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Dive into the research topics where Tamara Kerscher is active.

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Featured researches published by Tamara Kerscher.


Nature Genetics | 2009

A common variant on chromosome 11q13 is associated with atopic dermatitis.

Stephan Weidinger; Regina Fölster-Holst; Anja Bauerfeind; Franz Rüschendorf; Giannino Patone; Klaus Rohde; Ingo Marenholz; Florian Schulz; Tamara Kerscher; Norbert Hubner; Ulrich Wahn; Stefan Schreiber; Andre Franke; Rainer Vogler; Simon Heath; Hansjörg Baurecht; Natalija Novak; Elke Rodriguez; Thomas Illig; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Michael Kurek; T. Piskackova; Milan Macek; Young-Ae Lee; Andreas Ruether

We conducted a genome-wide association study in 939 individuals with atopic dermatitis and 975 controls as well as 270 complete nuclear families with two affected siblings. SNPs consistently associated with atopic dermatitis in both discovery sets were then investigated in two additional independent replication sets totalling 2,637 cases and 3,957 controls. Highly significant association was found with allele A of rs7927894 on chromosome 11q13.5, located 38 kb downstream of C11orf30 (Pcombined = 7.6 × 10−10). Approximately 13% of individuals of European origin are homozygous for rs7927894[A], and their risk of developing atopic dermatitis is 1.47 times that of noncarriers.


PLOS Biology | 2007

Variants in a Novel Epidermal Collagen Gene (COL29A1) Are Associated with Atopic Dermatitis

Cilla Söderhäll; Ingo Marenholz; Tamara Kerscher; Franz Rüschendorf; Margitta Worm; Christoph Grüber; Gabriele Mayr; Mario Albrecht; Klaus Rohde; Herbert Schulz; Ulrich Wahn; Norbert Hubner; Young-Ae Lee

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common chronic inflammatory skin disorder and a major manifestation of allergic disease. AD typically presents in early childhood often preceding the onset of an allergic airway disease, such as asthma or hay fever. We previously mapped a susceptibility locus for AD on Chromosome 3q21. To identify the underlying disease gene, we used a dense map of microsatellite markers and single nucleotide polymorphisms, and we detected association with AD. In concordance with the linkage results, we found a maternal transmission pattern. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the same families contribute to linkage and association. We replicated the association and the maternal effect in a large independent family cohort. A common haplotype showed strong association with AD (p = 0.000059). The associated region contained a single gene, COL29A1, which encodes a novel epidermal collagen. COL29A1 shows a specific gene expression pattern with the highest transcript levels in skin, lung, and the gastrointestinal tract, which are the major sites of allergic disease manifestation. Lack of COL29A1 expression in the outer epidermis of AD patients points to a role of collagen XXIX in epidermal integrity and function, the breakdown of which is a clinical hallmark of AD.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2009

An interaction between filaggrin mutations and early food sensitization improves the prediction of childhood asthma

Ingo Marenholz; Tamara Kerscher; Anja Bauerfeind; Renate Nickel; Thomas Keil; Susanne Lau; Klaus Rohde; Ulrich Wahn; Young-Ae Lee

BACKGROUND Asthma prediction in early infancy is essential for the development of new preventive strategies. Loss-of-function mutations in the filaggrin gene (FLG) were identified as risk factors for eczema and associated asthma. OBJECTIVE We evaluated the utility of the FLG mutations for the prediction of asthma. METHODS Eight hundred seventy-one individuals of the prospective German Multicenter Allergy Study cohort were genotyped for 3 FLG mutations. Information on asthma, eczema, and food sensitization was available from birth to 13 years of age. Pulmonary function was measured from 7 to 13 years of age. The predictive value of the FLG mutations and of atopic phenotypes in infancy was assessed for asthma. RESULTS In infants with eczema and sensitization to food allergens, the FLG mutations predicted childhood asthma with a positive predictive value of 100% (95% CI, 65.5% to 100%). This subgroup was characterized by a significant decrease in pulmonary function until puberty and represented 8.1% of all asthmatic children and 19.1% of patients with asthma after infantile eczema. We found a strong synergistic interaction between the FLG-null alleles and early food sensitization in the disease transition from eczema to asthma (relative excess risk due to interaction, 2.64; 95% CI, 1.70-3.98; P = .00040). CONCLUSION FLG mutations and food sensitization represent 2 distinct mechanisms interacting in the pathogenesis of asthma. In infants with eczema and food sensitization, genotyping of the FLG mutations allows the prediction of asthma before the onset of symptoms. Our findings might facilitate the development of early subgroup-specific interventions to prevent the progression from eczema to asthma.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

A functional IL-6 receptor (IL6R) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam F. Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee

BACKGROUND Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a common inflammatory skin disease. Previous studies have revealed shared genetic determinants among different inflammatory disorders, suggesting that markers associated with immune-related traits might also play a role in AD. OBJECTIVE We sought to identify novel genetic risk factors for AD. METHODS We examined the results of all genome-wide association studies from a public repository and selected 318 genetic markers that were significantly associated with any inflammatory trait. These markers were considered candidates and tested for association with AD in a 3-step approach including 7 study populations with 7130 patients with AD and 9253 control subjects. RESULTS A functional amino acid change in the IL-6 receptor (IL-6R Asp358Ala; rs2228145) was significantly associated with AD (odds ratio [OR], 1.15; P = 5 × 10(-9)). Interestingly, investigation of 2 independent population-based birth cohorts showed that IL-6R 358Ala specifically predisposes to the persistent form of AD (ORpersistent AD = 1.22, P = .0008; ORtransient AD = 1.04, P = .54). This variant determines the balance between the classical membrane-bound versus soluble IL-6R signaling pathways. Carriers of 358Ala had increased serum levels of soluble IL-6R (P = 4 × 10(-14)), with homozygote carriers showing a 2-fold increase. Moreover, we demonstrate that soluble IL-6R levels were higher in patients with AD than in control subjects (46.0 vs 37.8 ng/mL, P = .001). Additional AD risk variants were identified in RAD50, RUNX3, and ERBB3. CONCLUSION Our study supports the importance of genetic variants influencing inflammation in the etiology of AD. Moreover, we identified a functional genetic variant in IL6R influencing disease prognosis and specifically predisposing to persistent AD.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

The eczema risk variant on chromosome 11q13 (rs7927894) in the population-based ALSPAC cohort: a novel susceptibility factor for asthma and hay fever

Ingo Marenholz; Anja Bauerfeind; Tamara Kerscher; Raquel Granell; Renate Nickel; Susanne Lau; John Henderson; Young-Ae Lee

In a genome-wide association study, a common variant on chromosome 11q13.5 (rs7927894[T]) has been identified as a susceptibility locus for eczema. We aimed to analyze the effect of this risk variant on asthma and hay fever and to determine its impact on the general population level in over 9300 individuals of the prospectively evaluated Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children birth cohort. We demonstrate an association of rs7927894[T] with atopic asthma and with hay fever. The largest effect sizes were found in patients with the combined phenotype atopic asthma plus eczema [odds ratio (OR) = 1.50; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.20-1.88; P = 3.7 × 10(-4)] and hay fever plus eczema (OR = 1.37; 95% CI 1.15-1.62; P = 3.8 × 10(-4)). We replicated the effects of rs7927894[T] on eczema-associated asthma and hay fever independently in the German GENUFAD (GEnetic studies in NUclear Families with Atopic Dermatitis) study and show that they are significantly larger than the effect observed in eczema. The estimated population attributable risk fractions for eczema, eczema-associated atopic asthma or hay fever were 9.3, 24.9 and 23.5%, respectively. Finally in eczema, we found a synergistic interaction of rs7927894[T] with filaggrin gene (FLG) mutations, which are a major cause of epidermal barrier dysfunction, and replicated the interaction in the German Multicenter Allergy Study birth cohort. The synergistic effect of rs7927894[T] and FLG mutations on eczema risk as well as the association of both variants with eczema-associated atopic asthma and hay fever point to an involvement of rs7927894[T] in a functional pathway that is linked to the barrier defect.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2018

SMARCAD1 haploinsufficiency underlies Huriez syndrome and associated skin cancer susceptibility

Claudia Günther; Min Ae Lee-Kirsch; Jamina Eckhard; Anja Matanovic; Tamara Kerscher; Franz Rüschendorf; Benjamin Klein; Nicole Berndt; Nick Zimmermann; Christina Flachmeier; Theresa Thuß; Nadja Lucas; Ingo Marenholz; Norbert Hubner; Heiko Traupe; E. Delaporte; Young-Ae Lee

Huriez syndrome is a rare dominant genodermatosis characterized by congenital palmoplantar keratosis, scleroatrophic changes of the hands and feet, and an increased risk for cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) in approximately 15% of affected individuals (Figure 1a, Supplementary Table S1 online). CSCC in Huriez syndrome is characterized by early onset, localization on scleroatrophic skin, and aggressive metastasis formation (Delaporte et al., 1995; Hamm et al., 1996) suggesting that the local disease-specific skin changes promote malignant transformation.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2006

Filaggrin loss-of-function mutations predispose to phenotypes involved in the atopic march

Ingo Marenholz; Renate Nickel; Franz Rüschendorf; Florian Schulz; Tamara Kerscher; Christoph Grüber; Susanne Lau; Margitta Worm; Thomas Keil; Michael Kurek; Elisabetha Zaluga; Ulrich Wahn; Young-Ae Lee


/data/revues/00916749/v132i2/S0091674913003229/ | 2013

Compléments : A functional IL-6 receptor ( IL6R ) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl-Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee


/data/revues/00916749/v132i2/S0091674913003229/ | 2013

Iconographies supplémentaires de l'article : A functional IL-6 receptor ( IL6R ) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl-Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee


/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674913003229/ | 2013

A functional IL-6 receptor ( IL6R ) variant is a risk factor for persistent atopic dermatitis

Heidi Schaarschmidt; Liming Liang; William Cookson; Anja Bauerfeind; Min-Ae Lee-Kirsch; Katja Nemat; John Henderson; Lavinia Paternoster; John I. Harper; Elisabeth Mangold; Markus M. Nöthen; Franz Rüschendorf; Tamara Kerscher; Ingo Marenholz; Anja Matanovic; Susanne Lau; Thomas Keil; Carl-Peter Bauer; Michael Kurek; Andrzej Ciechanowicz; Milan Macek; Andre Franke; Michael Kabesch; Norbert Hubner; Gonçalo R. Abecasis; Stephan Weidinger; Miriam F. Moffatt; Young-Ae Lee

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Franz Rüschendorf

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Anja Bauerfeind

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Norbert Hubner

Dresden University of Technology

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Michael Kurek

Pomeranian Medical University

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