Anke Geick
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anke Geick.
Nature | 2004
Jürgen Soutschek; Akin Akinc; Birgit Bramlage; Klaus Charisse; Rainer Constien; Mary Donoghue; Sayda M. Elbashir; Anke Geick; Philipp Hadwiger; Jens Harborth; Matthias John; Venkitasamy Kesavan; Gary Lavine; Rajendra K. Pandey; Timothy Racie; Kallanthottathil G. Rajeev; Ingo Röhl; Ivanka Toudjarska; Gang Wang; Silvio Wuschko; David Bumcrot; Victor Koteliansky; Stefan Limmer; Muthiah Manoharan; Hans-Peter Vornlocher
RNA interference (RNAi) holds considerable promise as a therapeutic approach to silence disease-causing genes, particularly those that encode so-called ‘non-druggable’ targets that are not amenable to conventional therapeutics such as small molecules, proteins, or monoclonal antibodies. The main obstacle to achieving in vivo gene silencing by RNAi technologies is delivery. Here we show that chemically modified short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) can silence an endogenous gene encoding apolipoprotein B (apoB) after intravenous injection in mice. Administration of chemically modified siRNAs resulted in silencing of the apoB messenger RNA in liver and jejunum, decreased plasma levels of apoB protein, and reduced total cholesterol. We also show that these siRNAs can silence human apoB in a transgenic mouse model. In our in vivo study, the mechanism of action for the siRNAs was proven to occur through RNAi-mediated mRNA degradation, and we determined that cleavage of the apoB mRNA occurred specifically at the predicted site. These findings demonstrate the therapeutic potential of siRNAs for the treatment of disease.
Oligonucleotides | 2003
Volker Wacheck; Doris Losert; Patrick Günsberg; Hans-Peter Vornlocher; Philipp Hadwiger; Anke Geick; Hubert Pehamberger; Markus Müller; Burkhard Jansen
Malignant melanoma is a prime example of a treatment-resistant tumor with poor prognosis. Even with innovative treatment regimens, response rates remain low, and the duration of responses is short. More than 90% of all melanomas express the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2, shown to contribute to a chemoresistant phenotype in melanoma. We previously demonstrated that antisense-mediated inhibition of Bcl-2 sensitizes malignant melanoma to apoptosis-inducing treatment modalities. In the present study, we evaluated synthetic small interfering RNA (siRNA) compounds targeting Bcl-2 as a novel approach to downregulate Bcl-2 expression in melanoma cells. siRNA treatment led up to a 19-fold reduction of bcl-2 mRNA levels and only barely detectable Bcl-2 protein expression at low nanomolar concentrations. Silencing of Bcl-2 in melanoma cells by specific siRNA led to a moderate increase in apoptotic cell death and inhibition of cell growth. However, if siRNA compounds targeting Bcl-2 were combined with the apoptosis-inducing chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin, a massive increase in apoptotic cell death compared with controls was observed. Notably, the combination of Bcl2 siRNA and low-dose cisplatin resulted in a supra-additive effect, with nearly complete suppression of cell growth, whereas cell growth in cisplatin-only-treated cells was only moderately affected (96% vs. 25%, p < 0.001). These findings underline a key role for Bcl-2 in conferring chemoresistance to melanoma and highlight Bcl-2 siRNA strategies as novel and highly effective tools, with the potential for future targeted therapy of malignant melanoma.
Anti-Cancer Drugs | 2007
Doris Losert; Barbara Pratscher; Jürgen Soutschek; Anke Geick; Hans-Peter Vornlocher; Markus Müller; Volker Wacheck
The antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 contributes to a more chemoresistant phenotype of nonsmall cell lung cancer and therefore serves as an important target for novel anticancer strategies. Interestingly, docetaxel as a standard of care for treatment of nonsmall cell lung cancer has been shown to inactivate the Bcl-2 function by phosphorylation. We investigated the Bcl-2 expression status of nonsmall cell lung cancer cells in response to cisplatin or docetaxel and its effect on sensitizing nonsmall cell lung cancer cells by Bcl-2 downregulation employing a small interfering RNA approach. Bcl-2 expression was assessed by Western blotting and RT-PCR. Cell proliferation and apoptosis of nonsmall cell lung cancer cells were measured by an MTS-based assay and Annexin V/7-Aminoactinomycin, respectively. Combination treatment of Bcl-2 small interfering RNA with cisplatin resulted in a synergistic activity. By contrast, Bcl-2 downregulation did not sensitize nonsmall cell lung cancer cells to docetaxel. Of note, docetaxel treatment resulted in Bcl-2 phosphorylation of nonsmall cell lung cancer cells, whereas cisplatin increased the Bcl-2 overall expression and abrogated Bcl-2 phosphorylation. On the basis of our findings, a Bcl-2 silencing approach appears to be a suitable strategy for sensitizing nonsmall cell lung cancer to cisplatin, but not to docetaxel.
Current Protocols in Molecular Biology | 2003
Matthias John; Anke Geick; Philipp Hadwiger; Hans-Peter Vornlocher; Olaf Heidenreich
This unit provides information how to use short interfering RNA (siRNA) for sequence specific gene silencing in mammalian cells. Several ways for siRNA generation and optimisation, as well as recommendations for cell transfection are presented.
Archive | 2007
David Bumcrot; Pamela Tan; Hans-Peter Vornlocher; Anke Geick
Archive | 2002
Roland Kreutzer; Stefan Limmer; Hans-Peter Vornlocher; Philipp Hadwiger; Anke Geick; Matthias Ocker; Christoph Herold; Detlef Schuppan
Archive | 2006
Dinah Wen-Yee Sah; Maria Frank-Kamenetsky; Anke Geick; Philipp Hadwiger; Ingo Roehl; Pamela Tan; Hans-Peter Vornlocher
Archive | 2002
Matthias Ocker; Christoph Herold; Anke Geick; Detlef Schuppan; Hans-Peter Vornlocher; Roland Kreutzer; Stefan Limmer
Archive | 2014
Rainer Constien; Anke Geick; Philipp Hadwiger; Torsten Haneke; Ludger Markus Ickenstein; Carla Alexandra Hernandez Prata; Andrea Schuster; Timo Weide
Archive | 2006
Antonin de Fougerolles; Tatiana Novobrantseva; Pamela Tan; Anke Geick; Rachel Meyers