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Dive into the research topics where Andrea U. Steinbicker is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea U. Steinbicker.


Blood | 2011

Perturbation of hepcidin expression by BMP type I receptor deletion induces iron overload in mice.

Andrea U. Steinbicker; Thomas B. Bartnikas; Lisa K. Lohmeyer; Patricio Leyton; Claire Mayeur; Sonya M. Kao; Alexandra E. Pappas; Randall T. Peterson; Donald B. Bloch; Paul B. Yu; Mark D. Fleming; Kenneth D. Bloch

Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling induces hepatic expression of the peptide hormone hepcidin. Hepcidin reduces serum iron levels by promoting degradation of the iron exporter ferroportin. A relative deficiency of hepcidin underlies the pathophysiology of many of the genetically distinct iron overload disorders, collectively termed hereditary hemochromatosis. Conversely, chronic inflammatory conditions and neoplastic diseases can induce high hepcidin levels, leading to impaired mobilization of iron stores and the anemia of chronic disease. Two BMP type I receptors, Alk2 (Acvr1) and Alk3 (Bmpr1a), are expressed in murine hepatocytes. We report that liver-specific deletion of either Alk2 or Alk3 causes iron overload in mice. The iron overload phenotype was more marked in Alk3- than in Alk2-deficient mice, and Alk3 deficiency was associated with a nearly complete ablation of basal BMP signaling and hepcidin expression. Both Alk2 and Alk3 were required for induction of hepcidin gene expression by BMP2 in cultured hepatocytes or by iron challenge in vivo. These observations demonstrate that one type I BMP receptor, Alk3, is critically responsible for basal hepcidin expression, whereas 2 type I BMP receptors, Alk2 and Alk3, are required for regulation of hepcidin gene expression in response to iron and BMP signaling.


Blood | 2011

Inhibition of bone morphogenetic protein signaling attenuates anemia associated with inflammation

Andrea U. Steinbicker; Chetana Sachidanandan; Ashley J. Vonner; Rushdia Z. Yusuf; Donna Y. Deng; Carol S Lai; Kristen M. Rauwerdink; Julia Winn; Borja Saez; Colleen Cook; Brian A. Szekely; Cindy N. Roy; Jasbir Seehra; Gregory D. Cuny; David T. Scadden; Randall T. Peterson; Kenneth D. Bloch; Paul B. Yu

Anemia of inflammation develops in settings of chronic inflammatory, infectious, or neoplastic disease. In this highly prevalent form of anemia, inflammatory cytokines, including IL-6, stimulate hepatic expression of hepcidin, which negatively regulates iron bioavailability by inactivating ferroportin. Hepcidin is transcriptionally regulated by IL-6 and bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling. We hypothesized that inhibiting BMP signaling can reduce hepcidin expression and ameliorate hypoferremia and anemia associated with inflammation. In human hepatoma cells, IL-6-induced hepcidin expression, an effect that was inhibited by treatment with a BMP type I receptor inhibitor, LDN-193189, or BMP ligand antagonists noggin and ALK3-Fc. In zebrafish, the induction of hepcidin expression by transgenic expression of IL-6 was also reduced by LDN-193189. In mice, treatment with IL-6 or turpentine increased hepcidin expression and reduced serum iron, effects that were inhibited by LDN-193189 or ALK3-Fc. Chronic turpentine treatment led to microcytic anemia, which was prevented by concurrent administration of LDN-193189 or attenuated when LDN-193189 was administered after anemia was established. Our studies support the concept that BMP and IL-6 act together to regulate iron homeostasis and suggest that inhibition of BMP signaling may be an effective strategy for the treatment of anemia of inflammation.


Anesthesiology | 2012

Pulmonary Hypertension in Lambs Transfused with Stored Blood is Prevented by Breathing Nitric Oxide

David M. Baron; Binglan Yu; Chong Lei; Aranya Bagchi; Arkadi Beloiartsev; Christopher P. Stowell; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Rajeev Malhotra; Kenneth D. Bloch; Warren M. Zapol

Background: During extended storage, erythrocytes undergo functional changes. These changes reduce the viability of erythrocytes leading to release of oxyhemoglobin, a potent scavenger of nitric oxide. We hypothesized that transfusion of ovine packed erythrocytes (PRBC) stored for prolonged periods would induce pulmonary vasoconstriction in lambs, and that reduced vascular nitric oxide concentrations would increase this vasoconstrictor effect. Methods: We developed a model of autologous stored blood transfusion in lambs (n = 36). Leukoreduced blood was stored for either 2 days (fresh PRBC) or 40 days (stored PRBC). Fresh or stored PRBC were transfused into donors instrumented for awake hemodynamic measurements. Hemodynamic effects of PRBC transfusion were also studied after infusion of NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl-ester (25 mg/kg) or during inhalation of nitric oxide (80 ppm). Results: Cell-free hemoglobin levels were higher in the supernatant of stored PRBC than in supernatant of fresh PRBC (Mean ± SD, 148 ± 20 vs. 41 ± 13 mg/dl, respectively, P < 0.001). Pulmonary artery pressure during transfusion of stored PRBC transiently increased from 13 ± 1 to 18 ± 1 mmHg (P < 0.001) and was associated with increased plasma hemoglobin concentrations. NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl-ester potentiated the increase in pulmonary arterial pressure induced by transfusing stored PRBC, whereas inhalation of nitric oxide prevented the vasoconstrictor response. Conclusions: Our results suggest that patients with reduced vascular nitric oxide levels because of endothelial dysfunction may be more susceptible to adverse effects of transfusing blood stored for prolonged periods. These patients might benefit from transfusion of fresh PRBC, when available, or inhaled nitric oxide supplementation to prevent the pulmonary hypertension associated with transfusion of stored PRBC.


Transfusion | 2012

Diabetes augments and inhaled nitric oxide prevents the adverse hemodynamic effects of transfusing syngeneic stored blood in mice

Binglan Yu; Chong Lei; David M. Baron; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Kenneth D. Bloch; Warren M. Zapol

BACKGROUND: Stored red blood cells (RBCs) undergo progressive deleterious functional, biochemical, and structural changes. The mechanisms responsible for the adverse effects of transfusing stored RBCs remain incompletely elucidated.


Anesthesiology | 2012

Transfusion of stored autologous blood does not alter reactive hyperemia index in healthy volunteers

Lorenzo Berra; Andrea Coppadoro; Binglan Yu; Chong Lei; Ester Spagnolli; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Kenneth D. Bloch; Tian Lin; Fatima Sammy; H. Shaw Warren; Bernadette O. Fernandez; Martin Feelisch; Walter H. Dzik; Christopher P. Stowell; Warren M. Zapol

Background: Transfusion of human blood stored for more than 2 weeks is associated with increased mortality and morbidity. During storage, packed erythrocytes progressively release hemoglobin, which avidly binds nitric oxide. We hypothesized that the nitric oxide mediated hyperemic response after ischemia would be reduced after transfusion of packed erythrocytes stored for 40 days. Methods and Results: We conducted a crossover randomized interventional study, enrolling 10 healthy adults. Nine volunteers completed the study. Each volunteer received one unit of 40-day and one of 3-day stored autologous leukoreduced packed erythrocytes, on different study days according to a randomization scheme. Blood withdrawal and reactive hyperemia index measurements were performed before and 10 min, 1 h, 2 h, and 4 h after transfusion. The reactive hyperemia index during the first 4 h after transfusion of 40-day compared with 3-day stored packed erythrocytes was unchanged. Plasma hemoglobin and bilirubin concentrations were higher after transfusion of 40-day than after 3-day stored packed erythrocytes (P = 0.02, [95% CI difference 10–114 mg/l] and 0.001, [95% CI difference 0.6–1.5 mg/dl], respectively). Plasma concentrations of potassium, lactate dehydrogenase, haptoglobin, and cytokines, as well as blood pressure, did not differ between the two transfusions and remained within the normal range. Plasma nitrite concentrations increased after transfusion of 40-day stored packed erythrocytes, but not after transfusion of 3-day stored packed erythrocytes (P = 0.01, [95% CI difference 0.446–0.66 &mgr;M]). Conclusions: Transfusion of autologous packed erythrocytes stored for 40 days is associated with increased hemolysis, an unchanged reactive hyperemia index, and increased concentrations of plasma nitrite.


Blood | 2014

The type I BMP receptor Alk3 is required for the induction of hepatic hepcidin gene expression by interleukin-6

Claire Mayeur; Lisa K. Lohmeyer; Patricio Leyton; Sonya M. Kao; Alexandra E. Pappas; Starsha A. Kolodziej; Ester Spagnolli; Binglan Yu; Rita L. Galdos; Paul B. Yu; Randall T. Peterson; Donald B. Bloch; Kenneth D. Bloch; Andrea U. Steinbicker

Increased IL-6 production induces, via STAT3 phosphorylation, hepatic transcription of the gene encoding the iron-regulatory hormone, hepcidin, leading to development of anemia of chronic disease (ACD). Inhibition of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling prevents the induction of hepcidin gene expression by IL-6 and ameliorates ACD. Using mice with hepatocyte-specific deficiency of Alk2 or Alk3, we sought to identify the BMP type I receptor that participates in IL-6-mediated induction of hepcidin gene expression. Mice were injected with adenovirus specifying IL-6 (Ad.IL-6) or control adenovirus. Seventy-two hours later, serum iron concentrations and hepatic levels of STAT3 phosphorylation and hepcidin messenger RNA were measured. Additional mice were injected with recombinant murine IL-6 (mIL-6) or vehicle, and hepatic hepcidin gene expression was measured 4 hours later. Deficiency of Alk2 or Alk3 did not alter the ability of Ad.IL-6 injection to induce hepatic STAT3 phosphorylation. Ad.IL-6 increased hepatic hepcidin messenger RNA levels and decreased serum iron concentrations in Alk2- but not Alk3-deficient mice. Similarly, administration of mIL-6 induced hepatic hepcidin gene expression in Alk2- but not Alk3-deficient mice. These results demonstrate that the ability of IL-6 to induce hepatic hepcidin gene expression and reduce serum iron concentrations is dependent on the BMP type I receptor Alk3.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Soluble guanylate cyclase-α1 is required for the cardioprotective effects of inhaled nitric oxide.

Yasuko Nagasaka; Emmanuel Buys; Ester Spagnolli; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Sarah Hayton; Kristen M. Rauwerdink; Peter Brouckaert; Warren M. Zapol; Kenneth D. Bloch

Reperfusion injury limits the benefits of revascularization in the treatment of myocardial infarction (MI). Breathing nitric oxide (NO) reduces cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury in animal models; however, the signaling pathways by which inhaled NO confers cardioprotection remain uncertain. The objective of this study was to learn whether inhaled NO reduces cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury by activating the cGMP-generating enzyme, soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), and to investigate whether bone marrow (BM)-derived cells participate in the sGC-mediated cardioprotective effects of inhaled NO. Wild-type (WT) mice and mice deficient in the sGC α(1)-subunit (sGCα(1)(-/-) mice) were subjected to cardiac ischemia for 1 h, followed by 24 h of reperfusion. During ischemia and for the first 10 min of reperfusion, mice were ventilated with oxygen or with oxygen supplemented with NO (80 parts per million). The ratio of MI size to area at risk (MI/AAR) did not differ in WT and sGCα(1)(-/-) mice that did not breathe NO. Breathing NO decreased MI/AAR in WT mice (41%, P = 0.002) but not in sGCα(1)(-/-) mice (7%, P = not significant). BM transplantation was performed to restore WT BM-derived cells to sGCα(1)(-/-) mice. Breathing NO decreased MI/AAR in sGCα(1)(-/-) mice carrying WT BM (39%, P = 0.031). In conclusion, these results demonstrate that a global deficiency of sGCα(1) does not alter the degree of cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury in mice. The cardioprotective effects of inhaled NO require the presence of sGCα(1). Moreover, our studies suggest that BM-derived cells are key mediators of the ability of NO to reduce cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2012

Decreased IL-10 production by EBV-transformed B cells from patients with VODI: implications for the pathogenesis of Crohn disease.

Donald B. Bloch; Rita Nobre; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Waleed Al-Herz; Luigi D. Notarangelo; Mike Recher

developing lymphoid tissue. Lymphoid hyperplasia is one of the characteristic findings of LGB in early infancy. The observation that CCL11 (eotaxin-1) was highly expressed in the guts of these very young neonates is consistent with mucosal eosinophilia. Further studies are needed to identify the cellular source of CCL11. One potential confounder in this work is the control tissues, which came from much older children. It is well known that the immunologic composition of the gut mucosa changes with age. However, because it is impossible to obtain normal neonatal mucosa, it is difficult to circumvent this problem. In summary, our preliminarymicroarray data do not support the concept that FPIP has an allergic cause, and more studies need to be done.


Nitric Oxide | 2011

Nitric Oxide Regulates Pulmonary Vascular Smooth Muscle Cell Expression of the Inducible cAMP Early Repressor Gene

Andrea U. Steinbicker; Heling Liu; Kim Jiramongkolchai; Rajeev Malhotra; Elizabeth Y. Choe; Cornelius J. Busch; Amanda R. Graveline; Sonya M. Kao; Yasuko Nagasaka; Fumito Ichinose; Emmanuel Buys; Peter Brouckaert; Warren M. Zapol; Kenneth D. Bloch

Nitric oxide (NO) regulates vascular smooth muscle cell (VSMC) structure and function, in part by activating soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) to synthesize cGMP. The objective of this study was to further characterize the signaling mechanisms by which NO regulates VSMC gene expression using transcription profiling. DNA microarrays were hybridized with RNA extracted from rat pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (RPaSMC) exposed to the NO donor compound, S-nitroso-glutathione (GSNO). Many of the genes, whose expression was induced by GSNO, contain a cAMP-response element (CRE), of which one encoded the inducible cAMP early repressor (ICER). sGC and cAMP-dependent protein kinase, but not cGMP-dependent protein kinase, were required for NO-mediated phosphorylation of CRE-binding protein (CREB) and induction of ICER gene expression. Expression of a dominant-negative CREB in RPaSMC prevented the NO-mediated induction of CRE-dependent gene transcription and ICER gene expression. Pre-treatment of RPaSMC with the intracellular calcium (Ca(2+)) chelator, BAPTA-AM, blocked the induction of ICER gene expression by GSNO. The store-operated Ca(2+) channel inhibitors, 2-ABP, and SKF-96365, reduced the GSNO-mediated increase in ICER mRNA levels, while 2-ABP did not inhibit GSNO-induced CREB phosphorylation. Our results suggest that induction of ICER gene expression by NO requires both CREB phosphorylation and Ca(2+) signaling. Transcription profiling of RPaSMC exposed to GSNO revealed important roles for sGC, PKA, CREB, and Ca(2+) in the regulation of gene expression by NO. The induction of ICER in GSNO-treated RPaSMC highlights a novel cross-talk mechanism between cGMP and cAMP signaling pathways.


Isbt Science Series | 2015

Safety and effectiveness of a Patient Blood Management Programme in surgical patients – the study design for a multicentre epidemiological non-inferiority trial by the German PBM network

Patrick Meybohm; D. P. Fischer; E. Herrmann; Christof Geisen; Markus M. Müller; Erhard Seifried; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Christian Weber; Kai Zacharowski

Patient blood management (PBM) concepts aim to identify patients with anemia and optimize their treatment including use of preoperative iron substitution, blood‐sparing techniques and adequate transfusion practice. PBM concepts thus have great potential to increase patient safety and clinical outcome. Nevertheless, up to now, structured PBM programmes have only been implemented in very few hospitals in Germany and safety data regarding clinical outcome parameters is rare.

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