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Dive into the research topics where Peter Freisinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Freisinger.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Mutations in a new gene in Ellis-van Creveld syndrome and Weyers acrodental dysostosis

Victor L. Ruiz-Perez; Susan E. Ide; Tim M. Strom; Bettina Lorenz; David I. Wilson; Kathryn Woods; Lynn Mertens King; Clair A. Francomano; Peter Freisinger; Stephanie Spranger; Bruno Marino; Bruno Dallapiccola; Michael Wright; Thomas Meitinger; Mihael H. Polymeropoulos; Judith A. Goodship

Ellis-van Creveld syndrome (EvC, MIM 225500) is an autosomal recessive skeletal dysplasia characterized by short limbs, short ribs, postaxial polydactyly and dysplastic nails and teeth. Congenital cardiac defects, most commonly a defect of primary atrial septation producing a common atrium, occur in 60% of affected individuals. The disease was mapped to chromosome 4p16 in nine Amish subpedigrees and single pedigrees from Mexico, Ecuador and Brazil. Weyers acrodental dysostosis (MIM 193530), an autosomal dominant disorder with a similar but milder phenotype, has been mapped in a single pedigree to an area including the EvC critical region. We have identified a new gene (EVC), encoding a 992–amino-acid protein, that is mutated in individuals with EvC. We identified a splice-donor change in an Amish pedigree and six truncating mutations and a single amino acid deletion in seven pedigrees. The heterozygous carriers of these mutations did not manifest features of EvC. We found two heterozygous missense mutations associated with a phenotype, one in a man with Weyers acrodental dysostosis and another in a father and his daughter, who both have the heart defect characteristic of EvC and polydactyly, but not short stature. We suggest that EvC and Weyers acrodental dysostosis are allelic conditions.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012

Molecular diagnosis in mitochondrial complex I deficiency using exome sequencing

Tobias B. Haack; Birgit Haberberger; Eva-Maria Frisch; Thomas Wieland; Arcangela Iuso; Matteo Gorza; Valentina Strecker; Elisabeth Graf; Johannes A. Mayr; U. Herberg; Julia B. Hennermann; Thomas Klopstock; Klaus A. Kuhn; Uwe Ahting; Wolfgang Sperl; Ekkehard Wilichowski; Georg F. Hoffmann; Marketa Tesarova; Hana Hansikova; Jiri Zeman; Barbara Plecko; Massimo Zeviani; Ilka Wittig; Tim M. Strom; Markus Schuelke; Peter Freisinger; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch

Background Next generation sequencing has become the core technology for gene discovery in rare inherited disorders. However, the interpretation of the numerous sequence variants identified remains challenging. We assessed the application of exome sequencing for diagnostics in complex I deficiency, a disease with vast genetic heterogeneity. Methods Ten unrelated individuals with complex I deficiency were selected for exome sequencing and sequential bioinformatic filtering. Cellular rescue experiments were performed to verify pathogenicity of novel disease alleles. Results The first filter criterion was ‘Presence of known pathogenic complex I deficiency variants’. This revealed homozygous mutations in NDUFS3 and ACAD9 in two individuals. A second criterion was ‘Presence of two novel potentially pathogenic variants in a structural gene of complex I’, which discovered rare variants in NDUFS8 in two unrelated individuals and in NDUFB3 in a third. Expression of wild-type cDNA in mutant cell lines rescued complex I activity and assembly, thus providing a functional validation of their pathogenicity. Using the third criterion ‘Presence of two potentially pathogenic variants in a gene encoding a mitochondrial protein’, loss-of-function mutations in MTFMT were discovered in two patients. In three patients the molecular genetic correlate remained unclear and follow-up analysis is ongoing. Conclusion Appropriate in silico filtering of exome sequencing data, coupled with functional validation of new disease alleles, is effective in rapidly identifying disease-causative variants in known and new complex I associated disease genes.


Annals of Neurology | 1999

Loss-of-function mutations of SURF-1 are specifically associated with Leigh syndrome with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency

V. Tiranti; Michaela Jaksch; Sabine Hofmann; Claudia Galimberti; K. Hoertnagel; L. Lulli; Peter Freisinger; L. Bindoff; K.-D. Gerbitz; Giacomo P. Comi; G. Uziel; Massimo Zeviani; Thomas Meitinger

Mutations of SURF‐1, a gene located on chromosome 9q34, have recently been identified in patients affected by Leigh syndrome (LS), associated with deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase (COX), the terminal component of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. To investigate to what extent SURF‐1 is responsible for human disorders because of COX deficiency, we undertook sequence analysis of the SURF‐1 gene in 46 unrelated patients. We analyzed 24 COX‐defective patients classified as having typical Leigh syndrome (LSCOX), 6 patients classified as Leigh‐like (LLCOX) cases, and 16 patients classified as non‐LSCOX cases. Frameshift, stop, and splice mutations of SURF‐1 were detected in 18 of 24 (75%) of the LSCOX cases. No mutations were found in the LLCOX and non‐LSCOX group of patients. Rescue of the COX phenotype was observed in transfected cells from patients harboring SURF‐1 mutations, but not in transfected cell lines from 2 patients in whom no mutations were detected by sequence analysis. Loss of function of SURF‐1 protein is specifically associated with LSCOX, although a proportion of LSCOX cases must be the result of abnormalities in genes other than SURF‐1. SURF‐1 is the first nuclear gene to be consistently mutated in a major category of respiratory chain defects. DNA analysis can now be used to accurately diagnose LSCOX, a common subtype of Leigh syndrome. Ann Neurol 1999;46:161–166


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Mitochondrial Phosphate–Carrier Deficiency: A Novel Disorder of Oxidative Phosphorylation

Johannes A. Mayr; Olaf Merkel; Sepp D. Kohlwein; B Gebhardt; Hansjosef Böhles; Ulrike Fötschl; Johannes Koch; Michaela Jaksch; Hanns Lochmüller; Rita Horvath; Peter Freisinger; Wolfgang Sperl

The mitochondrial phosphate carrier SLC25A3 transports inorganic phosphate into the mitochondrial matrix, which is essential for the aerobic synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). We identified a homozygous mutation--c.215G-->A (p.Gly72Glu)--in the alternatively spliced exon 3A of this enzyme in two siblings with lactic acidosis, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and muscular hypotonia who died within the 1st year of life. Functional investigation of intact mitochondria showed a deficiency of ATP synthesis in muscle but not in fibroblasts, which correlated with the tissue-specific expression of exon 3A in muscle versus exon 3B in fibroblasts. The enzyme defect was confirmed by complementation analysis in yeast. This is the first report of patients with mitochondrial phosphate-carrier deficiency.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 1998

Identification of fifteen novel mutations in the tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNSALP) gene in European patients with severe hypophosphatasia.

E Mornet; Agnès Taillandier; S Peyramaure; F Kaper; F Muller; Rolf E. Brenner; P Bussière; Peter Freisinger; J Godard; M Le Merrer; Jf Oury; H. Plauchu; R Puddu; Jm Rival; Andrea Superti-Furga; Renaud Touraine; Jean-Louis Serre; Brigitte Simon‐Bouy

Hypophosphatasia is an inherited disorder characterised by defective bone mineralisation and deficiency of serum and tissue liver/bone/kidney alkaline phosphatase (L/B/K ALP) activity. We report the characterisation of tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase (TNSALP) gene mutations in a series of 13 European families affected by perinatal, infantile or childhood hypophosphatasia. Eighteen distinct mutations were found, only three of which had been reported previously in North American and Japanese populations. Most of the 15 new mutations were missense mutations, but we also found two mutations affecting donor splice sites and a nonsense mutation. A missense mutation in the last codon of the putative signal peptide probably affects the final maturation of the protein. Despite extensive sequencing of the gene and its promotor region, only one mutation was identified in two cases, one of which was compatible with a possible dominant effect of certain mutations and the putative role of polymorphisms of the TNSALP gene. In 12 of the 13 tested families, genetic diagnosis was possible by characterisation of the mutations or by use of polymorphisms as genetic markers. Hypophosphatasia diagnosis was assigned in two families where clinical, laboratory and radiographic data were unclear and prenatal diagnosis was performed in one case. The results also show that severe hypophosphatasia is due to a very large spectrum of mutations in European populations with no prevalent mutation and that genetic diagnosis of the disease must be performed by extensive analysis of the gene.


Neurology | 2001

Homozygosity (E140K) in SCO2 causes delayed infantile onset of cardiomyopathy and neuropathy

Michaela Jaksch; Rita Horvath; N. Horn; Dorothee P. Auer; Carol Macmillan; J. Peters; Klaus-Dieter Gerbitz; I. Kraegeloh-Mann; A. Muntau; Veronika Karcagi; R. Kalmanchey; Hanns Lochmüller; Eric A. Shoubridge; Peter Freisinger

Objective: To report three unrelated infants with a distinctive phenotype of Leigh-like syndrome, neurogenic muscular atrophy, and hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy. The patients all had a homozygous missense mutation in SCO2. Background: SCO2 encodes a mitochondrial inner membrane protein, thought to function as a copper transporter to cytochrome c oxidase (COX), the terminal enzyme of the respiratory chain. Mutations in SCO2 have been described in patients with severe COX deficiency and early onset fatal infantile hypertrophic cardioencephalomyopathy. All patients so far reported are compound heterozygotes for a missense mutation (E140K) near the predicted CxxxC metal binding motif; however, recent functional studies of the homologous mutation in yeast failed to demonstrate an effect on respiration. Methods: Here we present clinical, biochemical, morphologic, functional, MRI, and MRS data in two infants, and a short report in an additional patient, all carrying a homozygous G1541A transition (E140K). Results: The disease onset and symptoms differed significantly from those in compound heterozygotes. MRI and muscle morphology demonstrated an age-dependent progression of disease with predominant involvement of white matter, late appearance of basal ganglia lesions, and neurogenic muscular atrophy in addition to the relatively late onset of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The copper uptake of cultured fibroblasts was significantly increased. Conclusions: The clinical spectrum of SCO2 deficiency includes the delayed development of hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and severe neurogenic muscular atrophy. There is increased copper uptake in patients’ fibroblasts indicating that the G1541A mutation effects cellular copper metabolism.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2013

Homozygous missense mutation in BOLA3 causes multiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome in two siblings

Tobias B. Haack; Boris Rolinski; Birgit Haberberger; Franz A. Zimmermann; Jessica Schum; Valentina Strecker; Elisabeth Graf; Uwe Athing; Thomas Hoppen; Ilka Wittig; Wolfgang Sperl; Peter Freisinger; Johannes A. Mayr; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch

Defects of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation constitute a clinical and genetic heterogeneous group of disorders affecting multiple organ systems at varying age. Biochemical analysis of biopsy material demonstrates isolated or combined deficiency of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzyme complexes. Co-occurrence of impaired activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex has been rarely reported so far and is not yet fully understood. We investigated two siblings presenting with severe neonatal lactic acidosis, hypotonia, and intractable cardiomyopathy; both died within the first months of life. Muscle biopsy revealed a peculiar biochemical defect consisting of a combined deficiency of respiratory chain complexes I, II, and II+III accompanied by a defect of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Joint exome analysis of both affected siblings uncovered a homozygous missense mutation in BOLA3. The causal role of the mutation was validated by lentiviral-mediated expression of the mitochondrial isoform of wildtype BOLA3 in patient fibroblasts, which lead to an increase of both residual enzyme activities and lipoic acid levels. Our results suggest that BOLA3 plays a crucial role in the biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters necessary for proper function of respiratory chain and 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase complexes. We conclude that broad sequencing approaches combined with appropriate prioritization filters and experimental validation enable efficient molecular diagnosis and have the potential to discover new disease loci.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Mutations in GTPBP3 Cause a Mitochondrial Translation Defect Associated with Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Encephalopathy

Robert Kopajtich; Thomas J. Nicholls; Joanna Rorbach; Metodi D. Metodiev; Peter Freisinger; Hanna Mandel; Arnaud Vanlander; Daniele Ghezzi; Rosalba Carrozzo; Robert W. Taylor; Klaus Marquard; Kei Murayama; Thomas Wieland; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Johannes A. Mayr; Sarah F. Pearce; Christopher A. Powell; Ann Saada; Akira Ohtake; Federica Invernizzi; Eleonora Lamantea; Ewen W. Sommerville; Angela Pyle; Patrick F. Chinnery; Ellen Crushell; Yasushi Okazaki; Masakazu Kohda; Yoshihito Kishita; Yoshimi Tokuzawa; Zahra Assouline

Respiratory chain deficiencies exhibit a wide variety of clinical phenotypes resulting from defective mitochondrial energy production through oxidative phosphorylation. These defects can be caused by either mutations in the mtDNA or mutations in nuclear genes coding for mitochondrial proteins. The underlying pathomechanisms can affect numerous pathways involved in mitochondrial physiology. By whole-exome and candidate gene sequencing, we identified 11 individuals from 9 families carrying compound heterozygous or homozygous mutations in GTPBP3, encoding the mitochondrial GTP-binding protein 3. Affected individuals from eight out of nine families presented with combined respiratory chain complex deficiencies in skeletal muscle. Mutations in GTPBP3 are associated with a severe mitochondrial translation defect, consistent with the predicted function of the protein in catalyzing the formation of 5-taurinomethyluridine (τm(5)U) in the anticodon wobble position of five mitochondrial tRNAs. All case subjects presented with lactic acidosis and nine developed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. In contrast to individuals with mutations in MTO1, the protein product of which is predicted to participate in the generation of the same modification, most individuals with GTPBP3 mutations developed neurological symptoms and MRI involvement of thalamus, putamen, and brainstem resembling Leigh syndrome. Our study of a mitochondrial translation disorder points toward the importance of posttranscriptional modification of mitochondrial tRNAs for proper mitochondrial function.


Liver Transplantation | 2008

Abnormal neurological features predict poor survival and should preclude liver transplantation in patients with deoxyguanosine kinase deficiency

David Dimmock; J. Kay Dunn; Annette Feigenbaum; Anthony Rupar; Rita Horvath; Peter Freisinger; Bénédicte Mousson de Camaret; Lee-Jun C. Wong; Fernando Scaglia

Deoxyguanosine kinase (DGUOK) deficiency is the commonest type of mitochondrial DNA depletion associated with a hepatocerebral phenotype. In this article, we evaluate predictors of survival and therapeutic options in patients with DGUOK deficiency. A systematic search of MEDLINE, LILAC, and SCIELO was carried out to identify peer‐reviewed clinical trials, randomized controlled trials, meta‐analyses, and other studies with clinical pertinence. DGUOK deficiency was searched with the terms dGK, DGUOK, mitochondrial DNA depletion, mtDNA, and hepatocerebral. Bibliographies of identified articles were reviewed for additional references. Thirteen identified studies met the inclusion criteria and were used in this study. The analysis revealed that DGUOK deficiency is associated with a variable clinical phenotype. Long‐term survival is best predicted by the absence of profound hypotonia, significant psychomotor retardation, or nystagmus. In the presence of these features, there is increased mortality, and liver transplantation does not confer increased survival. In summary, liver transplantation appears to be futile in the presence of specific neurological signs or symptoms in patients affected with DGUOK deficiency. Conversely, in the absence of these neurological features, liver transplantation may be considered a potential treatment. Liver Transpl 14:1480–1485, 2008.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2010

Mitochondrial encephalocardio-myopathy with early neonatal onset due to TMEM70 mutation

Tomas Honzik; Markéta Tesařová; Johannes A. Mayr; Hana Hansikova; Pavel Ješina; Olaf A. Bodamer; Johannes Koch; Martin Magner; Peter Freisinger; Martina Huemer; Olga Kostková; Rudy Van Coster; Stanislav Kmoch; Josef Houstek; Wolfgang Sperl; Jiří Zeman

Objective Mitochondrial disturbances of energygenerating systems in childhood are a heterogeneous group of disorders. The aim of this multi-site survey was to characterise the natural course of a novel mitochondrial disease with ATP synthase deficiency and mutation in the TMEM70 gene. Methods Retrospective clinical data and metabolic profiles were collected and evaluated in 25 patients (14 boys, 11 girls) from seven European countries with a c.317-2A→G mutation in the TMEM70 gene. Results Severe muscular hypotonia (in 92% of newborns), apnoic spells (92%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCMP; 76%) and profound lactic acidosis (lactate 5–36 mmol/l; 92%) with hyperammonaemia (100–520 µmol/l; 86%) were present from birth. Ten patients died within the first 6 weeks of life. Most patients surviving the neonatal period had persisting muscular hypotonia and developed psychomotor delay. HCMP was non-progressive and even disappeared in some children. Hypospadia was present in 54% of the boys and cryptorchidism in 67%. Increased excretion of lactate and 3-methylglutaconic acid (3-MGC) was observed in all patients. In four surviving patients, life-threatening hyperammonaemia occurred during childhood, triggered by acute gastroenteritis and prolonged fasting. Conclusions ATP synthase deficiency with mutation in TMEM70 should be considered in the diagnosis and management of critically ill neonates with early neonatal onset of muscular hypotonia, HCMP and hypospadias in boys accompanied by lactic acidosis, hyperammonaemia and 3-MGC-uria. However, phenotype severity may vary significantly. The disease occurs frequently in the Roma population and molecular-genetic analysis of the TMEM70 gene is sufficient for diagnosis without need of muscle biopsy in affected children.

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Regina Trollmann

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Johannes A. Mayr

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Wolfgang Sperl

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Johannes Koch

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Massimo Zeviani

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit

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Agnès Rötig

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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