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Dive into the research topics where Alexey Ushmorov is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexey Ushmorov.


Bone | 2009

TNFα promotes osteogenic differentiation of human mesenchymal stem cells by triggering the NF-κB signaling pathway

Katrin Hess; Alexey Ushmorov; Jörg Fiedler; Rolf E. Brenner; Thomas Wirth

Mesenchymal stem cells are multipotent cells able to differentiate into different mesenchymal lineages. Studies in the past had suggested that two of these mesenchymal differentiation directions, the chondrogenic and the myogenic differentiation, are negatively regulated by the transcription factor NF-kappaB. Although osteogenic differentiation has been extensively studied, the influence of NF-kappaB on this differentiation lineage was not subject of detailed analyses in the past. We have analyzed the consequences of TNF-alpha treatment and genetic manipulation of the NF-kappaB pathway for osteogenic differentiation of hMSCs. Treatment of hMSCs during differentiation with TNF-alpha activates NF-kappaB and this results in enhanced expression of osteogenetic proteins like bone morphogenetic protein2 (BMP-2) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP). In addition, enhanced matrix mineralization was observed. The direct contribution of the NF-kappaB pathway was confirmed in cells that express a constitutively active version of the NF-kappaB-inducing kinase IKK2 (CA-IKK2). The IKK2/NF-kappaB-induced BMP-2 up-regulation results in the enhancement of RUNX2 and Osterix expression, two critical regulators of the osteogenic differentiation program. Interestingly, a genetic block of the NF-kappaB pathway did not interfere with osteogenic differentiation. We conclude that TNFalpha mediated NF-kappaB activation, although not absolutely required for BMP-2 expression and matrix mineralization nevertheless supports osteogenic differentiation and matrix mineralization by increasing BMP-2 expression. Our results therefore suggest that NF-kappaB activation may function in lineage selection during differentiation of hMSCs by fostering osteogenic differentiation at the expense of other differentiation lineages.


Blood | 2012

FOXO1 is a tumor suppressor in classical Hodgkin lymphoma

Linka Xie; Alexey Ushmorov; Frank Leithäuser; Hanfeng Guan; Christian Steidl; Johanna Färbinger; Christin Pelzer; Marion J. Vogel; Harald J. Maier; Randy D. Gascoyne; Peter Möller; Thomas Wirth

The FOXO transcription factors control proliferation and apoptosis in different cell types. Their activity is regulated by posttranslational modifications, mainly by the PI3K-PKB pathway, which controls nuclear export and degradation. We show that FOXO1 is highly expressed in normal germinal center B cells as well as in non-Hodgkin lymphomas, including follicular lymphoma, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue non-Hodgkin lymphoma, B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia, and mantle cell lymphoma. In contrast, in 31 of 32 classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) cases, Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells were FOXO1 negative. Neoplastic cells of nodular lymphocyte-predominant Hodgkin lymphoma were negative in 14 of 20 cases. FOXO1 was down-regulated in cHL cell lines, whereas it was expressed in non-Hodgkin lymphoma cell lines at levels comparable with normal B cells. Ectopic expression of a constitutively active FOXO1 induced apoptosis in cHL cell lines and blocked proliferation, accompanied with cell-cycle arrest in the G(0)/G(1) phase. We found that, in cHL cell lines, FOXO1 is inactivated by multiple mechanisms, including constitutive activation of AKT/PKB and MAPK/ERK kinases and up-regulation of microRNAs miR-96, miR-182, and miR-183. These results suggest that FOXO1 repression contributes to cHL lymphomagenesis.


Blood | 2010

KLF4 is a tumor suppressor in B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma and in classic Hodgkin lymphoma

Hanfeng Guan; Linka Xie; Frank Leithäuser; Lucia Flossbach; Peter Möller; Thomas Wirth; Alexey Ushmorov

The transcription factor KLF4 may act both as an oncogene and a tumor suppressor in a tissue-depending manner. In T- and pre-B-cell lymphoma, KLF4 was found to act as tumor suppressor. We found the KLF4 promoter methylated in B-cell lymphoma cell lines and in primary cases of B-cell lymphomas, namely, follicular lymphoma, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, Burkitt lymphoma, and in classic Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) cases. Promoter hypermethylation was associated with silencing of KLF4 expression. Conditional overexpression of KLF4 in Burkitt lymphoma cell lines moderately retarded proliferation, via cell-cycle arrest in G(0)/G(1). In the cHL cell lines, KLF4 induced massive cell death that could partially be inhibited with Z-VAD.fmk. A quantitative reverse-transcribed polymerase chain reaction array revealed KLF4 target genes, including the proapoptotic gene BAK1. Using an shRNA-mediated knock-down approach, we found that BAK1 is largely responsible for KLF4-induced apoptosis. In addition, we found that KLF4 negatively regulates CXCL10, CD86, and MSC/ABF-1 genes. These genes are specifically up-regulated in HRS cells of cHL and known to be involved in establishing the cHL phenotype. We conclude that epigenetic silencing of KLF4 in B-cell lymphomas and particularly in cHL may favor lymphoma survival by loosening cell-cycle control and protecting from apoptosis.


Blood | 2014

FOXO1 repression contributes to block of plasma cell differentiation in classical Hodgkin Lymphoma

Marion J. Vogel; Linka Xie; Hanfeng Guan; Reuben Tooze; Thomas Maier; Ulrike Kostezka; Harald J. Maier; Karlheinz Holzmann; Fong Chun Chan; Christian Steidl; Jonathan Reichel; Clarissa D. Weitzer; Franziska Gehringer; Anita B. Kick; Ethel Cesarman; Mikhail Roshal; Randy D. Gascoyne; Peter Möller; Thomas Wirth; Alexey Ushmorov

The survival of classical Hodgkin lymphoma (cHL) cells depends on activation of NF-κB, JAK/STAT, and IRF4. Whereas these factors typically induce the master regulator of plasma cell (PC) differentiation PRDM1/BLIMP-1, levels of PRDM1 remain low in cHL. FOXO1, playing a critical role in normal B-cell development, acts as a tumor suppressor in cHL, but has never been associated with induction of PC differentiation. Here we show that FOXO1 directly upregulates the full-length isoform PRDM1α in cHL cell lines. We also observed a positive correlation between FOXO1 and PRDM1 expression levels in primary Hodgkin-Reed-Sternberg cells. Further, we show that PRDM1α acts as a tumor suppressor in cHL at least partially by blocking MYC. Here we provide a link between FOXO1 repression and PRDM1α downregulation in cHL and identify PRDM1α as a tumor suppressor in cHL. The data support a potential role for FOXO transcription factors in normal PC differentiation.


Oncogene | 2008

N-myc augments death and attenuates protective effects of Bcl-2 in trophically stressed neuroblastoma cells.

Alexey Ushmorov; M D Hogarty; X Liu; H Knauß; Klaus-Michael Debatin; Christian Beltinger

N-myc has proapoptotic functions, yet it acts as an oncogene in neuroblastoma. Thus, antiapoptotic mechanisms have to be operative in neuroblastoma cells that antagonize the proapoptotic effects of N-myc. We conditionally activated N-myc in SH-EP neuroblastoma cells subjected to the trophic stress of serum or nutrient deprivation while changing the expression of Bcl-2, survivin and FLIPL, antiapoptotic molecules often overexpressed in poor prognosis neuroblastomas. Bcl-2 protected SH-EP cells from death during nutritional deprivation by activating energetically advantageous oxidative phosphorylation. N-myc overrode the metabolic protection provided by Bcl-2-induced oxidative phosphorylation by reestablishing the glycolytic phenotype and attenuated the antiapoptotic effect of Bcl-2 during metabolic stress. Survivin partially antagonized the growth suppressive function of N-myc in SH-EP neuroblastoma cells during serum deprivation whereas FLIPL did not. These findings advance our understanding of the functions of N-myc in neuroblastoma cells.


The Journal of Pathology | 2013

Decitabine represses translocated MYC oncogene in Burkitt lymphoma

Hanfeng Guan; Linka Xie; Kay Klapproth; Clarissa D. Weitzer; Thomas Wirth; Alexey Ushmorov

Burkitt lymphoma (BL) is caused by translocation of the MYC gene to an immunoglobulin locus resulting in its constitutive expression depending on the activity of the immunoglobulin (Ig) enhancer elements. Treatment of BL cell lines with epigenetic modifiers is known to repress B‐cell‐specific genes and to up‐regulate B‐cell‐inappropriate genes including the transcription repressor ID2 expression. We found that the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor decitabine/5‐aza‐2‐deoxycytidine (5‐aza‐dC) represses the MYC oncogene on RNA and protein levels by inducing ID2. Down‐regulation of MYC was associated with repression of transcriptional activity of the Ig locus and with inhibition of proliferation. The induction of ID2 can be in part explained by activation of the transcription factor NF‐κB. We conclude that up‐regulation of ID2 contributes to anti‐tumour activity of 5‐aza‐dC via repression of Ig locus activity and consequently MYC expression. Copyright


The FASEB Journal | 2012

Expression of constitutively active FoxO3 in murine forebrain leads to a loss of neural progenitors

Uta Schmidt-Strassburger; Tobias G. Schips; Harald J. Maier; Katharina Kloiber; Francesca Mannella; Kerstin E. Braunstein; Karlheinz Holzmann; Alexey Ushmorov; Stefan Liebau; Tobias M. Boeckers; Thomas Wirth

Inactivation of FoxO proteins by phosphorylation is the result of a number of stimuli, including the insulin/IGF pathway. We were interested in the consequence of blunting this pathway by employing transgenic mice with tetracycline‐controllable conditional expression of a constitutively active allele of FOXO3 under the control of the forebrain‐specific CaMKIIα promoter. Although transgene‐expressing mice were viable, brain weight was reduced by 30% in adult animals. Brains showed an isocortex compression with normal cortical layering, and a size reduction in regions known to depend on adult neurogenesis, i.e., the olfactory bulbs and the dentate gyrus. On postnatal activation of the transgene, adult neurogenesis was also severely affected. Investigating the molecular basis of this phenotype, we observed enhanced apoptosis starting from embryonic day E10.5 and a subsequent loss of progenitors in the ventricular/subventricular zones, but not in the isocortex or the striatum of adult mice. The enhanced apoptosis was accompanied by increased expression of PIK3IP1, which we identified as a direct transcriptional target of FOXO3. Transfection of Pik3ip1 into differentiating neural progenitors resulted in a significant reduction of viable cells. We therefore conclude that neural progenitors are particularly vulnerable to FOXO3‐induced apoptosis, which is mediated by PIK3IP1, a negative PI3 kinase regulator.—Schmidt‐Strassburger, U., Schips, T. G., Maier, H. J., Kloiber, K., Mannella, F., Braunstein, K. E., Holzmann, K., Ushmorov, A., Liebau, S., Boeckers, T. M., Wirth, T. Expression of constitutively active FoxO3 in murine forebrain leads to a loss of neural progenitors. FASEB J. 26, 4990–5001 (2012). www.fasebj.org


Leukemia | 2008

ABF-1 is frequently silenced by promoter methylation in follicular lymphoma, diffuse large B-cell lymphoma and Burkitt's lymphoma.

Alexey Ushmorov; Frank Leithäuser; Olga Ritz; Thomas F. E. Barth; Peter Möller; Thomas Wirth

Activated B-cell factor 1 (ABF-1) is a member of the bHLH transcription factor family. Its expression was detected in lymph nodes, appendix and other tissues, but not in thymus and peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). It contains a transrepression domain and was shown to inhibit transactivation of the related E2A transcription factors.1 E2A proteins are necessary for B-cell survival and proliferation.2 They are highly expressed in many types of B-cell non-Hodgkins lymphomas (B-NHL), that is, follicular lymphoma (FL), diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and Burkitts lymphoma (BL).3, 4 In contrast, expression of the E2A antagonist ABF-1 is low or absent in these types of tumor. Interestingly, an inverse situation is observed in classical Hodgkins lymphoma (cHL) where the levels of E2A are relatively low and ABF-1 expression is high.3 Indeed, ABF-1 expression was found to be limited to lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCL),5 cHL3 and primary effusion lymphoma.6 We therefore hypothesized that stable downregulation ABF-1 expression in FL, DLBCL and BL might endow a selective advantage to these tumors. Along with genomic mutations robust and stable gene inactivation has been shown to be achieved by epigenetic gene silencing.7 We therefore determined whether this mechanism contributes to the regulation of ABF-1 expression in distinct types of B-NHLs.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2005

Growth inhibition of murine neuroblastoma cells by c-myc with cell cycle arrest in G2/M.

Alexey Ushmorov; Klaus-Michael Debatin; Christian Beltinger

c-myc and N-myc belong to the myc family of proteins that plays an important role in cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. The N-myc gene is amplified in aggressive neuroblastoma and c-myc is overexpressed in many lymphomas and cancers. However, c-myc has not been implied in tumorigenesis or progression of neuroblastoma. We therefore investigated the so far unknown effects of c-myc overexpression on the aggressiveness of neuroblastoma cells with single copy N-myc. c-myc overexpression in serum-deprived murine NXS2 neuroblastoma cells led to cell cycle progression and massive apoptosis, causing a net decrease of viable cells. In serum-replete medium c-myc caused NXS2 cells to arrest in G2/M. Furthermore, c-myc decreased clonogenic growth of neuroblastoma cells. Taken together, these data suggest that c-myc attenuates the malignant phenotype of NXS2 neuroblastoma cells. Thus, although c-myc increased NXS2 tumor mass in vivo, c-myc appears to have decreased malignant potency in neuroblastoma cells compared to N-myc. This may be one reason why c-myc does not play a role in neuroblastomagenesis.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2007

Enriching suicide gene bearing tumor cells for an increased bystander effect.

Unger Mm; Wahl J; Alexey Ushmorov; Buechele B; Simmet T; Klaus-Michael Debatin; Christian Beltinger

The success of cancer gene therapies requiring in vivo gene transfer is severely hampered by the low efficacy of gene transfer, which has been difficult to improve. We therefore established a novel strategy to increase the share of transduced cells post gene transfer. We hypothesized that in vivo selection of tumor cells transduced with a suicide gene effectively enriches these cells within a tumor, thus allowing for an increased bystander effect after the prodrug is given, leading to enhanced eradication of tumor cells. We reasoned that in vivo enrichment should be achieved by exploiting the metabolism of the suicide gene product. For this ‘enrichment–eradication’ strategy we chose a fusion gene of cytosine deaminase and uracil phosphoribosyl transferase. Positive selection (enrichment) was to be achieved by concurrently giving N-(phosphonacetyl)-L-aspartate, an inhibitor of pyrimidine de novo synthesis, which leads to pyrimidine depletion-mediated death of non-transduced cells, and cytosine, to rescue fusion gene expressing cells via the pyrimidine salvage pathway. Negative selection (eradication) was to be induced by giving the prodrug 5-fluorocytosine. Indeed, murine NXS2 neuroblastoma cells transduced with the fusion gene were effectively enriched in vitro, leading to a near-complete bystander effect. In vivo enrichment–eradication of NXS2 cells led to decreased tumor growth. This proof-of-principle study shows that enrichment–eradication may compensate the effects of low in vivo gene transfer efficacy, a major obstacle in cancer gene therapy.

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Thomas Wirth

Beckman Research Institute

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Hanfeng Guan

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Linka Xie

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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