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Featured researches published by Sigrid Tinschert.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Molecular Characterization and Gene Content of Breakpoint Boundaries in Patients with Neurofibromatosis Type 1 with 17q11.2 Microdeletions

Dieter E. Jenne; Sigrid Tinschert; Heike Reimann; Wolfgang Lasinger; Gundula Thiel; Horst Hameister; Hildegard Kehrer-Sawatzki

Homologous recombination between poorly characterized regions flanking the NF1 locus causes the constitutional loss of approximately 1.5 Mb from 17q11.2 covering > or =11 genes in 5%-20% of patients with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1). To elucidate the extent of microheterogeneity at the deletion boundaries, we used single-copy DNA fragments from the extreme ends of the deleted segment to perform FISH on metaphase chromosomes from eight patients with NF1 who had large deletions. In six patients, these probes were deleted, suggesting that breakage and fusions occurred within the adjacent highly homologous sequences. Reexamination of the deleted region revealed two novel functional genes FLJ12735 (AK022797) and KIAA0653-related (WI-12393 and AJ314647), the latter of which is located closest to the distal boundary and is partially duplicated. We defined the complete reading frames for these genes and two expressed-sequence tag (EST) clusters that were reported elsewhere and are associated with the markers SHGC-2390 and WI-9521. Hybrid cell lines carrying only the deleted chromosome 17 were generated from two patients and used to identify the fusion sequences by junction-specific PCRs. The proximal breakpoints were found between positions 125279 and 125479 in one patient and within 4 kb of position 143000 on BAC R-271K11 (AC005562) in three patients, and the distal breakpoints were found at the precise homologous position on R-640N20 (AC023278). The interstitial 17q11.2 microdeletion arises from unequal crossover between two highly homologous WI-12393-derived 60-kb duplicons separated by approximately 1.5 Mb. Since patients with the NF1 large-deletion syndrome have a significantly increased risk of neurofibroma development and mental retardation, hemizygosity for genes from the deleted region around the neurofibromin locus (CYTOR4, FLJ12735, FLJ22729, HSA272195 (centaurin-alpha2), NF1, OMGP, EVI2A, EVI2B, WI-9521, HSA272196, HCA66, KIAA0160, and WI-12393) may contribute to the severe phenotype of these patients.


Neurogenetics | 1997

SCA2 trinucleotide expansion in German SCA patients

Olaf Riess; Franco Laccone; Suzana Gispert; Ludger Schöls; Christine Zühlke; Ana Maria Menezes Vieira-Saecker; Susanne Herlt; Karl Wessel; Jörg T. Epplen; Bernhard H. F. Weber; Friedmar Kreuz; Soheyla Chahrokh-Zadeh; Alfons Meindl; Astrid Lunkes; Jorge Aguiar; Milan Macek; Alice Krebsova; Milan Macek Sen; Katrin Bürk; Sigrid Tinschert; Isolde Schreyer; Stefan-M. Pulst; Georg Auburger

ABSTRACTAutosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (SCA) are a group of clinically and genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorders which lead to progressive cerebellar ataxia. A gene responsible for SCA type 2 has been mapped to human chromosome 12 and the disease causing mutation has been identified as an unstable and expanded (CAG)n trinucleotide repeat. We investigated the (CAG)n repeat length of the SCA2 gene in 842 patients with sporadic ataxia and in 96 German families with dominantly inherited SCA which do not harbor the SCA1 or MJD1/SCA3 mutation, respectively. The SCA2 (CAG)n expansion was identified in 71 patients from 54 families. The (CAG)n stretch of the affected allele varied between 36 and 64 trinucleotide units. Significant repeat expansions occurred most commonly during paternal transmission. Analysis of the (CAG)n repeat lengths with the age of onset in 41 patients revealed an inverse correlation. Two hundred and forty-one apparently healthy octogenerians carried alleles between 16 and 31 repeats. One 50-year old, healthy individual had 34 repeats; she had transmitted an expanded allele to her child. The small difference between ‘normal’ and disease alleles makes it necessary to define the extreme values of their ranges. With one exception, the trinucleotide expansion was not observed in 842 ataxia patients without a family history of the disease. The SCA2 mutation causes the disease in nearly 14% of autosomal dominant SCA in Germany.


Neuroradiology | 1999

Spontaneous remission of chiasmatic/ hypothalamic masses in neurofibromatosis type 1: report of two cases

S. Gottschalk; R. Tavakolian; Annegret Buske; Sigrid Tinschert; Rüdiger Lehmann

Abstract We report two children with neurofibromatosis type 1 showing enhancing masses on MRI suggesting neoplasms in the chiasm and hypothalamic region. In both patients no visual or endocrinal dysfunction was present. On serial MRI spontaneous partial remission was found, implying that a cautious approach to therapeutic management of similar cases should be taken.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Bilaterally cleft lip, limb defects, and haematological manifestations: Roberts syndrome versus TAR syndrome

Maik Urban; Charlotte Opitz; Christiane Bommer; Herbert Enders; Sigrid Tinschert; Regine Witkowski

We report on a 13-year-old patient followed since birth. He is the only offspring of young, non-consanguineous German parents. His mother has an isolated left cleft of lip and a cleft palate. At birth, our patient presented with bilaterally cleft lip/cleft palate, phocomelia of upper limbs with normal hands, and mild symmetrical deficiencies of the long bones of the lower limbs. Haematological evaluation demonstrated a leukaemoid reaction during a urinary tract infection as well as intermittent thrombocytopenia and episodes of marked eosinophilia during the first two years of life. Intellectual development has been normal. Comparison with two similar cases from the literature suggests a non-random phenotypic overlap of Roberts syndrome (MIM 268300) and TAR syndrome (MIM 274000). Such clinical constellations may be key observations to understand the genetic relationship of Roberts syndrome and TAR syndrome in future phenotype-genotype correlations.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1999

McCune-Albright syndrome: clinical and molecular evidence of mosaicism in an unusual giant patient.

Sigrid Tinschert; Helga Gerl; Andreas Gewies; Hans‐Peter Jung; Peter Nürnberg

Molecular genetics recently uncovered the mystery of the protean picture of McCune-Albright syndrome by identification of the somatic gain of function mutations in the GNAS1 gene. Here we present an adult patient with fibrous dysplasia and an endocrinopathy resulting in unusual giant height. The clinical diagnosis in the patient could be confirmed by molecular investigations in tissues involved in the process of fibrous dysplasia.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Craniometaphyseal dysplasia in six generations of a German kindred

Sigrid Tinschert; Hans-Steffen Braun

Craniometaphyseal dysplasia (CMD) was found in 6 generations of a large German kindred; 24 affected individuals were identified. The clinical diagnosis was confirmed by further examinations in 15 individuals, including 2 exhumed skeletons. Five deceased individuals were considered to be undoubtedly affected by reviewing photographs, and 4 must have had CMD from genealogical considerations. Pedigree analysis was performed over 8 generations back to persons born at the beginning of the 18th century in a central area of Germany. The trait could be traced back to a common male ancestor, born in 1790. Molecular genetic investigations on 3 generations of this kindred are in progress. In the present study we describe the clinical characteristics of the family.


Pediatric Dermatology | 1996

Zunich neuroectodermal syndrome: migratory ichthyosiform dermatosis, colobomas, and other abnormalities.

Sigrid Tinschert; Ingrun Anton-Lamprecht; Helga Albrecht-Nebe; Heike Audring

Abstract: We report a 21‐month‐old girl with symptoms consistent with the Zunich neuroectodermal syndrome, an apparently rare condition first described in 1983, Common features of all previously reported patients as well as in this child are characteristic craniofacial dysmorphism, bilateral colobomas of the retina, sparse and fine hair, hearing loss, Ichthyosiform erythroderma, mental retardation, ear anomalies, brachydactyly, and broad second toes. Light microscopic and uttrastructural investigations of the affected skin showed characteristic but nonspecific changes. The structural hair shaft abnormalities as well as the dysplastic nails in our patient have not been described before and are consistent with the previous assumption of an ectodermal dysplasia syndrome.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1997

Tetraphocomelia and bilateral cleft lip in a historical case of Roberts syndrome [Virchow, 1898]

Maik Urban; P. Rogalla; Sigrid Tinschert; Peter Krietsch

We discuss an unlabelled specimen of tetraphocomelia and bilaterally cleft lip from the former Virchow Museum of our Medical School. Identity of the subject with a case of what was later termed Roberts syndrome published by Rudolf Virchow in 1898 is demonstrated. Rediscovery of this important historical case is gratifying, since almost 95% of the specimens of Virchows collection were lost during World War II. We have restudied Virchows case. Recent CT scan images of the fetus are presented. We review data from the literature and present new clinical details. The fate of the original clinical data after passing through three reviews is documented briefly. We also reconstruct Virchows view on phocomelia and its consequences for later research.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1999

Recurrent NF1 gene mutation in a patient with oligosymptomatic neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1).

Annegret Buske; Andreas Gewies; Rüdiger Lehmann; Klaus Rüther; Bernd Algermissen; Peter Nürnberg; Sigrid Tinschert

We report a 21-year-old male with symptomatic optic glioma who does not fulfill the diagnosis of neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1) according to standard NIH criteria. Analysis of the NF1 gene revealed a recurrent mutation in exon 37 (C6792A or Y2264X). This nonsense mutation causes skipping of exon 37 during the splicing process and is predicted to result in a protein shortened by 34 amino acid residues. The mutation was detected in all tissues examined (blood lymphocytes, oral mucosa, and dermal fibroblasts). The same mutation was previously found in 3 patients with clinically confirmed NF1. To our knowledge, this is the first report of an adult patient carrying a putative (non-mosaic) NF1 gene mutation in multiple tissues but not fulfilling the NIH criteria for the clinical diagnosis of NF1.


Human Genetics | 1998

Two novel mutations in exons 19a and 20 and a BsaI polymorphism in a newly characterized intron of the neurofibromatosis type 1 gene

Anja Klose; Peter N. Robinson; Andreas Gewies; Lan Kluwe; Dieter Kaufmann; Annegret Buske; Sigrid Tinschert; Hartmut Peters

Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) is a common autosomal dominant disorder. It is caused by mutations in the NF1 gene, which comprises 60 exons and is located on chromosome 17q11.2. A total of 170 unrelated NF1 patients were screened for mutations in four exons by temperature-gradient gel electrophoresis. Preparatory work revealed the presence of a previously uncharacterized intron (19a) in what was previously designated exon 19; this allowed us to develop assays for genomic mutation screening in the newly defined exons 19a and 19b. Two novel NF1 mutations were detected: a single-base insertion in exon 19a creating a frameshift, and a second mutation affecting the splice donor site of intron 20 and leading to skipping of exon 20. A novel BsaBI polymorphism was identified in intron 19a.

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Charlotte Opitz

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Regine Witkowski

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Andreas Gewies

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Annegret Buske

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Peter Nürnberg

Humboldt State University

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Lan Kluwe

University of Hamburg

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Maik Urban

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Rüdiger Lehmann

Humboldt University of Berlin

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