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Dive into the research topics where Anne Dudeck is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Dudeck.


Blood | 2010

The receptor tyrosine kinase c-Kit controls IL-33 receptor signaling in mast cells

Sebastian Drube; Sylvia Heink; Sabine Walter; Tobias Löhn; Mandy Grusser; Alexander Gerbaulet; Luciana Berod; Julia Schons; Anne Dudeck; Jenny Freitag; Stefan Grotha; Daniela Reich; Olga Rudeschko; Johannes Norgauer; Karin Hartmann; Axel Roers; Thomas Kamradt

Members of the Toll/interleukin-1 receptor (TIR) family are of importance for host defense and inflammation. Here we report that the TIR-family member interleukin-33R (IL-33R) cross-activates the receptor tyrosine kinase c-Kit in human and murine mast cells. The IL-33R-induced activation of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3), extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (Erk1/2), protein kinase B (PKB), and Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase 1 (JNK1) depends on c-Kit and is required to elicit optimal effector functions. Costimulation with the c-Kit ligand stem cell factor (SCF) is necessary for IL-33-induced cytokine production in primary mast cells. The structural basis for this cross-activation is the complex formation between c-Kit, IL-33R, and IL-1R accessory protein (IL-1RAcP). We found that c-Kit and IL-1RAcP interact constitutively and that IL-33R joins this complex upon ligand binding. Our findings support a model in which signals from seemingly disparate receptors are integrated for full cellular responses.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015

Neutrophils are required for both the sensitization and elicitation phase of contact hypersensitivity

Felix C. Weber; Tamás Németh; Janka Zsófia Csepregi; Anne Dudeck; Axel Roers; Béla Ózsvári; Eva Oswald; László G. Puskás; Thilo Jakob; Attila Mócsai; Stefan F. Martin

Weber et al. report that neutrophils are required for both the sensitization and elicitation phase of contact hypersensitivity. Their results identify a novel role for neutrophils in shaping the adaptive immune response.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2015

Mast Cell Promotion of T Cell–Driven Antigen-Induced Arthritis Despite Being Dispensable for Antibody-Induced Arthritis in Which T Cells Are Bypassed

Nadja Schubert; Jan Dudeck; Peng Liu; Anna Karutz; Stephan Speier; Marcus Maurer; Jan Tuckermann; Anne Dudeck

The function of mast cells (MCs) in autoimmune disorders has been a subject of controversy recently. MC‐deficient KitW/W‐v mice were found to be resistant to K/BxN serum–transfer arthritis, whereas KitW‐sh/W‐sh mice and a genetic model of MC deficiency independent of the Kit mutation were found to be fully susceptible. This debate might lead to the assumption that MCs are dispensable in autoimmunity in general. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine the relevance of MCs to arthritis using a genetic model of inducible MC deficiency without compromised Kit signaling.


Cell Reports | 2015

Mast-Cell-Derived TNF Amplifies CD8+ Dendritic Cell Functionality and CD8+ T Cell Priming

Jan Dudeck; Shanawaz Mohammed Ghouse; Christian H. K. Lehmann; Anja Hoppe; Nadja Schubert; Sergei A. Nedospasov; Diana Dudziak; Anne Dudeck

Mast cells are critical promoters of adaptive immunity in the contact hypersensitivity model, but the mechanism of allergen sensitization is poorly understood. Using Mcpt5-CreTNF(FL/FL) mice, we show here that the absence of TNF exclusively in mast cells impaired the expansion of CD8(+) T cells upon sensitization and the T-cell-driven adaptive immune response to elicitation. T cells primed in the absence of mast cell TNF exhibited a diminished efficiency to transfer sensitization to naive recipients. Specifically, mast cell TNF promotes CD8(+) dendritic cell (DC) maturation and migration to draining lymph nodes. The peripherally released mast cell TNF further critically boosts the CD8(+) T-cell-priming efficiency of CD8(+) DCs, thereby linking mast cell effects on T cells to DC modulation. Collectively, our findings identify the distinct potential of mast cell TNF to amplify CD8(+) DC functionality and CD8(+) T-cell-dominated adaptive immunity, which may be of great importance for immunotherapy and vaccination approaches.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Cre/loxP-Based Mouse Models of Mast Cell Deficiency and Mast Cell-Specific Gene Inactivation

Katrin Peschke; Anne Dudeck; Anja Rabenhorst; Karin Hartmann; Axel Roers

Over the past decades, research on in vivo functions of mast cells has largely relied on kit-mutant mouse strains. Recently, new mouse models for investigation of mast cell functions based on the Cre/loxP recombination system have been published and results in these new models challenged findings of previous studies in kit-mutant mice. Herein we describe procedures central to mast cell-specific gene inactivation and the generation of mast cell-deficient mice based on the mouse strain Mcpt5-Cre, which expresses Cre recombinase selectively in connective tissue mast cells.


Cell Reports | 2014

IκB Kinase 2 Is Essential for IgE-Induced Mast Cell De Novo Cytokine Production but Not for Degranulation

Katrin Peschke; Anke Weitzmann; Klaus Heger; Rayk Behrendt; Nadja Schubert; Julia Scholten; David Voehringer; Karin Hartmann; Anne Dudeck; Marc Schmidt-Supprian; Axel Roers

The immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated mast cell (MC) response is central to the pathogenesis of type I allergy and asthma. IκB kinase 2 (IKK2) was reported to couple IgE-induced signals to MC degranulation by phosphorylating the SNARE protein SNAP23. We investigated MC responses in mice with MC-specific inactivation of IKK2 or NF-κB essential modulator (NEMO), or animals with MC-specific expression of a mutant, constitutively active IKK2. We show that the IgE-induced late-phase cytokine response is reduced in mice lacking IKK2 or NEMO in MCs. However, anaphylactic in vivo responses of these animals are not different from those of control mice, and in vitro IKK2-deficient MCs readily phosphorylate SNAP23 and degranulate similarly to control cells in response to allergen or calcium ionophore. Constitutive overactivation of the NF-κB pathway has only slight effects on allergen-triggered MC responses. Thus, IKK2 is dispensable for MC degranulation, and the important question how IgE-induced signals trigger MC vesicle fusion remains open.


Journal of Immunology | 2016

MK2/3 Are Pivotal for IL-33–Induced and Mast Cell–Dependent Leukocyte Recruitment and the Resulting Skin Inflammation

Sebastian Drube; Florian Kraft; Jan Dudeck; Anna-Lena Müller; Franziska Weber; Christiane Göpfert; Isabel Meininger; Mandy Beyer; Ingo M. Irmler; Norman Häfner; Dagmar Schütz; Ralf Stumm; Tatiana Yakovleva; Matthias Gaestel; Anne Dudeck; Thomas Kamradt

The IL-1R family member IL-33R mediates Fcε-receptor-I (FcεRI)-independent activation of mast cells leading to NF-κB activation and consequently the production of cytokines. IL-33 also induces the activation of MAPKs, such as p38. We aimed to define the relevance of the p38-targets, the MAPK-activated protein kinases 2 and 3 (MK2 and MK3) in IL-33-induced signaling and the resulting mast cell effector functions in vitro and in vivo. We demonstrate that the IL-33-induced IL-6 and IL-13 production strongly depends on the MK2/3-mediated activation of ERK1/2 and PI3K signaling. Furthermore, in the presence of the stem cell factors, IL-33 did induce an MK2/3-, ERK1/2- and PI3K-dependent production of TNF-α. In vivo, the loss of MK2/3 in mast cells decreased the IL-33-induced leukocyte recruitment and the resulting skin inflammation. Therefore, the MK2/3-dependent signaling in mast cells is essential to mediate IL-33-induced inflammatory responses. Thus, MK2/3 are potential therapeutic targets for suppression of IL-33-induced inflammation skin diseases such as psoriasis.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2017

Mast cells are critical regulators of bone fracture-induced inflammation and osteoclast formation and activity.

Jochen Kroner; Anna Kovtun; Julia Kemmler; Joanna J. Messmann; Gudrun Strauss; Sebastian Seitz; Thorsten Schinke; Michael Amling; Johanna Kotrba; Julia Froebel; Jan Dudeck; Anne Dudeck; Anita Ignatius

Mast cells, important sensor and effector cells of the immune system, may influence bone metabolism as their number is increased in osteoporotic patients. They are also present during bone fracture healing with currently unknown functions. Using a novel c‐Kit‐independent mouse model of mast cell deficiency, we demonstrated that mast cells did not affect physiological bone turnover. However, they triggered local and systemic inflammation after fracture by inducing release of inflammatory mediators and the recruitment of innate immune cells. In later healing stages, mast cells accumulated and regulated osteoclast activity to remodel the bony fracture callus. Furthermore, they were essential to induce osteoclast formation after ovariectomy. Additional in vitro studies revealed that they promote osteoclastogenesis via granular mediators, mainly histamine. In conclusion, mast cells are redundant in physiologic bone turnover but exert crucial functions after challenging the system, implicating mast cells as a potential target for treating inflammatory bone disorders.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017

Mast cells acquire MHCII from dendritic cells during skin inflammation

Jan Dudeck; Anna Medyukhina; Julia Fröbel; Carl-Magnus Svensson; Johanna Kotrba; Michael Gerlach; Ann-Christine Gradtke; Bernd Schröder; Stephan Speier; Marc Thilo Figge; Anne Dudeck

Mast cells (MCs) and dendritic cells (DCs) are essential innate sentinels populating host-environment interfaces. Using longitudinal intravital multiphoton microscopy of DCGFP/MCRFP reporter mice, we herein provide in vivo evidence that migratory DCs execute targeted cell-to-cell interactions with stationary MCs before leaving the inflamed skin to draining lymph nodes. During initial stages of skin inflammation, DCs dynamically scan MCs, whereas at a later stage, long-lasting interactions predominate. These innate-to-innate synapse-like contacts ultimately culminate in DC-to-MC molecule transfers including major histocompatibility complex class II (MHCII) proteins enabling subsequent ex vivo priming of allogeneic T cells with a specific cytokine signature. The extent of MHCII transfer to MCs correlates with their T cell priming efficiency. Importantly, preventing the cross talk by preceding DC depletion decreases MC antigen presenting capacity and T cell–driven inflammation. Consequently, we identify an innate intercellular communication arming resident MCs with key DC functions that might contribute to the acute defense potential during critical periods of migration-based DC absence.


Experimental Dermatology | 2017

Membrane-bound stem cell factor is the major but not only driver of fibroblast-induced murine skin mast cell differentiation

Mandy Leist; Cathleen Sünder; Sebastian Drube; Carolin Zimmermann; Astrid Geldmacher; Martin Metz; Anne Dudeck; Marcus Maurer

The maintenance and modulation of cutaneous mast cell (MC) numbers is held to be important for skin immune responses to allergens and pathogens. The increase in MC numbers in the skin is achieved by proliferation and the differentiation of precursor to mature MCs. Fibroblast‐derived SCF is thought to be the major skin MC growth factor and it potently induces MC proliferation. The mechanisms of fibroblast‐induced skin MC differentiation, including the role of SCF, however, remain insufficiently characterized and understood. Using cocultures of immature murine MCs and fibroblasts, we found that the adhesion of immature MCs to fibroblasts via VCAM‐1 and α4β7 integrin is very important for subsequent differentiation, which is driven by fibroblast membrane‐bound SCF and additional fibroblast‐derived membrane‐bound signals. Thus, our results show that fibroblast‐induced MC differentiation is induced by direct cell–cell contact and involves both Kit‐dependent and Kit‐independent pathways. Our findings add to the understanding of how immature mast cells mature in murine skin and encourage further analyses of the underlying mechanisms, which may result in novel targets for the modulation of skin mast cell driven diseases.

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Axel Roers

Dresden University of Technology

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Jan Dudeck

Dresden University of Technology

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Nadja Schubert

Dresden University of Technology

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Katrin Peschke

Dresden University of Technology

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