Institut für Humangenetik
Refine
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (109)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (109) (remove)
Keywords
- Fanconi-Anämie (12)
- Molekulargenetik (10)
- Fanconi Anämie (9)
- DNS-Reparatur (8)
- Erbkrankheit (8)
- Epigenetik (7)
- Brustkrebs (6)
- Mutation (6)
- Fanconi anemia (5)
- Genetik (5)
Institute
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
Genetisch bedingte und genetisch mitbedingte Erkrankungen im Krankengut einer Allgemeinarztpraxis
(2003)
Statistische Erfassung von genetisch bedingten und genetisch mitbedingten Erkrankungen einer Allgemeinarztpraxis. Es soll verdeutlicht werden, dass die Allgemeinmedizin und die Humangenetik im Rahmen der drastischen genetischen Entwicklung der Forschung enger zusammenarbeiten und die Lehre in der Ausbildung der Allgemeinmediziner intensivierte werden sollte.
Die Jahrtausendwende bildete den Rahmen einer lebhaften Zeit in der Gentherapie. Öffentlichkeitswirksame Berichte von bahnbrechenden Erfolgen schienen die Mühen jahrzehntelanger Grundlagenforschung endlich zu den prognostizierten Ergebnissen geführt zu haben, wenn auch vorerst nur in recht kleinen Nischen des Feldes. Begleitet von geschärfter öffentlicher Aufmerksamkeit, vor allem nach einem Todesfall im Rahmen einer gentherapeutischen Studie, schuf die Publikation des ersten therapeutischen Erfolges bei der „Severe Combined Immuno Deficiency“ (SCID) im Millenniumsjahr eine willkommene Atempause für die somatische Gentherapie. Da bei monogenen Defekten im Gegensatz zu polygenen bzw. multifaktoriell bedingten Leiden die Reparatur des jeweiligen Genlokus theoretisch zu einer vollständigen Korrektur führt, waren erste gentherapeutische Fortschritte vor allem in diesem Feld prognostiziert worden. Allerdings stellten sich diese Überlegungen sehr bald als ein in der täglichen Praxis der Laborarbeit mit immer neuen Hindernissen behaftetes Unternehmen heraus, so dass entgegen vorschnell geäußerter Ankündigungen die erwarteten Lösungen meist nur in Ansätzen zu Stande kamen. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, anhand ausgewählter monogener Erbkrankheiten den derzeitigen Stand der somatischen Gentherapie einer eingehenden Analyse zu unterziehen.
The human retina is a multilayered neuroectodermal tissue specialized in the transformation of light energy into electric impulses which can be transmitted to the brain where they are perceived as vision. Since the retina is easily accessible and functional aspects are directly recordable, the study of this tissue has been at the forefront of neuroscience research for over a century. Studies have revealed that the distinct functions of the retina require a large degree of differentiation which is achieved by the coordinated function of approximately 55 different cell types. The highly structured anatomy and the functional differentiation of the retina is a result of its distinctive transcriptome and proteome. Due to the complexity of the retina it has been difficult to estimate the number of genes actively transcribed in this tissue. Great efforts in the elucidation of retinal disease genes have led to the identification of 139 retina disease loci with 90 of the corresponding genes cloned thus far . In contrast to the success in the hereditary disorders, efforts to identify the genetic factors conferring manifestations known as age-related macular degeneration (AMD) have revealed sparse results. AMD is a retinal disease affecting a significant percentage of the older population. This disorder is likely due to exogenic as well as genetic factors. To further our understanding of retinal physiology and facilitate the identification of genes underlying retinal degenerations, particularly AMD, our efforts concentrated on the systematic analysis of the retinal transcriptome. Since approximately half of all retinal degeneration-associated genes identified to date are preferentially expressed in retina, it is plausible that the investigation of gene expression profiles and the identification of retina-expressed transcripts could be an important starting point for characterizing candidate genes for the retinal diseases. The expressed sequence tags approach included the assessment of all retinal expressed sequence tags (EST) clusters indexed in the UniGene database and of 1080 single-pass ESTs derived from an in-house generated human retina suppression subtracted hybridization (SSH) cDNA library. In total, 6603 EST clusters were evaluated during this thesis and detailed in-silico analysis was performed on 750 EST clusters. The expression of the genes was evaluated using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), followed by confirmation using quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR), as well as conventional and virtual Northern blot analysis. The expression profiling of 337 selected EST clusters led to the identification of 111 transcripts, of which 60 are specific or abundant to the retina, 3 are expressed at high levels in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), and 48 are expressed in brain as well as in retina. The EST approach used to select candidate transcripts allowed us to assess the effectiveness of the two available resources, the UniGene database and the retinal SSH (retSSH) cDNA library. From the results obtained, it is evident that the generation of suppression subtracted libraries to identify cell-specific transcripts constitutes the most straight-forward and efficient strategy. In addition to the high percentage of candidate genes that are identified from an SSH cDNA library, it has the added benefit that genes expressed at low levels can be identified. Furthermore, comparison of our retina-enriched gene set with previously published studies demonstrated only limited overlap of the identified genes further confirming the valuable source of retinal genes from our retinal SSH cDNA library. The effort of our and other groups has resulted in the establishment of the full-length coding sequence of 55 of the 111 genes uniquely or preferentially expressed in the retina. Using various methods such as bioinformatical analysis, EST assembly, cDNA library screening, and rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) a number of genes were cloned in the scope of this thesis including C1orf32, C4orf11, C7orf9, C12orf7, C14orf29, DAPL1, and GRM7. Bioinformatic analyses and cDNA library screening were used to isolate the full-length cDNA sequence and determine the genomic organization of C7orf9, also identified as RFRP. This 1190 bp retina-specific transcript from chromosome 7p15.3 encodes a precursor protein for at least two small neuropeptides, referred to as RFRP-1 and RFRP-3. Since C7orf9 is localized in the critical region for dominant cystoid macular dystrophy (CYMD) its role in the pathology was investigated. Southern blot analysis and sequencing of samples from two affected individuals of the original pedigree used to localize the disease gene excluded the gene from involvement in this disease. Multiple isoforms of the C12orf7 gene were assembled from a number of clones identified from library screenings, PCR amplifications, and RACE experiments. The gene variants, transcribed from chromosome 12q13.13, have been found to be expressed exclusively in retina. Because of the multiple alternative splicing of the gene, we can only speculate about the nature of the protein it encodes. The longest transcript, which includes all six exons plus the last intervening sequence, encodes a 471 aa protein which contains a nuclear localization signal and five ankyrin repeats. The existence of many isoforms is also observed in mouse suggesting that they may have a relevant role in cellular physiology. Five novel splice variants of the glutamate metabotropic receptor 7 (GRM7) resulting from the use of alternative 3’-end exons were identified and characterized. One of the novel variants, GRM7_v3, encodes a 924 aa protein and is therefore the longest putative GRM7 protein reported to date. Even though they are not retina-specific, the isoforms are preferentially expressed in the nervous system. Although the functional properties of the specific carboxyl-termini are still unclear, it is known that axon targeting of GRM7_v1 is mediated by the last 60 aa of the protein. Hence the novel isoforms may direct the protein to specific subcellular localizations. The C1orf32 gene, preferentially expressed in retina, is organized in 10 exons and is transcribed from chromosome 1q24.1. Bioinformatic analyses of the 639 aa putative protein not only identified the mouse and rat orthologous genes but also the LISCH7 gene as a potential member of the same family. Since the LISCH7 protein has been shown to function as a low density lipoprotein receptor, the C1orf32 protein may be involved in retinal lipid homeostasis. Disturbances in lipid metabolism have been proposed as one of the pathways involved in AMD etiology. Thus, the role of C1orf32 in this complex disease should be investigated. Expression analyses of the death-associated protein-like 1 (DAPL1) gene revealed that it is expressed in both the retina and the RPE at high levels. The 552 bp transcript encodes a 107 aa putative protein and is transcribed from chromosome 2q24.1. In-silico analyses identified an additional 12 related proteins from various species which share high similarity constituting a novel protein family. The similarity to the death-associated-protein (DAP) is particularly interesting since this protein has been found to be indispensable for programmed cell death. Therefore, DAPL1 is an excellent candidate for retinal disease as apoptosis is generally the ultimate cause in retinal degeneration. The retina-specific C4orf11 and C14orf29 genes localized on chromosome 4q21.22 and 14q22.1, respectively, are both transcribed in more than one isoform. The encoded proteins do not contain any known domains but because of their retina-specific expression they may be important for proper retinal physiology. As part of the long-term goals of the project, several of the cloned genes are being genotyped to construct single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) maps. Projects to investigate haplotype frequencies of candidate genes in large cohorts of controls and AMD patients are ongoing. Thus, by establishing a collection of 111 genes expressed exclusively or preferentially in the retina, the present work has laid the foundation for future research in retinal diseases.
Hereditäre Netzhautdegenerationen betreffen weltweit etwa 15 Millionen Menschen. Sie sind klinisch und genetisch auffällig heterogen. Bisher wurden 139 verschiedene chromosomale Genorte mit Netzhautdystrophien assoziiert, wovon inzwischen 90 Gene identifiziert werden konnten. Mit Hilfe verschiedener Klonierungsstrategien konnte in der vorgelegten Arbeit ein Beitrag zur Aufklärung der genetischen Ursachen einiger ausgewählter Retinopathien geleistet werden. So konnte durch die Positionsklonierung das Gen, das mit der X-gebundenen juvenilen Retinoschisis (RS) assoziiert ist, identifiziert werden. Funktionelle Analysen des Genproduktes sowie die Generierung eines Mausmodells der RS geben einen Einblick in die Physiologie der Retina sowie den Pathomechanismus der Erkrankung. Die genomische Organisation des Interphotorezeptor-Matrixproteoglykans-1 (IMPG1) wurde aufgeklärt und die chromosomale Lokalisation auf 6q13-15 bestimmt. Damit kartierte das Gen in eine Region, in die die Genorte für 7 Retinopathien des Menschen kartiert wurden. Durch Kopplungs- und Mutationsanalysen konnten unsere Arbeiten ausschließen, daß IMPG1 mit North Carolina Makuladystrophie (MCDR1) oder der progressiven bifokalen chorioretinalen Atrophie (PBCRA) in Zusammenhang steht. Die Diacylglycerin Kinase-3 (DAGK3) konnte nach der Bestimmung der genomischen Organisation in die Region 3q27-28 kartiert werden. Dieser chromosomale Abschnitt deckt sich mit der chromosomalen Lokalisation der autosomal dominanten Optikusatrophie (OPA1). Auch hier konnte mit Hilfe von Mutationsanalysen ein Ausschluß des Gens erfolgen. Die X-gebundene juvenile Retinoschisis ist eine häufige Ursache juveniler Makula-degenerationen und betrifft etwa 300.000 junge Männer weltweit. Charakteristische Kennzeichen der Erkrankung sind Aufspaltungen in den inneren Netzhautschichten, die zu zystischen Veränderungen der zentralen Retina führen. Ungefähr 50 % der Patienten entwickeln auch periphere Manifestationen. Durch die Arbeit unserer und anderer Forschergruppen konnte der Krankheitslokus in einen etwa 900 kb großen Bereich auf dem kurzen Arm des X-Chromosoms (Xp22.2) kartiert werden. Durch einen Vergleich der genomischen DNA Sequenzen mit öffentlich zugänglichen ESTs (expressed sequence tags) konnte ein retinaspezifisches Transkript identifiziert werden. Es besteht aus 6 Exonen und kodiert für ein putatives 224 Aminosäuren großes Protein, das sekretiert wird und ein hochkonserviertes Discoidindomänen-Motiv enthält. Discoidindomänen sind in Zelladhäsion oder in Zell-Zell Interaktionen involviert. Mutationsanalysen in RS-Patienten bestätigten, daß es sich bei diesem Transkript um RS1, d.h. um das krankheitsassoziierte Gen der X-gebundenen juvenilen Retinoschisis handelte. Das RS1-Protein (Retinoschisin) kommt in homo-oligomeren Komplexen, die über Disulfidbrücken miteinander verbunden sind, auf der Zelloberfläche der Photorezeptoren und der Bipolaren sowie in den synaptischen Regionen der äußeren (OPL) und innere plexiformen Schicht (IPL) vor. Um die Funktion des normalen Retinoschisins zu untersuchen und um einen Einblick in die RS-Pathogenese zu bekommen, wurde nach der Charakterisierung des orthologen murinen Gens (Rs1h) eine Retinoschisin-defiziente knock-out Maus generiert. Ophthalmologische und histologische Untersuchungen der Rs1h-/Y-Maus zeigen signifikante Parallelen zu dem RS-Erkrankungsbild des Menschen. Damit stellt die Rs1h knock-out Maus ein ideales Tiermodell für die Untersuchung des zugrundeliegenden Krankheitsmechanismusses dar. So konnten wir inzwischen zeigen, daß apoptotische Prozesse zur Degeneration der Photorezeptoren führen. Gegenwärtig werden mit diesem Tiermodell erste gentherapeutische Versuche durchgeführt. Diese Arbeiten sollen Aufschluß darüber geben, ob ein Adeno-assoziierter Virus (AAV)-Transfer des RS1 Gens in die erkrankte Retina ein möglicher Therapieansatz für RS auch beim Menschen sein könnte.
Age related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of visual impairment in the elderly and the major cause of blindness in the developed world. To date, the molecular mechanisms underlying the disease are not well understood although in recent years a primary involvement of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) has become evident. The aim of the present study is to systematically analyse genes which are differentially expressed in the RPE, and to assess their possible association with mechanisms and pathways likely to be related to retinal disease, in particular AMD. Towards this goal, 2379 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) were established from an inhouse generated RPE cDNA library. This library was constructed by using the suppression subtraction hybridization (SSH) technique which normalises redundant sequences and ensures enrichment of rare transcripts. In a first phase, 1002 ESTs were sequenced and subjected to comprehensive alignment with public nucleotide and protein databases. A search of the 1002 ESTs against the human genome draft sequence yielded 168 known genes, 51 predicted genes, 15 unknown transcripts and 41 clones with no significant similarity. Reverse Northern blot hybridization was performed for 318 EST clusters to identify abundantly expressed genes in the RPE and to prioritize subsequent analyses. Representative clones were spotted onto a nylon membrane and hybridized with cDNA probes of driver (heart and liver) and tester (RPE) used in the cDNA library construction. Subsequently, 107 EST clusters were subjected to Northern blot hybridizations. These analyses identified 7 RPE-specific, 3 retina-specific, 7 RPE/retina-specific, and 7 tissue restricted transcripts, while 29 EST clusters were ubiquitously expressed, and evaluation was not possible for another 54 EST clusters. Of the 24 transcripts with specific or restricted expression, 16 clones were selected for further characterization. The predicted gene MGC2477 and 2 novel isoforms of the human transient receptor potential cation channel, subfamily M, member 3 (TRPM3) were cloned and further described in detail. In addition, polymorphic variations for these 2 genes as well as for the human MT-Protocadherin gene were determined. For MGC2477, 15 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were identified, with 13 having a frequency of the minor allele greater than 20%. 10 of the 15 SNPs have not been reported in so far in public SNP repertoires. Partial assessment of the TRPM3 gene yielded 35 SNPs. Of these, 30 (85.7%) were highly frequent (0.17-0.5%), and 14 (40%) were novel. The MT-Protocadherin gene revealed 35 SNPs, including 28 (80%) with high frequency of the minor allele. 23 (65.7%) were novel SNPs. These SNPs will be used to construct the most common haplotypes. These will be used in case/control association studies in 400 AMD patients and 200 ethnically and aged matched controls to assess a possible contribution of these genes in the etiology of AMD.
There is substantial interest in the identification of genes underlying susceptibility to complex human diseases because of the potential utility of such genes in disease prediction and therapy. The complex age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a prevalent cause of legal blindness in industrialized countries and predominantly affects the elderly population over 75 years of age. Although vision loss in AMD results from photoreceptor cell death in the central retina, the initial pathogenesis likely involves processes in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) (Liang and Godley, 2003). The goal of the current study was to identify and characterize genes specifically or abundantly expressed in the RPE in order to determine more comprehensively the transcriptome of the RPE. In addition, our aim was to assess the role of these genes in AMD pathogenesis. Towards this end, a bovine cDNA library enriched for RPE transcripts was constructed in-house using a PCR-based suppression subtractive hybridization (SSH) technique (Diatchenko et al., 1996, 1999), which normalizes for sequence abundance and achieves high enrichment for differentially expressed genes. CAP3 (Huang and Madan, 1999) was used to assemble the high quality sequences of all the 2379 ESTs into clusters or singletons. 1.2% of the 2379 RPE-ESTs contains vector sequences and was excluded from further analysis. 5% of the RPE-ESTs showed homology to multipe chromosomes and were not included in further assembly process. The rest of the ESTs (2245) were assembled into 175 contigs and 509 singletons, which revealed approximately 684 unique genes in the dataset. Out of the 684, 343 bovine RPE transcripts did not align to their human orthologues. A large fraction of clones were shown to include a considerable 3´untranslated regions of the gene that are not conserved between bovine and human. It is the coding regions that can be conserved between bovine and human and not the 3’ UTR (Sharma et al., 2002). Therefore, more sequencing from the cDNA library with reclustering of those 343 ESTs together with continuous blasting might reveal their human orthologoues. To handle the large volume of data that the RPE cDNA library project has generated a highly efficient and user-friendly RDBMS was designed. Using RDBMS data storage can be managed efficiently and flexibly. The RDBMS allows displaying the results in query-based form and report format with additional annotations, links and search functions. Out of the 341 known and predicted genes identified in this study, 2 were further analyzed. The RPE or/and retina specificity of these two clones were further confirmed by RT-PCR analysis in adult human tissues. Construction of a single nucleotide polymphism (SNP) map was initiated as a first step in future case/control association studies. SNP genotyping was carried out for one of these two clones (RPE01-D2, now known as RDH12). 12 SNPs were identified from direct sequencing of the 23.4-kb region, of which 5 are of high frequency. In a next step, comparison of allele frequencies between AMD patients and healthy controls is required. Completion of the expression analysis for other predicted genes identified during this study is in progress using real time RT-PCR and will provide additional candidate genes for further analyses. This study is expected to contribute to our understanding of the genetic basis of RPE function and to clarify the role of the RPE-expressed genes in the predisposition to AMD. It may also help reveal the mechanisms and pathways that are involved in the development of AMD or other retinal dystrophies.
Fanconi anemia (FA) is a genetically and phenotypically heterogenous autoso- mal recessive disease associated with chromosomal instability, progressive bone marrow failure, typical birth defects and predisposition to neoplasia. The clinical phenotype is similar in all known complementation groups (FA-A, FA-B, FA-C,FA-D1, FA-D2, FA-E, FA-F and FA-G). The cellular phenotype is characterized by hypersensitivity to DNA crosslinking agents (MMC,DEB), which is exploited as a diagnostic tool. Alltogether, the FA proteins constitute a multiprotein pathway whose precise biochemical function(s) remain unknown. FANCA, FANCC, FANCE, FANCF and FANCG interact in a nuclear complex upstream of FANCD2. Complementation group FA-D1 was recently shown to be due to biallelic mutations in the human breast cancer gene 2 (BRCA2). After DNA damage, the nuclear complex regulates monoubiquitylation of FANCD2, result- ing in targeting of this protein into nuclear foci together with BRCA1 and other DNA damage response proteins. The close connection resp. identity of the FA genes and known players of the DSB repair pathways (BRCA1, BRCA2, Rad51) firmly establishs an important role of the FA gene family in the maintenance of genome integrity. The chapter 1 provides a general introduction to the thesis describing the current knowledge and unsolved problems of Fanconi anemia. The following chapters represent papers submitted or published in scientific literature. They are succeeded by a short general discussion (chapter 7). Mutation analysis in the Fanconi anemia genes revealed gene specific mutation spectra as well as different distributions throughout the genes. These results are described in chapter 1 and chapter 2 with main attention to the first genes identified, namely FANCC, FANCA and FANCG. In chapter 2 we provide general background on mutation analysis and we report all mutations published for FANCA, FANCC and FANCG as well as our own unpublished mutations until the year 2000. In chapter 3 we report a shift of the mutation spectrum previously reported for FANCC after examining ten FA-patients belonging to complementation group C. Seven of those patients carried at least one previously unknown mutation, whereas the other three patients carried five alleles with the Dutch founder mu- tation 65delG and one allele with the Ashkenazi founder mutation IVS4+4A>T, albeit without any known Ashkenazi ancestry. We also describe the first large deletion in FANCC. The newly detected alterations include two missense mu- tations (L423P and T529P) in the 3´-area of the FANCC gene. Since the only previously described missense mutation L554P is also located in this area, a case can be made for the existence of functional domain(s) in that region of the gene. In chapter 4 we report the spectrum of mutations found in the FANCG gene com- piled by several laboratories working on FA. As with other FA genes, most muta- tions have been found only once, however, the truncating mutation, E105X, was identified as a German founder mutation after haplotype analysis. Direct compar- ison of the murine and the human protein sequences revealed two leucine zipper motifs. In one of these the only identified missense mutation was located at a conserved residue, suggesting the leucine zipper providing an essential protein-protein interaction required for FANCG function. With regard to genotype-phenotype correlations, two patients carrying a homozygous E105X mutation were seen to have an early onset of the hematological disorder, whereas the missense mutation seems to lead to a disease with later onset and milder clinical course. In chapter 5 we explore the phenomenon of revertant mosaicism which emerges quite frequently in peripheral blood cells of patients suffering from FA. We de- scribe the types of reversion found in five mosaic FA-patients belonging to com- plementation groups FA-A and FA-C. For our single FA-C-patient intragenic crossover could be proven as the mechanism of self-correction. In the remaining four patients (all of them being compound heterozygous in FANCA), either the paternal or maternal allele has reverted back to WT sequence. We also describe a first example of in vitro phenotypic reversion via the emergence of a compensat- ing missense mutation 15 amino acids downstream of the constitutional mutation explaining the MMC-resistance of the lymphoblastoid cell line of this patient. In chapter 6 we report two FA-A mosaic patients where it could be shown that the spontaneous reversion had taken place in a single hematopoietic stem cell. This has been done by separating blood cells from both patients and searching for the reverted mutation in their granulocytes, monocytes, T- and B-lymphocytes as well as in skin fibroblasts. In both patients, all hematopoietic lineages, but not the fibroblasts, carried the reversion, and comparison to their increase in erythrocyte and platelet counts over time demonstrated that reversion must have taken place in a single hematopoietic stem cell. This corrected stem cell then has been able to undergo self-renewal and also to create a corrected progeny, which over time repopulated all hematopoietic lineages. The pancytopenia of these patients has been cured due to the strong selective growth advantage of the corrected cells in vivo and the increased apoptosis of the mutant hematopoietic cells.
Best disease (OMIM 153700) is an early-onset, autosomal dominant maculopathy characterized by egg yolk-like lesions in the central retina. The disease gene, the vitelliform macular dystrophy gene type 2 (VMD2), encodes a 585-aa VMD2 transmembrane protein, termed bestrophin. The protein is predominantly expressed on the basolateral side of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and is thought to be involved in the transport of chloride ions. Bestrophin as well as three closely related VMD2-like proteins (VMD2L1-L3) contain multiple putative transmembrane (TM) domains and an invariant tripeptide (RFP) motif in the N-terminal half of the protein. This and the tissue-restricted expression to polarized epithelial cells are typical features of the VMD2 RFP-TM family. Best disease is predominantly caused by missense mutations, clustering in four distinct „hotspots“ in the evolutionary highly conserved N-terminal region of the protein. To further augment the spectrum of mutations and to gain novel insights into the underlying molecular mechanisms, we screened VMD2 in a large cohort of affected patients. In total, nine novel VMD2 mutations were identified, raising the total number of known Best disease-related mutations from 83 to 92. Eight out of nine novel mutations are hotspot-specific missense mutations, underscoring their functional/structural significance and corroborating the dominant-negative nature of the mutations. Of special interest is a one-basepair deletion (Pro260fsX288) encoding a truncated protein with a deletion of an important functional domain (TM domain four) as well as the entire C-terminal half of bestrophin. For the first time, a nonsense mutation leading to a 50 % non-functional protein has been identified suggesting that on rare occassions Best disease may be caused by haploinsufficiency. Molecular diagnostics strongly requires a reliable classification of VMD2 sequence changes into pathogenic and non-pathogenic types. Since the molecular pathomechanism is unclear at present, the pathogenicity of novel sequence changes of VMD2 are currently assessed in light of known mutations. We therefore initiated a publicly accessible VMD2 mutation database (http://www.uni-wuerzburg.de/humangenetics/vmd2.html) and are collecting and administrating the growing number of mutations, rare sequence variants and common polymorphisms. Missense mutations may disrupt the function of proteins in numerous ways. To evaluate the functional consequences of VMD2 mutations in respect to intracellular mislocalization and/or protein elimination, a set of molecular tools were generated. These included the establishment of an in vitro COS7 heterologous expression assay, the generation of numerous VMD2 mutations by site-directed mutagenesis as well as the development of bestrophin-specific antibodies. Surprisingly, membrane fractionation/Western blot experiments revealed no significant quantitative differences between intact and mutant bestrophin. Irrelevant of the type or location of mutation, incorporation of mutant bestrophin to the membraneous fraction was observed. Thus, impaired membrane integration may be ruled out as causative pathomechanism of Best disease consistent with a dominant-negative effect of the mutations. In a different approach, efforts were directed towards identifying and characterizing the VMD2 RFP-TM protein family in mouse. While clarification of the genomic organization of murine Vmd2 was required as basis to generate Vmd2-targeted animals (see below), the study of closely related proteins (Vmd2L1, Vmd2L2 and Vmd2L3) may provide further clues as to the function of bestrophin. For this, biocomputational as well as RT PCR analyses were performed. Moreover, the novel genes were analyzed by real time quantitative RT PCR, displaying predominant expression in testis, colon and skeletal muscle of Vmd2, Vmd2L1 and Vmd2L3 transcripts, respectively as well as in eye tissue. Interestingly, neither an ORF was determined for murine Vmd2L2 nor was the transcript present in a panel of 12 mouse tissues, suggesting that murine Vmd2L2 may represent a functionally inactive pseudogene. The murine Vmd2L3 gene, as its human counterpart, is a highly differentially spliced transcript. Finally, generating mouse models of Best disease will provide essential tools to investigate the pathophysiology of bestrophin in vivo. We have initiated the generation of two different mouse lineages, one deficient of Vmd2 (knock-out) and the other carrying a human disease-related mutation (Tyr227Asn) in the orthologous murine gene (knock-in). Genetic engineering of both constructs has been achieved and presently, four ES clones harboring the homologous recombination event (Vmd2+/-) have been isolated and are ready for the subsequent steps to generate chimeric animals. The resulting mouse lineages will represent two key models to elucidate the functional role of bestrophin in Best disease, in RPE development and physiology.
Im Karpfenfisch Alburnus alburnus wurden die bisher größten überzähligen Chromosomen bei Wirbeltieren entdeckt. Dies ermöglichte eine umfangreiche zytogenetische und molekulare Studie dieser außergewöhnlichen Genomelemente. Aus Populationsstudien, die mehrere Fundorte in Deutschland einschlossen, konnten Informationen über die Verteilung der B Chromosomen in Fischen verschiedener Herkunftsorte ermittelt werden. Eine derartige Studie könnte zukünftig auch auf andere Länder ausgedehnt werden. Eine detaillierte, zytogenetische Analyse mit allen konventionellen Hellfeld- und Fluoreszenzbänderungen sowie Fluoreszenz in situ Hybridisierungen mit den ribosomalen 5S, 18S/28S rDNA-Proben und der Telomerprobe (TTAGGG)n, zeigte, dass die außergewöhnlich großen B Chromosomen von A. alburnus heterochromatisch, GC-reich und spät replizierend sind. Es wurden bei Alburnus alburnus keinerlei Hinweise auf heteromorphe Geschlechtschromosomen gefunden. Die molekularen Untersuchungen basierten hauptsächlich auf AFLP-Analysen, mit denen eine B Chromosomen-spezifische Bande entdeckt und isoliert werden konnte. Nach Klonierung und Sequenzierung sowie dem Durchsuchen einer Fischspezifischen Datenbank konnte eine retrotransposable Sequenz (Gypsy/Ty3 LTRRetrotranpson) gefunden werden. Ferner konnte eine deutliche Homologie zu dem Nterminalen Teil der reversen Transkriptase von Medaka, Oryzias latipes, dokumentiert werden. Die Southern blot-Untersuchungen und der PCR-Test zeigten, dass es sich bei der entdeckten 203 bp-Sequenz um eine B Chromosomen- und Alburnus alburnus-spezifische Sequenz handelt, welche hochrepetitiv über die beiden Arme der überzähligen Chromosomen verteilt ist. Der Ursprung und die Funktion der massiven überzähligen Chromosomen blieb offen. Da es aber nach wie vor wenig Information über B Chromosomensequenzen und DNA-Organisation im Allgemeinen und besonders bei Fischen gibt (Mestriner et al., 2000), sind die Ergebnisse dieser Studie für die Aufdeckung des Ursprungs und der Evolution überzähliger Chromosomen von allgemeiner Bedeutung, da sie wohl den Hauptanteil der DNA-Zusammensetzung des größten, bisher unter den Wirbeltieren entdeckten überzähligen Chromosoms darstellen. Die Analyse meiotischer Chromosomen zeigte, dass das B Chromosom in der Diakinese als selbstpaarendes Ringchromosom vorliegt. Zusammenfassung und Ausblick 101 Mittels durchflußzytophotometrischer DNA-Messungen konnte der Beitrag des außerordentlich großen B Chromosoms zum Gesamt-DNA-Gehalt von A. alburnus bestimmt werden und Fische auf das Vorhandensein des überzähligen Chromosoms, allerdings unter Tötung, analysiert werden. Dies kann in Zukunft durch Ausnutzung von Sequenzinformation über das B Chromosom und der damit einhergehenden Konstruktion spezifischer PCR-Primer („minimal-invasiver Flossentest“) vermieden werden. Fische aus unterschiedlichen Populationen, eventuell auch europaweit, können so schnell und zuverlässig auf das Vorhandensein des überzähligen Chromosoms hin untersucht werden, mit dem Zweck, durch künftige Verpaarung der Tiere mit 0, 1 oder 2 B Chromosomen den Vererbungs- bzw. Weitergabemechanismus der überzähligen Chromosomen auf die nächste Generation zu studieren.