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Dive into the research topics where Sabine Klaassen is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabine Klaassen.


Circulation | 2008

Mutations in Sarcomere Protein Genes in Left Ventricular Noncompaction

Sabine Klaassen; Susanne Probst; Erwin Oechslin; Brenda Gerull; Gregor Krings; Pia K. Schuler; Matthias Greutmann; David Hürlimann; Mustafa Yegitbasi; Lucia Pons; Michael Gramlich; Jörg-Detlef Drenckhahn; Arnd Heuser; Felix Berger; Rolf Jenni; Ludwig Thierfelder

Background— Left ventricular noncompaction constitutes a primary cardiomyopathy characterized by a severely thickened, 2-layered myocardium, numerous prominent trabeculations, and deep intertrabecular recesses. The genetic basis of this cardiomyopathy is still largely unresolved. We speculated that mutations in sarcomere protein genes known to cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and dilated cardiomyopathy may be associated with left ventricular noncompaction. Methods and Results— Mutational analysis in a cohort of 63 unrelated adult probands with left ventricular noncompaction and no other congenital heart anomalies was performed by denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography analysis and direct DNA sequencing of 6 genes encoding sarcomere proteins. Heterozygous mutations were identified in 11 of 63 samples in genes encoding &bgr;-myosin heavy chain (MYH7), &agr;-cardiac actin (ACTC), and cardiac troponin T (TNNT2). Nine distinct mutations, 7 of them in MYH7, 1 in ACTC, and 1 in TNNT2, were found. Clinical evaluations demonstrated familial disease in 6 of 11 probands with sarcomere gene mutations. MYH7 mutations segregated with the disease in 4 autosomal dominant LVNC kindreds. Six of the MYH7 mutations were novel, and 1 encodes a splice-site mutation, a relatively unique finding for MYH7 mutations. Modified residues in &bgr;-myosin heavy chain were located mainly within the ATP binding site. Conclusions— We conclude that left ventricular noncompaction is within the diverse spectrum of cardiac morphologies triggered by sarcomere protein gene defects. Our findings support the hypothesis that there is a shared molecular etiology of different cardiomyopathic phenotypes.


Nature Medicine | 2012

RBM20 , a gene for hereditary cardiomyopathy, regulates titin splicing

Wei Guo; Sebastian Schafer; Marion L. Greaser; Michael H. Radke; Martin Liss; Thirupugal Govindarajan; Henrike Maatz; Herbert Schulz; Shijun Li; Amanda M. Parrish; Vita Dauksaite; Padmanabhan Vakeel; Sabine Klaassen; Brenda Gerull; Ludwig Thierfelder; Vera Regitz-Zagrosek; Timothy A. Hacker; Kurt W. Saupe; G. William Dec; Patrick T. Ellinor; Calum A. MacRae; Bastian Spallek; Robert S. Fischer; Andreas Perrot; Cemil Özcelik; Kathrin Saar; Norbert Hubner; Michael Gotthardt

Alternative splicing has a major role in cardiac adaptive responses, as exemplified by the isoform switch of the sarcomeric protein titin, which adjusts ventricular filling. By positional cloning using a previously characterized rat strain with altered titin mRNA splicing, we identified a loss-of-function mutation in the gene encoding RNA binding motif protein 20 (Rbm20) as the underlying cause of pathological titin isoform expression. The phenotype of Rbm20-deficient rats resembled the pathology seen in individuals with dilated cardiomyopathy caused by RBM20 mutations. Deep sequencing of the human and rat cardiac transcriptome revealed an RBM20-dependent regulation of alternative splicing. In addition to titin (TTN), we identified a set of 30 genes with conserved splicing regulation between humans and rats. This network is enriched for genes that have previously been linked to cardiomyopathy, ion homeostasis and sarcomere biology. Our studies emphasize the key role of post-transcriptional regulation in cardiac function and provide mechanistic insights into the pathogenesis of human heart failure.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2011

Sarcomere Gene Mutations in Isolated Left Ventricular Noncompaction Cardiomyopathy Do Not Predict Clinical Phenotype

Susanne Probst; Erwin Oechslin; Pia K. Schuler; Matthias Greutmann; Philipp Boyé; Walter Knirsch; Felix Berger; Ludwig Thierfelder; Rolf Jenni; Sabine Klaassen

Background— Left ventricular noncompaction of the myocardium (LVNC) has been recognized as a cardiomyopathy with a genetic etiology. Mutations in genes encoding sarcomere proteins were shown to be associated with LVNC. We evaluated the potential clinical impact of genetic analysis of sarcomere genes in patients with LVNC. Methods and Results— We identified 5 mutations in cardiac myosin-binding protein C (MYBPC3) and 2 mutations in &agr;-tropomyosin (TPM1) in a cohort of unrelated adult probands with isolated LVNC. The mutations in MYBPC3 and TPM1 and in 6 other previously reported sarcomere genes in this cohort resulted in a total of 18 (29%) heterozygous mutations in 63 probands. &bgr;-myosin heavy chain (MYH7) was the most prevalent disease gene and accounts for 13% of cases, followed by MYBPC3 (8%). Comparing sarcomere mutation-positive and mutation-negative LVNC probands showed no significant differences in terms of average age, myocardial function, and presence of heart failure or tachyarrhythmias at initial presentation or at follow-up. Familial disease was found in 16 probands of whom 8 were sarcomere mutation positive. Nonpenetrance was detected in 2 of 8 mutation-positive families with LVNC. Conclusions— Mutations in sarcomere genes account for a significant (29%) proportion of cases of isolated LVNC in this cohort. The distribution of disease genes confirms genetic heterogeneity and opens new perspectives in genetic testing in patients with LVNC and their relatives at high risk of inheriting the cardiomyopathy. The presence or absence of a sarcomere gene mutation in LVNC cannot be related to the clinical phenotype.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Rare Copy Number Variants Contribute to Congenital Left-Sided Heart Disease

Marc-Phillip Hitz; Louis-Philippe Lemieux-Perreault; Christian R. Marshall; Yassamin Feroz-Zada; Robbie Davies; Shi Wei Yang; Anath C. Lionel; Guylaine D'Amours; Emmanuelle Lemyre; Rebecca Cullum; Jean-Luc Bigras; Maryse Thibeault; Philippe Chetaille; Alexandre Montpetit; Paul Khairy; Bert Overduin; Sabine Klaassen; Pamela A. Hoodless; Mona Nemer; Alexandre F.R. Stewart; Cornelius F. Boerkoel; Stephen W. Scherer; Andrea Richter; Marie-Pierre Dubé; Gregor Andelfinger

Left-sided congenital heart disease (CHD) encompasses a spectrum of malformations that range from bicuspid aortic valve to hypoplastic left heart syndrome. It contributes significantly to infant mortality and has serious implications in adult cardiology. Although left-sided CHD is known to be highly heritable, the underlying genetic determinants are largely unidentified. In this study, we sought to determine the impact of structural genomic variation on left-sided CHD and compared multiplex families (464 individuals with 174 affecteds (37.5%) in 59 multiplex families and 8 trios) to 1,582 well-phenotyped controls. 73 unique inherited or de novo CNVs in 54 individuals were identified in the left-sided CHD cohort. After stringent filtering, our gene inventory reveals 25 new candidates for LS-CHD pathogenesis, such as SMC1A, MFAP4, and CTHRC1, and overlaps with several known syndromic loci. Conservative estimation examining the overlap of the prioritized gene content with CNVs present only in affected individuals in our cohort implies a strong effect for unique CNVs in at least 10% of left-sided CHD cases. Enrichment testing of gene content in all identified CNVs showed a significant association with angiogenesis. In this first family-based CNV study of left-sided CHD, we found that both co-segregating and de novo events associate with disease in a complex fashion at structural genomic level. Often viewed as an anatomically circumscript disease, a subset of left-sided CHD may in fact reflect more general genetic perturbations of angiogenesis and/or vascular biology.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Fine Mapping of the 1p36 Deletion Syndrome Identifies Mutation of PRDM16 as a Cause of Cardiomyopathy

Anne-Karin Arndt; Sebastian Schafer; Jörg-Detlef Drenckhahn; M. Khaled Sabeh; Eva Plovie; Almuth Caliebe; Eva Klopocki; Gabriel Musso; Andreas A. Werdich; Hermann Kalwa; Matthias Heinig; Robert F. Padera; Katharina Wassilew; Julia Bluhm; Christine Harnack; Janine Martitz; Paul J.R. Barton; Matthias Greutmann; Felix Berger; Norbert Hubner; Reiner Siebert; Hans-Heiner Kramer; Stuart A. Cook; Calum A. MacRae; Sabine Klaassen

Deletion 1p36 syndrome is recognized as the most common terminal deletion syndrome. Here, we describe the loss of a gene within the deletion that is responsible for the cardiomyopathy associated with monosomy 1p36, and we confirm its role in nonsyndromic left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). With our own data and publically available data from array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH), we identified a minimal deletion for the cardiomyopathy associated with 1p36del syndrome that included only the terminal 14 exons of the transcription factor PRDM16 (PR domain containing 16), a gene that had previously been shown to direct brown fat determination and differentiation. Resequencing of PRDM16 in a cohort of 75 nonsyndromic individuals with LVNC detected three mutations, including one truncation mutant, one frameshift null mutation, and a single missense mutant. In addition, in a series of cardiac biopsies from 131 individuals with DCM, we found 5 individuals with 4 previously unreported nonsynonymous variants in the coding region of PRDM16. None of the PRDM16 mutations identified were observed in more than 6,400 controls. PRDM16 has not previously been associated with cardiac disease but is localized in the nuclei of cardiomyocytes throughout murine and human development and in the adult heart. Modeling of PRDM16 haploinsufficiency and a human truncation mutant in zebrafish resulted in both contractile dysfunction and partial uncoupling of cardiomyocytes and also revealed evidence of impaired cardiomyocyte proliferative capacity. In conclusion, mutation of PRDM16 causes the cardiomyopathy in 1p36 deletion syndrome as well as a proportion of nonsyndromic LVNC and DCM.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2011

Mutations in the sarcomere gene MYH7 in Ebstein anomaly

Alex V. Postma; Klaartje van Engelen; Judith van de Meerakker; Thahira Rahman; Susanne Probst; Marieke J.H. Baars; Ulrike Bauer; Thomas Pickardt; Silke Sperling; Felix Berger; Antoon F. M. Moorman; B. J. M. Mulder; Ludwig Thierfelder; Bernard Keavney; Judith A. Goodship; Sabine Klaassen

Background—Ebstein anomaly is a rare congenital heart malformation characterized by adherence of the septal and posterior leaflets of the tricuspid valve to the underlying myocardium. An association between Ebstein anomaly with left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) and mutations in MYH7 encoding &bgr;-myosin heavy chain has been shown; in this report, we have screened for MYH7 mutations in a cohort of probands with Ebstein anomaly in a large population-based study. Methods and Results—Mutational analysis in a cohort of 141 unrelated probands with Ebstein anomaly was performed by next-generation sequencing and direct DNA sequencing of MYH7. Heterozygous mutations were identified in 8 of 141 samples (6%). Seven distinct mutations were found; 5 were novel and 2 were known to cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. All mutations except for 1 3-bp deletion were missense mutations; 1 was a de novo change. Mutation-positive probands and family members showed various congenital heart malformations as well as LVNC. Among 8 mutation-positive probands, 6 had LVNC, whereas among 133 mutation-negative probands, none had LVNC. The frequency of MYH7 mutations was significantly different between probands with and without LVNC accompanying Ebstein anomaly (P<0.0001). LVNC segregated with the MYH7 mutation in the pedigrees of 3 of the probands, 1 of which also included another individual with Ebstein anomaly. Conclusions—Ebstein anomaly is a congenital heart malformation that is associated with mutations in MYH7. MYH7 mutations are predominantly found in Ebstein anomaly associated with LVNC and may warrant genetic testing and family evaluation in this subset of patients.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2012

Predictors of Adverse Outcome in Adolescents and Adults With Isolated Left Ventricular Noncompaction

Matthias Greutmann; May Ling Mah; Candice K. Silversides; Sabine Klaassen; Christine H. Attenhofer Jost; Rolf Jenni; Erwin Oechslin

Isolated left ventricular noncompaction is a rare form of primary cardiomyopathy. Although increasingly diagnosed, data on the outcomes are limited. To define the predictors of adverse outcomes, we performed a retrospective analysis of a prospectively defined cohort of consecutive patients (age >14 years) diagnosed with left ventricular noncompaction at a single center. The baseline characteristics included presentation with a cardiovascular complication (i.e., decompensated heart failure, systemic embolic event, or sustained ventricular arrhythmia). The primary end point was survival free from cardiovascular death or transplantation. The predictors of survival were evaluated using the Kaplan-Meier method and Cox proportional hazards analysis. A total of 115 patients were included, 77% of whom were symptomatic at diagnosis. Compared to the asymptomatic patients, the symptomatic patients were significantly older and had larger left ventricular cavities and worse left ventricular ejection fraction. Of the 115 patients, 49 (43%) presented with a cardiovascular complication. During a median follow-up of 2.7 years (range 0.1 to 19.4), none of the asymptomatic patients died or underwent transplantation compared to 31% (27 of 88) of the symptomatic patients (p = 0.001). The major determinants of cardiovascular death or transplantation were presentation with a cardiovascular complication (hazard ratio 20.6, 95% confidence interval 4.9 to 87.5, p <0.0001) or New York Heart Association class III or greater (hazard ratio 8.8, 95% confidence interval 3.2 to 24.0, p <0.0001). Left ventricular dilation and systolic dysfunction were less strong predictors. In conclusion, in patients with left ventricular noncompaction, New York Heart Association class III or greater and cardiovascular complications at presentation are strong predictors for adverse outcome.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2009

Stress-induced dilated cardiomyopathy in a knock-in mouse model mimicking human titin-based disease

Michael Gramlich; Beate Michely; Christian Krohne; Arnd Heuser; Bettina Erdmann; Sabine Klaassen; Bryan D. Hudson; Manuela Magarin; Florian Kirchner; Mihail Todiras; Henk Granzier; Siegfried Labeit; Ludwig Thierfelder; Brenda Gerull

Mutations in a variety of myofibrillar genes cause dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in humans, usually with dominant inheritance and incomplete penetrance. Here, we sought to clarify the functional effects of the previously identified DCM-causing TTN 2-bp insertion mutation (c.43628insAT) and generated a titin knock-in mouse model mimicking the c.43628insAT allele. Mutant embryos homozygous for the Ttn knock-in mutation developed defects in sarcomere formation and consequently died before E9.5. Heterozygous mice were viable and demonstrated normal cardiac morphology, function and muscle mechanics. mRNA and protein expression studies on heterozygous hearts demonstrated elevated wild-type titin mRNA under resting conditions, suggesting that up-regulation of the wild-type titin allele compensates for the unstable mutated titin under these conditions. When chronically exposed to angiotensin II or isoproterenol, heterozygous mice developed marked left ventricular dilatation (p<0.05) with impaired fractional shortening (p<0.001) and diffuse myocardial fibrosis (11.95+/-2.8% vs. 3.7+/-1.1%). Thus, this model mimics typical features of human dilated cardiomyopathy and may further our understanding of how titin mutations perturb cardiac function and remodel the heart.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Left ventricular non-compaction: prevalence in congenital heart disease.

Barbara E. Stähli; Catherine Gebhard; Patric Biaggi; Sabine Klaassen; Emanuela R. Valsangiacomo Buechel; Christine H. Attenhofer Jost; Rolf Jenni; Felix C. Tanner; Matthias Greutmann

INTRODUCTION Left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) is a rare cardiomyopathy, originally described as an isolated disease without other structural cardiac abnormalities. The aim of this study was to explore the prevalence of LVNC among adults with different types of congenital heart disease. METHODS From our databases we identified adults with congenital heart disease who fulfilled diagnostic criteria for LVNC. We report frequencies of associated congenital cardiac defects and the prevalence of LVNC among patients with different congenital heart defects. RESULTS From a total of 202 patients with LVNC, 24 patients (12%; mean age 32 ± 11 years, 19 males) had additional congenital cardiac defects. Associated defects were left ventricular outflow tract abnormalities in 11 patients (46%), including 7 uni- or bicuspid aortic valves; two aortic coarctations; one diffuse aortic hypoplasia and one subaortic stenosis, Ebstein anomaly in 6 patients (25%), tetralogy of Fallot in two (8%), and double outlet right ventricle in one patient (4%). In our cohort, the prevalence of LVNC was highest among patients with Ebstein anomaly (6/40, 15%), followed by aortic coarctation (2/60, 3%), tetralogy of Fallot (3/129, 2%) and uni- or bicuspid aortic valves (7/963, 1%). CONCLUSION In adults, various forms of congenital heart disease are associated with LVNC, particularly stenotic lesions of the left ventricular outflow tract, Ebstein anomaly, and tetralogy of Fallot. In the future, studying these patients in more depth may provide a better understanding of the interplay between genetic and hemodynamic factors that lead to the phenotype of LVNC.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C-seminars in Medical Genetics | 2013

Ebstein anomaly associated with left ventricular noncompaction: An autosomal dominant condition that can be caused by mutations in MYH7

Alexa M.C. Vermeer; Klaartje van Engelen; Alex V. Postma; Marieke J.H. Baars; Imke Christiaans; Simone de Haij; Sabine Klaassen; Barbara J.M. Mulder; Bernard Keavney

Left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) is a relatively common genetic cardiomyopathy, characterized by prominent trabeculations with deep intertrabecular recesses in mainly the left ventricle. Although LVNC often occurs in an isolated entity, it may also be present in various types of congenital heart disease (CHD). The most prevalent CHD in LVNC is Ebstein anomaly, which is a rare form of CHD characterized by apical displacement and partial fusion of the septal and posterior leaflet of the tricuspid valve with the ventricular septum. Several reports of sporadic as well as familial cases of Ebstein anomaly associated with LVNC have been reported. Recent studies identified mutations in the MYH7 gene, encoding the sarcomeric β‐myosin heavy chain protein, in patients harboring this specific phenotype. Here, we will review the association between Ebstein anomaly, LVNC and mutations in MYH7, which seems to represent a subtype of Ebstein anomaly with autosomal dominant inheritance and variable penetrance.

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Ludwig Thierfelder

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Marc-Phillip Hitz

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Marieke J.H. Baars

VU University Medical Center

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