A Hönig
University of Würzburg
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Publication
Featured researches published by A Hönig.
British Journal of Cancer | 2010
S F M Häusler; A Keller; P A Chandran; K Ziegler; K Zipp; S Heuer; M Krockenberger; J B Engel; A Hönig; M Scheffler; J Dietl; J Wischhusen
Background:Screening is an unsolved problem for ovarian cancer (OvCA). As late detection is equivalent to poor prognosis, we analysed whether OvCA patients show diagnostically meaningful microRNA (miRNA) patterns in blood cells.Methods:Blood-borne whole miRNome profiles from 24 patients with OvCA and 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls were biostatistically evaluated.Results:Students t-test revealed 147 significantly deregulated miRNAs before and 4 after Benjamini–Hochberg adjustment. Although these included miRNAs already linked to OvCA (e.g., miR-16, miR-155), others had never before been connected to specific diseases. A bioinformatically calculated miRNA profile allowed for discrimination between blood samples of OvCA patients and healthy controls with an accuracy of >76%. When only cancers of the serous subtype were considered and compared with an extended control group (n=39), accuracy, specificity and sensitivity all increased to >85%.Conclusion:Our proof-of-principle study strengthens the hypothesis that neoplastic diseases generate characteristic miRNA fingerprints in blood cells. Still, the obtained OvCA-associated miRNA pattern is not yet sensitive and specific enough to permit the monitoring of disease progression or even preventive screening. Microarray-based miRNA profiling from peripheral blood could thus be combined with other markers to improve the notoriously difficult but important screening for OvCA.
Journal of Immunology | 2008
Mathias Krockenberger; Yvonne Dombrowski; Claudia Weidler; Monika Ossadnik; A Hönig; Sebastian Häusler; Heike Voigt; Jürgen C. Becker; Lin Leng; Alexander Steinle; Michael Weller; Richard Bucala; Johannes Dietl; Jörg Wischhusen
The proinflammatory cytokine macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) stimulates tumor cell proliferation, migration, and metastasis; promotes tumor angiogenesis; suppresses p53-mediated apoptosis; and inhibits antitumor immunity by largely unknown mechanisms. We here describe an overexpression of MIF in ovarian cancer that correlates with malignancy and the presence of ascites. Functionally, we find that MIF may contribute to the immune escape of ovarian carcinoma by transcriptionally down-regulating NKG2D in vitro and in vivo which impairs NK cell cytotoxicity toward tumor cells. Together with the additional tumorigenic properties of MIF, this finding provides a rationale for novel small-molecule inhibitors of MIF to be used for the treatment of MIF-secreting cancers.
British Journal of Cancer | 2007
Thomas G. P. Grunewald; Ulrike Kämmerer; Christiane Winkler; Detlef Schindler; Albert Sickmann; A Hönig; Elke Butt
LIM and SH3 protein 1 (LASP-1), initially identified from human breast cancer, is a specific focal adhesion protein involved in cell proliferation and migration. In the present work, we analysed the effect of LASP-1 on biology and function of human ovarian cancer cell line SKOV-3 using small interfering RNA technique (siRNA). Transfection with LASP-1-specific siRNA resulted in a reduced protein level of LASP-1 in SKOV-3 cells. The siRNA-treated cells were arrested in G2/M phase of the cell cycle and proliferation of the tumour cells was suppressed by 60–90% corresponding to around 70% of the cells being transfected successfully as seen by immunofluorescence. Moreover, transfected tumour cells showed a 40% reduced migration. LASP-1 silencing is accompanied by a reduced binding of the LASP-1-binding partner zyxin to focal contacts without changes in actin stress fibre and microtubule organisation or focal adhesion morphology as observed by immunofluorescence. In contrast, silencing of zyxin is not influencing cell migration and had neither influence on LASP-1 expression nor actin cytoskeleton and focal contact morphology suggesting that LASP-1 is necessary and sufficient for recruiting zyxin to focal contacts. The data provide evidence for an essential role of LASP-1 in tumour cell growth and migration, possibly through influencing zyxin localization.
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2011
Sebastian Häusler; Itsaso Montalbán del Barrio; Jenny Strohschein; P. Anoop Chandran; Jörg B. Engel; A Hönig; Monika Ossadnik; Evi Horn; Birgitt Fischer; Mathias Krockenberger; Stefan Heuer; Ahmed Adel Seida; Markus Junker; Hermann Kneitz; Doris Kloor; Karl-Norbert Klotz; Johannes Dietl; Jörg Wischhusen
The ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 degrade immune stimulatory ATP to adenosine that inhibits T and NK cell responses via the A2A adenosine receptor (ADORA2A). This mechanism is used by regulatory T cells (Treg) that are associated with increased mortality in OvCA. Immunohistochemical staining of human OvCA tissue specimens revealed further aberrant expression of CD39 in 29/36 OvCA samples, whereas only 1/9 benign ovaries showed weak stromal CD39 expression. CD73 could be detected on 31/34 OvCA samples. While 8/9 benign ovaries also showed CD73 immunoreactivity, expression levels were lower than in tumour specimens. Infiltration by CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was enhanced in tumour specimens and significantly correlated with CD39 and CD73 levels on stromal, but not on tumour cells. In vitro, human OvCA cell lines SK-OV-3 and OaW42 as well as 11/15 ascites-derived primary OvCA cell cultures expressed both functional CD39 and CD73 leading to more efficient depletion of extracellular ATP and enhanced generation of adenosine as compared to activated Treg. Functional assays using siRNAs against CD39 and CD73 or pharmacological inhibitors of CD39, CD73 and ADORA2A revealed that tumour-derived adenosine inhibits the proliferation of allogeneic human CD4+ T cells in co-culture with OvCA cells as well as cytotoxic T cell priming and NK cell cytotoxicity against SK-OV3 or OAW42 cells. Thus, both the ectonucleotidases CD39 and CD73 and ADORA2A appear as possible targets for novel treatments in OvCA, which may not only affect the function of Treg but also relieve intrinsic immunosuppressive properties of tumour and stromal cells.
International Journal of Gynecological Cancer | 2007
Mathias Krockenberger; A Hönig; Lorenz Rieger; J.F Coy; Marc Sütterlin; Michaela Kapp; E. Horn; Johannes Dietl; Ulrike Kämmerer
Tumorbiology of ovarian cancer remains unclear. However, it is known that ovarian tumors, especially carcinomas, show elevated expression of glucose membrane transporters for facilitated glucose uptake. It can be assumed that increased glucose uptake leads to higher glucose metabolism. The energy resources of fully malignant transformed carcinomas are mainly supplied by aerobic glycolysis, for which several pathways are known. A key role in aerobic glycolysis is described for the transketolase enzymes. Recently, a novel transketolase-like enzyme called transketolase-like 1 (TKTL1) has been described that links aerobic glycolysis to the synthesis of fatty acids via production of acetyl-CoA. In order to investigate the role of TKTL1 for the progression of ovarian carcinomas, we examined paraffin sections of normal ovarian tissues, ovarian borderline tumors, and mucinous or serous papillary ovarian adenocarcinomas with respect to their expression of TKTL1. We identified a significantly elevated expression of TKTL1 in serous papillary ovarian adenocarcinomas, which correlates with poor prognostic parameters in the examined study group. Therefore, it can be assumed that TKTL1 plays a crucial role in ovarian cancer metabolism and that its expression predicts poor prognosis. Further investigations should be performed in order to evaluate whether this new enzyme is important for ovarian cancer tumorbiology and to analyze the potential role of TKTL1 as new target for specific antitumoral therapy
Cancer Treatment Reviews | 2013
Susan Dent; Basak Oyan; A Hönig; Max Mano; Sacha J Howell
Targeting human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) during or in sequence with chemotherapy improves overall survival in metastatic and early HER2-overexpressing breast cancer. In this paper we systematically review neoadjuvant clinical trial data in HER2-positive breast cancer and discuss key unanswered clinical questions. All trials of HER2-targeted neoadjuvant therapy were identified through non-date-limited searches of PubMED® and Biosis® and congress abstract book searches from 2000-2011. Eligible trials were prospective, had at least 10 patients and a clear definition of pathological complete response (pCR) rate. A total of 50 trials fulfilled the eligibility criteria; 41 single-arm phase II studies were identified, 37 with trastuzumab and 4 with lapatinib, with significant variability in baseline tumour characteristics and pCR rates (range 12-66.7%). Of 9 randomised phase II/III trials, 4 assessed the addition of trastuzumab to chemotherapy and a further 5 randomised trials assessed different HER2-targeting approaches. Four of these studies assessed dual HER2-targeting approaches, which universally increased pCR at the expense of increased non-cardiac toxicity when lapatinib, but not pertuzumab, was added to trastuzumab. Significant advances have been made in HER2 targeting, resulting in a marked increase in the number of breast cancer patients experiencing tumour pCR. Mature data from randomised neoadjuvant and adjuvant studies are awaited for survival outcomes with combination targeted approaches. Unanswered questions centre on the individualisation of therapy and include; which, if any, chemotherapy backbone should be used, and which patients need dual HER2 blockade?
British Journal of Cancer | 2010
Jochen J. Frietsch; Thomas G. P. Grunewald; S Jasper; Ulrike Kämmerer; S Herterich; Michaela Kapp; A Hönig; Elke Butt
Background:LIM and SH3 protein 1 (LASP-1) is a nucleo-cytoplasmatic signalling protein involved in cell proliferation and migration and is upregulated in breast cancer in vitro studies have shown that LASP-1 might be regulated by prostate-derived ETS factor (PDEF), p53 and/or LASP1 gene amplification. This current study analysed the prognostic significance of LASP-1 on overall survival (OS) in 177 breast cancer patients and addressed the suggested mechanisms of LASP-1-regulation.Methods:Nucleo-cytoplasmatic LASP-1-positivity of breast carcinoma samples was correlated with long-term survival, clinicopathological parameters, Ki67-positivity and PDEF expression. Rate of LASP1 amplification was determined in micro-dissected primary breast cancer cells using quantitative RT–PCR. Cell-phase dependency of nuclear LASP-1-localisation was studied in synchronised cells. In addition, LASP-1, PDEF and p53 expression was compared in cell lines of different tumour entities to define principles for LASP-1-regulation.Results:We showed that LASP-1 overexpression is not due to LASP1 gene amplification. Moreover, no correlation between p53-mutations or PDEF-expression and LASP-1-status was observed. However, nuclear LASP-1-localisation in breast carcinomas is increased during proliferation with peak in G2/M-phase and correlated significantly with Ki67-positivity and poor OS.Conclusion:Our results provide evidence that nuclear LASP-1-positivity may serve as a negative prognostic indicator for long-term survival of breast cancer patients.
Cell Death and Disease | 2017
Joachim Diessner; Valentin Bruttel; Roland Stein; Evi Horn; Sebastian Häusler; Johannes Dietl; A Hönig; Jörg Wischhusen
The antibody trastuzumab (Herceptin) has substantially improved overall survival for patients with aggressive HER2-positive breast cancer. However, about 70% of all treated patients will experience relapse or disease progression. This may be related to an insufficient targeting of the CD44highCD24low breast cancer stem cell subset, which is not only highly resistant to chemotherapy and radiotherapy but also a poor target for trastuzumab due to low HER2 surface expression. Hence, we explored whether the new antibody-drug conjugate T-DM1, which consists of the potent chemotherapeutic DM1 coupled to trastuzumab, could improve the targeting of these tumor-initiating or metastasis-initiating cells. To this aim, primary HER2-overexpressing tumor cells as well as HER2-positive and HER2-negative breast cancer cell lines were treated with T-DM1, and effects on survival, colony formation, gene and protein expression as well as antibody internalization were assessed. This revealed that CD44highCD24lowHER2low stem cell-like breast cancer cells show high endocytic activity and are thus particularly sensitive towards the antibody-drug conjugate T-DM1. Consequently, preexisting CD44highCD24low cancer stem cells were depleted by concentrations of T-DM1 that did not affect the bulk of the tumor cells. Likewise, colony formation was efficiently suppressed. Moreover, when tumor cells were cocultured with natural killer cells, antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity was enhanced, and EMT-mediated induction of stem cell-like properties was prevented in differentiated tumor cells. Thus our study reveals an unanticipated targeting of stem cell-like breast cancer cells by T-DM1 that may contribute to the clinical efficacy of this recently approved antibody-drug conjugate.
BMC Cancer | 2006
A Hönig; Lorenz Rieger; Michaela Kapp; Mathias Krockenberger; Matthias Eck; Johannes Dietl; Ulrike Kämmerer
BackgroundTartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) is a metalloprotein enzyme that belongs to the acid phosphatases and is known to be expressed by osteoclasts. It has already been investigated as a marker of bone metastases in cancer patients. In this study, which examined the value of serum TRAP concentrations as a marker of bone disease in breast cancer patients, we observed high concentrations of TRAP even in patients without bone metastases. To elucidate this phenomenon, we examined the expression of TRAP in breast cancer cells and the cells of several other malignancies.MethodsTRAP concentrations in the serum of tumor patients were determined by ELISA. The expression of TRAP in breast, ovarian, and cervical cancer and malignant melanoma was analyzed by immunohistochemistry. RT-PCR and immunocytology were used to evaluate TRAP expression in cultured tumor cells.ResultsA marked increase in serum TRAP concentrations was observed in patients with breast and ovarian cancer, regardless of the presence or absence of bone disease. TRAP expression was found in breast and ovarian cancers and malignant melanoma, while cervical cancer showed only minimal expression of TRAP. Expression of TRAP was absent in benign tissue or was much less marked than in the corresponding malignant tissue. TRAP expression was also demonstrated in cultured primary cancer cells and in commercially available cell lines.ConclusionOverexpression of TRAP was detected in the cells of various different tumors. TRAP might be useful as a marker of progression of malignant disease. It could also be a potential target for future cancer therapies.
European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology | 2008
Jörg B. Engel; A Hönig; Tanja Schönhals; Claudia Weidler; Sebastian Häusler; Mathias Krockenberger; Thomas G. P. Grunewald; Yvonne Dombrowski; Lorenz Rieger; Johannes Dietl; Jörg Wischhusen
OBJECTIVE Perifosine is an orally active alkylphospholipid analog, which has shown anti-tumor activity in a variety of cancers by inhibition of AKT phosphorylation. The objective of the current study was to evaluate its efficacy in in vitro models of human endometrial cancer. STUDY DESIGN The effect of 10microM and 40microM perifosine on AKT phophorylation in human endometrial cancer cell lines Ishikawa and HEC 1A was determined by Western blotting. To screen for a putative anti-tumor effect, HEC 1A and Ishikawa cells were incubated with increasing concentrations of perifosine for 24h, 48h and 72h and the number of viable cells was determined by crystal violet staining. Also the effect of a combined treatment with cisplatin and perifosine was investigated in Ishikawa cells. Flow cytometric analysis of DNA content was used to determine the effect of perifosine on the cell cycle distribution of HEC 1A and Ishikawa cells and to assess potential toxic side effects of perifosine on peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). RESULTS AKT phosphorylation was dose-dependently inhibited by perifosine. Concomitantly, perifosine displayed anti-tumor activity in both cell lines at concentrations that showed no effect on peripheral blood lymphocytes. Growth inhibitory effects became more pronounced with increasing treatment time. While IC 50 values at 24h were >40microM, IC 50 values after 48h were approximately 7microM in Ishikawa and 25microM in HEC 1A cells. After 72h, the IC 50 was below 1.25microM for Ishikawa and about 6microM for HEC 1A cells. Perifosine cotreatment substantially increased cytotoxic effects of cisplatin in human Ishikawa endometrial cancer cells. Of note, the anti-tumor activity of perifosine was not confined to a specific phase of the cell cycle. CONCLUSIONS The small molecule AKT inhibitor perifosine showed substantial anti-tumor activity in human endometrial cancer cell lines. Since these effects were increased with cisplatin, perifosine seems to be a good candidate for treatment combinations with classical cytostatic compounds. Thus, perifosine should be further evaluated in clinical studies in endometrial cancer.