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Thomas Mikeska


Thomas.Mikeska@petermac.org

Journal articles

2010
Anke Waha, Jörg Felsberg, Wolfgang Hartmann, Anna von dem Knesebeck, Thomas Mikeska, Stefan Joos, Marietta Wolter, Arend Koch, Pearlly S Yan, Elmar Endl, Otmar D Wiestler, Guido Reifenberger, Torsten Pietsch, Andreas Waha (2010)  Epigenetic downregulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase MKP-2 relieves its growth suppressive activity in glioma cells.   Cancer Res 70: 4. 1689-1699 Feb  
Abstract: Critical tumor suppression pathways in brain tumors have yet to be fully defined. Along with mutational analyses, genome-wide epigenetic investigations may reveal novel suppressor elements. Using differential methylation hybridization, we identified a CpG-rich region of the promoter of the dual-specificity mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase-2 gene (DUSP4/MKP-2) that is hypermethylated in gliomas. In 83 astrocytic gliomas and 5 glioma cell lines examined, hypermethylation of the MKP-2 promoter was found to occur relatively more frequently in diffuse or anaplastic astrocytomas and secondary glioblastomas relative to primary glioblastomas. MKP-2 hypermethylation was associated with mutations in TP53 and IDH1, exclusive of EGFR amplification, and with prolonged survival of patients with primary glioblastoma. Expression analysis established that promoter hypermethylation correlated with reduced expression of MKP-2 mRNA and protein. Consistent with a regulatory role, reversing promoter hypermethylation by treating cells with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine increased MKP-2 mRNA levels. Furthermore, we found that glioblastoma cell growth was inhibited by overexpression of exogenous MKP-2. Our findings reveal MKP-2 as a common epigenetically silenced gene in glioma, the inactivation of which may play a significant role in glioma development.
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Katie T Huang, Thomas Mikeska, Alexander Dobrovic, Stephen B Fox (2010)  DNA methylation analysis of the HIF-1α prolyl hydroxylase domain genes PHD1, PHD2, PHD3 and the factor inhibiting HIF gene FIH in invasive breast carcinomas.   Histopathology 57: 3. 451-460 Sep  
Abstract: Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) activity is regulated by prolyl hydroxylase (PHD1, PHD2, PHD3) and factor inhibiting HIF-1 (FIH) that target the α subunit of HIF-1 (HIF-1α) for proteosomal degradation. We hypothesised that the elevated HIF-1α level is due in some tumours to epigenetic silencing by DNA hypermethylation of the promoter region of one or more of the PHDs and FIH genes. The aims were to define the presence or absence of promoter methylation of PHDs and FIH in cell lines of various sources and breast carcinomas and, if present, determine its effect on mRNA and protein expression.
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Elena A Takano, Thomas Mikeska, Alexander Dobrovic, David J Byrne, Stephen B Fox (2010)  A multiplex endpoint RT-PCR assay for quality assessment of RNA extracted from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues.   BMC Biotechnol 10: 12  
Abstract: RNA extracted from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) samples is chemically modified and degraded, which compromises its use in gene expression studies. Most of the current approaches for RNA quality assessment are not suitable for FFPE derived RNA.
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Jan Küchler, Wolfgang Hartmann, Anke Waha, Arend Koch, Elmar Endl, Peter Wurst, Dagmar Kindler, Thomas Mikeska, Andreas Waha, Cynthia G Goodyer, Reinhard Büttner, Karl Schilling, Torsten Pietsch (2010)  p75(NTR) induces apoptosis in medulloblastoma cells.   Int J Cancer Jun  
Abstract: The classic medulloblastoma (CMB) and the desmoplastic medulloblastoma (DMB) subtypes represent the major medulloblastoma variants. In contrast to CMB, DMB display high levels of the low-affinity nerve growth factor receptor p75(NTR). Given the reports of a better clinical course of DMB, we hypothesized that p75(NTR) might act as a tumor suppressor in medulloblastomas. In a large set of medulloblastomas, p75(NTR) was screened for mutations, and its mRNA expression and the DNA methylation status of its 5'-region were assessed. p75(NTR) immunostainings were performed in wild-type murine cerebella and medulloblastomas arising in patched heterozygous mice, and murine cerebellar granule cell precursors (GCP) were analyzed in vitro. Medulloblastoma cells engineered to express p75(NTR) were characterized flow cytometrically and morphologically. One CMB displayed a mutation of the p75(NTR) coding sequence. p75(NTR) mRNA levels clearly delineated DMB and CMB; however, CpG island hypermethylation was excluded as the cause of low p75(NTR) expression in CMB. Sonic Hedgehog-treated GCP showed elevated p75(NTR) expression, and strong expression of p75(NTR) was detected in the external granule cell layer of wild-type mice and in murine ptc(+/-) medulloblastomas. CMB cells overexpressing p75(NTR) displayed a significant increase in apoptosis. In summary, our data link activated Hedgehog signaling in DMB with p75(NTR) expression and characterize p75(NTR) as a biologically relevant inductor of apoptosis in MB.
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2009
Hui-Hua Zhang, Francesca Walker, Sara Kiflemariam, Robert H Whitehead, David Williams, Wayne A Phillips, Thomas Mikeska, Alexander Dobrovic, Antony W Burgess (2009)  Selective inhibition of proliferation in colorectal carcinoma cell lines expressing mutant APC or activated B-Raf.   Int J Cancer 125: 2. 297-307 Jul  
Abstract: Tumor-derived cell lines are indispensable tools for understanding the contribution of activated signaling pathways to the cancer phenotype and for the design and testing of targeted signal therapies. In our study, we characterize 10 colorectal carcinoma cell lines for the presence of mutations in the wnt, Ras/MAPK, PI3K and p53 pathways. The mutational spectrum found in this panel of cell lines is similar to that detected in primary CRC, albeit with higher frequency of mutation in the beta-catenin and B-Raf genes. We have monitored activation of the wnt and Ras/MAPK pathways in these cells and analyzed their sensitivity to selective signaling inhibitors. Using beta-catenin subcellular distribution as a marker, we show that cells harboring APC mutations have low-level activated wnt signaling, which can be blocked by the extracellular wnt inhibitor DKK-1, suggesting autocrine activation of this pathway; proliferation of these cells is also blocked by DKK-1. In contrast, cells with beta-catenin mutations are unresponsive to extracellular wnt inhibition. Constitutive phosphorylation of MAPK is present in the majority of the cell lines and correlates with B-Raf but not K-Ras mutations; correspondingly, the proliferation of cells harboring mutations in B-Raf, but not K-Ras, is exquisitely sensitive inhibition of the MAPK pathway. We find no correlation between PI3K mutation or loss of PTEN expression and increased sensitivity to PI3K inhibitors. Our study discloses clear-cut differences in responsiveness to signaling inhibitors between individual mutations within an activated signaling pathway and suggests likely targets for signal-directed therapy of colorectal carcinomas.
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Thomas Mikeska, Alexander Dobrovic (2009)  Validation of a primer optimisation matrix to improve the performance of reverse transcription - quantitative real-time PCR assays.   BMC Res Notes 2: 06  
Abstract: The development of reverse transcription - quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR) platforms that can simultaneously measure the expression of multiple genes is dependent on robust assays that function under identical thermal cycling conditions. The use of a primer optimisation matrix to improve the performance of RT-qPCR assays is often recommended in technical bulletins and manuals. Despite this recommendation, a comprehensive introduction to and evaluation of this approach has been absent from the literature. Therefore, we investigated the impact of varying the primer concentration, leaving all the other reaction conditions unchanged, on a large number of RT-qPCR assays which in this case were designed to be monitored using hydrolysis probes from the Universal Probe Library (UPL) library.
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Valentina Vladimirova, Thomas Mikeska, Andreas Waha, Niels Soerensen, Jingying Xu, Patrick C Reynolds, Torsten Pietsch (2009)  Aberrant methylation and reduced expression of LHX9 in malignant gliomas of childhood.   Neoplasia 11: 7. 700-711 Jul  
Abstract: High-grade gliomas (HGGs) of childhood represent approximately 7% of pediatric brain tumors. They are highly invasive tumors and respond poorly to conventional treatments in contrast to pilocytic astrocytomas, which usually are well demarcated and frequently can be cured by surgery. The molecular events for this clinical relevant finding are only partially understood. In the current study, to identify aberrantly methylated genes that may be involved in the tumorigenesis of pediatric HGGs, we performed a microarray-based differential methylation hybridization approach and found frequent hypermethylation of the LHX9 (human Lim-homebox 9) gene encoding a transcription factor involved in brain development. Bisulfite genomic sequencing and combined bisulfite restriction analysis showed that HGGs were frequently methylated at two CpG-rich LHX9 regions in comparison to benign, nondiffuse pilocytic astrocytomas and normal brain tissues. The LHX9 hypermethylation was associated with reduced messenger RNA expression in pediatric HGG samples and corresponding cell lines. This epigenetic modification was reversible by pharmacological inhibition (5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine), and reexpression of LHX9 transcript was induced in pediatric glioma cell lines. Exogenous expression of LHX9 in glioma cell lines did not directly affect cell proliferation and apoptosis but specifically inhibited glioma cell migration and invasion in vitro, suggesting a possible implication of LHX9 in the migratory phenotype of HGGs. Our results demonstrate that the LHX9 gene is frequently silenced in pediatric malignant astrocytomas by hypermethylation and that this epigenetic alteration is involved in glioma cell migration and invasiveness.
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Osman El-Maarri, Michael S Kareta, Thomas Mikeska, Tim Becker, Amalia Diaz-Lacava, Judith Junen, Nicole Nüsgen, Frank Behne, Thomas Wienker, Andreas Waha, Johannes Oldenburg, Frédéric Chédin (2009)  A systematic search for DNA methyltransferase polymorphisms reveals a rare DNMT3L variant associated with subtelomeric hypomethylation.   Hum Mol Genet 18: 10. 1755-1768 May  
Abstract: Causes underlying inter-individual variations in DNA methylation profiles among normal healthy populations are not thoroughly understood. To investigate the contribution of genetic variation in DNA methyltransferase (DNMT) genes to such epigenetic variation, we performed a systematic search for polymorphisms in all known human DNMT genes [DNMT1, DNMT3A, DNMT3B, DNMT3L and DNMT2 (TRDMT1)] in 192 healthy males and females. One hundred and eleven different polymorphisms were detected. Of these, 24 were located in coding regions and 10 resulted in an amino acid change that may affect the corresponding DNMT protein structure or function. Association analysis between all major polymorphisms (frequency > 1%) and quantitative DNA methylation profiles did not return significant results after correction for multiple testing. Polymorphisms leading to an amino acid change were further investigated for changes in global DNA methylation by differential methylation hybridization. This analysis revealed that a rare change at DNMT3L (R271Q) was associated with significant DNA hypomethylation. Biochemical characterization confirmed that DNMT3L(R271Q) is impaired in its ability to stimulate de novo DNA methylation by DNMT3A. Methylated DNA immunoprecipitation based analysis using CpG island microarrays revealed that the hypomethylation in this sample preferentially clustered to subtelomeric genomic regions with affected loci corresponding to a subset of repetitive CpG islands with low predicted promoter potential located outside of genes.
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Peter Schüffler, Thomas Mikeska, Andreas Waha, Thomas Lengauer, Christoph Bock (2009)  MethMarker: user-friendly design and optimization of gene-specific DNA methylation assays.   Genome Biol 10: 10. 10  
Abstract: DNA methylation is a key mechanism of epigenetic regulation that is frequently altered in diseases such as cancer. To confirm the biological or clinical relevance of such changes, gene-specific DNA methylation changes need to be validated in multiple samples. We have developed the MethMarker http://methmarker.mpi-inf.mpg.de/ software to help design robust and cost-efficient DNA methylation assays for six widely used methods. Furthermore, MethMarker implements a bioinformatic workflow for transforming disease-specific differentially methylated genomic regions into robust clinical biomarkers.
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2008
Ida LM Candiloro, Thomas Mikeska, Peter Hokland, Alexander Dobrovic (2008)  Rapid analysis of heterogeneously methylated DNA using digital methylation-sensitive high resolution melting: application to the CDKN2B (p15) gene.   Epigenetics Chromatin 1: 7. Nov  
Abstract: ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Methylation-sensitive high resolution melting (MS-HRM) methodology is able to recognise heterogeneously methylated sequences by their characteristic melting profiles. To further analyse heterogeneously methylated sequences, we adopted a digital approach to MS-HRM (dMS-HRM) that involves the amplification of single templates after limiting dilution to quantify and to determine the degree of methylation. We used this approach to study methylation of the CDKN2B (p15) cell cycle progression inhibitor gene which is inactivated by DNA methylation in haematological malignancies of the myeloid lineage. Its promoter region usually shows heterogeneous methylation and is only rarely fully methylated. The methylation status of CDKN2B can be used as a biomarker of response to treatment. Therefore the accurate characterisation of its methylation is desirable. RESULTS: MS-HRM was used to assess CDKN2B methylation in acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) samples. All the AML samples that were methylated at the CDKN2B promoter (40/93) showed varying degrees of heterogeneous methylation. Six representative samples were selected for further study. dMS-HRM was used to simultaneously count the methylated alleles and assess the degree of methylation. Direct sequencing of selected dMS-HRM products was used to determine the exact DNA methylation pattern and confirmed the degree of methylation estimated by dMS-HRM. CONCLUSION: dMS-HRM is a powerful technique for the analysis of methylation in CDKN2B and other heterogeneously methylated genes. It eliminates both PCR and cloning bias towards either methylated or unmethylated DNA. Potentially complex information is simplified into a digital output, allowing counting of methylated and unmethylated alleles and providing an overall picture of methylation at the given locus. Downstream sequencing is minimised as dMS-HRM acts as a screen to select only methylated clones for further analysis.
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Requardt, Kaczmarczyk, Dublin, Wallraff-Beck, Mikeska, Degen, Waha, Steinhäuser, Willecke, Theis (2008)  Quality control of astrocyte-directed Cre transgenic mice: The benefits of a direct link between loss of gene expression and reporter activation.   Glia Oct  
Abstract: Cre recombinase activity for cell-type restricted deletion of floxed target genes (i.e., flanked by Cre recognition loxP-sites) is often measured by separate matings with recombination-activated reporter gene mice. Using a floxed Gja1 (Cx43) allele, we demonstrate the benefits of a direct link between reporter gene expression and target gene deletion to overcome critical limitations of the Cre/loxP system. The widely used human glial fibrillary acidic protein (hGFAP)-Cre transgene exhibits variable recombination activity and requires postexperimental validation. Such quality control is essential to correlate the extent of Cre-mediated Gja1 ablation with phenotypical alterations and to maintain the activity status of hGFAP-Cre in transgenic mouse colonies. We present several strategies to control for the fidelity of hGFAP-Cre mediated recombination. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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D M Ashley, C D Riffkin, M M Lovric, T Mikeska, A Dobrovic, J A Maxwell, H S Friedman, K J Drummond, A H Kaye, H K Gan, T G Johns, C J Hawkins (2008)  In vitro sensitivity testing of minimally passaged and uncultured gliomas with TRAIL and/or chemotherapy drugs.   Br J Cancer 99: 2. 294-304 Jul  
Abstract: TRAIL/Apo-2L has shown promise as an anti-glioma drug, based on investigations of TRAIL sensitivity in established glioma cell lines, but it is not known how accurately TRAIL signalling pathways of glioma cells in vivo are reproduced in these cell lines in vitro. To replicate as closely as possible the in vivo behaviour of malignant glioma cells, 17 early passage glioma cell lines and 5 freshly resected gliomas were exposed to TRAIL-based agents and/or chemotherapeutic drugs. Normal human hepatocytes and astrocytes and established glioma cell lines were also tested. Cross-linked TRAIL, but not soluble TRAIL, killed both normal cell types and cells from three tumours. Cells from only one glioma were killed by soluble TRAIL, although only inefficiently. High concentrations of cisplatin were lethal to glioma cells, hepatocytes and astrocytes. Isolated combinations of TRAIL and chemotherapy drugs were more toxic to particular gliomas than normal cells, but no combination was generally selective for glioma cells. This study highlights the widespread resistance of glioma cells to TRAIL-based agents, but suggests that a minority of high-grade glioma patients may benefit from particular combinations of TRAIL and chemotherapy drugs. In vitro sensitivity assays may help identify effective drug combinations for individual glioma patients.
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Lasse S Kristensen, Thomas Mikeska, Michael Krypuy, Alexander Dobrovic (2008)  Sensitive Melting Analysis after Real Time- Methylation Specific PCR (SMART-MSP): high-throughput and probe-free quantitative DNA methylation detection.   Nucleic Acids Res 36: 7. Apr  
Abstract: DNA methylation changes that are recurrent in cancer have generated great interest as potential biomarkers for the early detection and monitoring of cancer. In such situations, essential information is missed if the methylation detection is purely qualitative. We describe a new probe-free quantitative methylation-specific PCR (MSP) assay that incorporates evaluation of the amplicon by high-resolution melting (HRM) analysis. Depending on amplicon design, different types of information can be obtained from the HRM analysis. Much of this information cannot be obtained by electrophoretic analysis. In particular, identification of false positives due to incomplete bisulphite conversion or false priming is possible. Heterogeneous methylation can also be distinguished from homogeneous methylation. As proof of principle, we have developed assays for the promoter regions of the CDH1, DAPK1, CDKN2A (p16(INK4a)) and RARB genes. We show that highly accurate quantification is possible in the range from 100% to 0.1% methylated template when 25 ng of bisulphite-modified DNA is used as a template for PCR. We have named this new approach to quantitative methylation detection, Sensitive Melting Analysis after Real Time (SMART)-MSP.
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2007
Beatrix Versmold, Jörg Felsberg, Thomas Mikeska, Denise Ehrentraut, Juliane Köhler, Juergen A Hampl, Gabriele Röhn, Dieter Niederacher, Beate Betz, Martin Hellmich, Torsten Pietsch, Rita K Schmutzler, Andreas Waha (2007)  Epigenetic silencing of the candidate tumor suppressor gene PROX1 in sporadic breast cancer.   Int J Cancer 121: 3. 547-554 Aug  
Abstract: Extensive hypermethylation and consecutive transcriptional silencing of tumorsuppressor genes have been documented in multiple tumor entities including breast cancer. In a microarray based genome-wide methylation analysis of five sporadic breast carcinomas we identified a hypermethylated CpG island within the first intron of the prospero related homeobox gene 1 (PROX1). We, therefore, investigated CpG island methylation of PROX1 in a series of 33 pairs of primary breast cancer and corresponding normal tissue samples by bisulfite sequencing and COBRA analyses. Seventeen of these (52%) breast cancer samples revealed a significant accumulation of methylated CpG sites along with a significant reduction of PROX1 transcription compared to normal breast tissues of the same patients. Frequent methylation was also observed in brain metastases from primary breast cancer (21/37 = 57% of cases). Secondary, we analysed 38 brain metastases of primary breast carcinomas and detected a significantly reduced expression of PROX1 compared to normal breast tissue (p < 0.001) and primary breast carcinomas (p < 0.05), respectively. Additionally, treatment of breast cancer cell lines with demethylating agents could reactivate PROX1 transcription. In summary, we have identified PROX1 as a novel target gene that is hypermethylated and transcriptionally silenced in primary and metastatic breast cancer.
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Arend Koch, Aksana Hrychyk, Wolfgang Hartmann, Anke Waha, Thomas Mikeska, Andreas Waha, Ulrich Schüller, Nils Sörensen, Frank Berthold, Cynthia G Goodyer, Otmar D Wiestler, Walter Birchmeier, Jürgen Behrens, Torsten Pietsch (2007)  Mutations of the Wnt antagonist AXIN2 (Conductin) result in TCF-dependent transcription in medulloblastomas.   Int J Cancer 121: 2. 284-291 Jul  
Abstract: Medulloblastomas (MBs) represent the most common malignant brain tumors in children. Most MBs develop sporadically in the cerebellum, but their incidence is highly elevated in patients with familial adenomatous polyposis coli. These patients carry germline mutations in the APC tumor suppressor gene. APC is part of a multiprotein complex involved in the Wnt signaling pathway that controls the stability of beta-catenin, the central effector in this cascade. Previous genetic studies in MBs have identified mutations in genes coding for beta-catenin and its partners, APC and AXIN1, which cause activation of Wnt signaling. The pathway is negatively controlled by the tumor suppressor AXIN2 (Conductin), a scaffold protein of this signaling complex. To investigate whether alterations in AXIN2 may also be involved in the pathogenesis of sporadic MBs, we performed a mutational screening of the AXIN2 gene in 116 MB biopsy samples and 11 MB cell lines using single-strand conformation polymorphism and sequencing analysis. One MB displayed a somatic, tumor-specific 2 bp insertion in exon 5, leading to carboxy-terminal truncation of the AXIN2 protein. This tumor biopsy showed nuclear accumulation of beta-catenin protein, indicating an activation of Wnt signaling. In 2 further MB biopsies, mutations were identified in exon 5 (Glu408Lys) and exon 8 (Ser738Phe) of the AXIN2 gene, which are due to predicted germline mutations and rare polymorphisms. mRNA expression analysis in 22 MBs revealed reduced expression of AXIN2 mRNA compared to 8 fetal cerebellar tissues. Promoter hypermethylation could be ruled out as a major cause for transcriptional silencing by bisulfite sequencing. To study the functional role of AXIN2 in MBs, wild-type AXIN2 was overexpressed in MB cell lines in which the Wnt signaling pathway was activated by Wnt-3a. In this assay, AXIN2 inhibited Wnt signaling demonstrated in luciferase reporter assays. In contrast, overexpression of mutated AXIN2 with a deleted C-terminal DIX-domain resulted in an activation of the Wnt signaling pathway. These findings indicate that mutations of AXIN2 can lead to an oncogenic activation of the Wnt pathway in MBs.
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A Waha, A Koch, W Hartmann, U Milde, J Felsberg, A Hübner, T Mikeska, C G Goodyer, N Sörensen, I Lindberg, O D Wiestler, T Pietsch (2007)  SGNE1/7B2 is epigenetically altered and transcriptionally downregulated in human medulloblastomas.   Oncogene 26: 38. 5662-5668 Aug  
Abstract: In a genome-wide screen using differential methylation hybridization (DMH), we have identified a CpG island within the 5' region and untranslated first exon of the secretory granule neuroendocrine protein 1 gene (SGNE1/7B2) that showed hypermethylation in medulloblastomas compared to fetal cerebellum. Bisulfite sequencing and combined bisulfite restriction assay were performed to confirm the methylation status of this CpG island in primary medulloblastomas and medulloblastoma cell lines. Hypermethylation was detected in 16/23 (70%) biopsies and 7/8 (87%) medulloblastoma cell lines, but not in non-neoplastic fetal (n=8) cerebellum. Expression of SGNE1 was investigated by semi-quantitative competitive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and found to be significantly downregulated or absent in all, but one primary medulloblastomas and all cell lines compared to fetal cerebellum. After treatment of medulloblastoma cell lines with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine, transcription of SGNE1 was restored. No mutation was found in the coding region of SGNE1 by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Reintroduction of SGNE1 into the medulloblastoma cell line D283Med led to a significant growth suppression and reduced colony formation. In summary, we have identified SGNE1 as a novel epigenetically silenced gene in medulloblastomas. Its frequent inactivation, as well as its inhibitory effect on tumor cell proliferation and focus formation strongly argues for a significant role in medulloblastoma development.
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Thomas Mikeska, Christoph Bock, Osman El-Maarri, Anika Hübner, Denise Ehrentraut, Johannes Schramm, Jörg Felsberg, Philip Kahl, Reinhard Büttner, Torsten Pietsch, Andreas Waha (2007)  Optimization of quantitative MGMT promoter methylation analysis using pyrosequencing and combined bisulfite restriction analysis.   J Mol Diagn 9: 3. 368-381 Jul  
Abstract: Resistance to chemotherapy is a major complication during treatment of cancer patients. Hypermethylation of the MGMT gene alters DNA repair and is associated with longer survival of glioblastoma patients treated with alkylating agents. Therefore, MGMT promoter methylation plays an important role as a predictive biomarker for chemotherapy resistance. To adopt this established correlation into a molecular diagnosis procedure, we compared and optimized three experimental techniques [combined bisulfite restriction analysis, a primer extension- and denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography-based method named SIRPH (SNuPE ion pair-reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography), and pyrosequencing] with regard to their accuracy of detecting MGMT promoter methylation. Initially, bisulfite sequencing was used to obtain a comprehensive methylation profile of the MGMT promoter region in 22 glioblastoma samples and in three normal brain controls. Next, we statistically identified CpG sites that best discriminate between methylated and unmethylated MGMT promoters. These results were then used to design optimal combined bisulfite restriction analysis, SIRPH, and pyrosequencing assays for accurate and cost-efficient assessment of MGMT promoter methylation. We compared all three techniques with regard to their reliability and reproducibility on well-characterized tumor samples. The optimized pyrosequencing assay performed best and provides a sensitive, robust, and easy-to-use method for quantitative assessment of MGMT methylation, for both snap-frozen and paraffin-embedded specimens.
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2006
Christoph Bock, Martina Paulsen, Sascha Tierling, Thomas Mikeska, Thomas Lengauer, Jörn Walter (2006)  CpG island methylation in human lymphocytes is highly correlated with DNA sequence, repeats, and predicted DNA structure.   PLoS Genet 2: 3. Mar  
Abstract: CpG island methylation plays an important role in epigenetic gene control during mammalian development and is frequently altered in disease situations such as cancer. The majority of CpG islands is normally unmethylated, but a sizeable fraction is prone to become methylated in various cell types and pathological situations. The goal of this study is to show that a computational epigenetics approach can discriminate between CpG islands that are prone to methylation from those that remain unmethylated. We develop a bioinformatics scoring and prediction method on the basis of a set of 1,184 DNA attributes, which refer to sequence, repeats, predicted structure, CpG islands, genes, predicted binding sites, conservation, and single nucleotide polymorphisms. These attributes are scored on 132 CpG islands across the entire human Chromosome 21, whose methylation status was previously established for normal human lymphocytes. Our results show that three groups of DNA attributes, namely certain sequence patterns, specific DNA repeats, and a particular DNA structure, are each highly correlated with CpG island methylation (correlation coefficients of 0.64, 0.66, and 0.49, respectively). We predicted, and subsequently experimentally examined 12 CpG islands from human Chromosome 21 with unknown methylation patterns and found more than 90% of our predictions to be correct. In addition, we applied our prediction method to analyzing Human Epigenome Project methylation data on human Chromosome 6 and again observed high prediction accuracy. In summary, our results suggest that DNA composition of CpG islands (sequence, repeats, and structure) plays a significant role in predisposing CpG islands for DNA methylation. This finding may have a strong impact on our understanding of changes in CpG island methylation in development and disease.
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P Lund, K Weisshaupt, T Mikeska, D Jammas, X Chen, R - J Kuban, U Ungethüm, U Krapfenbauer, H - P Herzel, R Schäfer, J Walter, C Sers (2006)  Oncogenic HRAS suppresses clusterin expression through promoter hypermethylation.   Oncogene 25: 35. 4890-4903 Aug  
Abstract: Silencing of gene expression by methylation of CpG islands in regulatory elements is frequently observed in cancer. However, an influence of the most common oncogenic signalling pathways onto DNA methylation has not yet been investigated thoroughly. To address this issue, we identified genes suppressed in HRAS-transformed rat fibroblasts but upregulated after treatment with the demethylating agent 5-Aza-2-deoxycytidine and with the MEK1,2 inhibitor U0126. Analysis of gene expression by microarray and Northern blot analysis revealed the MEK/ERK target genes clusterin, matrix metalloproteinase 2 (Mmp2), peptidylpropyl isomerase C-associated protein, syndecan 4, Timp2 and Thbs1 to be repressed in the HRAS-transformed FE-8 cells in a MEK/ERK- and methylation-dependent manner. Hypermethylation of putative regulatory elements in HRAS-transformed cells as compared to immortalized fibroblasts was detected within a CpG island 14.5 kb upstream of clusterin, within the clusterin promoter and within a CpG island of the Mmp2 promoter by bisulphite sequencing. Furthermore, hypermethylation of the clusterin promoter was observed 10 days after induction of HRAS in immortalized rat fibroblasts and a clear correlation between reduced clusterin expression and hypermethlyation could also be observed in distinct rat tissues. These results suggest that silencing of individual genes by DNA methylation is controlled by oncogenic signalling pathways, yet the mechanisms responsible for initial target gene suppression are variable.
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2005
Christoph Bock, Sabine Reither, Thomas Mikeska, Martina Paulsen, Jörn Walter, Thomas Lengauer (2005)  BiQ Analyzer: visualization and quality control for DNA methylation data from bisulfite sequencing.   Bioinformatics 21: 21. 4067-4068 Nov  
Abstract: SUMMARY: Manual processing of DNA methylation data from bisulfite sequencing is a tedious and error-prone task. Here we present an interactive software tool that provides start-to-end support for this process. In an easy-to-use manner, the tool helps the user to import the sequence files from the sequencer, to align them, to exclude or correct critical sequences, to document the experiment, to perform basic statistics and to produce publication-quality diagrams.Emphasis is put on quality control: The program automatically assesses data quality and provides warnings and suggestions for dealing with critical sequences. The BiQ Analyzer program is implemented in the Java programming language and runs on any platform for which a recent Java virtual machine is available. AVAILABILITY: The program is available without charge for non-commercial users and can be downloaded from http://biq-analyzer.bioinf.mpi-inf.mpg.de/
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2003
Peter Sawatzki, Thomas Mikeska, Martin Nieger, Michael Bolte, Thomas Kolter (2003)  (4S,5S)-4-[(1R)-1,2-Dihydroxyethyl]-5-tridecyl-1,3-oxazolidin-2-one.   Acta Crystallogr C 59: Pt 5. o225-o227 May  
Abstract: The title compound, C(18)H(35)NO(4), is a new bioactive amphiphilic lipid with a cis-substituted 1,3-oxazolidin-2-one head group. In the crystal structure, the molecules form intercalating bilayers in which the oxazolidinone head groups are joined together by hydrogen bonds into chains.
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Thomas Mikeska, Martin Nieger, Heidi Mansikkamäki, Jörg Daniels, Thomas Kolter (2003)  Crystal structures of O-acetylated 2-acylamino-2-deoxy-D-galactose derivatives.   Carbohydr Res 338: 20. 2119-2128 Sep  
Abstract: The X-ray structures of 1,3,4,6-tetra-O-acetyl-2-deoxy-alpha-D-galactopyranoside derivatives with four different 2-(acylamino) substituents have been determined with Mo K(alpha) radiation at 123 K. The structure of the 2-acetylamino derivative and of its acyl-homologs with a 2-(propanoylamino)-, 2-(butanoylamino)-, and 2-(2-methyl-propanoylamino)-group crystallized in the monoclinic space group C2. The pyranose unit of all compounds has the usual 4C(1) shape. The different orientations of the 6-O-acetyl-groups are discussed. Conformations of the acylamino-group are compared to those found in the crystal structure of N-acetyl-alpha-D-galactosamine.
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P Sawatzki, T Mikeska, K Sandhoff, M Nieger, T Kolter (2003)  6(S)-Methyl-3(S)-(1-methylethyl)piperazin-2-one   Acta Crystallogr E 59: o171-o173 Feb  
Abstract: The identity of the title piperazinone, C8H16N2O, obtained by an unusual deoxygenation reaction, has been confirmed by its crystal structure. We describe the conformation of this template used to mimic conformationally flexible peptides and lipids and compare it to related piperazinones.
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S Brodesser, T Mikeska, M Nieger, T Kolter (2003)  1,1-dimethylethyl N-propanoylcarbamate   Acta Crystallogr E 59: o1359-o1361 Sep  
Abstract: The title compound, C8H15NO3, has been obtained as a by-product of an epoxidation reaction. The molecules are linked by nearly symmetrical, bifurcated N-H...O hydrogen bonds, forming infinite chains parallel to the c axis.
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2002
P Sawatzki, T Mikeska, M Nieger, H Hupfer, T Kolter (2002)  2(S)-N-tert-butoxycarbonylamino-N-methoxy-N-methylbutanamide   Acta Crystallogr E 58: o1415-o1417 Dec  
Abstract: In the solid state the title compound, C11H22N2O4, is in an antiperiplanar conformation. The conformation of the compound shows no similarity with the synclinal conformation of the chelated intermediate formed during nucleophilic attack.
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P Sawatzki, T Mikeska, M Nieger, H Hupfer, T Kolter (2002)  tert-Butyl 4-acetyl-2,2-dimethyl-1,3-oxazolidine-3-carboxylate   Acta Crystallogr E 58: o359-o361 Apr  
Abstract: The crystal structure of the title compound, C12H21NO4, has been determined. The conformation in the solid state is compared to the transition state in nucleophilic addition reactions predicted by the Felkin-Anh model.
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