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Dive into the research topics where Wolfgang Sperl is active.

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Featured researches published by Wolfgang Sperl.


Nature Genetics | 2008

TMEM70 mutations cause isolated ATP synthase deficiency and neonatal mitochondrial encephalocardiomyopathy

Alena Čížková; Viktor Stránecký; Johannes A. Mayr; Markéta Tesařová; Vendula Havlíčková; Jan Paul; Robert Ivánek; Andreas W. Kuss; Hana Hansikova; Vilma Kaplanová; Marek Vrbacký; Hana Hartmannová; Lenka Nosková; Tomas Honzik; Zdeněk Drahota; Martin Magner; Kateřina Hejzlarová; Wolfgang Sperl; Jiří Zeman; Josef Houštěk; Stanislav Kmoch

We carried out whole-genome homozygosity mapping, gene expression analysis and DNA sequencing in individuals with isolated mitochondrial ATP synthase deficiency and identified disease-causing mutations in TMEM70. Complementation of the cell lines of these individuals with wild-type TMEM70 restored biogenesis and metabolic function of the enzyme complex. Our results show that TMEM70 is involved in mitochondrial ATP synthase biogenesis in higher eukaryotes.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Loss of Complex I due to Mitochondrial DNA Mutations in Renal Oncocytoma

Johannes A. Mayr; David Meierhofer; Franz A. Zimmermann; René G. Feichtinger; Christian Kögler; Manfred Ratschek; Nikolaus Schmeller; Wolfgang Sperl; Barbara Kofler

Purpose: Many solid tumors exhibit abnormal aerobic metabolism characterized by increased glycolytic capacity and decreased cellular respiration. Recently, mutations in the nuclear encoded mitochondrial enzymes fumarate hydratase and succinate dehydrogenase have been identified in certain tumor types, thus demonstrating a direct link between mitochondrial energy metabolism and tumorigenesis. Although mutations in the mitochondrial genome (mitochondrial DNA, mtDNA) also can affect aerobic metabolism and mtDNA alterations are frequently observed in tumor cells, evidence linking respiratory chain deficiency in a specific tumor type to a specific mtDNA mutation has been lacking. Experimental Design: To identify mitochondrial alterations in oncocytomas, we investigated the activities of respiratory chain enzymes and sequenced mtDNA in 15 renal oncocytoma tissues. Results: Here, we show that loss of respiratory chain complex I (NADH/ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is associated with renal oncocytoma. Enzymatic activity of complex I was undetectable or greatly reduced in the tumor samples (n = 15). Blue Native gel electrophoresis of the multisubunit enzyme complex revealed a lack of assembled complex I. Mutation analysis of the mtDNA showed frame-shift mutations in the genes of either subunit ND1, ND4, or ND5 of complex I in 9 of the 15 tumors. Conclusion: Our data indicate that isolated loss of complex I is a specific feature of renal oncocytoma and that this deficiency is frequently caused by somatic mtDNA mutations.


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.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Mitochondrial Phosphate–Carrier Deficiency: A Novel Disorder of Oxidative Phosphorylation

Johannes A. Mayr; Olaf Merkel; Sepp D. Kohlwein; B Gebhardt; Hansjosef Böhles; Ulrike Fötschl; Johannes Koch; Michaela Jaksch; Hanns Lochmüller; Rita Horvath; Peter Freisinger; Wolfgang Sperl

The mitochondrial phosphate carrier SLC25A3 transports inorganic phosphate into the mitochondrial matrix, which is essential for the aerobic synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). We identified a homozygous mutation--c.215G-->A (p.Gly72Glu)--in the alternatively spliced exon 3A of this enzyme in two siblings with lactic acidosis, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and muscular hypotonia who died within the 1st year of life. Functional investigation of intact mitochondria showed a deficiency of ATP synthesis in muscle but not in fibroblasts, which correlated with the tissue-specific expression of exon 3A in muscle versus exon 3B in fibroblasts. The enzyme defect was confirmed by complementation analysis in yeast. This is the first report of patients with mitochondrial phosphate-carrier deficiency.


European Journal of Pediatrics | 1994

Propionic acidaemia: clinical, biochemical and therapeutic aspects. Experience in 30 patients.

Willy Lehnert; Wolfgang Sperl; Terttu Suormala; E. R. Baumgartner

Comprehensive data on 30 patients with propionic acidaemia, diagnosed by selective screening for inborn errors of metabolism, are presented. The most valuable diagnostic metabolites found were methylcitric-, 3-hydroxypropionic-, and 2-methyl-3-oxovaleric acids. Hyperlysinaemia and hyperlysinuria are also characteristic findings in this disease. The metabolic pattern found in propionic acidaemia is discussed extensively as are enzymatic findings. Residual activity of propionyl-CoA carboxylase is neither a predictive marker for severity nor for outcome of the disease. Propionate fixation assay were less reliable for confirmation of propionic acidaemia and of no prognostic value. Clinical presentation of the disease is discussed in detail. Besides the well-known unspecific findings (poor appetite, feeding difficulties, vomiting, dehydration, weight loss, muscular hypotonia, dyspnoea, somnolence, apathy, convulsion, coma, severe metabolic acidosis, hyperammonaemia) various skin abnormalities have been detected in about 50% of all patients. In 27% “dermatitis acidemica” was found.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Mitochondrial ATP synthase deficiency due to a mutation in the ATP5E gene for the F1 ε subunit

Johannes A. Mayr; Vendula Havlíčková; Franz A. Zimmermann; Iris Magler; Vilma Kaplanová; Pavel Ješina; Alena Pecinová; Hana Nůsková; Johannes Koch; Wolfgang Sperl; Josef Houštěk

F1Fo-ATP synthase is a key enzyme of mitochondrial energy provision producing most of cellular ATP. So far, mitochondrial diseases caused by isolated disorders of the ATP synthase have been shown to result from mutations in mtDNA genes for the subunits ATP6 and ATP8 or in nuclear genes encoding the biogenesis factors TMEM70 and ATPAF2. Here, we describe a patient with a homozygous p.Tyr12Cys mutation in the epsilon subunit encoded by the nuclear gene ATP5E. The 22-year-old woman presented with neonatal onset, lactic acidosis, 3-methylglutaconic aciduria, mild mental retardation and developed peripheral neuropathy. Patient fibroblasts showed 60-70% decrease in both oligomycin-sensitive ATPase activity and mitochondrial ATP synthesis. The mitochondrial content of the ATP synthase complex was equally reduced, but its size was normal and it contained the mutated epsilon subunit. A similar reduction was found in all investigated F1 and Fo subunits with the exception of Fo subunit c, which was found to accumulate in a detergent-insoluble form. This is the first case of a mitochondrial disease due to a mutation in a nuclear encoded structural subunit of the ATP synthase. Our results indicate an essential role of the epsilon subunit in the biosynthesis and assembly of the F1 part of the ATP synthase. Furthermore, the epsilon subunit seems to be involved in the incorporation of subunit c to the rotor structure of the mammalian enzyme.


Neurological Research | 2000

Oral creatine supplementation in Duchenne muscular dystrophy: A clinical and 31 P magnetic resonance spectroscopy study

Stephan Felber; Daniela Skladal; Markus Wyss; Christian Kremser; Arnold Koller; Wolfgang Sperl

Abstract The decrease in intracellular creatine concentration in Duchenne muscular dystrophy may contribute to the deterioration of intracellular energy homeostasis and may thus be one of the factors aggravating muscle weakness and degeneration. Oral creatine supplementation should have potential in alleviating the clinical symptoms. To test this hypothesis, creatine was orally administered over a period of 155 days to a 9-year-old patient with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. In accordance with previous investigations on normal subjects and trained athletes, the patient experienced improved muscle performance during creatine supplementation. Further evidence supporting this hypothesis derived from plasma creatine kinase and lactate dehydrogenase activities and repeated 31P magnetic resonance spectroscopy of the gastrocnemius muscle. These preliminary observations indicate a potential role for creatine supplementation in the symptomatic therapy of patients with muscle disease. [Neurol Res 2000; 22: 145-150]


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2011

Lipoic acid synthetase deficiency causes neonatal-onset epilepsy, defective mitochondrial energy metabolism, and glycine elevation.

Johannes A. Mayr; Franz A. Zimmermann; Christine Fauth; Christa Bergheim; David Meierhofer; Doris Radmayr; Johannes Zschocke; Johannes Koch; Wolfgang Sperl

Lipoic acid is an essential prosthetic group of four mitochondrial enzymes involved in the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate, α-ketoglutarate, and branched chain amino acids and in the glycine cleavage. Lipoic acid is synthesized stepwise within mitochondria through a process that includes lipoic acid synthetase. We identified the homozygous mutation c.746G>A (p.Arg249His) in LIAS in an individual with neonatal-onset epilepsy, muscular hypotonia, lactic acidosis, and elevated glycine concentration in plasma and urine. Investigation of the mitochondrial energy metabolism showed reduced oxidation of pyruvate and decreased pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity. A pronounced reduction of the prosthetic group lipoamide was found in lipoylated proteins.


BMC Medical Genetics | 2009

Mitochondrial DNA haplogroup T is associated with coronary artery disease and diabetic retinopathy: a case control study

Barbara Kofler; Edith E. Mueller; Waltraud Eder; Olaf Stanger; Richard Maier; Martin Weger; Anton Haas; Robert Winker; Otto Schmut; Bernhard Paulweber; Bernhard Iglseder; Wilfried Renner; Martina Wiesbauer; Irene Aigner; Danijela Santic; Franz A. Zimmermann; Johannes A. Mayr; Wolfgang Sperl

BackgroundThere is strong and consistent evidence that oxidative stress is crucially involved in the development of atherosclerotic vascular disease. Overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in mitochondria is an unifying mechanism that underlies micro- and macrovascular atherosclerotic disease. Given the central role of mitochondria in energy and ROS production, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is an obvious candidate for genetic susceptibility studies on atherosclerotic processes. We therefore examined the association between mtDNA haplogroups and coronary artery disease (CAD) as well as diabetic retinopathy.MethodsThis study of Middle European Caucasians included patients with angiographically documented CAD (n = 487), subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus with (n = 149) or without (n = 78) diabetic retinopathy and control subjects without clinical manifestations of atherosclerotic disease (n = 1527). MtDNA haplotyping was performed using multiplex PCR and subsequent multiplex primer extension analysis for determination of the major European haplogroups. Haplogroup frequencies of patients were compared to those of control subjects without clinical manifestations of atherosclerotic disease.ResultsHaplogroup T was significantly more prevalent among patients with CAD than among control subjects (14.8% vs 8.3%; p = 0.002). In patients with type 2 diabetes, the presence of diabetic retinopathy was also significantly associated with a higher prevalence of haplogroup T (12.1% vs 5.1%; p = 0.046).ConclusionOur data indicate that the mtDNA haplogroup T is associated with CAD and diabetic retinopathy in Middle European Caucasian populations.

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Johannes A. Mayr

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Barbara Kofler

Boston Children's Hospital

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Peter Freisinger

Boston Children's Hospital

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René G. Feichtinger

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Johannes Koch

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Daniela Karall

Innsbruck Medical University

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Christian Rauscher

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Sabine Scholl-Bürgi

Innsbruck Medical University

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