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Dive into the research topics where Tobias B. Haack is active.

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Featured researches published by Tobias B. Haack.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Exome sequencing identifies ACAD9 mutations as a cause of complex I deficiency

Tobias B. Haack; Katharina Danhauser; Birgit Haberberger; Jonathan Hoser; Valentina Strecker; Detlef Boehm; Graziella Uziel; Eleonora Lamantea; Federica Invernizzi; Joanna Poulton; Boris Rolinski; Arcangela Iuso; Saskia Biskup; Thorsten Schmidt; Hans W. Mewes; Ilka Wittig; Thomas Meitinger; Massimo Zeviani; Holger Prokisch

An isolated defect of respiratory chain complex I activity is a frequent biochemical abnormality in mitochondrial disorders. Despite intensive investigation in recent years, in most instances, the molecular basis underpinning complex I defects remains unknown. We report whole-exome sequencing of a single individual with severe, isolated complex I deficiency. This analysis, followed by filtering with a prioritization of mitochondrial proteins, led us to identify compound heterozygous mutations in ACAD9, which encodes a poorly understood member of the mitochondrial acyl-CoA dehydrogenase protein family. We demonstrated the pathogenic role of the ACAD9 variants by the correction of the complex I defect on expression of the wildtype ACAD9 protein in fibroblasts derived from affected individuals. ACAD9 screening of 120 additional complex I–defective index cases led us to identify two additional unrelated cases and a total of five pathogenic ACAD9 alleles.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Exome sequencing reveals de novo WDR45 mutations causing a phenotypically distinct, X-linked dominant form of NBIA.

Tobias B. Haack; Penelope Hogarth; Michael C. Kruer; Allison Gregory; Thomas Wieland; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Elisabeth Graf; Lynn Sanford; Esther Meyer; Eleanna Kara; Stephan M. Cuno; Sami I. Harik; Vasuki H. Dandu; Nardo Nardocci; Giovanna Zorzi; Todd Dunaway; Mark A. Tarnopolsky; Steven Skinner; Steven J. Frucht; Era Hanspal; Connie Schrander-Stumpel; Delphine Héron; Cyril Mignot; Barbara Garavaglia; Kailash P. Bhatia; John Hardy; Tim M. Strom; Nathalie Boddaert; Henry Houlden; Manju A. Kurian

Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) is a group of genetic disorders characterized by abnormal iron deposition in the basal ganglia. We report that de novo mutations in WDR45, a gene located at Xp11.23 and encoding a beta-propeller scaffold protein with a putative role in autophagy, cause a distinctive NBIA phenotype. The clinical features include early-onset global developmental delay and further neurological deterioration (parkinsonism, dystonia, and dementia developing by early adulthood). Brain MRI revealed evidence of iron deposition in the substantia nigra and globus pallidus. Males and females are phenotypically similar, an observation that might be explained by somatic mosaicism in surviving males and germline or somatic mutations in females, as well as skewing of X chromosome inactivation. This clinically recognizable disorder is among the more common forms of NBIA, and we suggest that it be named accordingly as beta-propeller protein-associated neurodegeneration.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012

Molecular diagnosis in mitochondrial complex I deficiency using exome sequencing

Tobias B. Haack; Birgit Haberberger; Eva-Maria Frisch; Thomas Wieland; Arcangela Iuso; Matteo Gorza; Valentina Strecker; Elisabeth Graf; Johannes A. Mayr; U. Herberg; Julia B. Hennermann; Thomas Klopstock; Klaus A. Kuhn; Uwe Ahting; Wolfgang Sperl; Ekkehard Wilichowski; Georg F. Hoffmann; Marketa Tesarova; Hana Hansikova; Jiri Zeman; Barbara Plecko; Massimo Zeviani; Ilka Wittig; Tim M. Strom; Markus Schuelke; Peter Freisinger; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch

Background Next generation sequencing has become the core technology for gene discovery in rare inherited disorders. However, the interpretation of the numerous sequence variants identified remains challenging. We assessed the application of exome sequencing for diagnostics in complex I deficiency, a disease with vast genetic heterogeneity. Methods Ten unrelated individuals with complex I deficiency were selected for exome sequencing and sequential bioinformatic filtering. Cellular rescue experiments were performed to verify pathogenicity of novel disease alleles. Results The first filter criterion was ‘Presence of known pathogenic complex I deficiency variants’. This revealed homozygous mutations in NDUFS3 and ACAD9 in two individuals. A second criterion was ‘Presence of two novel potentially pathogenic variants in a structural gene of complex I’, which discovered rare variants in NDUFS8 in two unrelated individuals and in NDUFB3 in a third. Expression of wild-type cDNA in mutant cell lines rescued complex I activity and assembly, thus providing a functional validation of their pathogenicity. Using the third criterion ‘Presence of two potentially pathogenic variants in a gene encoding a mitochondrial protein’, loss-of-function mutations in MTFMT were discovered in two patients. In three patients the molecular genetic correlate remained unclear and follow-up analysis is ongoing. Conclusion Appropriate in silico filtering of exome sequencing data, coupled with functional validation of new disease alleles, is effective in rapidly identifying disease-causative variants in known and new complex I associated disease genes.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Lack of the mitochondrial protein acylglycerol kinase causes Sengers syndrome.

Johannes A. Mayr; Tobias B. Haack; Elisabeth Graf; Franz A. Zimmermann; Thomas Wieland; Birgit Haberberger; Andrea Superti-Furga; Janbernd Kirschner; Beat Steinmann; Matthias R. Baumgartner; Isabella Moroni; Eleonora Lamantea; Massimo Zeviani; Richard J. Rodenburg; Jan A.M. Smeitink; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Wolfgang Sperl; Holger Prokisch

Exome sequencing of an individual with congenital cataracts, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, skeletal myopathy, and lactic acidosis, all typical symptoms of Sengers syndrome, discovered two nonsense mutations in the gene encoding mitochondrial acylglycerol kinase (AGK). Mutation screening of AGK in further individuals with congenital cataracts and cardiomyopathy identified numerous loss-of-function mutations in an additional eight families, confirming the causal nature of AGK deficiency in Sengers syndrome. The loss of AGK led to a decrease of the adenine nucleotide translocator in the inner mitochondrial membrane in muscle, consistent with a role of AGK in driving the assembly of the translocator as a result of its effects on phospholipid metabolism in mitochondria.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Loss-of-function mutations in MGME1 impair mtDNA replication and cause multisystemic mitochondrial disease

Cornelia Kornblum; Thomas J. Nicholls; Tobias B. Haack; Susanne Schöler; Viktoriya Peeva; Katharina Danhauser; Kerstin Hallmann; Gábor Zsurka; Joanna Rorbach; Arcangela Iuso; Thomas Wieland; Monica Sciacco; Dario Ronchi; Giacomo P. Comi; Maurizio Moggio; Catarina M. Quinzii; Salvatore DiMauro; Sarah E. Calvo; Vamsi K. Mootha; Thomas Klopstock; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Michal Minczuk; Wolfram S. Kunz; Holger Prokisch

Known disease mechanisms in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) maintenance disorders alter either the mitochondrial replication machinery (POLG, POLG2 and C10orf2) or the biosynthesis pathways of deoxyribonucleoside 5′-triphosphates for mtDNA synthesis. However, in many of these disorders, the underlying genetic defect has yet to be discovered. Here, we identify homozygous nonsense and missense mutations in the orphan gene C20orf72 in three families with a mitochondrial syndrome characterized by external ophthalmoplegia, emaciation and respiratory failure. Muscle biopsies showed mtDNA depletion and multiple mtDNA deletions. C20orf72, hereafter MGME1 (mitochondrial genome maintenance exonuclease 1), encodes a mitochondrial RecB-type exonuclease belonging to the PD–(D/E)XK nuclease superfamily. We show that MGME1 cleaves single-stranded DNA and processes DNA flap substrates. Fibroblasts from affected individuals do not repopulate after chemically induced mtDNA depletion. They also accumulate intermediates of stalled replication and show increased levels of 7S DNA, as do MGME1-depleted cells. Thus, we show that MGME1-mediated mtDNA processing is essential for mitochondrial genome maintenance.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

Mutations of the Mitochondrial-tRNA Modifier MTO1 Cause Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy and Lactic Acidosis

Daniele Ghezzi; Enrico Baruffini; Tobias B. Haack; Federica Invernizzi; Laura Melchionda; Cristina Dallabona; Tim M. Strom; Rossella Parini; Alberto Burlina; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch; Ileana Ferrero; Massimo Zeviani

Dysfunction of mitochondrial respiration is an increasingly recognized cause of isolated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. To gain insight into the genetic origin of this condition, we used next-generation exome sequencing to identify mutations in MTO1, which encodes mitochondrial translation optimization 1. Two affected siblings carried a maternal c.1858dup (p.Arg620Lysfs(∗)8) frameshift and a paternal c.1282G>A (p.Ala428Thr) missense mutation. A third unrelated individual was homozygous for the latter change. In both humans and yeast, MTO1 increases the accuracy and efficiency of mtDNA translation by catalyzing the 5-carboxymethylaminomethylation of the wobble uridine base in three mitochondrial tRNAs (mt-tRNAs). Accordingly, mutant muscle and fibroblasts showed variably combined reduction in mtDNA-dependent respiratory chain activities. Reduced respiration in mutant cells was corrected by expressing a wild-type MTO1 cDNA. Conversely, defective respiration of a yeast mto1Δ strain failed to be corrected by an Mto1(Pro622∗) variant, equivalent to human MTO1(Arg620Lysfs∗8), whereas incomplete correction was achieved by an Mto1(Ala431Thr) variant, corresponding to human MTO1(Ala428Thr). The respiratory yeast phenotype was dramatically worsened in stress conditions and in the presence of a paromomycin-resistant (P(R)) mitochondrial rRNA mutation. Lastly, in vivo mtDNA translation was impaired in the mutant yeast strains.


Brain | 2014

PNPLA6 mutations cause Boucher-Neuhäuser and Gordon Holmes syndromes as part of a broad neurodegenerative spectrum

Matthis Synofzik; Michael Gonzalez; Charles Marques Lourenço; Marie Coutelier; Tobias B. Haack; Adriana P. Rebelo; Didier Hannequin; Tim M. Strom; Holger Prokisch; Christoph Kernstock; Alexandra Durr; Ludger Schöls; Marcos M. Lima-Martínez; Amjad Farooq; Rebecca Schüle; Giovanni Stevanin; Wilson Marques; Stephan Züchner

Boucher-Neuhäuser and Gordon Holmes syndromes are clinical syndromes defined by early-onset ataxia and hypogonadism plus chorioretinal dystrophy (Boucher-Neuhäuser syndrome) or brisk reflexes (Gordon Holmes syndrome). Here we uncover the genetic basis of these two syndromes, demonstrating that both clinically distinct entities are allelic for recessive mutations in the gene PNPLA6. In five of seven Boucher-Neuhäuser syndrome/Gordon Holmes syndrome families, we identified nine rare conserved and damaging mutations by applying whole exome sequencing. Further, by dissecting the complex clinical presentation of Boucher-Neuhäuser syndrome and Gordon Holmes syndrome into its neurological system components, we set out to analyse an additional 538 exomes from families with ataxia (with and without hypogonadism), pure and complex hereditary spastic paraplegia, and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2. We identified four additional PNPLA6 mutations in spastic ataxia and hereditary spastic paraplegia families, revealing that Boucher-Neuhäuser and Gordon Holmes syndromes in fact represent phenotypic clusters on a spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases caused by mutations in PNPLA6. Structural analysis indicates that the majority of mutations falls in the C-terminal phospholipid esterase domain and likely inhibits the catalytic activity of PNPLA6, which provides the precursor for biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine. Our findings show that PNPLA6 influences a manifold of neuronal systems, from the retina to the cerebellum, upper and lower motor neurons and the neuroendocrine system, with damage of this protein causing an extraordinarily broad continuous spectrum of associated neurodegenerative disease.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Exome sequence reveals mutations in CoA synthase as a cause of neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation

Sabrina Dusi; Lorella Valletta; Tobias B. Haack; Yugo Tsuchiya; Paola Venco; Marco Tigano; Nikita Demchenko; Thomas Wieland; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Tim M. Strom; Federica Invernizzi; Barbara Garavaglia; Allison Gregory; Lynn Sanford; Jeffrey Hamada; Conceição Bettencourt; Henry Houlden; Luisa Chiapparini; Giovanna Zorzi; Manju A. Kurian; Nardo Nardocci; Holger Prokisch; Susan J. Hayflick; Ivan Gout; Valeria Tiranti

Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) comprises a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders with progressive extrapyramidal signs and neurological deterioration, characterized by iron accumulation in the basal ganglia. Exome sequencing revealed the presence of recessive missense mutations in COASY, encoding coenzyme A (CoA) synthase in one NBIA-affected subject. A second unrelated individual carrying mutations in COASY was identified by Sanger sequence analysis. CoA synthase is a bifunctional enzyme catalyzing the final steps of CoA biosynthesis by coupling phosphopantetheine with ATP to form dephospho-CoA and its subsequent phosphorylation to generate CoA. We demonstrate alterations in RNA and protein expression levels of CoA synthase, as well as CoA amount, in fibroblasts derived from the two clinical cases and in yeast. This is the second inborn error of coenzyme A biosynthesis to be implicated in NBIA.


Neurology | 2014

Novel (ovario) leukodystrophy related to AARS2 mutations

Cristina Dallabona; Daria Diodato; Sietske H. Kevelam; Tobias B. Haack; Lee-Jun C. Wong; Gajja S. Salomons; Enrico Baruffini; Laura Melchionda; Caterina Mariotti; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch; Kim Chapman; Alison Colley; Helena Rocha; Katrin Őunap; Raphael Schiffmann; Ettore Salsano; Mario Savoiardo; Eline M. Hamilton; Truus E. M. Abbink; Nicole I. Wolf; Ileana Ferrero; Costanza Lamperti; Massimo Zeviani; Adeline Vanderver; Daniele Ghezzi; Marjo S. van der Knaap

Objectives: The study was focused on leukoencephalopathies of unknown cause in order to define a novel, homogeneous phenotype suggestive of a common genetic defect, based on clinical and MRI findings, and to identify the causal genetic defect shared by patients with this phenotype. Methods: Independent next-generation exome-sequencing studies were performed in 2 unrelated patients with a leukoencephalopathy. MRI findings in these patients were compared with available MRIs in a database of unclassified leukoencephalopathies; 11 patients with similar MRI abnormalities were selected. Clinical and MRI findings were investigated. Results: Next-generation sequencing revealed compound heterozygous mutations in AARS2 encoding mitochondrial alanyl-tRNA synthetase in both patients. Functional studies in yeast confirmed the pathogenicity of the mutations in one patient. Sanger sequencing revealed AARS2 mutations in 4 of the 11 selected patients. The 6 patients with AARS2 mutations had childhood- to adulthood-onset signs of neurologic deterioration consisting of ataxia, spasticity, and cognitive decline with features of frontal lobe dysfunction. MRIs showed a leukoencephalopathy with striking involvement of left-right connections, descending tracts, and cerebellar atrophy. All female patients had ovarian failure. None of the patients had signs of a cardiomyopathy. Conclusions: Mutations in AARS2 have been found in a severe form of infantile cardiomyopathy in 2 families. We present 6 patients with a new phenotype caused by AARS2 mutations, characterized by leukoencephalopathy and, in female patients, ovarian failure, indicating that the phenotypic spectrum associated with AARS2 variants is much wider than previously reported.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2013

Homozygous missense mutation in BOLA3 causes multiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome in two siblings

Tobias B. Haack; Boris Rolinski; Birgit Haberberger; Franz A. Zimmermann; Jessica Schum; Valentina Strecker; Elisabeth Graf; Uwe Athing; Thomas Hoppen; Ilka Wittig; Wolfgang Sperl; Peter Freisinger; Johannes A. Mayr; Tim M. Strom; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch

Defects of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation constitute a clinical and genetic heterogeneous group of disorders affecting multiple organ systems at varying age. Biochemical analysis of biopsy material demonstrates isolated or combined deficiency of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzyme complexes. Co-occurrence of impaired activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex has been rarely reported so far and is not yet fully understood. We investigated two siblings presenting with severe neonatal lactic acidosis, hypotonia, and intractable cardiomyopathy; both died within the first months of life. Muscle biopsy revealed a peculiar biochemical defect consisting of a combined deficiency of respiratory chain complexes I, II, and II+III accompanied by a defect of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Joint exome analysis of both affected siblings uncovered a homozygous missense mutation in BOLA3. The causal role of the mutation was validated by lentiviral-mediated expression of the mitochondrial isoform of wildtype BOLA3 in patient fibroblasts, which lead to an increase of both residual enzyme activities and lipoic acid levels. Our results suggest that BOLA3 plays a crucial role in the biogenesis of iron-sulfur clusters necessary for proper function of respiratory chain and 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase complexes. We conclude that broad sequencing approaches combined with appropriate prioritization filters and experimental validation enable efficient molecular diagnosis and have the potential to discover new disease loci.

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Johannes A. Mayr

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Peter Freisinger

Boston Children's Hospital

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Wolfgang Sperl

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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René G. Feichtinger

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Ertan Mayatepek

University of Düsseldorf

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Daniele Ghezzi

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Johannes Koch

Boston Children's Hospital

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