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Dive into the research topics where Angela Kuhla is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela Kuhla.


Platelets | 2014

Effect of the hydrogen sulfide donor GYY4137 on platelet activation and microvascular thrombus formation in mice.

Eberhard Grambow; Fabian Mueller-Graf; Evgenya Delyagina; Marcus Frank; Angela Kuhla; Brigitte Vollmar

Abstract This study evaluates the effect of the H2S donor GYY4137 (GYY) on adhesion molecule expression, protein S-sulfhydration and morphology of platelets in vitro and on kinetics of microvascular thrombus formation in vivo. Using flowcytometry, untreated resting, TRAP-activated, or TRAP-activated and GYY-exposed human platelets were studied for expression of P-selectin, GPIb and GPIIb/IIIa as well as for fibrinogen binding. By means of electron microscopy, platelet morphology and intracellular granule numbers were assessed. Platelet shape change was studied using immunohistochemistry for P-selectin, NSF and F-actin by SR-SIM. Biotin switch assay served for the analysis of platelet protein S-sulfhydration by GYY. Using the FeCl3 and the light/dye model in dorsal skinfold chamber-equipped mice, the effect of GYY and its vehicle DMSO was studied on venular thrombus formation and tail-vein bleeding time. Soluble (s)P-selectin plasma concentrations were measured in GYY- or DMSO-treated animals. Exposure to GYY increased the S-sulfhydration of platelet proteins. GYY reduced dose-dependently the TRAP-induced adhesion molecule expression and attenuated the morphological signs of TRAP-associated platelet activation. In mice, GYY caused a significant prolongation of venular thrombus formation and tail-vein bleeding time. Application of an anti-P-selectin antibody in DMSO-exposed animals prolonged thrombosis formation comparably as GYY did. GYY reversed the TRAP-induced distribution of P-selectin at the plasma membrane of platelets. This indicates reduced exocytosis and shedding of P-selectin, which is supported by significantly lower sP-selectin concentrations in GYY- vs. DMSO-treated mice. H2S acts anti-thrombotic and seems to regulate thrombogenesis by interference with platelet activation and adhesion molecule-mediated aggregation.


Apoptosis | 2008

Hepatocellular apoptosis is mediated by TNFα-dependent Fas/FasLigand cytotoxicity in a murine model of acute liver failure

Angela Kuhla; Christian Eipel; Nikolai Siebert; Kerstin Abshagen; Michael D. Menger; Brigitte Vollmar

There is increasing evidence that the active contribution of hepatocytes to liver disease is strongly dependent on local cytokine environment. It has been shown in vitro that TNFα can enhance hepatocyte FasLigand (FasL)-mediated cytotoxicity. Here, we demonstrate that TNFα-induced apoptosis was associated with Fas and FasL upregulation and that a FasL-neutralizing antibody prevented TNFα-induced apoptosis. We further examined in vivo the relevance of the Fas/FasL pathway to hepatocellular apoptosis in a TNFα-driven model of acute liver failure. Livers of galactosamine/lipopolysaccharide (Gal/LPS)-exposed Fas wild-type mice highly expressed both Fas and FasL and revealed marked hepatocellular apoptosis that was almost completely blocked by soluble TNFα-receptor; this was also almost absent in Gal/LPS-exposed Fas lymphoproliferation mutant mice. Our data provide evidence for a direct link between TNFα and Fas/FasL in mediating hepatocyte apoptosis. Fratricidal death by Fas–FasL interactions of neighbouring hepatocytes may actively contribute to acute liver failure.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Lifelong Caloric Restriction Increases Working Memory in Mice

Angela Kuhla; Sophie Lange; Carsten Holzmann; Fabian Maass; Jana Petersen; Brigitte Vollmar; Andreas Wree

Caloric restriction (CR) is argued to positively affect general health, longevity and the normally occurring age-related reduction of cognition. This issue is well examined, but most studies investigated the effect of short-term periods of CR. Herein, 4 weeks old female mice were fed caloric restricted for 4, 20 and especially for 74 weeks. CR mice received 60% of food eaten by their ad libitum (AL) fed littermates, and all age-matched groups were behaviorally analyzed. The motor coordination, which was tested by rotarod/accelerod, decreased age-related, but was not influenced by the different periods of CR. In contrast, the age-related impairment of spontaneous locomotor activity and anxiety, both being evaluated by open field and by elevated plus maze test, was found aggravated by a lifelong CR. Measurement of cognitive performance with morris water maze showed that the working memory decreased age-related in AL mice, while a lifelong CR caused a better cognitive performance and resulted in a significantly better spatial memory upon 74 weeks CR feeding. However, a late-onset CR feeding in 66 weeks old mice did not ameliorate the working memory. Therefore, a lifelong CR seems to be necessary to improve working memory.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2009

Role of the perforin/granzyme cell death pathway in d-Gal/LPS-induced inflammatory liver injury

Angela Kuhla; Christian Eipel; Kerstin Abshagen; Nikolai Siebert; Michael D. Menger; Brigitte Vollmar

Cytotoxic T lymphocytes and their granule components, such as perforin and granzyme, play an important role in the defense of hepatic infections caused by different pathogens. Moreover, it has been shown in vitro that hepatocytes can initiate cell death via a perforin-dependent mechanism. Although it is well known that hepatocellular apoptosis in D-galactosamine/lipopolysaccharide (D-Gal/LPS)-associated liver failure is mediated by TNF-alpha-dependent Fas/FasL cytotoxicity, there is no information on the role of perforin-mediated mechanisms in vivo. Therefore, we studied whether the cytolytic perforin/granzyme pathway contributes to the D-Gal/LPS-associated hepatotoxicity. Perforin knockout (Pko) mice showed significantly higher hepatic TNF-alpha and IL-6 mRNA expression as well as plasma TNF-alpha and IL-6 concentrations within the first hour upon D-Gal/LPS challenge compared with perforin wild-type (Pwt) mice. At 6 h upon D-Gal/LPS challenge, Pko mice further presented with higher transaminase release and onconecrotic tissue damage, whereas hepatocellular apoptosis and caspase-3 cleavage remained unaffected by the perforin deficiency. Pretreatment with a recombinant human TNF-alpha receptor fusion protein attenuated necrotic and apoptotic tissue damage and reduced plasma transaminase activities as well as cytokine release, thereby preventing acute liver failure in Pko mice as effectively as in Pwt mice. These data do not only confirm the significance of TNF-alpha as distal mediator of hepatic injury in this model but simultaneously reveal a contribution of a perforin-dependent immunoregulation, limiting the D-Gal/LPS-induced overwhelming cytokine release and onconecrotic tissue injury.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2015

Advanced glycation end products are mitogenic signals and trigger cell cycle reentry of neurons in Alzheimer's disease brain

Angela Kuhla; Sophie C. Ludwig; Björn Kuhla; Gerald Münch; Brigitte Vollmar

Neurons that reenter the cell cycle die rather than divide, a phenomenon that is associated with neurodegeneration in Alzheimers disease (AD). Reexpression of cell-cycle related genes in differentiated neurons in AD might be rooted in aberrant mitogenic signaling. Because microglia and astroglia proliferate in the vicinity of amyloid plaques, it is likely that plaque components or factors secreted from plaque-activated glia induce neuronal mitogenic signaling. Advanced glycation end products (AGEs), protein-bound oxidation products of sugar, might be one of those mitogenic compounds. Cyclin D1 positive neurons are colocalized with AGEs or directly surrounded by extracellular AGE deposits in AD brain. However, a direct proof of DNA replication in these cells has been missing. Here, we report by using fluorescent in situ hybridization that consistent with the expression of cell cycle proteins, hyperploid neuronal cells are in colocalization with AGE staining in AD brains but not in nondemented controls. To complement human data, we used apolipoprotein E-deficient mice as model of neurodegeneration and showed that increased oxidative stress caused an intensified neuronal deposition of AGEs, being accompanied by an activation of the MAPK cascade via RAGE. This cascade, in turn, induced the expression of cyclin D1 and DNA replication. In addition, reduction of oxidative stress by application of α-lipoic acid decreased AGE accumulations, and this decrease was accompanied by a reduction in cell cycle reentry and a more euploid neuronal genome.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2014

Lifelong Caloric Restriction Reprograms Hepatic Fat Metabolism in Mice

Angela Kuhla; Steffi Hahn; Antje Butschkau; Sophie Lange; Andreas Wree; Brigitte Vollmar

Calorie lowering slows the aging process and extends life span in diverse species by so far unknown mechanisms. The inverse linear relationship between calorie intake and life span suggests that regulators of energy metabolism are of importance in aging. The present study shows that lifelong caloric restriction in mice induces a metabolic adaptation with reduced lipogenesis and enhanced lipolysis and ketogenesis. This process, that is, the reprogramming of hepatic fat metabolism, is associated with a marked rise of fibroblastic growth factor 21 as a putative starvation master regulator. Due to the life span-extending properties of fibroblastic growth factor 21, the rise in fibroblastic growth factor 21 might contribute to the markedly better health status found in mice upon lifelong caloric restriction feeding. In addition, adropin, known as a peptide that controls lipid homeostasis, is significantly upregulated, underlining the diminution of lipogenesis that was further substantiated by decreased expression of liver-X-receptor α and its target genes sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1c, fatty acid synthase, and member 1 of human transporter subfamily ABCA upon lifelong caloric restriction feeding.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2011

Aging Is Associated With a Shift of Fatty Metabolism Toward Lipogenesis

Angela Kuhla; Tina Blei; Robert Jaster; Brigitte Vollmar

The incidence of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease is steadily increasing among the elderly population. Lipid metabolism is transcriptionally controlled by the nuclear receptors retinoid acid receptor alpha, liver-X-receptor alpha, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha and their target genes ABCA1, sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1c, and fatty acid synthase. Using senescence-accelerated prone mice (SAMP8), we addressed the question as to whether age-related increase of oxidative stress affects nuclear receptor gene expression. In contrast to SAMR1 control mice, young SAMP8 mice exhibit hepatic steatosis with increased hepatic cholesterol content, plasma triglyceride, and aspartate aminotransferase levels. This is accompanied by an increase of liver-X-receptor alpha and retinoid acid receptor alpha expression, whereas peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha expression is found diminished. SAMP8 mice further reveal a lower expression of ABCA1 as well as of sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1c and higher expression of fatty acid synthase. The dysbalance between the nuclear receptors and their target genes most probably mediates hepatic steatosis and underlines the pathological relevance of nuclear receptor shift toward lipogenesis in fat metabolism of the elderly patient.


British Journal of Surgery | 2013

RAGE blockade and hepatic microcirculation in experimental endotoxaemic liver failure.

Angela Kuhla; J. Norden; Kerstin Abshagen; Michael D. Menger; Brigitte Vollmar

Activation of the receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGE) causes sustained activation of multiple inflammatory pathways. Therefore, RAGE has potential as a new therapeutic target in sepsis. The aim of this study was to analyse whether RAGE blockade in vivo prevents microcirculatory dysfunction and subsequent tissue injury in endotoxaemic liver failure.


Laboratory Investigation | 2010

Oxidative stress-associated rise of hepatic protein glycation increases inflammatory liver injury in uncoupling protein-2 deficient mice

Angela Kuhla; Christina Hettwer; Michael D. Menger; Brigitte Vollmar

Mitochondrial dysfunction seems to be intrinsically involved in the pathogenesis of multiple organ failure because of enhanced production of reactive oxygen species and induction of oxidative damage. Chronic oxidative stress in turn causes an accumulation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs). To investigate whether mitochondrial dysfunction-associated oxidative stress leads to increased formation and accumulation of AGE, we studied hepatic glycation in uncoupling protein-2 (UCP2−/−) knockout mice. Using the galactosamine/lipopolysaccharide (G/L)-induced liver injury model, we further tested the hypothesis that a mitochondrial dysfunction-associated increase of hepatic glycation is causative for increased liver injury. Under baseline conditions, UCP2−/− mice showed higher malondialdehyde levels and reduced glutathione/glutathione disulfide ratios as well as significantly higher hepatic levels of AGE and hepatic expression of receptor for AGE (RAGE) when compared with UCP2+/+ mice, indicative for increased oxidative stress and hepatic glycation. Further, livers of G/L-challenged UCP2−/− mice revealed significantly more pronounced tissue injury and were found to express higher levels of AGE and RAGE compared with wild-type mice. Functional blockade of RAGE by application of recombinant RAGE significantly diminished liver damage particularly in UCP2−/− mice. This in turn increased survival from 30% in UCP2+/+ mice to 50% in UCP2−/− mice. In summary, we show for the first time that mitochondrial dysfunction-associated oxidative stress enhances hepatic protein glycation, which aggravates inflammation-induced liver injury. Targeting the AGE/RAGE interaction by the blockade of RAGE might be of therapeutic value for the oxidative stress-exposed liver.


Experimental Gerontology | 2011

Role of age and uncoupling protein-2 in oxidative stress, RAGE/AGE interaction and inflammatory liver injury

Angela Kuhla; Christina Trieglaff; Brigitte Vollmar

The objective of this study is to clarify whether age-related oxidative stress enhances hepatic vulnerability via increased interaction of advanced glycation endproducts (AGE) with their receptor RAGE. To further address the role of uncoupling of mitochondrial respiration, mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 wild-type (UCP2+/+) and knock out (UCP2-/-) mice were used and studied at an age of 8 (young), 38 (adult) and 76 weeks (senescent). First, we could show that UCP2 protein expression increased with age in UCP2+/+ mice. Second, in both mouse strains oxidative stress, as measured by malondialdehyde concentrations and the ratio of glutathione to glutathione disulfide, as well as hepatic RAGE expression and highly modified AGE accumulation significantly increased with age. This, however, was far more pronounced in UCP2-/- mice, in particular at the young age of 8 wk. In addition, the hepatic activity of the AGE precursor detoxifying enzyme glyoxalase-I was significantly decreased in 8 wk old UCP2-/- animals and concomitantly caused 2-fold higher levels of methylglyoxal-modified AGE in these animals. We further showed that the numbers of hepatic cells expressing sRAGE which acts as a decoy for RAGE ligands decreased with age and were markedly lower in the UCP2-/- than the UCP2+/+ mice. As a consequence, young 8 wk old UCP2-/- mice benefited from treatment with recombinant mouse RAGE to block the RAGE/AGE interaction, when challenged with galactosamine/lipopolysaccharide for the induction of acute liver injury. They showed less pronounced tissue damage and slightly lower mortality rate, while older UCP2+/+ and UCP2-/- mice revealed comparably high mortality rates and extent of liver injury, irrespective of their treatment with rRAGE. Taken together, the present study underlines the role of UCP2 in the age-related increase of oxidative stress and the oxidative stress-related RAGE/AGE interaction. In young animals, blockade of the RAGE/AGE interaction is of benefit, while in older animals, this protective effect is lost, supposedly due to the fact that with age other factors than enhanced hepatic glycation products predominantly determine liver injury and injury-related mortality rate.

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