Markus Zweier's research while affiliated with University of Zurich and other places

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Publications (51)


Missense variants in ANO4 cause sporadic encephalopathic or familial epilepsy with evidence for a dominant-negative effect
  • Article
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May 2024

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46 Reads

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1 Citation

The American Journal of Human Genetics

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Figure 1: Patients included in the analysis.
Figure 2: Number of amyloidosis patients included in the registry over time. ATTR: transthyretin amyloidosis; AL: light-chain amyloidosis; AA: amyloid A amyloidosis.
Figure 3: Overall survival in light-chain and transthyretin amyloidosis. AL: light-chain amyloidosis; ATTR: transthyretin amyloidosis.
Baseline characteristics.
Organ involvement of the most common types of amyloidosis.
Historic characteristics and mortality of patients in the Swiss Amyloidosis Registry

February 2024

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33 Reads

Swiss medical weekly: official journal of the Swiss Society of Infectious Diseases, the Swiss Society of Internal Medicine, the Swiss Society of Pneumology

AIMS OF THE STUDY: Systemic amyloidoses are rare protein-folding diseases with heterogeneous, often nonspecific clinical presentations. To better understand systemic amyloidoses and to apply state-of-the-art diagnostic pathways and treatment, the interdisciplinary Amyloidosis Network was founded in 2013 at University Hospital Zurich. In this respect, a registry was implemented to study the characteristics and life expectancy of patients with amyloidosis within the area covered by the network. Patient data were collected retrospectively for the period 2005–2014 and prospectively from 2015 onwards. METHODS: Patients aged 18 years or older diagnosed with any subtype of systemic amyloidosis were eligible for inclusion if they were treated in one of the four referring centres (Zurich, Chur, St Gallen, Bellinzona). Baseline data were captured at the time of diagnosis. Follow-up data were assessed half-yearly for the first two years, then annually. RESULTS: Between January 2005 and March 2020, 247 patients were screened, and 155 patients with confirmed systemic amyloidosis were included in the present analysis. The most common amyloidosis type was light-chain (49.7%, n = 77), followed by transthyretin amyloidosis (40%, n = 62) and amyloid A amyloidosis (5.2%, n = 8). Most patients (61.9%, n = 96) presented with multiorgan involvement. Nevertheless, single organ involvement was seen in all types of amyloidosis, most commonly in amyloid A amyloidosis (75%, n = 6). The median observation time of the surviving patients was calculated by the reverse Kaplan-Meier method and was 3.29 years (95% confidence interval [CI] 2.33–4.87); it was 4.87 years (95% CI 3.14–7.22) in light-chain amyloidosis patients and 1.85 years (95% CI 1.48–3.66) in transthyretin amyloidosis patients, respectively. The 1-, 3- and 5-year survival rates were 87.0% (95% CI 79.4–95.3%), 68.5% (95% CI 57.4–81.7%) and 66.0% (95% CI 54.6–79.9%) respectively for light-chain amyloidosis patients and 91.2% (95% CI 83.2–99.8%), 77.0% (95% CI 63.4–93.7%) and 50.6% (95% CI 31.8–80.3%) respectively for transthyretin amyloidosis patients. There was no significant difference between the two groups (p = 0.81). CONCLUSION: During registry set-up, a more comprehensive work-up of our patients suffering mainly from light-chain amyloidosis and transthyretin amyloidosis was implemented. Survival rates were remarkably high and similar between light-chain amyloidosis and transthyretin amyloidosis, a finding which was noted in similar historic registries of international centres. However, further studies are needed to depict morbidity and mortality as the amyloidosis landscape is changing rapidly.


Elucidating the clinical and molecular spectrum of SMARCC2-associated NDD in a cohort of 65 affected individuals

August 2023

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75 Reads

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4 Citations

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

Purpose: Coffin-Siris and Nicolaides-Baraitser syndromes, are recognisable neurodevelopmental disorders caused by germline variants in BAF complex subunits. The SMARCC2 BAFopathy was recently reported. Herein, we present clinical and molecular data on a large cohort. Methods: Clinical symptoms for 41 novel and 24 previously published affected individuals were analyzed using the Human Phenotype Ontology. For genotype-phenotype correlation, molecular data were standardized and grouped into non-truncating and likely gene-disrupting (LGD) variants. Missense variant protein expression and BAF subunit interactions were examined using 3D protein modeling, co-immunoprecipitation, and proximity-ligation assays. Results: Neurodevelopmental delay with intellectual disability, muscular hypotonia and behavioral disorders were the major manifestations. Clinical hallmarks of BAFopathies were rare. Clinical presentation differed significantly, with LGD variants being predominantly inherited and associated with mildly reduced or normal cognitive development, while non-truncating variants were mostly de novo and presented with severe developmental delay. These distinct manifestations and non-truncating variant clustering in functional domains suggest different pathomechanisms. In vitro testing showed decreased protein expression for N-terminal missense variants similar to LGD. Conclusion: This study improved SMARCC2 variant classification and identified discernible SMARCC2-associated phenotypes for LGD and non-truncating variants, which were distinct from other BAFopathies. The pathomechanism of most non-truncating variants has yet to be investigated.



A very mild phenotype in six individuals of a three-generation family with the novel HRAS variant c.176C > G p.(Ala59Gly): Emergence of a new HRAS-related RASopathy distinct from Costello syndrome

May 2023

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26 Reads

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1 Citation

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A

Costello syndrome is a clinically recognizable, severe neurodevelopmental disorder caused by heterozygous activating variants in HRAS. The vast majority of affected patients share recurring variants affecting HRAS codons 12 and 13 and a relatively uniform phenotype. Here, we report the unique and attenuated phenotype of six individuals of an extended family affected by the HRAS variant c.176C>T p.(Ala59Gly), which, to our knowledge, has never been reported as a germline variant in patients so far. HRAS Alanine 59 has been previously functionally investigated as an oncogenic hotspot and the p.Ala59Gly substitution was shown to impair intrinsic GTP hydrolysis. All six individuals we report share a phenotype of ectodermal anomalies and mild features suggestive of a RASopathy, reminiscent of patients with Noonan syndrome-like disorder with loose anagen hair. All six are of normal intelligence, none have a history of failure to thrive or malignancy, and they have no known cardiac or neurologic pathologies. Our report adds to the previous reports of patients with rare variants affecting amino acids located in the SWITCH II/G3 region of HRAS and suggests a consistent, attenuated phenotype distinct from classical Costello syndrome. We propose the definition of a new distinct HRAS-related RASopathy for patients carrying HRAS variants affecting codons 58, 59, 60.


Cover

May 2023

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41 Reads

Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine

Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine


Fig. 1 Clinical presentation and genetic subgroups of the study cohort. Main clinical and genetic subgroups (left) and ethnicity (right). The percentage of cases with predicted deleterious and possibly deleterious RNF213 variants (as defined in Fig. 2B) are highlighted in red and labeled as "RNF". In the left panel, "rare diagnoses" were SHAM syndrome, Alagille syndrome, MOPD type 2 syndrome, STAT3 deficiency and brain small vessel disease type 2. "Unclear diagnosis" refers to MMS patients for whom neither a clinical nor a genetic diagnosis associated with MMA could be established.
The genetic landscape and clinical implication of pediatric Moyamoya angiopathy in an international cohort

April 2023

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97 Reads

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6 Citations

European Journal of Human Genetics

Pediatric Moyamoya Angiopathy (MMA) is a progressive intracranial occlusive arteriopathy that represents a leading cause of transient ischemic attacks and strokes in childhood. Despite this, up to now no large, exclusively pediatric MMA cohort has been subjected to systematic genetic investigation. In this study, we performed molecular karyotyping, exome sequencing and automated structural assessment of missense variants on a series of 88 pediatric MMA patients and correlated genetic, angiographic and clinical (stroke burden) findings. The two largest subgroups in our cohort consisted of RNF213 and neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) patients. While deleterious RNF213 variants were associated with a severe MMA clinical course with early symptom onset, frequent posterior cerebral artery involvement and higher stroke rates in multiple territories, NF1 patients had a similar infarct burden compared to non-NF1 individuals and were often diagnosed incidentally during routine MRIs. Additionally, we found that MMA-associated RNF213 variants have lower predicted functional impact compared to those associated with aortic disease. We also raise the question of MMA as a feature of recurrent as well as rare chromosomal imbalances and further support the possible association of MMA with STAT3 deficiency. In conclusion, we provide a comprehensive characterization at the genetic and clinical level of a large exclusively pediatric MMA population. Due to the clinical differences found across genetic subgroups, we propose genetic testing for risk stratification as part of the routine assessment of pediatric MMA patients.


Elucidating the clinical and molecular spectrum of SMARCC2-associated NDD in a cohort of 65 affected individuals

April 2023

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252 Reads

PURPOSE: Coffin-Siris and Nicolaides-Baraitser syndromes, are recognisable neurodevelopmental disorders caused by germline variants in BAF complex subunits. The SMARCC2 BAFopathy was recently reported. Herein, we present clinical and molecular data on a large cohort. METHODS: Clinical symptoms for 41 novel and 24 previously published cases were analyzed using the Human Phenotype Ontology. For genotype-phenotype correlation, molecular data were standardized and grouped into non-truncating and likely gene-disrupting variants (LGD). Missense variant protein expression and BAF subunit interactions were examined using 3D protein modeling, co-immunoprecipitation, and proximity-ligation assays. RESULTS: Neurodevelopmental delay with intellectual disability, muscular hypotonia and behavioral disorders were the major manifestations. Clinical hallmarks of BAFopathies were rare. Clinical presentation differed significantly, with LGD variants being predominantly inherited and associated with mildly reduced or normal cognitive development, while non-truncating variants were mostly de novo and presented with severe developmental delay. These distinct manifestations and non-truncating variant clustering in functional domains suggest different pathomechanisms. In vitro testing showed decreased protein expression for N-terminal missense variants similar to LGD. CONCLUSION: This study improved SMARCC2 variant classification and identified discernible SMARCC2-associated phenotypes for LGD and non-truncating variants, which were distinct from other BAFopathies. The pathomechanism of most non-truncating variants has yet to be investigated.


Bi-allelic variants in the ESAM tight-junction gene cause a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with fetal intracranial hemorrhage

March 2023

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135 Reads

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6 Citations

The American Journal of Human Genetics

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is an essential gatekeeper for the central nervous system and incidence of neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) is higher in infants with a history of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). We discovered a rare disease trait in thirteen individuals, including four fetuses, from eight unrelated families associated with homozygous loss-of-function variant alleles of ESAM which encodes an endothelial cell adhesion molecule. The c.115del (p.Arg39Glyfs∗33) variant, identified in six individuals from four independent families of Southeastern Anatolia, severely impaired the in vitro tubulogenic process of endothelial colony-forming cells, recapitulating previous evidence in null mice, and caused lack of ESAM expression in the capillary endothelial cells of damaged brain. Affected individuals with bi-allelic ESAM variants showed profound global developmental delay/unspecified intellectual disability, epilepsy, absent or severely delayed speech, varying degrees of spasticity, ventriculomegaly, and ICH/cerebral calcifications, the latter being also observed in the fetuses. Phenotypic traits observed in individuals with bi-allelic ESAM variants overlap very closely with other known conditions characterized by endothelial dysfunction due to mutation of genes encoding tight junction molecules. Our findings emphasize the role of brain endothelial dysfunction in NDDs and contribute to the expansion of an emerging group of diseases that we propose to rename as "tightjunctionopathies."


of genetic findings of 63 index patients.
Pathogenic complex rearrangement in patient 70855, consisting of an approximately 39 kb de novo microduplication of parts of TMEM255B inserted into MECP2 and a 0.5 kb deletion in the last exon of MECP2. Each panel A‐D shows from top to bottom genomic position (hg19), gene content, copy number calling, BAM depth, and copy number values of calculated probe bins. (a) WGS showing the deletion in MECP2 with sharp boarders (b) WES showing the deletion in MECP2 (c) WGS showing the duplication of parts of TMEM255B on chromosome 13 (d) WES showing the duplication of parts of TMEM255B on chromosome 13. (e) Results of Optical Genome Mapping using the Bionano Inc. Saphyr® device demonstrating a de novo 39 kb insertion into MECP2, likely corresponding to the 39 kb duplicated segment of TMEM255B.
The current benefit of genome sequencing compared to exome sequencing in patients with developmental or epileptic encephalopathies

February 2023

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133 Reads

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5 Citations

Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine

Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine

Background: As the technology of next generation sequencing rapidly develops and costs are constantly reduced, the clinical availability of whole genome sequencing (WGS) increases. Thereby, it remains unclear what exact advantage WGS offers in comparison to whole exome sequencing (WES) for the diagnosis of genetic diseases using current technologies. Methods: Trio-WGS was conducted for 20 patients with developmental or epileptic encephalopathies who remained undiagnosed after WES and chromosomal microarray analysis. Results: A diagnosis was reached for four patients (20%). However, retrospectively all pathogenic variants could have been detected in a WES analysis conducted with today's methods and knowledge. Conclusion: The additional diagnostic yield of WGS versus WES is currently largely explained by new scientific insights and the general technological progress. Nevertheless, it is noteworthy that whole genome sequencing has greater potential for the analysis of small copy number and copy number neutral variants not seen with WES as well as variants in noncoding regions, especially as potentially more knowledge of the function of noncoding regions arises. We, therefore, conclude that even though today the added value of WGS versus WES seems to be limited, it may increase substantially in the future.


Citations (35)


... The copyright holder for this preprint this version posted December 30, 2023. ; https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.12.30.573688 doi: bioRxiv preprint autism gene [93][94][95][96][97] . As for brain tumors, SMARCA4 is recurrently mutated in multiple cancers 98 . ...

Reference:

Activity-assembled nBAF complex mediates rapid immediate early gene transcription by regulating RNA Polymerase II productive elongation
Elucidating the clinical and molecular spectrum of SMARCC2-associated NDD in a cohort of 65 affected individuals
  • Citing Article
  • August 2023

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

... deletion together with a gain in 1q21.1-21.2, a 15q11.2 BP1-BP2 duplication, and a deletion in 1p36.22 [20]. Only a small deletion in one patient was found in the 1p31.3 ...

The genetic landscape and clinical implication of pediatric Moyamoya angiopathy in an international cohort

European Journal of Human Genetics

... To our knowledge, the current findings represent the first example of a human genetic mutation causing acquired blood-CNS barrier breakdown as the primary driver of neurodegenerative pathology. In contrast, other monogenic neurological diseases caused by mutations of key endothelial cell proteins (for example, occludin, JAM3, ESAM, CCM1-3, and SLC2A1) involve marked structural abnormalities, angiopathy, or severe hemorrhaging (37)(38)(39)(40). These differences may reflect the role of TRPV4 as a modulator Consistent with recent scRNA-seq studies (22)(23)(24)(25)(26)(27), our examination of a Trpv4 reporter mouse line revealed Trpv4 expression in NVECs but the absence of expression in spinal motor neurons. ...

Bi-allelic variants in the ESAM tight-junction gene cause a neurodevelopmental disorder associated with fetal intracranial hemorrhage
  • Citing Article
  • March 2023

The American Journal of Human Genetics

... According to a current meta-analysis, overall diagnostic yields are 24% for exome sequencing and 48% for genome sequencing 1 but are highly variable depending on cohort selection and date of the study. Moreover, since exome sequencing has improved over time, the current diagnostic yield of exome sequencing is expected to be closer to genome sequencing as pointed out by Grether et al. 2 The diagnostic yield of genetic testing is highest in early-onset developmental and epileptic or epileptic encephalopathy (DEE/EE), which are severe disorders combining early-onset epilepsy and neurodevelopmental delay, but still about half of the cases remain without diagnosis. 3,4 Undiagnosed cases may be explained by variants that are difficult to detect, variants of uncertain significance, or novel disease-associated genes. ...

The current benefit of genome sequencing compared to exome sequencing in patients with developmental or epileptic encephalopathies
Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine

Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine

... Not all affected individuals in the BFLS and WHIKERS testing cohorts in our study had a positive CHUJANS-BFLS-WHIKERS episignature. None of the females with PHF6 variants had a positive episignature, which might have to do with the fact that BFLS is an X-linked disorder and sex-specific phenotypical differences have been described for affected individuals with PHF6 variants (Gerber et al. 2022). Whether a female-specific BFLS episignature can be identified, remains to be elucidated. ...

Further characterization of Borjeson‐Forssman‐Lehmann syndrome in females due to de novo variants in PHF6

... This is most likely due to increased awareness and better diagnostic pathways [18]. Patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) within our network undergo systematic evaluation with echocardiography, MRI and, in case of absence of MGUS, bone scintigraphy to detect or rule out transthyretin amyloidosis [19]. We suspect that there will be a further shift towards wild-type transthyretin amyloidosis as the approval of new treatments increases awareness of the disease. ...

Management of transthyretin amyloidosis

Swiss medical weekly: official journal of the Swiss Society of Infectious Diseases, the Swiss Society of Internal Medicine, the Swiss Society of Pneumology

... Since then, there have been other NAA10 and NAA15 variants that have been identified with their phenotypic manifestations, including variable degrees of intellectual disability, hypotonia, congenital cardiac abnormalities, seizures, and delayed speech and motor development [6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16] . A large subset of individuals with NAA10, and to a lesser extent NAA15, mutations also present with visual abnormalities, including myopia, astigmatism, and cortical visual impairment (CVI) 7 . ...

Confirmation of Ogden syndrome as an X‐linked recessive fatal disorder due to a recurrent NAA10 variant and review of the literature

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A

... Mild anterior polar opacities, with minimal visual axis obstruction was seen in four families with PAX6 families in our cohort (6 out of 18) consistent with the existing literature [9,27,29]. Moreover, transcription factor genes (specifically PAX6 and BCOR) were detected in a substantial proportion (7 out of 18) among our studied families, surpassing the prevalence reported in prior studies [30]. ...

Genetic Analysis in a Swiss Cohort of Bilateral Congenital Cataract
  • Citing Article
  • May 2021

Jama Ophthalmology

... The deletion is in an area with 8 consecutive cytosine nucleotides, which can lead to equivalent deletions. NSD2 is associated with Rauch-Steindl syndrome, an autosomal dominant disorder associated with short stature, small head circumference, dysmorphic facial features, developmental delay, and impaired intellectual function, albeit with variable expressivity and unknown penetrance (Zanoni et al. 2021). The rAF-hi annotation is due to two additional indels within the CRAFTS-indel 10bp range. ...

Loss-of-function and missense variants in NSD2 cause decreased methylation activity and are associated with a distinct developmental phenotype

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

... Beyond the identified genetic association of CYFIP2 with neurodevelopmental disorders (Begemann et al. 2021), recent studies have revealed a mechanistical connection between reduced CYFIP2 levels and Alzheimer's disease (AD) (Tiwari et al. 2016;Ghosh et al. 2020). Notably, CYFIP2 proteins were found to be down-regulated in the postmortem forebrain of AD patients and in the hippocampus and cortex of AD model mice (Tiwari et al. 2016). ...

New insights into the clinical and molecular spectrum of the novel CYFIP2-related neurodevelopmental disorder and impairment of the WRC-mediated actin dynamics

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics