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Study of exclusive one-pion and one-eta production using hadron and dielectron channels in pp reactions at kinetic beam energies of 1.25 GeV and 2.2 GeV with HADES (2012)
Agakishiev, Geydar ; Álvarez-Pol, Héctor ; Balanda, Andrzej ; Bassini, Roberto ; Böhmer, Michael ; Bokemeyer, Helmut ; Boyard, Jean-Louis ; Cabanelas Eiras, Pablo ; Chernenko, Sergey ; Christ, Tassilo ; Destefanis, Marco Giovanni Maria ; Dohrmann, Frank ; Dybczak, Adrian ; Eberl, Thomas ; Fabbietti, Laura ; Fateev, Oleg ; Finocchiaro, Paolo ; Friese, Jürgen ; Fröhlich, Ingo ; Galatyuk, Tetyana ; Garzón, Juan A. ; Gernhäuser, Roman ; Gilardi, Camilla ; Golubeva, Marina ; González-Díaz, Diégo ; Guber, Fedor ; Gumberidze, Malgorzata ; Hennino, Thierry ; Holzmann, Romain ; Ierusalimov, Alexander P. ; Iori, Ileana ; Ivashkin, Alexander ; Jurkovič, Martin ; Kämpfer, Burkhard ; Kanaki, Kalliopi ; Karavicheva, Tatiana ; Koenig, Ilse ; Koenig, Wolfgang ; Kolb, Burkhard W. ; Kotte, Roland ; Kozuch, Anna ; Krizek, Filip ; Kühn, Wolfgang ; Kugler, Andrej ; Kurepin, Alexei ; Lang, Simon Martin ; Lapidus, Kirill ; Liu, T. ; Maier, Ludwig W. ; Markert, Jochen ; Metag, Volker ; Michalska, Beata ; Morinière, Emilie ; Mousa, Jehad ; Münch, Mathias ; Münch, Christian ; Naumann, Lothar ; Otwinowski, Jacek Tomasz ; Pachmayer, Yvonne C. ; Pechenov, Vladimir ; Pechenova, Olga ; Pérez Cavalcanti, Tiago ; Pietraszko, Jerzy ; Pospısil, Vladimir ; Przygoda, Witold ; Ramstein, Béatrice ; Reshetin, Andrey ; Roy-Stephan, M. ; Rustamov, Anar ; Sadovsky, Alexander ; Sailer, Benjamin ; Salabura, Piotr ; Sánchez, M. ; Schmah, Alexander ; Schwab, Erwin ; Sobolev, Yuri G. ; Spataro, Stefano ; Spruck, Björn ; Ströbele, Herbert ; Stroth, Joachim ; Sturm, Christian Thomas ; Tarantola, Attilio ; Teilab, Khaled ; Tlustý, Pavel ; Toia, Alberica ; Traxler, Michael ; Trebacz, Radoslaw ; Tsertos, Haralabos ; Wagner, Vladimir ; Wisniowski, Marcin ; Wojcik, Tomasz ; Wüstenfeld, Jörn ; Yurevich, Sergey ; Zanevsky, Yuri V. ; Zumbruch, Peter W.
We present measurements of exclusive ensuremathπ+,0 and η production in pp reactions at 1.25GeV and 2.2GeV beam kinetic energy in hadron and dielectron channels. In the case of π+ and π0 , high-statistics invariant-mass and angular distributions are obtained within the HADES acceptance as well as acceptance-corrected distributions, which are compared to a resonance model. The sensitivity of the data to the yield and production angular distribution of Δ (1232) and higher-lying baryon resonances is shown, and an improved parameterization is proposed. The extracted cross-sections are of special interest in the case of pp → pp η , since controversial data exist at 2.0GeV; we find \ensuremathσ=0.142±0.022 mb. Using the dielectron channels, the π0 and η Dalitz decay signals are reconstructed with yields fully consistent with the hadronic channels. The electron invariant masses and acceptance-corrected helicity angle distributions are found in good agreement with model predictions.
Contrasting disease patterns in seropositive and seronegative neuromyelitis optica : a multicentre study of 175 patients (2012)
Jarius, Sven ; Ruprecht, Klemens ; Wildemann, Brigitte ; Kümpfel, Tania ; Ringelstein, Marius ; Geis, Christian ; Kleiter, Ingo ; Kleinschnitz, Christoph ; Berthele, Achim ; Brettschneider, Johannes ; Hellwig, Kerstin ; Hemmer, Bernhard ; Linker, Ralf A. ; Lauda, Florian ; Mayer, Christoph ; Tumani, Hayrettin ; Melms, Arthur ; Trebst, Corinna ; Stangel, Martin ; Marziniak, Martin ; Hoffmann, Frank ; Schippling, Sven ; Faiss, Jürgen H. ; Neuhaus, Oliver ; Ettrich, Barbara ; Zentner, Christian ; Guthke, Kersten ; Hofstadt-van Oy, Ulrich ; Reuss, Reinhard ; Pellkofer, Hannah ; Ziemann, Ulf ; Kern, Peter ; Wandinger, Klaus P. ; Bergh, Florian T. ; Böttcher, Tobias ; Langel, Stefan ; Liebetrau, Martin ; Rommer, Paulus S. ; Niehaus, Sabine ; Münch, Christoph ; Winkelmann, Alexander ; Zettl, Uwe Klaus ; Metz, Imke ; Veauthier, Christian ; Sieb, Jörn P. ; Wilke, Christian ; Hartung, Hans P. ; Aktas, Orhan ; Paul, Friedemann
Background: The diagnostic and pathophysiological relevance of antibodies to aquaporin-4 (AQP4-Ab) in patients with neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD) has been intensively studied. However, little is known so far about the clinical impact of AQP4-Ab seropositivity. Objective: To analyse systematically the clinical and paraclinical features associated with NMO spectrum disorders in Caucasians in a stratified fashion according to the patients' AQP4-Ab serostatus. Methods: Retrospective study of 175 Caucasian patients (AQP4-Ab positive in 78.3%). Results: Seropositive patients were found to be predominantly female (p < 0.0003), to more often have signs of co-existing autoimmunity (p < 0.00001), and to experience more severe clinical attacks. A visual acuity of ≤ 0.1 during acute optic neuritis (ON) attacks was more frequent among seropositives (p < 0.002). Similarly, motor symptoms were more common in seropositive patients, the median Medical Research Council scale (MRC) grade worse, and MRC grades ≤ 2 more frequent, in particular if patients met the 2006 revised criteria (p < 0.005, p < 0.006 and p < 0.01, respectively), the total spinal cord lesion load was higher (p < 0.006), and lesions ≥ 6 vertebral segments as well as entire spinal cord involvement more frequent (p < 0.003 and p < 0.043). By contrast, bilateral ON at onset was more common in seronegatives (p < 0.007), as was simultaneous ON and myelitis (p < 0.001); accordingly, the time to diagnosis of NMO was shorter in the seronegative group (p < 0.029). The course of disease was more often monophasic in seronegatives (p < 0.008). Seropositives and seronegatives did not differ significantly with regard to age at onset, time to relapse, annualized relapse rates, outcome from relapse (complete, partial, no recovery), annualized EDSS increase, mortality rate, supratentorial brain lesions, brainstem lesions, history of carcinoma, frequency of preceding infections, oligoclonal bands, or CSF pleocytosis. Both the time to relapse and the time to diagnosis was longer if the disease started with ON (p < 0.002 and p < 0.013). Motor symptoms or tetraparesis at first myelitis and > 1 myelitis attacks in the first year were identified as possible predictors of a worse outcome. Conclusion: This study provides an overview of the clinical and paraclinical features of NMOSD in Caucasians and demonstrates a number of distinct disease characteristics in seropositive and seronegative patients
BAG3 proteomic signature under proteostasis stress (2020)
Hiebel, Christof ; Stürner, Elisabeth ; Hoffmeister, Meike ; Tascher, Georg ; Schwarz, Mario ; Nagel, Heike ; Behrends, Christian ; Münch, Christian ; Behl, Christian
The multifunctional HSP70 co-chaperone BAG3 (BCL-2-associated athanogene 3) represents a key player in the quality control of the cellular proteostasis network. In response to stress, BAG3 specifically targets aggregation-prone proteins to the perinuclear aggresome and promotes their degradation via BAG3-mediated selective macroautophagy. To adapt cellular homeostasis to stress, BAG3 modulates and functions in various cellular processes and signaling pathways. Noteworthy, dysfunction and deregulation of BAG3 and its pathway are pathophysiologically linked to myopathies, cancer, and neurodegenerative disorders. Here, we report a BAG3 proteomic signature under proteostasis stress. To elucidate the dynamic and multifunctional action of BAG3 in response to stress, we established BAG3 interactomes under basal and proteostasis stress conditions by employing affinity purification combined with quantitative mass spectrometry. In addition to the identification of novel potential BAG3 interactors, we defined proteins whose interaction with BAG3 was altered upon stress. By functional annotation and protein-protein interaction enrichment analysis of the identified potential BAG3 interactors, we confirmed the multifunctionality of BAG3 and highlighted its crucial role in diverse cellular signaling pathways and processes, ensuring cellular proteostasis and cell viability. These include protein folding and degradation, gene expression, cytoskeleton dynamics (including cell cycle and transport), as well as granulostasis, in particular.
Characterization of extracellular vesicles from preconditioned human adipose-derived stromal/stem cells (2021)
Geßner, Alec ; Koch, Benjamin Florian ; Klann, Kevin ; Fuhrmann, Dominik Christian ; Farmand, Samira ; Schubert, Ralf ; Münch, Christian ; Geiger, Helmut ; Baer, Patrick C.
Cell-free therapy using extracellular vesicles (EVs) from adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (ASCs) seems to be a safe and effective therapeutic option to support tissue and organ regeneration. The application of EVs requires particles with a maximum regenerative capability and hypoxic culture conditions as an in vitro preconditioning regimen has been shown to alter the molecular composition of released EVs. Nevertheless, the EV cargo after hypoxic preconditioning has not yet been comprehensively examined. The aim of the present study was the characterization of EVs from hypoxic preconditioned ASCs. We investigated the EV proteome and their effects on renal tubular epithelial cells in vitro. While no effect of hypoxia was observed on the number of released EVs and their protein content, the cargo of the proteins was altered. Proteomic analysis showed 41 increased or decreased proteins, 11 in a statistically significant manner. Furthermore, the uptake of EVs in epithelial cells and a positive effect on oxidative stress in vitro were observed. In conclusion, culture of ASCs under hypoxic conditions was demonstrated to be a promising in vitro preconditioning regimen, which alters the protein cargo and increases the anti-oxidative potential of EVs. These properties may provide new potential therapeutic options for regenerative medicine.
Endosomal Rab cycles regulate Parkin-mediated mitophagy (2018)
Yamano, Koji ; Wang, Chunxin ; Sarraf, Shireen A. ; Münch, Christian ; Kikuchi, Reika ; Noda, Nobuo N. ; Hizukuri, Yohei ; Kanemaki, Masato T. ; Harper, Wade ; Tanaka, Keiji ; Matsuda, Noriyuki ; Youle, Richard J.
Damaged mitochondria are selectively eliminated by mitophagy. Parkin and PINK1, gene products mutated in familial Parkinson’s disease, play essential roles in mitophagy through ubiquitination of mitochondria. Cargo ubiquitination by E3 ubiquitin ligase Parkin is important to trigger selective autophagy. Although autophagy receptors recruit LC3-labeled autophagic membranes onto damaged mitochondria, how other essential autophagy units such as ATG9A-integrated vesicles are recruited remains unclear. Here, using mammalian cultured cells, we demonstrate that RABGEF1, the upstream factor of the endosomal Rab GTPase cascade, is recruited to damaged mitochondria via ubiquitin binding downstream of Parkin. RABGEF1 directs the downstream Rab proteins, RAB5 and RAB7A, to damaged mitochondria, whose associations are further regulated by mitochondrial Rab-GAPs. Furthermore, depletion of RAB7A inhibited ATG9A vesicle assembly and subsequent encapsulation of the mitochondria by autophagic membranes. These results strongly suggest that endosomal Rab cycles on damaged mitochondria are a crucial regulator of mitophagy through assembling ATG9A vesicles.
Functional translatome proteomics reveal converging and dose-dependent regulation by mtorc1 and eif2α (2019)
Klann, Kevin ; Tascher, Georg ; Münch, Christian
Regulation of translation is essential during stress. However, the precise sets of proteins regulated by the key translational stress responses—the integrated stress response (ISR) and mTORC1—remain elusive. We developed multiplexed enhanced protein dynamics (mePROD) proteomics, adding signal amplification to dynamic-SILAC and multiplexing, to enable measuring acute changes in protein synthesis. Treating cells with ISR/mTORC1-modulating stressors, we showed extensive translatome modulation with ∼20% of proteins synthesized at highly reduced rates. Comparing translation-deficient sub-proteomes revealed an extensive overlap demonstrating that target specificity is achieved on protein level and not by pathway activation. Titrating cap-dependent translation inhibition confirmed that synthesis of individual proteins is controlled by intrinsic properties responding to global translation attenuation. This study reports a highly sensitive method to measure relative translation at the nascent chain level and provides insight into how the ISR and mTORC1, two key cellular pathways, regulate the translatome to guide cellular survival upon stress.
Vom Massenspektrum zum humanen Interaktom : bioinformatische Algorithmen visualisieren komplexe zelluläre Kommunikationsnetzwerke (2017)
Münch, Christian
Nach der Entschlüsselung des menschlichen Genoms, die 2003 als abgeschlossen galt, ist die Aufgabe des 21. Jahrhunderts, das Proteom – die Gesamtheit aller Proteine einer Zelle – und dessen Interaktionen zu verstehen. Vor einigen Jahren wäre diese Sisyphusarbeit noch nicht möglich gewesen.
Calcitriol promotes differentiation of glioma stem-like cells and increases their susceptibility to temozolomide (2021)
Gerstmeier, Julia ; Possmayer, Anna-Lena ; Bozkurt, Süleyman ; Hoffmann, Marina E. ; Đikić, Ivan ; Herold-Mende, Christel ; Burger, Michael C. ; Münch, Christian ; Kögel, Donat ; Linder, Benedikt
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and most aggressive primary brain tumor, with a very high rate of recurrence and a median survival of 15 months after diagnosis. Abundant evidence suggests that a certain sub-population of cancer cells harbors a stem-like phenotype and is likely responsible for disease recurrence, treatment resistance and potentially even for the infiltrative growth of GBM. GBM incidence has been negatively correlated with the serum levels of 25-hydroxy-vitamin D3, while the low pH within tumors has been shown to promote the expression of the vitamin D3-degrading enzyme 24-hydroxylase, encoded by the CYP24A1 gene. Therefore, we hypothesized that calcitriol can specifically target stem-like glioblastoma cells and induce their differentiation. Here, we show, using in vitro limiting dilution assays, quantitative real-time PCR, quantitative proteomics and ex vivo adult organotypic brain slice transplantation cultures, that therapeutic doses of calcitriol, the hormonally active form of vitamin D3, reduce stemness to varying extents in a panel of investigated GSC lines, and that it effectively hinders tumor growth of responding GSCs ex vivo. We further show that calcitriol synergizes with Temozolomide ex vivo to completely eliminate some GSC tumors. These findings indicate that calcitriol carries potential as an adjuvant therapy for a subgroup of GBM patients and should be analyzed in more detail in follow-up studies.
Maintaining protein stability of ∆Np63 via USP28 is required by squamous cancer cells (2020)
Prieto‐Garcia, Cristian ; Hartmann, Oliver ; Reissland, Michaela ; Braun, Fabian ; Fischer, Thomas ; Walz, Susanne ; Schülein‐Völk, Christina ; Eilers, Ursula ; Ade, Carsten P. ; Calzado, Marco A. ; Orian, Amir ; Maric, Hans-Michael ; Münch, Christian ; Rosenfeldt, Mathias ; Eilers, Martin ; Diefenbacher, Markus Elmar
The transcription factor ∆Np63 is a master regulator of epithelial cell identity and essential for the survival of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of lung, head and neck, oesophagus, cervix and skin. Here, we report that the deubiquitylase USP28 stabilizes ∆Np63 and maintains elevated ∆NP63 levels in SCC by counteracting its proteasome‐mediated degradation. Impaired USP28 activity, either genetically or pharmacologically, abrogates the transcriptional identity and suppresses growth and survival of human SCC cells. CRISPR/Cas9‐engineered in vivo mouse models establish that endogenous USP28 is strictly required for both induction and maintenance of lung SCC. Our data strongly suggest that targeting ∆Np63 abundance via inhibition of USP28 is a promising strategy for the treatment of SCC tumours.
Activating transcription factor 4 mediates adaptation of human glioblastoma cells to hypoxia and temozolomide (2021)
Lorenz, Nadja Irene ; Sittig, Alina C. M. ; Urban, Hans ; Luger, Anna-Luisa ; Engel, Anna Larissa ; Münch, Christian ; Steinbach, Joachim Peter ; Ronellenfitsch, Michael Wilfried
The integrated stress response (ISR) is a central cellular adaptive program that is activated by diverse stressors including ER stress, hypoxia and nutrient deprivation to orchestrate responses via activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4). We hypothesized that ATF4 is essential for the adaptation of human glioblastoma (GB) cells to the conditions of the tumor microenvironment and is contributing to therapy resistance against chemotherapy. ATF4 induction in GB cells was modulated pharmacologically and genetically and investigated in the context of temozolomide treatment as well as glucose and oxygen deprivation. The relevance of the ISR was analyzed by cell death and metabolic measurements under conditions to approximate aspects of the GB microenvironment. ATF4 protein levels were induced by temozolomide treatment. In line, ATF4 gene suppressed GB cells (ATF4sh) displayed increased cell death and decreased survival after temozolomide treatment. Similar results were observed after treatment with the ISR inhibitor ISRIB. ATF4sh and ISRIB treated GB cells were sensitized to hypoxia-induced cell death. Our experimental study provides evidence for an important role of ATF4 for the adaptation of human GB cells to conditions of the tumor microenvironment characterized by low oxygen and nutrient availability and for the development of temozolomide resistance. Inhibiting the ISR in GB cells could therefore be a promising therapeutic approach.
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