Caecilia Kuhn
German Cancer Research Center
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Featured researches published by Caecilia Kuhn.
European Journal of Cell Biology | 1999
Wiebke K. Peitsch; Christine Grund; Caecilia Kuhn; Martina Schnölzer; Herbert Spring; Monika Schmelz; Werner W. Franke
Using immunoblotting, immunprecipitation with subsequent fragment mass spectrometry, and immunolocalization techniques, we have detected the actin-binding ca. 120-kDa protein drebrin, originally identified in - and thought to be specific for - neuronal cells, in diverse kinds of human and bovine non-neuronal cells. Drebrin has been found in numerous cell culture lines and in many tissues of epithelial, endothelial, smooth muscle and neural origin but not in, for example, cardiac, skeletal and certain types of smooth muscle cells, in hepatocytes and in the human epithelium-derived cell culture line A-431. By double-label fluorescence microscopy we have found drebrin enriched in actin microfilament bundles associated with plaques of cell-cell contact sites representing adhering junctions. These drebrin-positive, adhering junction-associated bundles, however, are not identical with the vinculin-containing, junction-attached bundles, and in the same cell both subtypes of microfilament-anchoring plaques are readily distinguished by immunolocalization comparing drebrin and vinculin. The intracellular distribution of the drebrin- and the vinculin-based microfilament systems has been studied in detail by confocal fluorescence laser scanning microscopy in monolayers of the polar epithelial cell lines, MCF-7 and PLC, and drebrin has been found to be totally and selectively absent in the notoriously vinculin-rich focal adhesions. The occurrence and the possible functions of drebrin in non-neuronal cells, notably epithelial cells, and the significance of the existence of two different actin-anchoring junctional plaques is discussed.
Experimental Cell Research | 1984
Werner W. Franke; Christine Grund; Caecilia Kuhn; Veli Pekka Lehto; Ismo Virtanen
A monoclonal antibody specific for vimentin is described which, by immunofluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy, decorates fibrillar and/or granular structures in mitotic and early postmitotic cells but does not react with vimentin filaments of interphase stages of various cultured cells (rat vascular smooth muscle-derived cell line RVF-SM; SV40-transformed human fibroblasts; bovine kidney epithelial cells of line MDBK). These observations indicate that the organization of vimentin filaments varies during the cell cycle, undergoing a perimitotic change of filament organization. These changes of vimentin filaments are described in relation to those reported for cytokeratin filaments of various epithelial and carcinoma cells. The possible functional implications of filament protein rearrangements both during the cell cycle and in cell differentiation processes are discussed.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006
Carola M. Borrmann; Claudia Mertens; Ansgar Schmidt; Lutz Langbein; Caecilia Kuhn; Werner W. Franke
Abstract: In biochemical and immunocytochemical comparisons of adhering junctions of different epithelia, we have observed differences in molecular composition not only between the intermediate filament‐attached desmosomes and the actin filaments‐anchoring adherens junctions but also between desmosomes of different tissues and of different strata in the same stratified epithelium. In addition we now report cell type‐specific differences of molecular composition and immunoreactivity in both desmosomes and adherens junctions of certain simple epithelia. Whereas the zonula adhaerens of human intestinal and colonic epithelial cells, and of carcinomas derived therefrom, contains the additional armadillo‐type plaque protein ARVCF, this protein has not been detected in the zonula adhaerens of hepatocytes. Similarly, plakophilin 3 is present in the desmosomal plaques of intestinal and colonic cells but appears to be absent from the hepatocytic desmosomes. We suggest that these profound compositional differences in the junctions of related simple epithelia are correlated to functional differences of the specific type of epithelium.
Archive | 1988
Werner W. Franke; Pamela Cowin; Christine Grund; Caecilia Kuhn; Hans-Peter Kapprell
The endothelium of most blood vessels is a single layer of tightly packed cells which line the vascular lumen and border on the basal lamina and, in some arteries and arterioles, on the processes of vascular smooth muscle cells. Like singlelayered epithelia, the endothelial cells are polar, with an apical, i.e., adluminal, and a basal, i.e., abluminal, plasma membrane region which appear to be segregated from each other by a special membrane region containing occluding, i.e., “tight,” junctions (for reviews see Ref. 89). Again similarly to polar epithelia, the endothelium is capable of vectorial sorting, secretion, and virus budding as well as endocytotic and transcytotic processes (for examples see Refs. 47,66,72). Obviously, tight sealing of endothelial cells to each other is a prerequisite for their physiological functioning, and situations in which the coherence of the endothelial layer is locally and/or transiently interrupted are usually associated with pathological processes (e.g., Refs. 16,17,52,54,77,86,92). The elucidation of the molecular organization of the “endothelial junction” is crucial to our understanding of the structures and molecules involved in the intercellular adhesion of the endothelial cells. This junctional zone is characterized by a relatively close apposition of the adjacent plasma membranes which are flanked by a so-called “parajunctional zone” of cortical cytoplasm (for definition see Ref. 90). So far only two specific junctions have been identified within this junctional complex. These are the occluding (tight) and the communicating (gap) junctions which are morphologically similar to those present in other tissues (reviewed in Refs. 89-92; for certain freeze-cleave aspects see also Refs. 98,110). Typical desmosomes or other adhering junction structures have not been demonstrated in higher vertebrates. However, Fawcett29,30 has attracted attention to
Cell and Tissue Research | 2009
Roland Moll; Evelyn Sievers; Bettina Hämmerling; Ansgar Schmidt; Mareike Barth; Caecilia Kuhn; Christine Grund; Ilse Hofmann; Werner W. Franke
The lymph node sinus are channel structures of unquestionable importance in immunology and pathology, specifically in the filtering of the lymph, the transport and processing of antigens, the adhesion and migration of immune cells, and the spread of metastatic cancer cells. Our knowledge of the cell and molecular biology of the sinus-forming cells is still limited, and the origin and biological nature of these cells have long been a matter of debate. Here, we review the relevant literature and present our own experimental results, in particular concerning molecular markers of intercellular junctions and cell differentiation. We show that both the monolayer cells lining the sinus walls and the intraluminal virgultar cell meshwork are indeed different morphotypes of the same basic endothelial cell character, as demonstrated by the presence of a distinct spectrum of general and lymphatic endothelial markers, and we therefore refer to these cells as sinus endothelial/virgultar cells (SEVCs). These cells are connected by unique adhering junctions, termed complexus adhaerentes, characterized by the transmembrane glycoprotein VE-cadherin, combined with the desmosomal plaque protein desmoplakin, several adherens junction plaque proteins including α- and β-catenin and p120 catenin, and components of the tight junction ensemble, specifically claudin-5 and JAM-A, and the plaque protein ZO-1. We show that complexus adhaerentes are involved in the tight three-dimensional integration of the virgultar network of SEVC processes along extracellular guidance structures composed of paracrystalline collagen bundle “stays”. Overall, the SEVC system might be considered as a local and specific modification of the general lymphatic vasculature system. Finally, physiological and pathological alterations of the SEVC system will be presented, and the possible value of the molecular markers described in histological diagnoses of autochthonous lymph node tumors will be discussed.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Beate K. Straub; Steffen Rickelt; Ralf Zimbelmann; Christine Grund; Caecilia Kuhn; Marcus Iken; Michael Ott; Peter Schirmacher; Werner W. Franke
Contradicting the “cadherin switch” model, mixed E-cadherin–N-cadherin heterodimeric adherens junctions are prevalent in a variety of endodermal cells and endoderm-derived tumors.
Cell and Tissue Research | 2009
Mareike Barth; Heiderose Schumacher; Caecilia Kuhn; Payam Akhyari; Artur Lichtenberg; Werner W. Franke
Remarkable efforts have recently been made in the tissue engineering of heart valves to improve the results of valve transplantations and replacements, including the design of artificial valves. However, knowledge of the cell and molecular biology of valves and, specifically, of valvular interstitial cells (VICs) remains limited. Therefore, our aim has been to determine and localize the molecules forming the adhering junctions (AJs) that connect VICs in situ and in cell culture. Using biochemical and immunolocalization methods at the light- and electron-microscopic levels, we have identified, in man, cow, sheep and rat, the components of VIC-connecting AJs in situ and in cell culture. These AJs contain, in addition to the transmembrane glycoproteins N-cadherin and cadherin-11, the typical plaque proteins α- and β-catenin as well as plakoglobin and p120, together with minor amounts of protein p0071, i.e. a total of five plaque proteins of the armadillo family. While we can exclude the occurrence of desmogleins, desmocollins and desmoplakin, we have noted with surprise that AJs of VICs in cell cultures, but not those growing in the valve tissue, contain substantial amounts of the desmosomal plaque protein, plakophilin-2. Clusters of AJs occur not only on the main VIC cell bodies but are also found widely dispersed on their long filopodia thus forming, in the tissue, a meshwork that, together with filopodial attachments to paracrystalline collagen fiber bundles, establishes a three-dimensional suprastructure, the role of which is discussed with respect to valve formation, regeneration and function.
International Journal of Cancer | 2009
Steffen Rickelt; Stefanie Winter-Simanowski; Edeltraut Noffz; Caecilia Kuhn; Werner W. Franke
In contrast to the desmosome‐containing epithelial and carcinoma cells, normal and malignantly transformed cells derived from mesenchymal tissues and tumors are connected only by adherens junctions (AJs) containing N‐cadherins and/or cadherin‐11, anchored in a cytoplasmic plaque assembled by α‐ and β‐catenin, plakoglobin, proteins p120 and p0071. Here, we report that the AJs of many malignantly transformed cell lines are characterized by the additional presence of plakophilin‐2 (Pkp2), a protein hitherto known only as a major component of desmosomal plaques, i.e., AJs of epithelia and carcinomatous cells. This massive acquisition of Pkp2 and its integration into AJ plaques of a large number of transformed cell lines is demonstrated with biochemical and immunolocalization techniques. Upregulation of Pkp2 and its integration into AJs has also been noted in some soft tissue tumors insitu and some highly proliferative colonies of cultured mesenchymal stem cells. As Pkp2 has recently been identified as a functionally important major regulatory organizer in AJs and related junctions in epithelial cells and cardiomyocytes, we hypothesize that the integration of Pkp2 into AJs of “soft tissue tumor” cells also can serve functions in the upregulation of proliferation, the promotion of malignant growth in general as well as the close‐packing of diverse kinds of cells and the metastatic behavior of such tumors. We propose to examine its presence in transformed mesenchymal cells and related tumors and to use it as an additional diagnostic criterion.
Virchows Archiv | 2006
Roland Moll; Hans Jürgen Holzhausen; Hans Dieter Mennel; Caecilia Kuhn; Renate Baumann; Christiane Taege; Werner W. Franke
The two sarcomeric isoforms of actins, cardiac and skeletal muscle α-actin, are highly homologous so that their immunohistochemical distinction is extremely difficult. Taking advantage of monoclonal antibodies distinguishing the two conservative amino acid exchanges near the aminoterminus, we have performed an extended immunohistochemical analysis of the cardiac α-actin (CAA) isoform in normal, regenerating, diseased and neoplastic human muscle tissues. Intense and uniform CAA staining is seen in fetal and adult myocardium and in fetal skeletal muscle while adult skeletal muscle is essentially negative, except for muscle spindle myocytes and a few scattered muscle fibres with overall reduced diameter. By contrast, CAA synthesis is markedly induced in regenerating skeletal muscle cells, in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and upon degenerative atrophy. CAA has also been detected in certain vascular and visceral smooth muscle cells. Among tumors, CAA has consistently been seen in rhabdomyosarcomas and rhabdomyomatous cells of nephroblastomas, whereas, smooth muscle tumors have shown only occasional staining. While the synthesis of this actin isoform is less restricted than previously thought, monoclonal antibodies against CAA provide a well-defined, reliable and sensitive diagnostic tool for the definition and detection of aberrant differentiation in diseased skeletal muscle and of striated muscle differentiation in rhabdomyosarcomas.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Hans Heid; Steffen Rickelt; Ralf Zimbelmann; Stefanie Winter; Heiderose Schumacher; Yvette Dörflinger; Caecilia Kuhn; Werner W. Franke
We report on the heterogeneity and diversity of lipid droplets (LDs) in early stages of adipogenesis by elucidating the cell and molecular biology of amphiphilic and cytoskeletal proteins regulating and stabilizing the generation of LDs in human adipose cells. A plethora of distinct and differently sized LDs was detected by a brief application of adipocyte differentiation medium and additional short treatment with oleic acid. Using these cells and highly specific antibodies for LD-binding proteins of the perilipin (PLIN) family, we could distinguish between endogenously derived LDs (endogenous LDs) positive for perilipin from exogenously induced LDs (exogenous LDs) positive for adipophilin, TIP47 and S3-12. Having optimized these stimulation conditions, we used early adipogenic differentiation stages to investigate small-sized LDs and concentrated on LD-protein associations with the intermediate-sized filament (IF) vimentin. This IF protein was described earlier to surround lipid globules, showing spherical, cage-like structures. Consequently - by biochemical methods, by immunofluorescence microscopy and by electron- and immunoelectron microscopy - various stages of emerging lipid globules were revealed with perilipin as linking protein between LDs and vimentin. For this LD-PLIN-Vimentin connection, a model is now proposed, suggesting an interaction of proteins via opposed charged amino acid domains respectively. In addition, multiple sheaths of smooth endoplasmic reticulum cisternae surrounding concentrically nascent LDs are shown. Based on our comprehensive localization studies we present and discuss a novel pathway for the LD formation.