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Dive into the research topics where Vera M. Kalscheuer is active.

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Featured researches published by Vera M. Kalscheuer.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2015

Redefining the MED13L syndrome

Abidemi Adegbola; Luciana Musante; Bert Callewaert; Patrícia Maciel; Hao Hu; Bertrand Isidor; Cédric Le Caignec; Barbara Delle Chiaie; Olivier Vanakker; Björn Menten; Annelies Dheedene; Nele Bockaert; Filip Roelens; Karin Decaestecker; João Silva; Gabriela Soares; Fátima Lopes; Hossein Najmabadi; Kimia Kahrizi; Gerald F. Cox; Steven P. Angus; John F. Staropoli; Ute Fischer; Vanessa Suckow; Oliver Bartsch; Andrew Chess; Hans-Hilger Ropers; Thomas F. Wienker; Christoph Hübner; Angela M. Kaindl

Congenital cardiac and neurodevelopmental deficits have been recently linked to the mediator complex subunit 13-like protein MED13L, a subunit of the CDK8-associated mediator complex that functions in transcriptional regulation through DNA-binding transcription factors and RNA polymerase II. Heterozygous MED13L variants cause transposition of the great arteries and intellectual disability (ID). Here, we report eight patients with predominantly novel MED13L variants who lack such complex congenital heart malformations. Rather, they depict a syndromic form of ID characterized by facial dysmorphism, ID, speech impairment, motor developmental delay with muscular hypotonia and behavioral difficulties. We thereby define a novel syndrome and significantly broaden the clinical spectrum associated with MED13L variants. A prominent feature of the MED13L neurocognitive presentation is profound language impairment, often in combination with articulatory deficits.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

New insights into Brunner syndrome and potential for targeted therapy

Elizabeth E. Palmer; Melanie Leffler; Carolyn Rogers; Marie Shaw; Renée Carroll; J. Earl; N.W. Cheung; Bernard Champion; Hao Hu; Stefan A. Haas; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Jozef Gecz; Michael Field

We report two families with Brunner syndrome living in one state of Australia. The first family had a predicted protein‐truncating variant of monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) (p.S251KfsX2). Affected males had mild intellectual disability (ID), obsessive behaviour, limited friendships and were introverted and placid during clinical interview. The family disclosed episodic explosive aggression after a diagnosis was made. The second family had a missense variant in MAOA (p.R45W). Affected males had borderline‐mild ID, attention deficit disorder and limited friendships. One had a history of explosive aggression in childhood and episodic symptoms of flushing, headaches and diarrhoea. Their carrier mother had normal intelligence but similar episodic symptoms. Characteristic biochemical abnormalities included high serum serotonin and urinary metanephrines and low urinary 5‐hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5‐HIAA) and vanillylmandelic acid (VMA). Symptomatic individuals in the second family had particularly high serotonin levels, and treatment with a serotonin reuptake inhibitor and dietary modification resulted in reversal of biochemical abnormalities, reduction of ‘serotonergic’ symptoms and behavioural improvement. Brunner syndrome should be considered as a cause of mild ID with paroxysmal behavioural symptoms. It can be screened for with serum/urine metanephrine and serotonin measurement. Cautious treatment with a serotonin reuptake inhibitor, dietary modifications and avoidance of medications contraindicated in patients on monoamine oxidase inhibitors can improve symptoms.


Brain | 2017

Rare GABRA3 variants are associated with epileptic seizures, encephalopathy and dysmorphic features

Cristina Elena Niturad; Dorit Lev; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Agnieszka Charzewska; Julian Schubert; Tally Lerman-Sagie; Hester Y. Kroes; Renske Oegema; Monica Traverso; Nicola Specchio; Maria Lassota; Jamel Chelly; Odeya Bennett-Back; Nirit Carmi; Tal Koffler-Brill; Michele Iacomino; Marina Trivisano; Giuseppe Capovilla; Pasquale Striano; Magdalena Nawara; Sylwia Rzońca; Ute Fischer; Melanie Bienek; Corinna Jensen; Hao Hu; Holger Thiele; Janine Altmüller; Roland Krause; Patrick May; Felicitas Becker

Genetic epilepsies are caused by mutations in a range of different genes, many of them encoding ion channels, receptors or transporters. While the number of detected variants and genes increased dramatically in the recent years, pleiotropic effects have also been recognized, revealing that clinical syndromes with various degrees of severity arise from a single gene, a single mutation, or from different mutations showing similar functional defects. Accordingly, several genes coding for GABAA receptor subunits have been linked to a spectrum of benign to severe epileptic disorders and it was shown that a loss of function presents the major correlated pathomechanism. Here, we identified six variants in GABRA3 encoding the α3-subunit of the GABAA receptor. This gene is located on chromosome Xq28 and has not been previously associated with human disease. Five missense variants and one microduplication were detected in four families and two sporadic cases presenting with a range of epileptic seizure types, a varying degree of intellectual disability and developmental delay, sometimes with dysmorphic features or nystagmus. The variants co-segregated mostly but not completely with the phenotype in the families, indicating in some cases incomplete penetrance, involvement of other genes, or presence of phenocopies. Overall, males were more severely affected and there were three asymptomatic female mutation carriers compared to only one male without a clinical phenotype. X-chromosome inactivation studies could not explain the phenotypic variability in females. Three detected missense variants are localized in the extracellular GABA-binding NH2-terminus, one in the M2-M3 linker and one in the M4 transmembrane segment of the α3-subunit. Functional studies in Xenopus laevis oocytes revealed a variable but significant reduction of GABA-evoked anion currents for all mutants compared to wild-type receptors. The degree of current reduction correlated partially with the phenotype. The microduplication disrupted GABRA3 expression in fibroblasts of the affected patient. In summary, our results reveal that rare loss-of-function variants in GABRA3 increase the risk for a varying combination of epilepsy, intellectual disability/developmental delay and dysmorphic features, presenting in some pedigrees with an X-linked inheritance pattern.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2018

De novo and inherited mutations in the X-linked gene CLCN4 are associated with syndromic intellectual disability and behavior and seizure disorders in males and females

Elizabeth E. Palmer; Till Stuhlmann; Stefanie Weinert; Eric Haan; H. Van Esch; Maureen Holvoet; Jackie Boyle; Melanie Leffler; Martine Raynaud; Claude Moraine; H. van Bokhoven; Tjitske Kleefstra; Kimia Kahrizi; Hossein Najmabadi; Hans-Hilger Ropers; M.R. Delgado; Deepa Sirsi; Sailaja Golla; A. Sommer; M.P. Pietryga; Wendy K. Chung; J. Wynn; Luis Rohena; E. Bernardo; D. Hamlin; B.M. Faux; Dorothy K. Grange; L. Manwaring; John Tolmie; S. Joss

Variants in CLCN4, which encodes the chloride/hydrogen ion exchanger CIC-4 prominently expressed in brain, were recently described to cause X-linked intellectual disability and epilepsy. We present detailed phenotypic information on 52 individuals from 16 families with CLCN4-related disorder: 5 affected females and 2 affected males with a de novo variant in CLCN4 (6 individuals previously unreported) and 27 affected males, 3 affected females and 15 asymptomatic female carriers from 9 families with inherited CLCN4 variants (4 families previously unreported). Intellectual disability ranged from borderline to profound. Behavioral and psychiatric disorders were common in both child- and adulthood, and included autistic features, mood disorders, obsessive–compulsive behaviors and hetero- and autoaggression. Epilepsy was common, with severity ranging from epileptic encephalopathy to well-controlled seizures. Several affected individuals showed white matter changes on cerebral neuroimaging and progressive neurological symptoms, including movement disorders and spasticity. Heterozygous females can be as severely affected as males. The variability of symptoms in females is not correlated with the X inactivation pattern studied in their blood. The mutation spectrum includes frameshift, missense and splice site variants and one single-exon deletion. All missense variants were predicted to affect CLCN4’s function based on in silico tools and either segregated with the phenotype in the family or were de novo. Pathogenicity of all previously unreported missense variants was further supported by electrophysiological studies in Xenopus laevis oocytes. We compare CLCN4-related disorder with conditions related to dysfunction of other members of the CLC family.


Neurology Genetics | 2017

ARHGEF9 disease: Phenotype clarification and genotype-phenotype correlation

Michael Alber; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Elysa J. Marco; Elliott H. Sherr; Gaetan Lesca; Marianne Till; Gyri Gradek; Antje Wiesener; Christoph Korenke; Sandra Mercier; Felicitas Becker; Toshiyuki Yamamoto; Stephen W. Scherer; Christian R. Marshall; Susan Walker; Usha R. Dutta; Ashwin Dalal; Vanessa Suckow; Payman Jamali; Kimia Kahrizi; Hossein Najmabadi; Berge A. Minassian

Objective: We aimed to generate a review and description of the phenotypic and genotypic spectra of ARHGEF9 mutations. Methods: Patients with mutations or chromosomal disruptions affecting ARHGEF9 were identified through our clinics and review of the literature. Detailed medical history and examination findings were obtained via a standardized questionnaire, or if this was not possible by reviewing the published phenotypic features. Results: A total of 18 patients (including 5 females) were identified. Six had de novo, 5 had maternally inherited mutations, and 7 had chromosomal disruptions. All females had strongly skewed X-inactivation in favor of the abnormal X-chromosome. Symptoms presented in early childhood with delayed motor development alone or in combination with seizures. Intellectual disability was severe in most and moderate in patients with milder mutations. Males with severe intellectual disability had severe, often intractable, epilepsy and exhibited a particular facial dysmorphism. Patients with mutations in exon 9 affecting the proteins PH domain did not develop epilepsy. Conclusions: ARHGEF9 encodes a crucial neuronal synaptic protein; loss of function of which results in severe intellectual disability, epilepsy, and a particular facial dysmorphism. Loss of only the proteins PH domain function is associated with the absence of epilepsy.


Human Mutation | 2017

EIF2S3 Mutations Associated with Severe X-Linked Intellectual Disability Syndrome MEHMO

Martina Skopkova; Friederike Hennig; Byung-Sik Shin; Clesson E. Turner; Daniela Stanikova; Katarina Brennerova; Juraj Stanik; Ute Fischer; Lyndal Henden; Ulrich Müller; Daniela Steinberger; Esther Leshinsky-Silver; Armand Bottani; Timea Kurdiova; Jozef Ukropec; Olga Nyitrayova; Miriam Kolnikova; Iwar Klimes; Guntram Borck; Melanie Bahlo; Stefan A. Haas; Joo-Ran Kim; Leda E. Lotspeich-Cole; Thomas E. Dever; Vera M. Kalscheuer

Impairment of translation initiation and its regulation within the integrated stress response (ISR) and related unfolded‐protein response has been identified as a cause of several multisystemic syndromes. Here, we link MEHMO syndrome, whose genetic etiology was unknown, to this group of disorders. MEHMO is a rare X‐linked syndrome characterized by profound intellectual disability, epilepsy, hypogonadism and hypogenitalism, microcephaly, and obesity. We have identified a C‐terminal frameshift mutation (Ile465Serfs) in the EIF2S3 gene in three families with MEHMO syndrome and a novel maternally inherited missense EIF2S3 variant (c.324T>A; p.Ser108Arg) in another male patient with less severe clinical symptoms. The EIF2S3 gene encodes the γ subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 (eIF2), crucial for initiation of protein synthesis and regulation of the ISR. Studies in patient fibroblasts confirm increased ISR activation due to the Ile465Serfs mutation and functional assays in yeast demonstrate that the Ile465Serfs mutation impairs eIF2γ function to a greater extent than tested missense mutations, consistent with the more severe clinical phenotype of the Ile465Serfs male mutation carriers. Thus, we propose that more severe EIF2S3 mutations cause the full MEHMO phenotype, while less deleterious mutations cause a milder form of the syndrome with only a subset of the symptoms.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2017

De Novo Mutations in SLC25A24 Cause a Craniosynostosis Syndrome with Hypertrichosis, Progeroid Appearance, and Mitochondrial Dysfunction

Nadja Ehmke; Luitgard Graul-Neumann; Lukasz Smorag; Rainer Koenig; Lara Segebrecht; Pilar L. Magoulas; Fernando Scaglia; Esra Kilic; Anna F. Hennig; Nicolai Adolphs; Namrata Saha; Beatrix Fauler; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Friederike Hennig; Janine Altmüller; Christian Netzer; Holger Thiele; Peter Nürnberg; Gökhan Yigit; Marten Jäger; Jochen Hecht; Ulrike Krüger; Thorsten Mielke; Peter Krawitz; Denise Horn; Markus Schuelke; Stefan Mundlos; Carlos A. Bacino; Penelope E. Bonnen; Bernd Wollnik

Gorlin-Chaudhry-Moss syndrome (GCMS) is a dysmorphic syndrome characterized by coronal craniosynostosis and severe midface hypoplasia, body and facial hypertrichosis, microphthalmia, short stature, and short distal phalanges. Variable lipoatrophy and cutis laxa are the basis for a progeroid appearance. Using exome and genome sequencing, we identified the recurrent de novo mutations c.650G>A (p.Arg217His) and c.649C>T (p.Arg217Cys) in SLC25A24 in five unrelated girls diagnosed with GCMS. Two of the girls had pronounced neonatal progeroid features and were initially diagnosed with Wiedemann-Rautenstrauch syndrome. SLC25A24 encodes a mitochondrial inner membrane ATP-Mg/Pi carrier. In fibroblasts from affected individuals, the mutated SLC25A24 showed normal stability. In contrast to control cells, the probands cells showed mitochondrial swelling, which was exacerbated upon treatment with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). The same effect was observed after overexpression of the mutant cDNA. Under normal culture conditions, the mitochondrial membrane potential of the probands fibroblasts was intact, whereas ATP content in the mitochondrial matrix was lower than that in control cells. However, upon H2O2 exposure, the membrane potential was significantly elevated in cells harboring the mutated SLC25A24. No reduction of mitochondrial DNA copy number was observed. These findings demonstrate that mitochondrial dysfunction with increased sensitivity to oxidative stress is due to the SLC25A24 mutations. Our results suggest that the SLC25A24 mutations induce a gain of pathological function and link mitochondrial ATP-Mg/Pi transport to the development of skeletal and connective tissue.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2018

Genetics of intellectual disability in consanguineous families

Hao Hu; Kimia Kahrizi; Luciana Musante; Zohreh Fattahi; Ralf Herwig; Masoumeh Hosseini; Cornelia Oppitz; Seyedeh Sedigheh Abedini; Vanessa Suckow; Larti Farzaneh; Maryam Beheshtian; Bettina Lipkowitz; Tara Akhtarkhavari; Sepideh Mehvari; Sabine Otto; Marzieh Mohseni; Sanaz Arzhangi; Payman Jamali; Faezeh Mojahedi; Maryam Taghdiri; Elaheh Papari; Mohammad Javad Soltani Banavandi; Saeide Akbari; Seyed Hassan Tonekaboni; Hossein Dehghani; Mohammad Reza Ebrahimpou; Ingrid Bader; Behzad Davarnia; Monika Cohen; Hossein Khodaei

Autosomal recessive (AR) gene defects are the leading genetic cause of intellectual disability (ID) in countries with frequent parental consanguinity, which account for about 1/7th of the world population. Yet, compared to autosomal dominant de novo mutations, which are the predominant cause of ID in Western countries, the identification of AR-ID genes has lagged behind. Here, we report on whole exome and whole genome sequencing in 404 consanguineous predominantly Iranian families with two or more affected offspring. In 219 of these, we found likely causative variants, involving 77 known and 77 novel AR-ID (candidate) genes, 21 X-linked genes, as well as 9 genes previously implicated in diseases other than ID. This study, the largest of its kind published to date, illustrates that high-throughput DNA sequencing in consanguineous families is a superior strategy for elucidating the thousands of hitherto unknown gene defects underlying AR-ID, and it sheds light on their prevalence.


Gene | 2017

Mutations in two large pedigrees highlight the role of ZNF711 in X-linked intellectual disability

I.M. van der Werf; A. Van Dijck; Edwin Reyniers; Céline Helsmoortel; A.A. Kumar; Vera M. Kalscheuer; A.P.M. de Brouwer; Tjitske Kleefstra; H. van Bokhoven; Geert Mortier; S. Janssens; Geert Vandeweyer; R.F. Kooy

Intellectual disability (ID) affects approximately 1-2% of the general population and is characterized by impaired cognitive abilities. ID is both clinically as well as genetically heterogeneous, up to 2000 genes are estimated to be involved in the emergence of the disease with various clinical presentations. For many genes, only a few patients have been reported and causality of some genes has been questioned upon the discovery of apparent loss-of-function mutations in healthy controls. Description of additional patients strengthens the evidence for the involvement of a gene in the disease and can clarify the clinical phenotype associated with mutations in a particular gene. Here, we present two large four-generation families with a total of 11 males affected with ID caused by mutations in ZNF711, thereby expanding the total number of families with ID and a ZNF711 mutation to four. Patients with mutations in ZNF711 all present with mild to moderate ID and poor speech accompanied by additional features in some patients, including autistic features and mild facial dysmorphisms, suggesting that ZNF711 mutations cause non-syndromic ID.


Neurology Genetics | 2017

CDKL5 variants: Improving our understanding of a rare neurologic disorder

Ralph D. Hector; Vera M. Kalscheuer; Friederike Hennig; Helen Leonard; Jenny Downs; Angus John Clarke; Timothy A. Benke; Judith Armstrong; Mercedes Pineda; Mark E.S. Bailey; Stuart Cobb

Objective: To provide new insights into the interpretation of genetic variants in a rare neurologic disorder, CDKL5 deficiency, in the contexts of population sequencing data and an updated characterization of the CDKL5 gene. Methods: We analyzed all known potentially pathogenic CDKL5 variants by combining data from large-scale population sequencing studies with CDKL5 variants from new and all available clinical cohorts and combined this with computational methods to predict pathogenicity. Results: The study has identified several variants that can be reclassified as benign or likely benign. With the addition of novel CDKL5 variants, we confirm that pathogenic missense variants cluster in the catalytic domain of CDKL5 and reclassify a purported missense variant as having a splicing consequence. We provide further evidence that missense variants in the final 3 exons are likely to be benign and not important to disease pathology. We also describe benign splicing and nonsense variants within these exons, suggesting that isoform hCDKL5_5 is likely to have little or no neurologic significance. We also use the available data to make a preliminary estimate of minimum incidence of CDKL5 deficiency. Conclusions: These findings have implications for genetic diagnosis, providing evidence for the reclassification of specific variants previously thought to result in CDKL5 deficiency. Together, these analyses support the view that the predominant brain isoform in humans (hCDKL5_1) is crucial for normal neurodevelopment and that the catalytic domain is the primary functional domain.

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Marie Shaw

University of Adelaide

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Jozef Gecz

University of Adelaide

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