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Dive into the research topics where Winfried Edelmann is active.

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Featured researches published by Winfried Edelmann.


Cell | 1996

MEIOTIC PACHYTENE ARREST IN MLH1-DEFICIENT MICE

Winfried Edelmann; Paula E. Cohen; Michael F. Kane; Kirkland Lau; Bernice E. Morrow; Samuel E. Bennett; Asad Umar; Thomas A. Kunkel; Giorgio Cattoretti; R. S. K. Chaganti; Jeffrey W. Pollard; Richard D. Kolodner; Raju Kucherlapati

Germ line mutations in DNA mismatch repair genes including MLH1 cause hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer. To understand the role of MLH1 in normal growth and development, we generated mice that have a null mutation of this gene. Mice homozygous for this mutation show a replication error phenotype, and extracts of these cells are deficient in mismatch repair activity. Homozygous mutant males show normal mating behavior but have no detectable mature sperm. Examination of meiosis in these males reveals that the cells enter meiotic prophase and arrest at pachytene. Homozygous mutant females have normal estrous cycles and reproductive and mating behavior but are infertile. The phenotypes of the mlh1 mutant mice are distinct from those deficient in msh2 and pms2. The different phenotypes of the three types of mutant mice suggest that these three genes may have independent functions in mammalian meiosis.


Cell | 1998

Somatic Inactivation of Pkd2 Results in Polycystic Kidney Disease

Guanqing Wu; Yiqiang Cai; Glen S. Markowitz; Jong Hoon Park; David M. Reynolds; Yoshiko Maeda; Thanh C. Le; Harry Hou; Raju Kucherlapati; Winfried Edelmann; Stefan Somlo

Germline mutations in PKD2 cause autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease. We have introduced a mutant exon 1 in tandem with the wild-type exon 1 at the mouse Pkd2 locus. This is an unstable allele that undergoes somatic inactivation by intragenic homologous recombination to produce a true null allele. Mice heterozygous and homozygous for this mutation, as well as Pkd+/- mice, develop polycystic kidney and liver lesions that are indistinguishable from the human phenotype. In all cases, renal cysts arise from renal tubular cells that lose the capacity to produce Pkd2 protein. Somatic loss of Pkd2 expression is both necessary and sufficient for renal cyst formation in ADPKD, suggesting that PKD2 occurs by a cellular recessive mechanism.


Neuron | 1996

GFAP Is Necessary for the Integrity of CNS White Matter Architecture and Long-Term Maintenance of Myelination

Wolfgang Liedtke; Winfried Edelmann; Phyllis Bieri; Fung Chow Chiu; Nicholas J. Cowan; Raju Kucherlapati; Cedric S. Raine

To investigate the structural role of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in vivo, mice carrying a null mutation in GFAP were generated. In 7/14 mutant animals older than 18 months of age, hydrocephalus associated with white matter loss was detected. Mutant mice displayed abnormal myelination including the presence of actively myelinating oligodendrocytes in adults, nonmyelinated axons in optic nerve, and reduced myelin thickness in spinal cord. White matter was poorly vascularized and the blood-brain barrier was structurally and functionally impaired. Astrocytic structure and function were abnormal, consisting of shortened astrocytic cell processes, decreased septation of white matter, and increased CNS extracellular space. Thus, GFAP expression is essential for normal white matter architecture and blood-brain barrier integrity, and its absence leads to late-onset CNS dysmyelination.


Cell | 1997

Mutation in the mismatch repair gene Msh6 causes cancer susceptibility

Winfried Edelmann; Kan Yang; Asad Umar; Joerg Heyer; Kirkland Lau; Kunhua Fan; Wolfgang Liedtke; Paula E. Cohen; Michael F. Kane; James R. Lipford; Nianjun Yu; Gray F. Crouse; Jeffrey W. Pollard; Thomas A. Kunkel; Martin Lipkin; Richard D. Kolodner; Raju Kucherlapati

Mice carrying a null mutation in the mismatch repair gene Msh6 were generated by gene targeting. Cells that were homozygous for the mutation did not produce any detectable MSH6 protein, and extracts prepared from these cells were defective for repair of single nucleotide mismatches. Repair of 1, 2, and 4 nucleotide insertion/deletion mismatches was unaffected. Mice that were homozygous for the mutation had a reduced life span. The mice developed a spectrum of tumors, the most predominant of which were gastrointestinal tumors and B- as well as T-cell lymphomas. The tumors did not show any microsatellite instability. We conclude that MSH6 mutations, like those in some other members of the family of mismatch repair genes, lead to cancer susceptibility, and germline mutations in this gene may be associated with a cancer predisposition syndrome that does not show microsatellite instability.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Mammalian MutS homologue 5 is required for chromosome pairing in meiosis

Winfried Edelmann; Paula E. Cohen; Burkhard Kneitz; Nena Winand; Marie Lia; Joerg Heyer; Richard D. Kolodner; Jeffrey W. Pollard; Raju Kucherlapati

MSH5 (MutS homologue 5) is a member of a family of proteins known to be involved in DNA mismatch repair. Germline mutations in MSH2, MLH1 and GTBP (also known as MSH6) cause hereditary non–polyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) or Lynch syndrome. Inactivation of Msh2, Mlh1, Gtmbp (also known as Msh6) or Pms2 in mice leads to hereditary predisposition to intestinal and other cancers. Early studies in yeast revealed a role for some of these proteins, including Msh5, in meiosis. Gene targeting studies in mice confirmed roles for Mlh1 and Pms2 in mammalian meiosis. To assess the role of Msh5 in mammals, we generated and characterized mice with a null mutation in Msh5. Msh5–/– mice are viable but sterile. Meiosis in these mice is affected due to the disruption of chromosome pairing in prophase I. We found that this meiotic failure leads to a diminution in testicular size and a complete loss of ovarian structures. Our results show that normal Msh5 function is essential for meiotic progression and, in females, gonadal maintenance.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Cardiac defects and renal failure in mice with targeted mutations in Pkd2

Guanqing Wu; Glen S. Markowitz; Li Li; Stephen M. Factor; Lin Geng; Sonia Tibara; Jay Tuchman; Yiqiang Cai; Jong Hoon Park; Janet van Adelsberg; Harry Hou; Raju Kucherlapati; Winfried Edelmann; Stefan Somlo

PKD2, mutations in which cause autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), encodes an integral membrane glycoprotein with similarity to calcium channel subunits. We induced two mutations in the mouse homologue Pkd2 (ref.4): an unstable allele (WS25; hereafter denoted Pkd2WS25) that can undergo homologous-recombination–based somatic rearrangement to form a null allele; and a true null mutation (WS183; hereafter denoted Pkd2−). We examined these mutations to understand the function of polycystin-2, the protein product of Pkd2, and to provide evidence that kidney and liver cyst formation associated with Pkd2 deficiency occurs by a two-hit mechanism. Pkd2−/− mice die in utero between embryonic day (E) 13.5 and parturition. They have structural defects in cardiac septation and cyst formation in maturing nephrons and pancreatic ducts. Pancreatic ductal cysts also occur in adult Pkd2WS25/− mice, suggesting that this clinical manifestation of ADPKD also occurs by a two-hit mechanism. As in human ADPKD, formation of kidney cysts in adult Pkd2WS25/− mice is associated with renal failure and early death (median survival, 65 weeks versus 94 weeks for controls). Adult Pkd2+/− mice have intermediate survival in the absence of cystic disease or renal failure, providing the first indication of a deleterious effect of haploinsufficiency at Pkd2on long-term survival. Our studies advance our understanding of the function of polycystin-2 in development and our mouse models recapitulate the complex human ADPKD phenotype.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Caveolin-2-Deficient Mice Show Evidence of Severe Pulmonary Dysfunction without Disruption of Caveolae

Babak Razani; Xiao Bo Wang; Jeffery A. Engelman; Michela Battista; Guy Lagaud; Xiao Lan Zhang; Burkhard Kneitz; Harry Hou; George J. Christ; Winfried Edelmann; Michael P. Lisanti

ABSTRACT Caveolin-2 is a member of the caveolin gene family with no known function. Although caveolin-2 is coexpressed and heterooligomerizes with caveolin-1 in many cell types (most notably adipocytes and endothelial cells), caveolin-2 has traditionally been considered the dispensable structural partner of the widely studied caveolin-1. We now directly address the functional significance of caveolin-2 by genetically targeting the caveolin-2 locus (Cav-2) in mice. In the absence of caveolin-2 protein expression, caveolae still form and caveolin-1 maintains its localization in plasma membrane caveolae, although in certain tissues caveolin-1 is partially destabilized and shows modestly diminished protein levels. Despite an intact caveolar membrane system, the Cav-2-null lung parenchyma shows hypercellularity, with thickened alveolar septa and an increase in the number of endothelial cells. As a result of these pathological changes, these Cav-2-null mice are markedly exercise intolerant. Interestingly, these Cav-2-null phenotypes are identical to the ones we and others have recently reported for Cav-1-null mice. As caveolin-2 expression is also severely reduced in Cav-1-null mice, we conclude that caveolin-2 deficiency is the clear culprit in this lung disorder. Our analysis of several different phenotypes observed in caveolin-1-deficient mice (i.e., abnormal vascular responses and altered lipid homeostasis) reveals that Cav-2-null mice do not show any of these other phenotypes, indicating a selective role for caveolin-2 in lung function. Taken together, our data show for the first time a specific role for caveolin-2 in mammalian physiology independent of caveolin-1.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

APC-dependent suppression of colon carcinogenesis by PPARγ

Geoffrey D. Girnun; Wendy M. Smith; Stavit Drori; Pasha Sarraf; Elisabetta Mueller; Charis Eng; Prashant R. Nambiar; Daniel W. Rosenberg; Roderick T. Bronson; Winfried Edelmann; Raju Kucherlapati; Frank J. Gonzalez; Bruce M. Spiegelman

Activation of PPARγ by synthetic ligands, such as thiazolidinediones, stimulates adipogenesis and improves insulin sensitivity. Although thiazolidinediones represent a major therapy for type 2 diabetes, conflicting studies showing that these agents can increase or decrease colonic tumors in mice have raised concerns about the role of PPARγ in colon cancer. To analyze critically the role of this receptor, we have used mice heterozygous for Pparγ with both chemical and genetic models of this malignancy. Heterozygous loss of PPARγ causes an increase in β-catenin levels and a greater incidence of colon cancer when animals are treated with azoxymethane. However, mice with preexisting damage to Apc, a regulator of β-catenin, develop tumors in a manner insensitive to the status of PPARγ. These data show that PPARγ can suppress β-catenin levels and colon carcinogenesis but only before damage to the APC/β-catenin pathway. This finding suggests a potentially important use for PPARγ ligands as chemopreventative agents in colon cancer.


Nature Immunology | 2004

Altered somatic hypermutation and reduced class-switch recombination in exonuclease 1-mutant mice.

Philip D. Bardwell; Caroline J. Woo; Kaichun Wei; Ziqiang Li; Alberto Martin; Stephen Z Sack; Tchaiko Parris; Winfried Edelmann; Matthew D. Scharff

The generation of protective antibodies requires somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class-switch recombination (CSR) of immunoglobulin genes. Here we show that mice mutant for exonuclease 1 (Exo1), which participates in DNA mismatch repair (MMR), have decreased CSR and changes in the characteristics of SHM similar to those previously observed in mice mutant for the MMR protein Msh2. Exo1 is thus the first exonuclease shown to be involved in SHM and CSR. The phenotype of Exo1−/− mice and the finding that Exo1 and Mlh1 are physically associated with mutating variable regions support the idea that Exo1 and MMR participate directly in SHM and CSR.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

SLiCE: a novel bacterial cell extract-based DNA cloning method

Yongwei Zhang; Uwe Werling; Winfried Edelmann

We describe a novel cloning method termed SLiCE (Seamless Ligation Cloning Extract) that utilizes easy to generate bacterial cell extracts to assemble multiple DNA fragments into recombinant DNA molecules in a single in vitro recombination reaction. SLiCE overcomes the sequence limitations of traditional cloning methods, facilitates seamless cloning by recombining short end homologies (≥15 bp) with or without flanking heterologous sequences and provides an effective strategy for directional subcloning of DNA fragments from Bacteria Artificial Chromosomes (BACs) or other sources. SLiCE is highly cost effective as a number of standard laboratory bacterial strains can serve as sources for SLiCE extract. In addition, the cloning efficiencies and capabilities of these strains can be greatly improved by simple genetic modifications. As an example, we modified the DH10B Escherichia coli strain to express an optimized λ prophage Red recombination system. This strain, termed PPY, facilitates SLiCE with very high efficiencies and demonstrates the versatility of the method.

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Kan Yang

Rockefeller University

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Kunhua Fan

Rockefeller University

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Matthew D. Scharff

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Richard D. Kolodner

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Harry Hou

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Elena Avdievich

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Paula E. Cohen

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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