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Dive into the research topics where Philip Seibler is active.

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Featured researches published by Philip Seibler.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Mitochondrial Parkin Recruitment Is Impaired in Neurons Derived from Mutant PINK1 Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Philip Seibler; John Graziotto; Hyun Jeong; Filip Simunovic; Christine Klein; Dimitri Krainc

Genetic Parkinson disease (PD) has been associated with mutations in PINK1, a gene encoding a mitochondrial kinase implicated in the regulation of mitochondrial degradation. While the studies so far examined PINK1 function in non-neuronal systems or through PINK1 knockdown approaches, there is an imperative to examine the role of endogenous PINK1 in appropriate human-derived and biologically relevant cell models. Here we report the generation of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from skin fibroblasts taken from three PD patients with nonsense (c.1366C>T; p.Q456X) or missense (c.509T>G; p.V170G) mutations in the PINK1 gene. These cells were differentiated into dopaminergic neurons that upon mitochondrial depolarization showed impaired recruitment of lentivirally expressed Parkin to mitochondria, increased mitochondrial copy number, and upregulation of PGC-1α, an important regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis. Importantly, these alterations were corrected by lentiviral expression of wild-type PINK1 in mutant iPS cell-derived PINK1 neurons. In conclusion, our studies suggest that fibroblasts from genetic PD can be reprogrammed and differentiated into neurons. These neurons exhibit distinct phenotypes that should be amenable to further mechanistic studies in this relevant biological context.


Science | 2014

PINK1 Loss of Function Mutations Affect Mitochondrial Complex I Activity via NdufA10 Ubiquinone Uncoupling

Vanessa A. Morais; Dominik Haddad; Katleen Craessaerts; Pieter-Jan De Bock; Jef Swerts; Sven Vilain; Liesbeth Aerts; Lut Overbergh; Anne Grünewald; Philip Seibler; Christine Klein; Kris Gevaert; Patrik Verstreken; Bart De Strooper

In the PINK1 Pathogenic mutations in the kinase PINK1 are causally related to Parkinsons disease (PD). One hypothesis proposes that PINK1 regulates mitophagy—the clearance of dysfunctional mitochondria. A second hypothesis suggests that PINK1 has a direct effect on mitochondrial complex I, affecting the maintenance of the electron transport chain (ETC) resulting in decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and dysfunctional mitochondria. In support of the second hypothesis, Morais et al. (p. 203, published online 20 March) observed a complex I deficit in fibroblasts and neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells from PINK1 patients before any mitophagy was induced. The phosphoproteome of complex I in liver and brain from mice deficient for Pink1, compared to wild-type animals, revealed that Ser250 in complex I subunit NdufA10 was differentially phosphorylated. Ser250 is critically involved in the reduction of ubiquinone by complex I, explaining why Pink1 knockout mice, flies, and patient cell lines show decreased mitochondrial membrane potential. Synaptic defects in pink1 null mutant Drosophila could be rescued using phosphomimetic NdufA10. Mitochondria lacking a Parkinson’s disease–associated kinase harbor a functionally important phosphorylation defect. Under resting conditions, Pink1 knockout cells and cells derived from patients with PINK1 mutations display a loss of mitochondrial complex I reductive activity, causing a decrease in the mitochondrial membrane potential. Analyzing the phosphoproteome of complex I in liver and brain from Pink1−/− mice, we found specific loss of phosphorylation of serine-250 in complex I subunit NdufA10. Phosphorylation of serine-250 was needed for ubiquinone reduction by complex I. Phosphomimetic NdufA10 reversed Pink1 deficits in mouse knockout cells and rescued mitochondrial depolarization and synaptic transmission defects in pinkB9-null mutant Drosophila. Complex I deficits and adenosine triphosphate synthesis were also rescued in cells derived from PINK1 patients. Thus, this evolutionary conserved pathway may contribute to the pathogenic cascade that eventually leads to Parkinson’s disease in patients with PINK1 mutations.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Phosphatase and Tensin Homolog (PTEN)-induced Putative Kinase 1 (PINK1)-dependent Ubiquitination of Endogenous Parkin Attenuates Mitophagy STUDY IN HUMAN PRIMARY FIBROBLASTS AND INDUCED PLURIPOTENT STEM CELL-DERIVED NEURONS

Aleksandar Rakovic; Katharina Shurkewitsch; Philip Seibler; Anne Grünewald; Alessandra Zanon; Johann Hagenah; Dimitri Krainc; Christine Klein

Background: The Parkinson disease-related proteins PINK1 and Parkin initiate mitophagy of damaged mitochondria. Results: Endogenous Parkin is not sufficient to induce mitophagy due to PINK1-dependent ubiquitination of Parkin. Conclusion: Mitophagy is detectable only with supraphysiological levels of Parkin and differs between fibroblasts and iPS-derived neurons. Significance: Stresses the importance of future studies in Parkinson disease-relevant tissue, i.e., dopaminergic neurons. Mutations in the E3 ubiquitin ligase Parkin and the mitochondrial PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1) have been identified to cause autosomal recessive forms of familial Parkinson disease, with PINK1 functioning upstream of Parkin in a pathway important for the maintenance of mitochondrial function and morphology. Upon the loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential, Parkin translocates to mitochondria in a PINK1-dependent manner to ubiquitinate mitochondrial proteins. Parkin-mediated polyubiquitination of outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM) proteins recruits the ubiquitin- and LC3-binding adaptor protein p62 to mitochondria and induces mitophagy. Although previous studies examined mitophagy in established cell lines through overexpression approaches, there is an imperative to study the role of endogenous Parkin and PINK1 in human-derived and biologically relevant cell models. Here, we demonstrate in human primary fibroblasts and induced pluripotent stem-derived neurons from controls and PINK1 mutation carriers that endogenous levels of Parkin are not sufficient to initiate mitophagy upon loss of the mitochondrial membrane potential, caused by its (self-)ubiquitination, followed by degradation via the ubiquitin proteasome system. Next, we showed differential PINK1-dependent, Parkin-mediated ubiquitination of OMM proteins, which is Parkin dose-dependent and affects primarily OMM proteins of higher molecular mass. In contrast to the situation fibroblasts, we did not detect mitophagy in induced pluripotent stem-derived neurons even upon overexpression of Parkin. Taken together, our data demonstrate that mitophagy differs between human non-neuronal and neuronal cells and between “endogenous” and “Parkin-overexpressing” cellular models.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Effect of endogenous mutant and wild-type PINK1 on Parkin in fibroblasts from Parkinson disease patients

Aleksandar Rakovic; Anne Grünewald; Philip Seibler; Alfredo Ramirez; Norman Kock; Slobodanka Orolicki; Katja Lohmann; Christine Klein

Mutations in the PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1), a mitochondrial serine-threonine kinase, and Parkin, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, are associated with autosomal-recessive forms of Parkinson disease (PD). Both are involved in the maintenance of mitochondrial integrity and protection from multiple stressors. Recently, Parkin was demonstrated to be recruited to impaired mitochondria in a PINK1-dependent manner, where it triggers mitophagy. Using primary human dermal fibroblasts originating from PD patients with various PINK1 mutations, we showed at the endogenous level that (i) PINK1 regulates the stress-induced decrease of endogenous Parkin; (ii) mitochondrially localized PINK1 mediates the stress-induced mitochondrial translocation of Parkin; (iii) endogenous PINK1 is stabilized on depolarized mitochondria; and (iv) mitochondrial accumulation of full-length PINK1 is sufficient but not necessary for the stress-induced loss of Parkin signal and its mitochondrial translocation. Furthermore, we showed that different stressors, depolarizing or non-depolarizing, led to the same effect on detectable Parkin levels and its mitochondrial targeting. Although this effect on Parkin was independent of the mitochondrial membrane potential, we demonstrate a differential effect of depolarizing versus non-depolarizing stressors on endogenous levels of PINK1. Our study shows the necessity to introduce an environmental factor, i.e. stress, to visualize the differences in the interaction of PINK1 and Parkin in mutants versus controls. Establishing human fibroblasts as a suitable model for studying this interaction, we extend data from animal and other cellular models and provide experimental evidence for the generally held notion of PD as a condition with a combined genetic and environmental etiology.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2012

ATP13A2 mutations impair mitochondrial function in fibroblasts from patients with Kufor-Rakeb syndrome

Anne Grünewald; Björn Arns; Philip Seibler; Aleksandar Rakovic; Alexander Münchau; Alfredo Ramirez; Carolyn M. Sue; Christine Klein

Mutations in ATP13A2 cause autosomal-recessive parkinsonism (Kufor-Rakeb syndrome; KRS). Because several other parkinsonism-associated proteins have been connected to mitochondrial function and mitophagy, we studied the impact of endogenous mutations in ATPase type 13A2 (ATP13A2) on mitochondria in fibroblasts from KRS patients compared with controls. In patients, we detected decreased adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesis rates, increased mitochondrial DNA levels, a higher frequency of mitochondrial DNA lesions, increased oxygen consumption rates, and increased fragmentation of the mitochondrial network. Importantly, overexpression of wild-type ATP13A2 rescued the respiration phenotype. These findings collectively suggest that ATP13A2 contributes to the maintenance of a healthy mitochondrial pool, supporting the hypothesis that impaired mitochondrial clearance represents an important pathogenic mechanism underlying KRS.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2015

Retromer-dependent neurotransmitter receptor trafficking to synapses is altered by the Parkinson's disease VPS35 mutation p.D620N

Lise N. Munsie; Austen J. Milnerwood; Philip Seibler; Dayne Beccano-Kelly; Igor Tatarnikov; Jaskaran Khinda; Mattia Volta; Chelsie Kadgien; Li-Ping Cao; Lucia Tapia; Christine Klein; Matthew J. Farrer

Vacuolar protein sorting 35 (VPS35) is a core component of the retromer complex, crucial to endosomal protein sorting and intracellular trafficking. We recently linked a mutation in VPS35 (p.D620N) to familial parkinsonism. Here, we characterize human VPS35 and retromer function in mature murine neuronal cultures and investigate neuron-specific consequences of the p.D620N mutation. We find VPS35 localizes to dendritic spines and is involved in the trafficking of excitatory AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs). Fundamental neuronal processes, including excitatory synaptic transmission, AMPAR surface expression and synaptic recycling are altered by VPS35 overexpression. VPS35 p.D620N acts as a loss-of-function mutation with respect to VPS35 activity regulating synaptic transmission and AMPAR recycling in mouse cortical neurons and dopamine neuron-like cells produced from induced pluripotent stem cells of human p.D620N carriers. Such perturbations to synaptic function likely produce chronic pathophysiological stress upon neuronal circuits that may contribute to neurodegeneration in this, and other, forms of parkinsonism.


Lancet Neurology | 2008

A heterozygous frameshift mutation in PRKRA (DYT16) associated with generalised dystonia in a German patient

Philip Seibler; Ana Djarmati; Brigitte Langpap; Johann Hagenah; Alexander Schmidt; Norbert Brüggemann; Hartwig Siebner; Hans-Christian Jabusch; Eckart Altenmüller; Alexander Münchau; Katja Lohmann; Christine Klein

We have read with great interest the article in The Lancet Neurology by Camargos and colleagues who describe the fi nding of DYT16 dystonia, a novel, recessively inherited form of early-onset generalised dystonia that is associated with a missense mutation in the gene that encodes PPKRA. The homozygous mutation was found in seven aff ected members from three Brazilian families. In one family, the mother of a homozygous carrier was also aff ected but could not be genotyped. This raises the question of whether a heterozygous mutation might act as a susceptibility factor for dystonia. A similar scenario has been discussed for seemingly recessive genes that are linked to parkinsonism. To explore further the role of mutations in PRKRA, we screened patients with dystonia and controls for changes in the sequence of this gene. The phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in PRKRA is, for the most part, unknown; on the basis of early onset (<25 years; mean 13·7 [SD 7·4] years), a positive family history (n=9), and limb involvement, we identifi ed 52 unrelated patients with dystonia: 22 patients presented with generalised dystonia, 11 with segmental dystonia, 15 with musician’s dystonia, and four with writer’s cramp. By use of published primer sequences, we sequenced all the coding exons and fl anking intronic sequences of PRKRA in these patients. The known and newly detected sequence variations were tested in a further 75 patients with dystonia (mean age of onset of 31·6 [6·4] years), of whom 15 had a positive family history of dystonia, and in 189 neurologically healthy controls (mean age: 57·7 [11·6] years). We identifi ed a novel heterozygous mutation (c.266_267delAT; p.H89fsX20) in exon 3 of PRKRA in patient 14741 (fi gure). This predicted frameshift mutation, which might cause premature truncation of the protein, was absent in the other patients and the controls. We did not detect any other mutations in PRKRA in this patient. Clinically, he presented with early-childhood-onset leg dystonia that spread gradually over the course of a few years. His family history was unremarkable for any movement disorder; secondary causes of dystonia were excluded; and brain MRI was normal. At his last examination, the patient, C C G


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2013

Niemann-Pick type C1 patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells display disease specific hallmarks

Michaela Trilck; Rayk Hübner; Philip Seibler; Christine Klein; Arndt Rolfs; Moritz J. Frech

BackgroundNiemann-Pick type C1 disease (NPC1) is a rare progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the NPC1 gene. In this lysosomal storage disorder the intracellular transport and sequestration of several lipids like cholesterol is severely impaired, resulting in an accumulation of lipids in late endosomes and lysosomes. The neurological manifestation of the disease is caused by dysfunction and cell death in the central nervous system. Several animal models were used to analyze the impaired pathways. However, the underlying pathogenic mechanisms are still not completely understood and the genetic variability in humans cannot be reflected in these models. Therefore, a human model using patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells provides a promising approach.MethodsWe reprogrammed human fibroblasts from a NPC1 patient and a healthy control by retroviral transduction with Oct4, Klf4, Sox2 and c-Myc. The obtained human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) were characterized by immunocytochemical analyses. Neural progenitor cells were generated and patch clamp recordings were performed for a functional analysis of derived neuronal cells. Filipin stainings and the Amplex Red assay were used to demonstrate and quantify cholesterol accumulation.ResultsThe hiPSCs expressed different stem cell markers, e.g. Nanog, Tra-1-81 and SSEA4. Using the embryoid body assay, the cells were differentiated in cells of all three germ layers and induced teratoma in immunodeficient mice, demonstrating their pluripotency. In addition, neural progenitor cells were derived and differentiated into functional neuronal cells. Patch clamp recordings revealed voltage dependent channels, spontaneous action potentials and postsynaptic currents. The accumulation of cholesterol in different tissues is the main hallmark of NPC1. In this study we found an accumulation of cholesterol in fibroblasts of a NPC1 patient, derived hiPSCs, and neural progenitor cells, but not in cells derived from fibroblasts of a healthy individual. These findings were quantified by the Amplex Red assay, demonstrating a significantly elevated cholesterol level in cells derived from fibroblasts of a NPC1 patient.ConclusionsWe generated a neuronal model based on induced pluripotent stem cells derived from patient fibroblasts, providing a human in vitro model to study the pathogenic mechanisms of NPC1 disease.


Journal of Neurology | 2014

Recessive dystonia-ataxia syndrome in a Turkish family caused by a COX20 (FAM36A) mutation.

Sarah Doss; Katja Lohmann; Philip Seibler; Björn Arns; Thomas Klopstock; Christine Zühlke; Karen Freimann; Susen Winkler; Thora Lohnau; Mario Drungowski; Peter Nürnberg; Karin Wiegers; Ebba Lohmann; Sadaf Naz; Meike Kasten; Georg Bohner; Alfredo Ramirez; Matthias Endres; Christine Klein

DYTCA is a syndrome that is characterized by predominant dystonia and mild cerebellar ataxia. We examined two affected siblings with healthy, consanguineous, Turkish parents. Both patients presented with a combination of childhood-onset cerebellar ataxia, dystonia, and sensory axonal neuropathy. In the brother, dystonic features were most pronounced in the legs, while his sister developed torticollis. Routine diagnostic investigations excluded known genetic causes. Biochemical analyses revealed a mitochondrial respiratory chain complex IV and a coenzyme Q10 deficiency in a muscle biopsy. By exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous missense mutation (c.154A >C; p.Thr52Pro) in both patients in exon 2 of the COX20 (FAM36A) gene, which encodes a complex IV assembly factor. This variant was confirmed by Sanger sequencing, was heterozygous in both parents, and was absent from 427 healthy controls. The exact same mutation was recently reported in a patient with ataxia and muscle hypotonia. Among 128 early-onset dystonia and/or ataxia patients, we did not detect any other patient with a COX20 mutation. cDNA sequencing and semi-quantitative analysis were performed in fibroblasts from one of our homozygous mutation carriers and six controls. In addition to the exchange of an amino acid, the mutation led to a shift in splicing. In conclusion, we extend the phenotypic spectrum of a recently identified mutation in COX20 to a recessively inherited, early-onset dystonia-ataxia syndrome that is characterized by reduced complex IV activity. Further, we confirm a pathogenic role of this mutation in cerebellar ataxia, but this mutation seems to be a rather rare cause.


JAMA Neurology | 2013

A Novel OPA3 Mutation Revealed by Exome Sequencing: An Example of Reverse Phenotyping

Beenish Arif; Kishore R. Kumar; Philip Seibler; Franca Vulinovic; Amara Fatima; Susen Winkler; Gudrun Nürnberg; Holger Thiele; Peter Nürnberg; Ahmad Zeeshan Jamil; Anne Brüggemann; Ghazanfar Abbas; Christine Klein; Sadaf Naz; Katja Lohmann

IMPORTANCE We sought to unravel the genetic cause in a consanguineous Pakistani family with a complex neurological phenotype. OBSERVATIONS Neurological and ophthalmological examination, including videotaping and fundoscopy, and genetic investigations, including homozygosity mapping and exome sequencing, were performed at the University of the Punjab and the University of Lübeck. Participants included 2 severely affected cousins from consanguineous parents, 10 of their reportedly unaffected relatives, and 342 Pakistani controls. Motor symptoms in the 2 patients started at the age of 3 to 4 years and included chorea, cerebellar ataxia, dystonia, and pyramidal tract signs. Genome-wide genotyping delineated 2 regions of homozygosity on chromosomes 13q12.11 to 13q12.13 and 19q12 to 19q13.41. Exome sequencing revealed 2 rare, homozygous variants (c.32 T>A [p.L11Q] in OPA3 and c.941 C>G [p.A314G] in TSHZ3) that segregated with the disease. Only the OPA3 variant was absent in the control subjects and predicted to be damaging. Subsequent ophthalmological assessment revealed bilateral optic atrophy in both patients. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Mutations in OPA3 have been reported in Costeff optic atrophy syndrome. We identify a novel missense mutation in OPA3 as the cause of a complex neurological disorder, expanding the OPA3 -linked phenotype by early-onset pyramidal tract signs and marked lower limb dystonia. Investigation of optic atrophy was initiated only after genetic analysis, a phenomenon referred to as reverse phenotyping.

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Patrik Verstreken

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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