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Featured researches published by Thomas J. Corydon.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Clear correlation of genotype with disease phenotype in very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency.

Brage S. Andresen; S. E. Olpin; Ben J. H. M. Poorthuis; H.R. Scholte; Christine Vianey-Saban; Lodewijk IJlst; Andrew A. M. Morris; Morteza Pourfarzam; Kim Bartlett; E. Regula Baumgartner; Johannis B.C. deKlerk; Lisbeth Dahl Schroeder; Thomas J. Corydon; Hans Lund; Vibeke Winter; Peter Bross; Lars Bolund; Niels Gregersen

Very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (VLCAD) catalyzes the initial rate-limiting step in mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation. VLCAD deficiency is clinically heterogenous, with three major phenotypes: a severe childhood form, with early onset, high mortality, and high incidence of cardiomyopathy; a milder childhood form, with later onset, usually with hypoketotic hypoglycemia as the main presenting feature, low mortality, and rare cardiomyopathy; and an adult form, with isolated skeletal muscle involvement, rhabdomyolysis, and myoglobinuria, usually triggered by exercise or fasting. To examine whether these different phenotypes are due to differences in the VLCAD genotype, we investigated 58 different mutations in 55 unrelated patients representing all known clinical phenotypes and correlated the mutation type with the clinical phenotype. Our results show a clear relationship between the nature of the mutation and the severity of disease. Patients with the severe childhood phenotype have mutations that result in no residual enzyme activity, whereas patients with the milder childhood and adult phenotypes have mutations that may result in residual enzyme activity. This clear genotype-phenotype relationship is in sharp contrast to what has been observed in medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency, in which no correlation between genotype and phenotype can be established.


Genome Research | 2012

Rare versus common variants in pharmacogenetics: SLCO1B1 variation and methotrexate disposition

Laura B. Ramsey; Gitte H. Bruun; Wenjian Yang; Lisa R. Treviño; Selina Vattathil; Paul Scheet; Cheng Cheng; Gary L. Rosner; Kathleen M. Giacomini; Yiping Fan; Alex Sparreboom; Torben S. Mikkelsen; Thomas J. Corydon; Ching-Hon Pui; William E. Evans; Mary V. Relling

Methotrexate is used to treat autoimmune diseases and malignancies, including acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Inter-individual variation in clearance of methotrexate results in heterogeneous systemic exposure, clinical efficacy, and toxicity. In a genome-wide association study of children with ALL, we identified SLCO1B1 as harboring multiple common polymorphisms associated with methotrexate clearance. The extent of influence of rare versus common variants on pharmacogenomic phenotypes remains largely unexplored. We tested the hypothesis that rare variants in SLCO1B1 could affect methotrexate clearance and compared the influence of common versus rare variants in addition to clinical covariates on clearance. From deep resequencing of SLCO1B1 exons in 699 children, we identified 93 SNPs, 15 of which were non-synonymous (NS). Three of these NS SNPs were common, with a minor allele frequency (MAF) >5%, one had low frequency (MAF 1%-5%), and 11 were rare (MAF <1%). NS SNPs (common or rare) predicted to be functionally damaging were more likely to be found among patients with the lowest methotrexate clearance than patients with high clearance. We verified lower function in vitro of four SLCO1B1 haplotypes that were associated with reduced methotrexate clearance. In a multivariate stepwise regression analysis adjusting for other genetic and non-genetic covariates, SLCO1B1 variants accounted for 10.7% of the population variability in clearance. Of that variability, common NS variants accounted for the majority, but rare damaging NS variants constituted 17.8% of SLCO1B1s effects (1.9% of total variation) and had larger effect sizes than common NS variants. Our results show that rare variants are likely to have an important effect on pharmacogenetic phenotypes.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2008

Mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation defects—remaining challenges

Niels Gregersen; Brage S. Andresen; Christina Bak Pedersen; Rikke K.J. Olsen; Thomas J. Corydon; Peter Bross

SummaryMitochondrial fatty acid oxidation defects have been recognized since the early 1970s. The discovery rate has been rather constant, with 3–4 ‘new’ disorders identified every decade and with the most recent example, ACAD9 deficiency, reported in 2007. In this presentation we will focus on three of the ‘old’ defects: medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency, riboflavin responsive multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenation (RR-MAD) deficiency, and short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) deficiency. These disorders have been discussed in many publications and at countless conference presentations, and many questions relating to them have been answered. However, continuing clinical and pathophysiological research has raised many further questions, and new ideas and methodologies may be required to answer these. We will discuss these challenges. For MCAD deficiency the key question is why 80% of symptomatic patients are homozygous for the prevalent ACADM gene variation c.985A > G whereas this is found in only ∼50% of newborns with a positive screen. For RR-MAD deficiency, the challenge is to find the connection between variations in the ETFDH gene and the observed deficiency of a number of different mitochondrial dehydrogenases as well as deficiency of FAD and coenzyme Q10. With SCAD deficiency, the challenge is to elucidate whether ACADS gene variations are disease-associated, especially when combined with other genetic/cellular/environmental factors, which may act synergistically.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Misfolding, degradation and aggregation of variant proteins the molecular pathogenesis of short chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) deficiency

Christina Bak Pedersen; Peter Bross; Vibeke Winter; Thomas J. Corydon; Lars Bolund; Kim Bartlett; Jerry Vockley; Niels Gregersen

Short chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) deficiency is an inborn error of the mitochondrial fatty acid metabolism caused by rare variations as well as common susceptibility variations in the SCAD gene. Earlier studies have shown that a common variant SCAD protein (R147W) was impaired in folding, and preliminary experiments suggested that the variant protein displayed prolonged association with chaperonins and delayed formation of active enzyme. Accordingly, the molecular pathogenesis of SCAD deficiency may rely on intramitochondrial protein quality control mechanisms, including degradation and aggregation of variant SCAD proteins. In this study we investigated the processing of a set of disease-causing variant SCAD proteins (R22W, G68C, W153R, R359C, and Q341H) and two common variant proteins (R147W and G185S) that lead to reduced SCAD activity. All SCAD proteins, including the wild type, associate with mitochondrial hsp60 chaperonins; however, the variant SCAD proteins remained associated with hsp60 for prolonged periods of time. Biogenesis experiments at two temperatures revealed that some of the variant proteins (R22W, G68C, W153R, and R359C) caused severe misfolding, whereas others (R147W, G185S, and Q341H) exhibited a less severe temperaturesensitive folding defect. Based on the magnitude of in vitro defects, these SCAD proteins are characterized as folding-defective variants and mild folding variants, respectively. Pulse-chase experiments demonstrated that the variant SCAD proteins either triggered proteolytic degradation by mitochondrial proteases or, especially at elevated temperature, aggregation of non-native conformers. The latter finding may indicate that accumulation of aggregated SCAD proteins may play a role in the pathogenesis of SCAD deficiency.


Neuroscience | 2008

Decreased expression of the mitochondrial matrix proteases Lon and ClpP in cells from a patient with hereditary spastic paraplegia (SPG13).

Jens Jacob Hansen; Thomas J. Corydon; Johan Palmfeldt; A. Dürr; Bertrand Fontaine; Marit N. Nielsen; Jane Christensen; Niels Gregersen; Peter Bross

The mitochondrial chaperonin heat shock protein 60 (Hsp60) assists the folding of a subset of proteins localized in mitochondria and is an essential component of the mitochondrial protein quality control system. Mutations in the HSPD1 gene that encodes Hsp60 have been identified in patients with an autosomal dominant form of hereditary spastic paraplegia (SPG13), a late-onset neurodegenerative disorder characterized by a progressive paraparesis of the lower limbs. The disease-associated Hsp60-(p.Val98Ile) protein, encoded by the c.292G>A HSPD1 allele, has reduced chaperonin activity, but how its expression affects mitochondrial functions has not been investigated. We have studied mitochondrial function and expression of genes encoding mitochondrial chaperones and proteases in a human lymphoblastoid cell line and fibroblast cells from a patient who is heterozygous for the c.292G>A HSPD1 allele. We found that both the c.292G>A RNA transcript and the corresponding Hsp60-(p.Val98Ile) protein were present at comparable levels to their wild-type counterparts in SPG13 patient cells. Compared with control cells, we found no significant cellular or mitochondrial dysfunctions in SPG13 patient cells by assessing the mitochondrial membrane potential, cell viability, and sensitivity toward oxidative stress. However, a decreased expression of the mitochondrial protein quality control proteases Lon and ClpP, both at the RNA and protein level, was demonstrated in SPG13 patient cells. We propose that decreased levels of mitochondrial proteases Lon and ClpP may allow Hsp60 substrate proteins to go through more folding attempts instead of being prematurely degraded, thereby supporting productive folding in cells with reduced Hsp60 chaperonin activity. In conclusion, our studies with SPG13 patient cells expressing the functionally impaired mutant Hsp60 chaperonin suggest that reduction of the degradative activity of the protein quality control system may represent a previously unrecognized cellular adaptation to reduced chaperone function.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2001

The role of chaperone-assisted folding and quality control in inborn errors of metabolism : Protein folding disorders

Niels Gregersen; Peter Bross; Brage S. Andresen; Christina B. Pedersen; Thomas J. Corydon; Lars Bolund

Molecular chaperones are present in the various compartments of the cell and assist the folding of newly synthesized proteins. Compared to wild-type proteins, missense mutant proteins are generally synthesized in a normal fashion, but may be impaired in their folding. A broad array of diseases that are due to misfolding of mutant proteins may be labelled conformational diseases: aggregation diseases, such as Alzheimer disease; diseases caused by negative dominance from misfolded structural proteins, such as hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; and disorders where the misfolded protein is degraded by intracellular proteases. Many metabolic disorders belong to this last category, where the so-called protein quality control systems, comprising chaperones and proteases, attempt to eliminate folding intermediates or misfolded proteins. On the basis of in vitro experiments with a limited number of missense mutations identified in patients with phenylalanine hydroxylase and fatty acid oxidation deficiencies, we discuss the cellular fate of missense mutant proteins. We find that the balance between folding to functional conformers, retention (holding) and degradation of folding intermediates or misfolded proteins is dependent on the nature of the mutation and on the efficiency of the quality control. For example, low temperature may promote formation of functional conformers, while elevated temperature usually promotes retention and degradation. We conclude that disorders caused by many missense mutations are complex diseases in which the mutation itself is a necessary major primary component, but that its effect may be modified by cellular conditions and possibly by genetic variations in the quality control systems. We suggest that this new knowledge about cell handling may open new avenues of understanding of the cell pathology and treatment of patients with metabolic disorders.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

The Hsp60-(p.V98I) mutation associated with hereditary spastic paraplegia SPG13 compromises chaperonin function both in vitro and in vivo

Peter Bross; Søren Naundrup; Jakob Hansen; Marit N. Nielsen; Jane Christensen; Mogens Kruhøffer; Johan Palmfeldt; Thomas J. Corydon; Niels Gregersen; Debbie Ang; Costa Georgopoulos; Kåre Lehmann Nielsen

We have previously reported the association of a mutation (c.292G > A/p.V98I) in the human HSPD1 gene that encodes the mitochondrial Hsp60 chaperonin with a dominantly inherited form of hereditary spastic paraplegia. Here, we show that the purified Hsp60-(p.V98I) chaperonin displays decreased ATPase activity and exhibits a strongly reduced capacity to promote folding of denatured malate dehydrogenase in vitro. To test its in vivo functions, we engineered a bacterial model system that lacks the endogenous chaperonin genes and harbors two plasmids carrying differentially inducible operons with human Hsp10 and wild-type Hsp60 or Hsp10 and Hsp60-(p.V98I), respectively. Ten hours after shutdown of the wild-type chaperonin operon and induction of the Hsp60-(p.V98I)/Hsp10 mutant operon, bacterial cell growth was strongly inhibited. No globally increased protein aggregation was observed, and microarray analyses showed that a number of genes involved in metabolic pathways, some of which are essential for robust aerobic growth, were strongly up-regulated in Hsp60-(p.V98I)-expressing bacteria, suggesting that the growth arrest was caused by defective folding of some essential proteins. Co-expression of Hsp60-(p.V98I) and wild-type Hsp60 exerted a dominant negative effect only when the chaperonin genes were expressed at relatively low levels. Based on our in vivo and in vitro data, we propose that the major effect of heterozygosity for the Hsp60-(p.V98I) mutation is a moderately decreased activity of chaperonin complexes composed of mixed wild-type and Hsp60-(p.V98I) mutant subunits.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Isolated 2-Methylbutyrylglycinuria Caused by Short/Branched-Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase Deficiency: Identification of a New Enzyme Defect, Resolution of Its Molecular Basis, and Evidence for Distinct Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenases in Isoleucine And Valine Metabolism

Brage S. Andresen; Ernst Christensen; Thomas J. Corydon; Peter Bross; Bente Pilgaard; Jos P.N. Ruiter; Henrik Simonsen; Vibeke Winter; Inga Knudsen; Lisbeth Dahl Schroeder; Niels Gregersen; Flemming Skovby

Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (ACAD) defects in isoleucine and valine catabolism have been proposed in clinically diverse patients with an abnormal pattern of metabolites in their urine, but they have not been proved enzymatically or genetically, and it is unknown whether one or two ACADs are involved. We investigated a patient with isolated 2-methylbutyrylglycinuria, suggestive of a defect in isoleucine catabolism. Enzyme assay of the patients fibroblasts, using 2-methylbutyryl-CoA as substrate, confirmed the defect. Sequence analysis of candidate ACADs revealed heterozygosity for the common short-chain ACAD A625 variant allele and no mutations in ACAD-8 but a 100-bp deletion in short/branched-chain ACAD (SBCAD) cDNA from the patient. Our identification of the SBCAD gene structure (11 exons; >20 kb) enabled analysis of genomic DNA. This showed that the deletion was caused by skipping of exon 10, because of homozygosity for a 1228G-->A mutation in the patient. This mutation was not present in 118 control chromosomes. In vitro transcription/translation experiments and overexpression in COS cells confirmed the disease-causing nature of the mutant SBCAD protein and showed that ACAD-8 is an isobutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase and that both wild-type proteins are imported into mitochondria and form tetramers. In conclusion, we report the first mutation in the SBCAD gene, show that it results in an isolated defect in isoleucine catabolism, and indicate that ACAD-8 is a mitochondrial enzyme that functions in valine catabolism.


Acta Ophthalmologica | 2013

Update on the keratoconus genetics

Kim Nielsen; Jesper Hjortdal; Maria Pihlmann; Thomas J. Corydon

Keratoconus (KC) is one of the leading causes for keratoplasty. While the genetic aetiology of more and more corneal dystrophies is revealed, KC falls behind. And it is not because of lack of effort. The diversity in the many published results from over two decades is discussed in relation to the present knowledge in molecular biology. Results that at first appear to be in conflict with each other make sense when placed in the right context. Ophthalmologists often refer to KC as a heterogeneous disease. This review demonstrates that it truly is a multifactorial disease. Despite the many attempts to reveal the aetiology of KC, the pathological mechanism(s) still remain to be solved.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2012

Influence of Polymorphic OATP1B-Type Carriers on the Disposition of Docetaxel

Anne-Joy M. de Graan; Cynthia S. Lancaster; Amanda Obaidat; Bruno Hagenbuch; Laure Elens; Lena E. Friberg; Peter de Bruijn; Shuiying Hu; Alice A. Gibson; Gitte H. Bruun; Thomas J. Corydon; Torben S. Mikkelsen; Aisha L. Walker; Guoqing Du; Walter J. Loos; Ron H.N. van Schaik; Sharyn D. Baker; Ron H.J. Mathijssen; Alex Sparreboom

Purpose: Docetaxel is extensively metabolized by CYP3A4 in the liver but mechanisms by which the drug is taken up into hepatocytes remain poorly understood. We hypothesized that (i) liver uptake of docetaxel is mediated by the polymorphic solute carriers OATP1B1 and OATP1B3 and (ii) inherited genetic defects in this process may impair systemic drug elimination. Experimental Design: Transport of docetaxel was studied in vitro using various cell lines stably transfected with OATP1B1*1A (wild-type), OATP1B1*5 [c.521T>C (V174A); rs4149056], OATP1B3, or the mouse transporter Oatp1b2. Docetaxel clearance was evaluated in wild-type and Oatp1b2-knockout mice as well as in two cohorts of patients with multiple variant transporter genotypes (n = 213). Results: Docetaxel was found to be a substrate for OATP1B1, OATP1B3, and Oatp1b2 but was not transported by OATP1B1*5. Deficiency of Oatp1b2 in mice was associated with an 18-fold decrease in docetaxel clearance (P = 0.0099), which was unrelated to changes in intrinsic metabolic capacity in mouse liver microsomes. In patients, however, none of the studied common reduced function variants in OATP1B1 or OATP1B3 were associated with docetaxel clearance (P > 0.05). Conclusions: The existence of at least two potentially redundant uptake transporters in the human liver with similar affinity for docetaxel supports the possibility that functional defects in both of these proteins may be required to confer substantially altered disposition phenotypes. In view of the established exposure–toxicity relationships for docetaxel, we suggest that caution is warranted if docetaxel has to be administered together with agents that potently inhibit both OATP1B1 and OATP1B3. Clin Cancer Res; 18(16); 4433–40. ©2012 AACR.

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Brage S. Andresen

University of Southern Denmark

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Manfred Infanger

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Markus Wehland

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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