. Homozygosity for the favorable allele (CC) conferred a 14.0 months survival advantage. Sequence, genotypic and functional analyses revealed that there is linkage disequilibrium between rs1541160 and SNP rs522444 within the KIFAP3 promoter and that the favorable alleles of rs1541160 and rs522444 correlate with reduced KIFAP3 expression. No SNPs were associated with risk of sporadic ALS, site of onset, or age of onset. We have identified a variant within the KIFAP3 gene that is associated with decreased KIFAP3 expression and increased survival in sporadic ALS. These findings support the view that genetic factors modify phenotypes in this disease and that cellular motor proteins are determinants of motor neuron viability.


Annals of Neurology | 2011

Angiogenin variants in Parkinson disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Michael A. van Es; Helenius J. Schelhaas; Paul W.J. van Vught; Nicola Ticozzi; Peter Andersen; Ewout J.N. Groen; Claudia Schulte; Hylke M. Blauw; Max Koppers; Frank P. Diekstra; Katsumi Fumoto; Ashley Lyn Leclerc; Pamela Keagle; Bastiaan R. Bloem; H. Scheffer; Bart F L Van Nuenen; Marka van Blitterswijk; Wouter van Rheenen; Anne Marie Wills; Patrick Lowe; Guo-fu Hu; Wenhao Yu; Hiroko Kishikawa; David Wu; Rebecca D. Folkerth; Claudio Mariani; Stefano Goldwurm; Gianni Pezzoli; Philip Van Damme; Robin Lemmens

Several studies have suggested an increased frequency of variants in the gene encoding angiogenin (ANG) in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Interestingly, a few ALS patients carrying ANG variants also showed signs of Parkinson disease (PD). Furthermore, relatives of ALS patients have an increased risk to develop PD, and the prevalence of concomitant motor neuron disease in PD is higher than expected based on chance occurrence. We therefore investigated whether ANG variants could predispose to both ALS and PD.


BMC Genomics | 2009

Weighted gene co-expression network analysis of the peripheral blood from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis patients

Christiaan G.J. Saris; Steve Horvath; Paul W.J. van Vught; Michael A. van Es; Hylke M. Blauw; Tova F Fuller; Peter Langfelder; Joseph DeYoung; John H. J. Wokke; Jan H. Veldink; Leonard H. van den Berg; Roel A. Ophoff

BackgroundAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) is a lethal disorder characterized by progressive degeneration of motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. Diagnosis is mainly based on clinical symptoms, and there is currently no therapy to stop the disease or slow its progression. Since access to spinal cord tissue is not possible at disease onset, we investigated changes in gene expression profiles in whole blood of ALS patients.ResultsOur transcriptional study showed dramatic changes in blood of ALS patients; 2,300 probes (9.4%) showed significant differential expression in a discovery dataset consisting of 30 ALS patients and 30 healthy controls. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) was used to find disease-related networks (modules) and disease related hub genes. Two large co-expression modules were found to be associated with ALS. Our findings were replicated in a second (30 patients and 30 controls) and third dataset (63 patients and 63 controls), thereby demonstrating a highly significant and consistent association of two large co-expression modules with ALS disease status. Ingenuity Pathway Analysis of the ALS related module genes implicates enrichment of functional categories related to genetic disorders, neurodegeneration of the nervous system and inflammatory disease. The ALS related modules contain a number of candidate genes possibly involved in pathogenesis of ALS.ConclusionThis first large-scale blood gene expression study in ALS observed distinct patterns between cases and controls which may provide opportunities for biomarker development as well as new insights into the molecular mechanisms of the disease.


Lancet Neurology | 2008

Copy-number variation in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: a genome-wide screen

Hylke M. Blauw; Jan H. Veldink; Michael A. van Es; Paul W.J. van Vught; Christiaan G.J. Saris; Bert van der Zwaag; Lude Franke; J. Peter H. Burbach; John H. J. Wokke; Roel A. Ophoff; Leonard H. van den Berg

BACKGROUND Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease characterised by the selective death of motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord. Genetic risk factors have been implicated in susceptibility to ALS. Like single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), copy-number variants (CNVs) are a source of genetic variation that have important effects on gene expression and disease phenotypes, and our aim was to identify CNVs that predispose to sporadic ALS. METHODS We did a genome-wide screen for CNVs by analysis of Illumina 317K SNP arrays for 406 patients with sporadic ALS and 404 controls. We examined CNVs for association with ALS, and used the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes database and the Gene Ontology database to investigate the functionality of genes that were deleted exclusively in patients with ALS. FINDINGS We detected 2328 CNVs in 810 individuals. No CNV locus was significantly associated with sporadic ALS. 406 genes were duplicated or deleted exclusively in patients with ALS and have not been reported in previous studies of CNVs. Of the 390 genes heterozygously deleted in patients with sporadic ALS, 155 (40%) deletions were recorded exclusively in patients. By contrast, of the 323 genes heterozygously deleted in control participants, only 51 (16%) were exclusive to the controls (p=2.15 x 10(-12) for difference between groups). Products of the genes deleted specifically in patients with sporadic ALS include proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation, regulation of the actin cytoskeleton, and interactions between cytokines and their receptors. INTERPRETATION Common CNVs in the regions of the genome represented on the SNP array are unlikely to be associated with sporadic ALS. However, the high number of genes deleted specifically in patients with ALS strongly suggests that multiple rare deletions might have an important role in ALS pathogenesis.


JAMA Neurology | 2010

FUS mutations in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in the Netherlands.

Ewout J.N. Groen; Michael A. van Es; Paul W.J. van Vught; Wim G. M. Spliet; JooYeon Engelen-Lee; Marianne de Visser; John H. J. Wokke; Helenius J. Schelhaas; Roel A. Ophoff; Katsumi Fumoto; R. Jeroen Pasterkamp; Dennis Dooijes; Edwin Cuppen; Jan H. Veldink; Leonard H. van den Berg

OBJECTIVES To assess the frequency of FUS mutations in 52 probands with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) and to provide careful documentation of clinical characteristics. DESIGN FUS mutation analysis was performed using capillary sequencing on all coding regions of the gene in a cohort of patients with FALS. The clinical characteristics of patients carrying FUS mutations were described in detail. SETTING Three university hospitals in the Netherlands (referral centers for neuromuscular diseases). PATIENTS Fifty-two probands from unrelated pedigrees with FALS. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE FUS mutations. RESULTS We identified 3 mutations in 4 of 52 probands. We observed 2 previously identified mutations (p.Arg521Cys and p.Arg521His) and 1 novel mutation (p.Ser462Phe). In addition, a p.Gln210His polymorphism was identified in 1 proband and 3 healthy control subjects. Phenotypic analysis demonstrated that patients may lack upper motor neuron signs, which was confirmed at autopsy, and disease survival was short (<36 months for 8 of 10 patients). CONCLUSIONS We discovered FUS mutations in Dutch patients with FALS and the occurrence of benign variations in the gene. Therefore, caution is warranted when interpreting results in a clinical setting. Although the phenotype associated with FUS mutations is variable, most patients predominantly demonstrate loss of lower motor neurons and have short disease survival.

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Robin Lemmens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Wim Robberecht

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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