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Browsing by Author "Schubert, Maria"

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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
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    Distinct microRNA Expression Profile in Prostate Cancer Patients with Early Clinical Failure and the Impact of let-7 as Prognostic Marker in High-Risk Prostate Cancer
    (Public Library Science, 2013)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Spahn, Martin
    ;
    Kneitz, Susanne
    ;
    Scholz, Claus Juergen
    ;
    Joniau, Steven
    ;
    Stroebel, Philipp  
    ;
    Riedmiller, Hubertus
    ;
    Kneitz, Burkhard
    Background: The identification of additional prognostic markers to improve risk stratification and to avoid overtreatment is one of the most urgent clinical needs in prostate cancer (PCa). MicroRNAs, being important regulators of gene expression, are promising biomarkers in various cancer entities, though the impact as prognostic predictors in PCa is poorly understood. The aim of this study was to identify specific miRNAs as potential prognostic markers in high-risk PCa and to validate their clinical impact. Methodology and Principal Findings: We performed miRNA-microarray analysis in a high-risk PCa study group selected by their clinical outcome (clinical progression free survival (CPFS) vs. clinical failure (CF)). We identified seven candidate miRNAs (let-7a/b/c, miR-515-3p/5p, -181b, -146b, and -361) that showed differential expression between both groups. Further qRT-PCR analysis revealed down-regulation of members of the let-7 family in the majority of a large, well-characterized high-risk PCa cohort (n = 98). Expression of let-7a/b/and -c was correlated to clinical outcome parameters of this group. While let-7a showed no association or correlation with clinical relevant data, let-7b and let-7c were associated with CF in PCa patients and functioned partially as independent prognostic marker. Validation of the data using an independent high-risk study cohort revealed that let-7b, but not let-7c, has impact as an independent prognostic marker for BCR and CF. Furthermore, we identified HMGA1, a non-histone protein, as a new target of let-7b and found correlation of let-7b down-regulation with HMGA1 over-expression in primary PCa samples. Conclusion: Our findings define a distinct miRNA expression profile in PCa cases with early CF and identified let-7b as prognostic biomarker in high-risk PCa. This study highlights the importance of let-7b as tumor suppressor miRNA in high-risk PCa and presents a basis to improve individual therapy for high-risk PCa patients.
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    Erratum to: Two novel disaccharides, rutinose and methylrutinose, are involved in carbon metabolism in Datisca glomerata (vol 231, pg 507, 2010)
    (Springer, 2010)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Melnikova, Anna N.
    ;
    Mesecke, Nikola
    ;
    Zubkova, Elena K.
    ;
    Fortte, Rocco
    ;
    Batashev, Denis R.
    ;
    Barth, Inga
    ;
    Sauer, Norbert
    ;
    Gamalei, Yuri V.
    ;
    Mamushina, Natalia S.
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    Tietze, Lutz Friedjan  
    ;
    Voitsekhovskaja, Olga V.
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
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    Lignification of cell walls of infected cells in Casuarina glauca nodules that depend on symplastic sugar supply is accompanied by reduction of plasmodesmata number and narrowing of plasmodesmata
    (Wiley-blackwell, 2013)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Koteyeva, Nouria K.
    ;
    Zdyb, Anna
    ;
    Santos, Patricia
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    Voitsekhovskaja, Olga V.
    ;
    Demchenko, Kirill N.
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
    The oxygen protection system for the bacterial nitrogen-fixing enzyme complex nitrogenase in actinorhizal nodules of Casuarina glauca resembles that of legume nodules: infected cells contain large amounts of the oxygen-binding protein hemoglobin and are surrounded by an oxygen diffusion barrier. However, while in legume nodules infected cells are located in the central tissue, actinorhizal nodules are composed of modified lateral roots with infected cells in the expanded cortex. Since an oxygen diffusion barrier around the entire cortex would also block oxygen access to the central vascular system where it is required to provide energy for transport processes, here each individual infected cell is surrounded with an oxygen diffusion barrier. In order to assess the effect of these oxygen diffusion barriers on oxygen supply for energy production for transport processes, apoplastic and symplastic sugar transport pathways in C. glauca nodules were examined. The results support the idea that sugar transport to and within the nodule cortex relies to a large extent on the less energy-demanding symplastic mechanism. This is in line with the assumption that oxygen access to the nodule vascular system is substantially restricted. In spite of this dependence on symplastic transport processes to supply sugars to infected cells, plasmodesmal connections between infected cells, and to a lesser degree with uninfected cells, were reduced during the differentiation of infected cells.
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    Plasmodesmata distribution and sugar partitioning in nitrogen-fixing root nodules of Datisca glomerata
    (Springer, 2011)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Koteyeva, Nouria K.
    ;
    Wabnitz, Philipp W.
    ;
    Santos, Patricia
    ;
    Buettner, Michael
    ;
    Sauer, Norbert
    ;
    Demchenko, Kirill N.
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
    To understand carbon partitioning in roots and nodules of Datisca glomerata, activities of sucrose-degrading enzymes and sugar transporter expression patterns were analyzed in both organs, and plasmodesmal connections between nodule cortical cells were examined by transmission electron microscopy. The results indicate that in nodules, the contribution of symplastic transport processes is increased in comparison to roots, specifically in infected cells which develop many secondary plasmodesmata. Invertase activities are dramatically reduced in nodules as compared to roots, indicating that here the main enzyme responsible for the cleavage of sucrose is sucrose synthase. A high-affinity, low-specificity monosaccharide transporter whose expression is induced in infected cells prior to the onset of bacterial nitrogen fixation, and which has an unusually low pH optimum and may be involved in turgor control or hexose retrieval during infection thread growth.
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    Survival in Patients with High-Risk Prostate Cancer Is Predicted by miR-221, Which Regulates Proliferation, Apoptosis, and Invasion of Prostate Cancer Cells by Inhibiting IRF2 and SOCS3
    (Amer Assoc Cancer Research, 2014)
    Kneitz, Burkhard
    ;
    Krebs, Markus
    ;
    Kalogirou, Charis
    ;
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Joniau, Steven
    ;
    van Poppel, Hein
    ;
    Lerut, Evelyne
    ;
    Kneitz, Susanne
    ;
    Scholz, Claus Juergen
    ;
    Stroebel, Philipp  
    ;
    Gessler, Manfred
    ;
    Riedmiller, Hubertus
    ;
    Spahn, Martin
    A lack of reliably informative biomarkers to distinguish indolent and lethal prostate cancer is one reason this disease is overtreated. miR-221 has been suggested as a biomarker in high-risk prostate cancer, but there is insufficient evidence of its potential utility. Here we report that miR-221 is an independent predictor for cancer-related death, extending and validating earlier findings. By mechanistic investigations we showed that miR-221 regulates cell growth, invasiveness, and apoptosis in prostate cancer at least partially via STAT1/STAT3-mediated activation of the JAK/STAT signaling pathway. miR-221 directly inhibits the expression of SOCS3 and IRF2, two oncogenes that negatively regulate this signaling pathway. miR-221 expression sensitized prostate cancer cells for IFN-gamma-mediated growth inhibition. Our findings suggest that miR-221 offers a novel prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target in high-risk prostate cancer. (C) 2014 AACR.
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    Two novel disaccharides, rutinose and methylrutinose, are involved in carbon metabolism in Datisca glomerata
    (Springer, 2010)
    Schubert, Maria
    ;
    Melnikova, Anna N.
    ;
    Mesecke, Nikola
    ;
    Zubkova, Elena K.
    ;
    Fortte, Rocco
    ;
    Batashev, Denis R.
    ;
    Barth, Inga
    ;
    Sauer, Norbert
    ;
    Gamalei, Yuri V.
    ;
    Mamushina, Natalia S.
    ;
    Tietze, Lutz Friedjan  
    ;
    Voitsekhovskaja, Olga V.
    ;
    Pawlowski, Katharina
    Datisca glomerata forms nitrogen-fixing root nodules in symbiosis with soil actinomycetes from the genus Frankia. Analysis of sugars in roots, nodules and leaves of D. glomerata revealed the presence of two novel compounds that were identified as alpha-l-rhamnopyranoside-(1 -> 6)-d-glucose (rutinose) and alpha-l-rhamnopyranoside-(1 -> 6)-1-O-beta-d-methylglucose (methylrutinose). Rutinose has been found previously as a/the glycoside part of several flavonoid glycosides, e.g. rutin, also of datiscin, the main flavonoid of Datisca cannabina, but had not been reported as free sugar. Time course analyses suggest that both rutinose and methylrutinose might play a role in transient carbon storage in sink organs and, to a lesser extent, in source leaves. Their concentrations show that they can accumulate in the vacuole. Rutinose, but not methylrutinose, was accepted as a substrate by the tonoplast disaccharide transporter SUT4 from Arabidopsis. In vivo C-14-labeling and the study of uptake of exogenous sucrose and rutinose from the leaf apoplast showed that neither rutinose nor methylrutinose appreciably participate in phloem translocation of carbon from source to sink organs, despite rutinose being found in the apoplast at significant levels. A model for sugar metabolism in D. glomerata is presented.

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