Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Arno Doelemeyer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Arno Doelemeyer.


Cell Reports | 2015

Notch2 Is Required for Inflammatory Cytokine-Driven Goblet Cell Metaplasia in the Lung

Henry Danahay; Angelica D. Pessotti; Julie Coote; Brooke E. Montgomery; Donghui Xia; Aaron Wilson; Haidi Yang; Zhao Wang; Luke Bevan; Chris Thomas; Stephanie Petit; Anne Serdakowski London; Peter LeMotte; Arno Doelemeyer; Germán L. Vélez-Reyes; Paula Bernasconi; Christy Fryer; Matthew J. Edwards; Paola Capodieci; Amy Chen; Marc Hild; Aron B. Jaffe

The balance and distribution of epithelial cell types is required to maintain tissue homeostasis. A hallmark of airway diseases is epithelial remodeling, leading to increased goblet cell numbers and an overproduction of mucus. In the conducting airway, basal cells act as progenitors for both secretory and ciliated cells. To identify mechanisms regulating basal cell fate, we developed a screenable 3D culture system of airway epithelial morphogenesis. We performed a high-throughput screen using a collection of secreted proteins and identified inflammatory cytokines that specifically biased basal cell differentiation toward a goblet cell fate, culminating in enhanced mucus production. We also demonstrate a specific requirement for Notch2 in cytokine-induced goblet cell metaplasia in vitro and in vivo. We conclude that inhibition of Notch2 prevents goblet cell metaplasia induced by a broad range of stimuli and propose Notch2 neutralization as a therapeutic strategy for preventing goblet cell metaplasia in airway diseases.


Science Signaling | 2014

Memo Is a Copper-Dependent Redox Protein with an Essential Role in Migration and Metastasis

Gwen MacDonald; Ivan Nalvarte; Tatiana Smirnova; Manuela Vecchi; Nicola Aceto; Arno Doelemeyer; Anna Frei; Susanne Lienhard; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Daniel Hess; Jan Seebacher; Jeremy J. Keusch; Heinz Gut; Danièle Salaun; Giovanni Mazzarol; Davide Disalvatore; Mohamed Bentires-Alj; Pier Paolo Di Fiore; Ali Badache; Nancy E. Hynes

Copper chelators could help to reduce metastasis from breast tumors. Copper for Breast Cancer Metastasis Many patients with breast cancer die from metastases, the spread of cancer cells from the primary tumor to other sites. Activation of certain proteins by oxidation, a chemical modification involving reactive oxygen species, promotes the movement of cells from one location to another. MacDonald et al. discovered that the enzyme Memo bound copper and enhanced the oxidation of proteins involved in cell movement. Mice with tumors formed from breast cancer cells lacking Memo had fewer lung metastases. High Memo abundance predicted metastasis in breast cancer patients, and copper chelation therapy, which is in clinical trials for breast cancer treatment, may inhibit this metastatic process. Memo is an evolutionarily conserved protein with a critical role in cell motility. We found that Memo was required for migration and invasion of breast cancer cells in vitro and spontaneous lung metastasis from breast cancer cell xenografts in vivo. Biochemical assays revealed that Memo is a copper-dependent redox enzyme that promoted a more oxidized intracellular milieu and stimulated the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cellular structures involved in migration. Memo was also required for the sustained production of the ROS O2− by NADPH (reduced form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate) oxidase 1 (NOX1) in breast cancer cells. Memo abundance was increased in >40% of the primary breast tumors tested, was correlated with clinical parameters of aggressive disease, and was an independent prognostic factor of early distant metastasis.


JCI insight | 2017

Retinoic-acid-orphan-receptor-C inhibition suppresses Th17 cells and induces thymic aberrations

Christine Guntermann; Alessandro Piaia; Marie-Laure Hamel; Diethilde Theil; Tina Rubic-Schneider; Alberto del Rio-Espinola; Linda Dong; Andreas Billich; Klemens Kaupmann; Janet Dawson; Klemens Hoegenauer; David Orain; Samuel Hintermann; Rowan Stringer; Dhavalkumar D. Patel; Arno Doelemeyer; Mark Deurinck; Jens Schümann

Retinoic-acid-orphan-receptor-C (RORC) is a master regulator of Th17 cells, which are pathogenic in several autoimmune diseases. Genetic Rorc deficiency in mice, while preventing autoimmunity, causes early lethality due to metastatic thymic T cell lymphomas. We sought to determine whether pharmacological RORC inhibition could be an effective and safe therapy for autoimmune diseases by evaluating its effects on Th17 cell functions and intrathymic T cell development. RORC inhibitors effectively inhibited Th17 differentiation and IL-17A production, and delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions. In vitro, RORC inhibitors induced apoptosis, as well as Bcl2l1 and BCL2L1 mRNA downregulation, in mouse and nonhuman primate thymocytes, respectively. Chronic, 13-week RORC inhibitor treatment in rats caused progressive thymic alterations in all analyzed rats similar to those in Rorc-deficient mice prior to T cell lymphoma development. One rat developed thymic cortical hyperplasia with preneoplastic features, including increased mitosis and reduced IKAROS expression, albeit without skewed T cell clonality. In summary, pharmacological inhibition of RORC not only blocks Th17 cell development and related cytokine production, but also recapitulates thymic aberrations seen in Rorc-deficient mice. While RORC inhibition may offer an effective therapeutic principle for Th17-mediated diseases, T cell lymphoma with chronic therapy remains an apparent risk.


Oncotarget | 2016

Serpin E2 promotes breast cancer metastasis by remodeling the tumor matrix and polarizing tumor associated macrophages

Tatiana Smirnova; Laura Bonapace; Gwen MacDonald; Shunya Kondo; Jeffrey Wyckoff; Hilmar Ebersbach; Bérengère Fayard; Arno Doelemeyer; Marie-May Coissieux; Marinus R. Heideman; Mohamed Bentires-Alj; Nancy E. Hynes

The extracellular serine protease inhibitor serpinE2 is overexpressed in breast cancer and has been shown to foster metastatic spread. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that serpinE2 creates tumor-promoting conditions in the tumor microenvironment (TME) by affecting extracellular matrix remodeling. Using two different breast cancer models, we show that blocking serpinE2, either by knock-down (KD) in tumor cells or in response to a serpinE2 binding antibody, decreases metastatic dissemination from primary tumors to the lungs. We demonstrate that in response to serpinE2 KD or antibody treatment there are dramatic changes in the TME. Multiphoton intravital imaging revealed deposition of a dense extracellular collagen I matrix encapsulating serpinE2 KD or antibody-treated tumors. This is accompanied by a reduction in the population of tumor-promoting macrophages, as well as a decrease in chemokine ligand 2, which is known to affect macrophage abundance and polarization. In addition, TIMP-1 secretion is increased, which may directly inhibit matrix metalloproteases critical for collagen degradation in the tumor. In summary, our findings suggest that serpinE2 is required in the extracellular milieu of tumors where it acts in multiple ways to regulate tumor matrix deposition, thereby controlling tumor cell dissemination.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2018

Fingolimod inhibits brain atrophy and promotes brain-derived neurotrophic factor in an animal model of multiple sclerosis

Paul Smith; Cindy Schmid; Stefan Zurbruegg; Magali Jivkov; Arno Doelemeyer; Diethilde Theil; Valerie Dubost; Nicolau Beckmann

Longitudinal brain atrophy quantification is a critical efficacy measurement in multiple sclerosis (MS) clinical trials and the determination of No Evidence of Disease Activity (NEDA). Utilising fingolimod as a clinically validated therapy we evaluated the use of repeated brain tissue volume measures during chronic experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) as a new preclinical efficacy measure. Brain volume changes were quantified using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 7 Tesla and correlated to treatment-induced brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) measured in blood, cerebrospinal fluid, spinal cord and brain. Serial brain MRI measurements revealed slow progressive brain volume loss in vehicle treated EAE mice despite a stable clinical score. Fingolimod (1 mg/kg) significantly ameliorated brain tissue atrophy in the cerebellum and striatum when administered from established EAE disease onwards. Fingolimod-dependent tissue preservation was associated with induction of BDNF specifically within the brain and co-localized with neuronal soma. In contrast, therapeutic teriflunomide (3 mg/kg) treatment failed to inhibit CNS autoimmune mediated brain degeneration. Finally, weekly anti-IL-17A antibody (15 mg/kg) treatment was highly efficacious and preserved whole brain, cerebellum and striatum volume. Fingolimod-mediated BDNF increases within the CNS may contribute to limiting progressive tissue loss during chronic neuroinflammation.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2018

Tough Composite Hydrogels with High Loading and Local Release of Biological Drugs

Jianyu Li; Eckhard Weber; Sabine Guth-Gundel; Michael Schuleit; Andreas Kuttler; Christine Halleux; Nathalie Accart; Arno Doelemeyer; Anne Basler; Bruno Tigani; Kuno Wuersch; Mara Fornaro; Michaela Kneissel; Alexander G. Stafford; Benjamin R. Freedman; David J. Mooney

Hydrogels are under active development for controlled drug delivery, but their clinical translation is limited by low drug loading capacity, deficiencies in mechanical toughness and storage stability, and poor control over the drug release that often results in burst release and short release duration. This work reports a design of composite clay hydrogels, which simultaneously achieve a spectrum of mechanical, storage, and drug loading/releasing properties to address the critical needs from translational perspectives. The clay nanoparticles provide large surface areas to adsorb biological drugs, and assemble into microparticles that are physically trapped within and toughen hydrogel networks. The composite hydrogels demonstrate feasibility of storage, and extended release of large quantities of an insulin-like growth factor-1 mimetic protein (8 mg mL-1 ) over four weeks. The release rate is primarily governed by ionic exchange and can be upregulated by low pH, which is typical for injured tissues. A rodent model of Achilles tendon injury is used to demonstrate that the composite hydrogels allow for highly extended and localized release of biological drugs in vivo, while demonstrating biodegradation and biocompatibility. These attributes make the composite hydrogel a promising system for drug delivery and regenerative medicine.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2007

Regulation of choroidal blood flow during combined changes in intraocular pressure and arterial blood pressure.

Elzbieta Polska; Christian Simader; Günter Weigert; Arno Doelemeyer; Julia Kolodjaschna; Ole Scharmann; Leopold Schmetterer


Archives of Ophthalmology | 2002

Partial Antagonism of Endothelin 1–Induced Vasoconstriction in the Human Choroid by Topical Unoprostone Isopropyl

Elzbieta Polska; Arno Doelemeyer; Alexandra Luksch; Paulina Ehrlich; Nils Kaehler; Christine L. Percicot; George N. Lambrou; Leopold Schmetterer


Neurobiology of Aging | 2016

Longitudinal noninvasive magnetic resonance imaging of brain microhemorrhages in BACE inhibitor–treated APP transgenic mice

Nicolau Beckmann; Arno Doelemeyer; Stefan Zurbruegg; Karine Bigot; Diethilde Theil; Wilfried Frieauff; Carine Kolly; Pierre Moulin; Daniel Neddermann; Robert Kreutzer; Ludovic Perrot; Irena Brzak; Laura H. Jacobson; Matthias Staufenbiel; Ulf Neumann; Derya R. Shimshek


Documenta Ophthalmologica | 2008

Multifocal electroretinographical changes in monkeys with experimental ocular hypertension: a longitudinal study

Jan Kremers; Arno Doelemeyer; Elzbieta Polska; Fabrice Moret; Christian Lambert; George N. Lambrou

Collaboration


Dive into the Arno Doelemeyer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leopold Schmetterer

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Angelika Unterhuber

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wolfgang Drexler

Medical University of Vienna

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge