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Dive into the research topics where Valeska Frank is active.

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Featured researches published by Valeska Frank.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2008

Loss of nephrocystin-3 function can cause embryonic lethality, Meckel-Gruber-like syndrome, situs inversus, and renal-hepatic-pancreatic dysplasia.

Carsten Bergmann; Manfred Fliegauf; Nadina Ortiz Brüchle; Valeska Frank; Heike Olbrich; J. Kirschner; Bernhard Schermer; Ingolf Schmedding; Andreas Kispert; Bettina Kränzlin; Gudrun Nürnberg; Christian Becker; Tiemo Grimm; Gundula Girschick; Sally Ann Lynch; Peter Kelehan; Jan Senderek; Thomas J. Neuhaus; Thomas Stallmach; Hanswalter Zentgraf; Peter Nürnberg; Norbert Gretz; Cecilia Lo; Soeren S. Lienkamp; Tobias Schäfer; Gerd Walz; Thomas Benzing; Klaus Zerres; Heymut Omran

Many genetic diseases have been linked to the dysfunction of primary cilia, which occur nearly ubiquitously in the body and act as solitary cellular mechanosensory organelles. The list of clinical manifestations and affected tissues in cilia-related disorders (ciliopathies) such as nephronophthisis is broad and has been attributed to the wide expression pattern of ciliary proteins. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms leading to this dramatic diversity of phenotypes. We recently reported hypomorphic NPHP3 mutations in children and young adults with isolated nephronophthisis and associated hepatic fibrosis or tapetoretinal degeneration. Here, we chose a combinatorial approach in mice and humans to define the phenotypic spectrum of NPHP3/Nphp3 mutations and the role of the nephrocystin-3 protein. We demonstrate that the pcy mutation generates a hypomorphic Nphp3 allele that is responsible for the cystic kidney disease phenotype, whereas complete loss of Nphp3 function results in situs inversus, congenital heart defects, and embryonic lethality in mice. In humans, we show that NPHP3 mutations can cause a broad clinical spectrum of early embryonic patterning defects comprising situs inversus, polydactyly, central nervous system malformations, structural heart defects, preauricular fistulas, and a wide range of congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract (CAKUT). On the functional level, we show that nephrocystin-3 directly interacts with inversin and can inhibit like inversin canonical Wnt signaling, whereas nephrocystin-3 deficiency leads in Xenopus laevis to typical planar cell polarity defects, suggesting a role in the control of canonical and noncanonical (planar cell polarity) Wnt signaling.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011

Mutations in Multiple PKD Genes May Explain Early and Severe Polycystic Kidney Disease

Carsten Bergmann; Jennifer von Bothmer; Nadina Ortiz Brüchle; Andreas Venghaus; Valeska Frank; Henry Fehrenbach; Tobias Hampel; Lars Pape; Annegret Buske; Jón Einar Jónsson; Nanette Sarioglu; Antónia Santos; Jose Carlos Ferreira; Jan U. Becker; Reinhold Cremer; Julia Hoefele; Marcus R. Benz; Lutz T. Weber; Reinhard Buettner; Klaus Zerres

Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is typically a late-onset disease caused by mutations in PKD1 or PKD2, but about 2% of patients with ADPKD show an early and severe phenotype that can be clinically indistinguishable from autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD). The high recurrence risk in pedigrees with early and severe PKD strongly suggests a common familial modifying background, but the mechanisms underlying the extensive phenotypic variability observed among affected family members remain unknown. Here, we describe severely affected patients with PKD who carry, in addition to their expected familial germ-line defect, additional mutations in PKD genes, including HNF-1β, which likely aggravate the phenotype. Our findings are consistent with a common pathogenesis and dosage theory for PKD and may propose a general concept for the modification of disease expression in other so-called monogenic disorders.


Nature Genetics | 2013

ANKS6 is a central component of a nephronophthisis module linking NEK8 to INVS and NPHP3

Sylvia Hoff; Jan Halbritter; Daniel Epting; Valeska Frank; Thanh-Minh T. Nguyen; Jeroen van Reeuwijk; Christopher Boehlke; Christoph Schell; Takayuki Yasunaga; Martin Helmstädter; Miriam Mergen; Emilie Filhol; Karsten Boldt; Nicola Horn; Marius Ueffing; Edgar A. Otto; Tobias Eisenberger; Mariet W. Elting; Joanna A.E. van Wijk; Detlef Bockenhauer; Nj Sebire; Søren Rittig; Mogens Vyberg; Troels Ring; Martin Pohl; Lars Pape; Thomas J. Neuhaus; Neveen A. Soliman Elshakhs; Sarah Koon; Peter C. Harris

Nephronophthisis is an autosomal recessive cystic kidney disease that leads to renal failure in childhood or adolescence. Most NPHP gene products form molecular networks. Here we identify ANKS6 as a new NPHP family member that connects NEK8 (NPHP9) to INVS (NPHP2) and NPHP3. We show that ANKS6 localizes to the proximal cilium and confirm its role in renal development through knockdown experiments in zebrafish and Xenopus laevis. We also identify six families with ANKS6 mutations affected by nephronophthisis, including severe cardiovascular abnormalities, liver fibrosis and situs inversus. The oxygen sensor HIF1AN hydroxylates ANKS6 and INVS and alters the composition of the ANKS6-INVS-NPHP3 module. Knockdown of Hif1an in Xenopus results in a phenotype that resembles loss of other NPHP proteins. Network analyses uncovered additional putative NPHP proteins and placed ANKS6 at the center of this NPHP module, explaining the overlapping disease manifestation caused by mutation in ANKS6, NEK8, INVS or NPHP3.


Human Mutation | 2013

Combined NGS approaches identify mutations in the intraflagellar transport gene IFT140 in skeletal ciliopathies with early progressive kidney Disease.

Miriam Schmidts; Valeska Frank; Tobias Eisenberger; Saeed Al Turki; Albane A. Bizet; Dinu Antony; Suzanne Rix; Christian Decker; Nadine Bachmann; Martin Bald; Tobias Vinke; Burkhard Toenshoff; Natalia Di Donato; Theresa Neuhann; Jane Hartley; Eamonn R. Maher; Radovan Bogdanovic; Amira Peco-Antic; Christoph J. Mache; Ivana Joksic; Marija Guc-Scekic; Jelena Dobricic; Mirjana Brankovic-Magic; Uk K; Hanno J. Bolz; Gregory J. Pazour; Philip L. Beales; Peter J. Scambler; Sophie Saunier; Hannah M. Mitchison

Ciliopathies are genetically heterogeneous disorders characterized by variable expressivity and overlaps between different disease entities. This is exemplified by the short rib‐polydactyly syndromes, Jeune, Sensenbrenner, and Mainzer‐Saldino chondrodysplasia syndromes. These three syndromes are frequently caused by mutations in intraflagellar transport (IFT) genes affecting the primary cilia, which play a crucial role in skeletal and chondral development. Here, we identified mutations in IFT140, an IFT complex A gene, in five Jeune asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy (JATD) and two Mainzer‐Saldino syndrome (MSS) families, by screening a cohort of 66 JATD/MSS patients using whole exome sequencing and targeted resequencing of a customized ciliopathy gene panel. We also found an enrichment of rare IFT140 alleles in JATD compared with nonciliopathy diseases, implying putative modifier effects for certain alleles. IFT140 patients presented with mild chest narrowing, but all had end‐stage renal failure under 13 years of age and retinal dystrophy when examined for ocular dysfunction. This is consistent with the severe cystic phenotype of Ift140 conditional knockout mice, and the higher level of Ift140 expression in kidney and retina compared with the skeleton at E15.5 in the mouse. IFT140 is therefore a major cause of cono‐renal syndromes (JATD and MSS). The present study strengthens the rationale for IFT140 screening in skeletal ciliopathy spectrum patients that have kidney disease and/or retinal dystrophy.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Mutations in NEK8 link multiple organ dysplasia with altered Hippo signalling and increased c-MYC expression

Valeska Frank; Sandra Habbig; Malte P. Bartram; Tobias Eisenberger; Hermine E. Veenstra-Knol; Christian Decker; Reinder A.C. Boorsma; Heike Göbel; Gudrun Nürnberg; Anabel Griessmann; Mareike Franke; Lori Borgal; Priyanka Kohli; Linus A. Völker; Jörg Dötsch; Peter Nürnberg; Thomas Benzing; Hanno J. Bolz; Colin A. Johnson; Erica H. Gerkes; Bernhard Schermer; Carsten Bergmann

Mutations affecting the integrity and function of cilia have been identified in various genes over the last decade accounting for a group of diseases called ciliopathies. Ciliopathies display a broad spectrum of phenotypes ranging from mild manifestations to lethal combinations of multiple severe symptoms and most of them share cystic kidneys as a common feature. Our starting point was a consanguineous pedigree with three affected fetuses showing an early embryonic phenotype with enlarged cystic kidneys, liver and pancreas and developmental heart disease. By genome-wide linkage analysis, we mapped the disease locus to chromosome 17q11 and identified a homozygous nonsense mutation in NEK8/NPHP9 that encodes a kinase involved in ciliary dynamics and cell cycle progression. Missense mutations in NEK8/NPHP9 have been identified in juvenile cystic kidney jck mice and in patients suffering from nephronophthisis (NPH), an autosomal-recessive cystic kidney disease. This work confirmed a complete loss of NEK8 expression in the affected fetuses due to nonsense-mediated decay. In cultured fibroblasts derived from these fetuses, the expression of prominent polycystic kidney disease genes (PKD1 and PKD2) was decreased, whereas the oncogene c-MYC was upregulated, providing potential explanations for the observed renal phenotype. We furthermore linked NEK8 with NPHP3, another NPH protein known to cause a very similar phenotype in case of null mutations. Both proteins interact and activate the Hippo effector TAZ. Taken together, our study demonstrates that NEK8 is essential for organ development and that the complete loss of NEK8 perturbs multiple signalling pathways resulting in a severe early embryonic phenotype.


PLOS ONE | 2015

An Efficient and Comprehensive Strategy for Genetic Diagnostics of Polycystic Kidney Disease

Tobias Eisenberger; Christian Decker; Milan Hiersche; Ruben C. Hamann; Eva Decker; Steffen Neuber; Valeska Frank; Hanno J. Bolz; Henry Fehrenbach; Lars Pape; Burkhard Toenshoff; Christoph J. Mache; Kay Latta; Carsten Bergmann

Renal cysts are clinically and genetically heterogeneous conditions. Autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD) is the most frequent life-threatening genetic disease and mainly caused by mutations in PKD1. The presence of six PKD1 pseudogenes and tremendous allelic heterogeneity make molecular genetic testing challenging requiring laborious locus-specific amplification. Increasing evidence suggests a major role for PKD1 in early and severe cases of ADPKD and some patients with a recessive form. Furthermore it is becoming obvious that clinical manifestations can be mimicked by mutations in a number of other genes with the necessity for broader genetic testing. We established and validated a sequence capture based NGS testing approach for all genes known for cystic and polycystic kidney disease including PKD1. Thereby, we demonstrate that the applied standard mapping algorithm specifically aligns reads to the PKD1 locus and overcomes the complication of unspecific capture of pseudogenes. Employing careful and experienced assessment of NGS data, the method is shown to be very specific and equally sensitive as established methods. An additional advantage over conventional Sanger sequencing is the detection of copy number variations (CNVs). Sophisticated bioinformatic read simulation increased the high analytical depth of the validation study and further demonstrated the strength of the approach. We further raise some awareness of limitations and pitfalls of common NGS workflows when applied in complex regions like PKD1 demonstrating that quality of NGS needs more than high coverage of the target region. By this, we propose a time- and cost-efficient diagnostic strategy for comprehensive molecular genetic testing of polycystic kidney disease which is highly automatable and will be of particular value when therapeutic options for PKD emerge and genetic testing is needed for larger numbers of patients.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Perinatal Deaths in a Family with Autosomal Dominant Polycystic Kidney Disease and a PKD2 Mutation

Carsten Bergmann; Nadina Ortiz Brüchle; Valeska Frank; Helga Rehder; Klaus Zerres

The authors report on a four-generation family carrying a mutation in the gene for ADPKD2 (PKD2) with previously undetected polycystic kidney disease. In the present generation, however, perinatal ...


Nature Genetics | 2017

Mutations in DZIP1L , which encodes a ciliary-transition-zone protein, cause autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease

Hao Lu; Maria C Rondón Galeano; Elisabeth Ott; Geraldine Kaeslin; P. Jaya Kausalya; Carina Kramer; Nadina Ortiz-Brüchle; Nadescha Hilger; Vicki Metzis; Milan Hiersche; Shang Yew Tay; Robert Tunningley; Shubha Vij; Andrew D. Courtney; Belinda Whittle; Elke Wühl; Udo Vester; Björn Hartleben; Steffen Neuber; Valeska Frank; Melissa H. Little; Daniel Epting; Peter Papathanasiou; Andrew C. Perkins; Graham D. Wright; Walter Hunziker; Heon Yung Gee; Edgar A. Otto; Klaus Zerres; Friedhelm Hildebrandt

Autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD), usually considered to be a genetically homogeneous disease caused by mutations in PKHD1, has been associated with ciliary dysfunction. Here, we describe mutations in DZIP1L, which encodes DAZ interacting protein 1-like, in patients with ARPKD. We further validated these findings through loss-of-function studies in mice and zebrafish. DZIP1L localizes to centrioles and to the distal ends of basal bodies, and interacts with septin2, a protein implicated in maintenance of the periciliary diffusion barrier at the ciliary transition zone. In agreement with a defect in the diffusion barrier, we found that the ciliary-membrane translocation of the PKD proteins polycystin-1 and polycystin-2 is compromised in DZIP1L-mutant cells. Together, these data provide what is, to our knowledge, the first conclusive evidence that ARPKD is not a homogeneous disorder and further establish DZIP1L as a second gene involved in ARPKD pathogenesis.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2014

Mutations in WDR19 encoding the intraflagellar transport component IFT144 cause a broad spectrum of ciliopathies.

Henry Fehrenbach; Christian Decker; Tobias Eisenberger; Valeska Frank; Tobias Hampel; Ulrike Walden; Kerstin Amann; Ingrid Krüger-Stollfuß; Hanno J. Bolz; Karsten Häffner; Martin Pohl; Carsten Bergmann

BackgroundAn emerging number of clinically and genetically heterogeneous diseases now collectively termed ciliopathies have been connected to the dysfunction of primary cilia. We describe an 8-year-old girl with a complex phenotype that did not clearly match any familiar syndrome.Case-Diagnosis/TreatmentHypotonia, facial dysmorphism and retardation were noted shortly after birth. Other features included short stature, mild skeletal anomalies, strabism, deafness, subdural hygroma, hepatosplenomegaly and end-stage renal failure. Renal biopsy revealed tubular atrophy, interstitial fibrosis and segmental glomerulosclerosis. After exclusion of a chromosomal abnormality by array-comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), we performed next-generation sequencing (NGS) using a customized panel that targeted 131 genes known or hypothesized to cause ciliopathies. We identified the novel homozygous WDR19 mutation c.1483G > C (p.Gly495Arg) that affects an evolutionarily highly conserved residue in the intraflagellar transport protein IFT144, is absent from databases and is predicted to be pathogenic by all bioinformatic sources used.ConclusionMutations in WDR19 encoding the intraflagellar transport component IFT144 have recently been described in single families with the clinically overlapping skeletal ciliopathies Jeune and Sensenbrenner syndromes, combined or isolated nephronophthisis (NPHP) and retinitis pigmentosa (RP) (Senior–Loken syndrome). Our patient emphasizes the usefulness and efficiency of a comprehensive NGS panel approach in patients with unclassified ciliopathies. It further suggests that WDR19 mutations can cause a broad spectrum of ciliopathies that extends to Jeune and Sensenbrenner syndromes, RP and renal NPHP-like phenotypes.


Molecular Diagnosis & Therapy | 2006

Diagnosis, Pathogenesis, and Treatment Prospects in Cystic Kidney Disease

Carsten Bergmann; Valeska Frank; Fabian Küpper; Dirk Kamitz; Jens Hanten; Peter Berges; Silke Mager; Markus Moser; Jutta Kirfel; Reinhard Büttner; Jan Senderek; Klaus Zerres

Cystic kidney diseases (CKDs) are a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by progressive fibrocystic renal and hepatobiliary changes. Recent findings have proven the cystogenic process to be compatible with cellular dedifferentiation, i. e. increased apoptosis and proliferation rates, altered protein sorting and secretory characteristics, as well as disorganization of the extracellular matrix. Compelling evidence suggests that cilia play a central pathogenic role and most cystic kidney disorders converge into a common pathogenic pathway. Recently, several promising trials have further extended our understanding of the pathophysiology of CKD and may have the potential for rational personalized therapies in future years. This review aims to summarize the current state of knowledge of the structure and function of proteins underlying polycystic kidney disease, to explore the clinical consequences of changes in respective genes, and to discuss potential therapeutic approaches.

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Gudrun Nürnberg

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Lars Pape

Hannover Medical School

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Henry Fehrenbach

Boston Children's Hospital

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