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Browsing by Author "Hess, Ina"

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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
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    Antitumor Effects of a Combined 5-Aza-2 ' Deoxycytidine and Valproic Acid Treatment on Rhabdomyosarcoma and Medulloblastoma in Ptch Mutant Mice
    (Amer Assoc Cancer Research, 2009)
    Ecke, Ines
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    Petry, Frauke
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Tauber, Svantje
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    Moenkemeyer, Sven
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    Hess, Ina
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    Dullin, Christian  
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    Kimmina, Sarah
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    Pirngruber, Judith
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    Johnsen, Steven A.  
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    Uhmann, Anja
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    Nitzki, Frauke
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    Wojnowski, Leszek
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    Schulz-Schaeffer, Walter J.  
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    Witt, Olaf
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    Hahn, Heidi  
    Patched (etch) heterozygous mice develop medulloblastoma (MB) and rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) resembling the corresponding human tumors. We have previously shown that epigenetic silencing of the intact Ptch allele contributes to tumor formation in this model. Here, we investigated whether targeting of epigenetic silencing mechanisms could be useful in the treatment of Ptch-associated cancers. A reduction of endogenous DNA methyltransferasel (Dnmt1) activity significantly reduced tumor incidence in heterozygous Ptch knockout mice. A combined treatment with the Dnmt inhibitor 5-aza-2'deoxycytidine (5-aza-dC) and the histone deacetlyase (HDAC) inhibitor valproic acid (VPA) efficiently prevented MB and RMS formation, whereas monotherapies with either drug were less effective. Wild-type Ptch expression was efficiently reactivated in tumors by 5-aza-dC/VPA combination therapy. This was associated with reduced methylation of the Pitch promoter and induction of historic hyperacetylation suggesting inhibition of HDACs is vivo. However, the treatment was not effective in clinically overt, advanced stage tumors. This is a first in vivo demonstration that targeting of Dnmt and HDAC activities is highly effective in preventing formation of Ptch-associated tumors. The results suggest a novel clinical strategy for consolidation therapy of corresponding tumors in humans after completion of conventional treatment. Our data also suggest that epigenetic therapy may be less effective in treating advanced stages of tumors, at least in this tumor model. [Cancer Res 2009;69(3):887-95]
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    ANTITUMOR EFFECTS OF CALCITRIOL IN PATCHED1-ASSOCIATED BASAL CELL CARCINOMA INVOLVES INHIBITION OF HEDGEHOG SIGNALING AND INDUCTION OF DIFFERENTIATION
    (Int Inst Anticancer Research, 2011)
    Uhmann, Anja
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    Niemann, Hannah
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    Lammering, Berenice
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    Henkel, Cornelia
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    Hess, Ina
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    Nitzki, Frauke
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    Fritsch, Anne
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Dullin, Christian  
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    Schraepler, Anke
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    Reifenberger, Julia
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    Schweyer, Stefan
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    Pietsch, Torsten
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    Strutz, Frank M.
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    Schulz-Schaeffer, Walter J.  
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    Hahn, Heidi  
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    Antitumoral Effects of Calcitriol in Basal Cell Carcinomas Involve Inhibition of Hedgehog Signaling and Induction of Vitamin D Receptor Signaling and Differentiation
    (Amer Assoc Cancer Research, 2011)
    Uhmann, Anja
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    Niemann, Hannah
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    Lammering, Berenice
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    Henkel, Cornelia
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    Hess, Ina
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    Nitzki, Frauke
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    Fritsch, Anne
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    Pruefer, Nicole
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    Rosenberger, Albert  
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    Dullin, Christian  
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    Schraepler, Anke
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    Reifenberger, Julia
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    Schweyer, Stefan
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    Pietsch, Torsten
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    Strutz, Frank M.
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    Schulz-Schaeffer, Walter J.  
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    Hahn, Heidi  
    Activation of the Hedgehog (Hh)-signaling pathway due to deficiency in the Hh receptor Patched1 (Ptch) is the pivotal defect leading to formation of basal cell carcinoma (BCC). Recent reports provided evidence of Ptch-dependent secretion of vitamin D(3)-related compound, which functions as an endogenous inhibitor of Hh signaling by repressing the activity of the signal transduction partner of Ptch, Smoothened (Smo). This suggests that Ptch-deficient tumor cells are devoid of this substance, which in turn results in activation of Hh-signaling. Here, we show that the application of the physiologically active form of vitamin D(3), calcitriol, inhibits proliferation and growth of BCC of Ptch mutant mice in vitro and in vivo. This is accompanied by the activation of the vitamin D receptor (Vdr) and induction of BCC differentiation. In addition, calcitriol inhibits Hh signaling at the level of Smo in a Vdr-independent manner. The concomitant antiproliferative effects on BCC growth are stronger than those of the Hh-specific inhibitor cyclopamine, even though the latter more efficiently inhibits Hh signaling. Taken together, we show that exogenous supply of calcitriol controls the activity of 2 independent pathways, Hh and Vdr signaling, which are relevant to tumorigenesis and tumor treatment. These data suggest that calcitriol could be a therapeutic option in the treatment of BCC, the most common tumor in humans. Mol Cancer Ther; 10(11); 2179-88. (C) 2011 AACR.
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    DMBA/TPA Treatment Is Necessary for BCC Formation from Patched Deficient Epidermal Cells in Ptch(flox/flox)CD4Cre(+/-) Mice
    (Elsevier Science Inc, 2014)
    Uhmann, Anja
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    Hess, Ina
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    Frommhold, Anke
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    Koenig, Simone
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    Zabel, Sebastian
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    Nitzki, Frauke
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    Dittmann, Kai  
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    Luehder, Fred  
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    Christiansen, Hans
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    Reifenberger, Julia
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    Schulz-Schaeffer, Walter J.  
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    Hahn, Heidi  
    The development of basal cell carcinoma (BCC), the most frequently diagnosed tumor among persons with European ancestry, is closely linked to mutations in the Hedgehog (Hh) receptor and tumor suppressor Patched1 (Ptch). Using Ptch(flox/flox)CD4Cre(+/-) mice, in which Ptch was ablated in CD4Cre-expressing cells, we demonstrate that the targeted cells can give rise to BCC after treatment with DMBA (7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene)/TPA (12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate), but not after wounding of the skin. In addition, in this model, BCC are not caused by malfunctioning of Ptch-deficient T cells, as BCC did not develop when bone marrow (BM) of Ptch(flox/flox)CD4Cre(+/-) mice was transplanted into Ptch wild-type mice. Instead, lineage-tracing experiments and flow cytometric analyses suggest that the tumors are initiated from rare Ptch-deficient stem cell-like cells of the epidermis that express CD4. As DMBA/TPA is a prerequisite for BCC development in this model, the initiated cells need a second stimulus for expansion and tumor formation. However, in contrast to papilloma, this stimulus seems to be unrelated to alterations in the Ras signaling cascade. Together, these data suggest that biallelic loss of Ptch in CD4(+) cells does not suffice for BCC formation and that BCC formation requires a second so far unknown event, at least in the Ptch(flox/flox)CD4Cre(+/-) BCC mouse model.
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    Hedgehog signaling activation induces stem cell proliferation and hormone release in the adult pituitary gland
    (Nature Publishing Group, 2016)
    Pyczek, Joanna  
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    Buslei, Rolf
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    Schult, David
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    Hoelsken, Annett
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    Buchfelder, Michael
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    Hess, Ina
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    Hahn, Heidi  
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    Uhmann, Anja
    Hedgehog (HH) signaling is known to be essential during the embryonal development of the pituitary gland but the knowledge about its role in the adult pituitary and in associated tumors is sparse. In this report we investigated the effect of excess Hh signaling activation in murine pituitary explants and analyzed the HH signaling status of human adenopituitary lobes and a large cohort of pituitary adenomas. Our data show that excess Hh signaling led to increased proliferation of Sox2(+) and Sox9(+) adult pituitary stem cells and to elevated expression levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone (Acth), growth hormone (Gh) and prolactin (Prl) in the adult gland. Inhibition of the pathway by cyclopamine reversed these effects indicating that active Hh signaling positively regulates proliferative processes of adult pituitary stem cells and hormone production in the anterior pituitary. Since hormone producing cells of the adenohypophysis as well as ACTH-, GH- and PRL-immunopositive adenomas express SHH and its target GLI1, we furthermore propose that excess HH signaling is involved in the development/maintenance of hormone-producing pituitary adenomas. These findings advance the understanding of physiological hormone regulation and may open new treatment options for pituitary tumors.
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    T Cell Development Critically Depends on Prethymic Stromal Patched Expression
    (Amer Assoc Immunologists, 2011)
    Uhmann, Anja
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    van den Brandt, Jens  
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    Dittmann, Kai  
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    Hess, Ina
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    Dressel, Ralf  
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    Binder, Claudia  
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    Luehder, Fred  
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    Christiansen, Hans
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    Fassnacht, Martin
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    Bhandoola, Avinash
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    Wienands, Juergen  
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    Reichardt, Holger Michael  
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    Hahn, Heidi  
    We recently described that T cell specification in mice deficient in the Hedgehog (Hh) receptor Patched (Ptch) is blocked at the level of the common lymphoid progenitor in the bone marrow (BM). Adoptive transfer of wild-type BM in Ptch-deficient mice provides evidence that T cell development strictly depends on Ptch expression in the nonhematopoietic compartment. Transplantation experiments using BM deficient in the glucocorticoid receptor exclude any involvement of the stress hormone corticosterone in our model. Using cell-type-specific knockout mice, we show that T cell development is independent of T cell-intrinsic Ptch expression. Furthermore, Ptch expression by the thymus stroma is dispensable, as revealed by fetal thymus organ culture and thymus transplantation. In contrast, analysis of the earliest thymic progenitors in Ptch-deficient mice indicated that Ptch is required for the development or supply of thymic homing progenitors that give rise to earliest thymic progenitors. Collectively, our findings identified Ptch as an exclusive T cell-extrinsic factor necessary for proper development of T cells at their prethymic stage. This observation may be important for current considerations using Hh inhibitors upstream of Ptch in diseases accompanied by aberrant Hh signaling. The Journal of Immunology, 2011, 186: 3383-3391.

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