👤 Thomas Liehr

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articles
Floren Kavaja, Thomas Liehr, Gazmend Temaj · 2026 · Acta biochimica Polonica · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Obesity, a global health catastrophe, arises from complex interactions between environmental factors and genetic predispositions. This review summarizes the current state of knowledge on the genetic b Show more
Obesity, a global health catastrophe, arises from complex interactions between environmental factors and genetic predispositions. This review summarizes the current state of knowledge on the genetic basis of obesity and contrasts rare monogenic forms caused by mutations in a single gene with common polygenic forms caused by hundreds of genetic variants with small effects. We highlight important genes in neuroendocrine signaling pathways, particularly the leptin-melanocortin system involving Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/abp.2026.15484
MC4R
Jhon Alex Dziechciarz Vidal, Deborah Charlesworth, Wen-Juan Ma +7 more · 2025 · Communications biology · Nature · added 2026-04-24
A few species have evolved multiple sex chromosome systems with more than two Xs or Ys due to sex chromosome-autosome translocations. Among vertebrates, frogs (Anura) have the highest known number of Show more
A few species have evolved multiple sex chromosome systems with more than two Xs or Ys due to sex chromosome-autosome translocations. Among vertebrates, frogs (Anura) have the highest known number of such neo-sex chromosome systems, making them interesting for studying how such systems evolve. In this work, we investigated two Leptodactylus species, L. pentadactylus (LPE) and L. paraensis (LPA), with large ring multivalents in male meiosis, using genomic and cytogenetic investigation of repetitive DNA sequences, including satellite DNAs (satDNAs), and transposable elements (TEs). SatDNA mapping identify individual chromosomes in the LPE ring, and morphologies suggest that all chromosomes are shared with the LPA ring although a common ring origin is not firmly supported. In situ mapping suggests recent satDNA accumulation in subtelomeric regions since the split from the outgroups, likely unrelated to the translocations that created sex-linkage, which probably involved breaks in the pericentromeric regions. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s42003-025-09151-z
LPA
Verena Nilius-Eliliwi, Marco Tembrink, Wanda Maria Gerding +10 more · 2022 · Frontiers in oncology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), treatment decisions are currently made according to the risk classification of the European LeukemiaNet (ELN), which is based on genetic alterations. Recently, optical Show more
In acute myeloid leukemia (AML), treatment decisions are currently made according to the risk classification of the European LeukemiaNet (ELN), which is based on genetic alterations. Recently, optical genome mapping (OGM) as a novel method proved to yield a genome-wide and detailed cytogenetic characterization at the time of diagnosis. A young female patient suffered from a rather unexpected aggressive disease course under FLT3 targeted therapy in combination with induction chemotherapy. By applying a "next-generation diagnostic workup" strategy with OGM and whole-exome sequencing (WES), a Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2022.959243
MLLT10
Daniela R Ney Garcia, Mariana T de Souza, Amanda F de Figueiredo +10 more · 2017 · Hematological oncology · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
In pediatric acute leukemias, reciprocal chromosomal translocations frequently cause gene fusions involving the lysine (K)-specific methyltransferase 2A gene (KMT2A, also known as MLL). Specific KMT2A Show more
In pediatric acute leukemias, reciprocal chromosomal translocations frequently cause gene fusions involving the lysine (K)-specific methyltransferase 2A gene (KMT2A, also known as MLL). Specific KMT2A fusion partners are associated with the disease phenotype (lymphoblastic vs. myeloid), and the type of KMT2A rearrangement also has prognostic implications. However, the KMT2A partner gene cannot always be identified by banding karyotyping. We sought to identify such partner genes in 13 cases of childhood leukemia with uninformative karyotypes by combining molecular techniques, including multicolor banding FISH, reverse-transcriptase PCR, and long-distance inverse PCR. Of the KMT2A fusion partner genes, MLLT3 was present in five patients, all with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, MLLT1 in two patients, and MLLT10, MLLT4, MLLT11, and AFF1 in one patient each. Reciprocal reading by long-distance inverse PCR also disclosed KMT2A fusions with PITPNA in one patient, with LOC100132273 in another patient, and with DNA sequences not compatible with any gene in three patients. The most common KMT2A breakpoint region was intron/exon 9 (3/8 patients), followed by intron/exon 11 and 10. Finally, multicolor banding revealed breakpoints in other chromosomes whose biological and prognostic implications remain to be determined. We conclude that the combination of molecular techniques used in this study can efficiently identify KMT2A fusion partners in complex pediatric acute leukemia karyotypes. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/hon.2299
MLLT10
Moneeb A K Othman, Dragana Vujić, Zeljko Zecević +4 more · 2015 · Gene · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous disease characterized by the malignant transformation of hematopoietic precursors to a pathogenic cell clone. Chromosomal band 11q23 harboring MLL (=mix Show more
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a heterogeneous disease characterized by the malignant transformation of hematopoietic precursors to a pathogenic cell clone. Chromosomal band 11q23 harboring MLL (=mixed lineage leukemia) gene is known to be involved in rearrangements with variety of genes as activating partners of MLL in different AML subtypes. Overall, an unfavorable prognosis is associated with MLL abnormalities. Here we investigated an 11-month-old male presenting with hyperleukocytosis being diagnosed with AML subtype FAB-M5b. In banding cytogenetics a der(19)t(19;?)(q13.3;?) and del(Y)(q11.23) were found as sole aberrations. Molecular cytogenetics revealed that the MLL gene was disrupted and even partially lost due to a t(10;19;11)(p12.31;q13.31;q23.3), an MLL/MLLT10 fusion appeared, and the der(Y) was an asymmetric inverted duplication with breakpoints in Yp11.2 and Yq11.23. The patient got hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from his haploidentical mother. Still three months afterwards 15% of blasts were detected in bone marrow and later the patient was lost during follow-up. The present case highlights the necessity to exclude MLL rearrangements, even when there seems to be no actual hint from banding cytogenetics. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.gene.2015.02.064
MLLT10
Moneeb A K Othman, Joana B Melo, Isabel M Carreira +6 more · 2015 · Oncology reports · added 2026-04-24
Cytogenetic classification of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is primarily based on numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. In T-cell ALL (T-ALL), chromosomal rearrangements are identif Show more
Cytogenetic classification of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is primarily based on numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. In T-cell ALL (T-ALL), chromosomal rearrangements are identified in up to 70% of the patients while the remaining patients show a normal karyotype. In the present study, a 16-year-old male was diagnosed with T-precursor cell ALL and a normal karyotype after standard GTG-banding, was studied retrospectively (>10 years after diagnosis) in frame of a research project by molecular approaches. In addition to molecular cytogenetics, multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) and high resolution array-comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) were also applied. Thus, the following yet unrecognized balanced chromosomal aberrations were detected: der(3)t(3;5)(p23;q31.1), der(5)t(3;5)(p23;q35.3), der(5)t(5;10)(q31.1;p12.3) and der(10)t(5;10)(q35.3;p12.3). The oncogene MLLT10 was involved in this rearrangement as was the IL3 gene; in addition, trisomy 4 was present. All of these clonal aberrations were found in 40% of the cells. Even if this complex karyotype would have been identified at the time of diagnosis, most likely no other protocol of anticancer therapy (ALL-BFM 95) would have been applied. Three months after the end of a successful 2-year treatment, the patient suffered from isolated bone marrow relapse and died of sepsis during ALL-REZ-BFM protocol treatment. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.3892/or.2014.3624
MLLT10
Amanda Faria de Figueiredo, Tarsis Paiva Vieira, Thomas Liehr +8 more · 2012 · Leukemia research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.leukres.2011.12.009
MLLT10