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Dive into the research topics where Carmen Blum is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmen Blum.


European Journal of Immunology | 2007

Faithful activation of an extra-bright red fluorescent protein in "knock-in" Cre-reporter mice ideally suited for lineage tracing studies.

Hervé Luche; Odile Weber; Tata Nageswara Rao; Carmen Blum; Hans Jörg Fehling

The considerable potential of Cre recombinase as a tool for in vivo fate‐mapping studies depends on the availability of reliable reporter mice. By targeting a tandem‐dimer red fluorescent protein (tdRFP) with advanced spectral and biological properties into the ubiquitously expressed ROSA26 locus of C57BL/6‐ES cells, we have generated a novel inbred Cre‐reporter mouse with several unique characteristics. We directly demonstrate the usefulness of our reporter strain in inter‐crosses with a “universal Cre‐deleter” strain and with mice expressing Cre recombinase in a T lineage‐specific manner. Cytofluorometric and histological analyses illustrate: (i) non‐toxicity and extraordinary brightness of the fluorescent reporter, allowing quantitative detection and purification of labeled cells with highest accuracy, (ii) reliable Cre‐mediated activation of tdRFP from an antisense orientation relative to ROSA26 transcription, effectively excluding “leaky” reporter expression, (iii) absence of gene expression variegation effects, (iv) quantitative detection of tdRFP‐expressing cells even in paraformaldehyde‐fixed tissue sections, and (v) full compatibility with GFP/YFP‐based fluorescent markers in multicolor experiments. Taken together, the data show that our C57BL/6‐inbred reporter mice are ideally suited for sophisticated lineage‐tracing experiments requiring sensitive and quantitative detection/purification of live Cre‐expressing cells and their progeny.


Immunity | 2010

Fate Mapping Reveals Separate Origins of T Cells and Myeloid Lineages in the Thymus

Susan M. Schlenner; Vikas Madan; Katrin Busch; Annette Tietz; Carolin Läufle; Celine Costa; Carmen Blum; Hans Jörg Fehling; Hans Reimer Rodewald

The cellular differentiation pathway originating from the bone marrow leading to early T lymphocytes remains poorly understood. The view that T cells branch off from a lymphoid-restricted pathway has recently been challenged by a model proposing a common progenitor for T cell and myeloid lineages. We generated interleukin-7 receptor alpha (Il7r) Cre recombinase knockin mice and traced lymphocyte development by visualizing the history of Il7r expression. Il7r fate mapping labeled all T cells but few myeloid cells. More than 85% of T cell progenitors were Il7r reporter(+) and, hence, had arisen from an Il7r-expressing pathway. In contrast, the overwhelming majority of myeloid cells in the thymus were derived from Il7r reporter(-) cells. Thus, lymphoid-restricted progenitors are the major route to T cells, and distinct origins of lymphoid and myeloid lineages represent a fundamental hallmark of hematopoiesis.


Nature | 2001

Thymus medulla consisting of epithelial islets each derived from a single progenitor

Hans Reimer Rodewald; Sabine Paul; Corinne Haller; Horst Bluethmann; Carmen Blum

The thymus is organized into medullary and cortical zones that support distinct stages of T-cell development. The formation of medulla and cortex compartments is thought to occur through invagination of an endodermal epithelial sheet into an ectodermal one at the third pharyngeal pouch and cleft, respectively. Epithelial stem/progenitor cells have been proposed to be involved in thymus development, but evidence for their existence has been elusive. We have constructed chimaeric mice by injecting embryonic stem (ES) cells into blastocysts using ES cells and blastocysts differing in their major histocompatibility complex (MHC) type. Here we show that the MHC class-II-positive medullary epithelium in these chimaeras is composed of cell clusters, most of which derive from either embryonic stem cell or blastocyst, but not mixed, origin. Thus, the medulla comprises individual epithelial ‘islets’ each arising from a single progenitor. One thymic lobe has about 300 medullary areas that originate from as few as 900 progenitors. Islet formation can be recapitulated after implantation of ‘reaggregated fetal thymic organs’ into mice, which shows that medullary ‘stem’ cells retain their potential until at least day 16.5 in fetal development. Thus, medulla–cortex compartmentalization is established by formation of medullary islets from single progenitors.


Immunity | 2009

Deletion of Notch1 Converts Pro-T Cells to Dendritic Cells and Promotes Thymic B Cells by Cell-Extrinsic and Cell-Intrinsic Mechanisms

Thorsten B. Feyerabend; Grzegorz Terszowski; Annette Tietz; Carmen Blum; Hervé Luche; Achim Gossler; Nicholas W. Gale; Freddy Radtke; Hans Jörg Fehling; Hans Reimer Rodewald

Notch1 signaling is required for T cell development and has been implicated in fate decisions in the thymus. We showed that Notch1 deletion in progenitor T cells (pro-T cells) revealed their latent developmental potential toward becoming conventional and plasmacytoid dendritic cells. In addition, Notch1 deletion in pro-T cells resulted in large numbers of thymic B cells, previously explained by T-to-B cell fate conversion. Single-cell genotyping showed, however, that the majority of these thymic B cells arose from Notch1-sufficient cells by a cell-extrinsic pathway. Fate switching nevertheless exists for a subset of thymic B cells originating from Notch1-deleted pro-T cells. Chimeric mice lacking the Notch ligand delta-like 4 (Dll4) in thymus epithelium revealed an essential role for Dll4 in T cell development. Thus, Notch1-Dll4 signaling fortifies T cell commitment by suppressing non-T cell lineage potential in pro-T cells, and normal Notch1-driven T cell development repels excessive B cells in the thymus.


Nature Immunology | 2008

Regulation of T cell survival through coronin-1–mediated generation of inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate and calcium mobilization after T cell receptor triggering

Philipp Mueller; Jan Massner; Rajesh Jayachandran; Benoit Combaluzier; Imke Albrecht; John Gatfield; Carmen Blum; Rod Ceredig; Hans Reimer Rodewald; Antonius Rolink; Jean Pieters

T cell homeostasis is essential for the functioning of the vertebrate immune system, but the intracellular signals required for T cell homeostasis are largely unknown. We here report that the WD-repeat protein family member coronin-1, encoded by the gene Coro1a, is essential in the mouse for T cell survival through its promotion of Ca2+ mobilization from intracellular stores. Upon T cell receptor triggering, coronin-1 was essential for the generation of inositol-1,4,5-trisphosphate from phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate. The absence of coronin-1, although it did not affect T cell development, resulted in a profound defect in Ca2+ mobilization, interleukin-2 production, T cell proliferation and T cell survival. We conclude that coronin-1, through activation of Ca2+ release from intracellular stores, is an essential regulator of peripheral lymphocyte survival.


Nature | 2014

Cell competition is a tumour suppressor mechanism in the thymus

Vera C. Martins; Katrin Busch; Dilafruz Juraeva; Carmen Blum; Carolin Ludwig; Volker Rasche; Felix Lasitschka; Sergey E. Mastitsky; Benedikt Brors; Thomas Hielscher; Hans Joerg Fehling; Hans Reimer Rodewald

Cell competition is an emerging principle underlying selection for cellular fitness during development and disease. Competition may be relevant for cancer, but an experimental link between defects in competition and tumorigenesis is elusive. In the thymus, T lymphocytes develop from precursors that are constantly replaced by bone-marrow-derived progenitors. Here we show that in mice this turnover is regulated by natural cell competition between ‘young’ bone-marrow-derived and ‘old’ thymus-resident progenitors that, although genetically identical, execute differential gene expression programs. Disruption of cell competition leads to progenitor self-renewal, upregulation of Hmga1, transformation, and T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (T-ALL) resembling the human disease in pathology, genomic lesions, leukaemia-associated transcripts, and activating mutations in Notch1. Hence, cell competition is a tumour suppressor mechanism in the thymus. Failure to select fit progenitors through cell competition may explain leukaemia in X-linked severe combined immune deficiency patients who showed thymus-autonomous T-cell development after therapy with gene-corrected autologous progenitors.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Neural Crest Origin of Perivascular Mesenchyme in the Adult Thymus

Susanna M. Müller; C. Claus Stolt; Grzegorz Terszowski; Carmen Blum; Takashi Amagai; Nicoletta Kessaris; Palma Iannarelli; William D. Richardson; Michael Wegner; Hans Reimer Rodewald

The endodermal epithelial thymus anlage develops in tight association with neural crest (NC)-derived mesenchyme. This epithelial-NC interaction is crucial for thymus development, but it is not known how NC supports thymus development or whether NC cells or their progeny make any significant contribution to the adult thymus. By nude mouse blastocyst complementation and by cell surface phenotype, we could previously separate thymus stroma into Foxn1-dependent epithelial cells and a Foxn1-independent mesenchymal cell population. These mesenchymal cells expressed vascular endothelial growth factor-A, and contributed to thymus vascularization. These data suggested a physical or functional association with thymic blood vessels, but the origin, location in the thymus, and function of these stromal cells remained unknown. Using a transgenic mouse expressing Cre recombinase in premigratory NC (Sox10-Cre), we have now fate-mapped the majority of these adult mesenchymal cells to a NC origin. NC-derived cells represent tightly vessel-associated pericytes that are sandwiched between endothelium and epithelium along the entire thymus vasculature. The ontogenetic, phenotypic, and positional definition of this distinct perivascular mesenchymal compartment provides a cellular basis for the role of NC in thymus development and possibly maintenance, and might be useful to address properties of the endothelial-epithelial barrier in the adult thymus.


Blood | 2008

Impaired function of primitive hematopoietic cells in mice lacking the Mixed-Lineage-Leukemia homolog MLL5.

Vikas Madan; Babita Madan; Urszula Brykczynska; Frédéric Zilbermann; Kevin Hogeveen; Konstanze Döhner; Hartmut Döhner; Odile Weber; Carmen Blum; Hans Reimer Rodewald; Paolo Sassone-Corsi; Antoine H.F.M. Peters; Hans Jörg Fehling

The human Mixed-Lineage-Leukemia-5 (MLL5) gene is located in a genomic region frequently deleted in patients with myeloid malignancies and encodes a widely expressed nuclear protein most closely related to MLL1, a Trithorax transcriptional regulator with established involvement in leukemogenesis. Although the physiologic function of MLL5 is completely unknown, domain structure and homology to transcriptional regulators with histone methyltransferase activity suggest a role in epigenetic gene regulation. To investigate physiologic functions of Mll5, we have generated a knockout mouse mutant using Cre/loxP technology. Adult homozygous Mll5-deficient mice are obtained at reduced frequency because of postnatal lethality. Surviving animals display a variety of abnormalities, including male infertility, retarded growth, and defects in multiple hematopoietic lineages. Interestingly, Mll5(-/-) mice die of sublethal whole-body irradiation but can be rescued with wild-type bone marrow grafts. Flow cytometric ana-lysis, bone marrow reconstitution, and in vivo BrdU-labeling experiments reveal numerical, functional, and cell-cycle defects in the lineage-negative Sca-1(+), Kit(+) (LSK) population, which contains short- and long-term hematopoietic stem cells. Together, these in vivo findings establish several nonredundant functions for Mll5, including an essential role in regulating proliferation and functional integrity of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Loss of histochemical identity in mast cells lacking carboxypeptidase A

Thorsten B. Feyerabend; Heinz Hausser; Annette Tietz; Carmen Blum; Lars Hellman; Anita H. Straus; Helio K. Takahashi; Ellen S. Morgan; Ann M. Dvorak; Hans Jörg Fehling; Hans Reimer Rodewald

ABSTRACT Mast cell carboxypeptidase A (Mc-cpa) is a highly conserved secretory granule protease. The onset of expression in mast cell progenitors and lineage specificity suggest an important role for Mc-cpa in mast cells. To address the function of Mc-cpa, we generated Mc-cpa-null mice. Mc-cpa− / − mast cells lacked carboxypeptidase activity, revealing that Mc-cpa is a nonredundant enzyme. While Mc-cpa − / − peritoneal mast cells were ultrastructurally normal and synthesized normal amounts of heparin, they displayed striking histochemical and biochemical hallmarks of immature mast cells. Wild-type peritoneal mast cells had a mature phenotype characterized by differential histochemical staining with proteoglycan-reactive dyes (cells do not stain with alcian blue but stain with safranin and with berberine) and a high side scatter to forward scatter ratio by flow cytometry and were detergent resistant. In contrast, Mc-cpa − / − peritoneal mast cells, like immature bone marrow-derived cultured mast cells, stained with alcian blue normally or weakly and either did not stain with safranin and berberine or stained weakly, had a low side scatter to forward scatter ratio, and were detergent sensitive. This phenotype was partially ameliorated with age. Thus, histochemistry and flow cytometry, commonly used to measure mast cell maturation, deviated from morphology in Mc-cpa − / − mice. The Mc-cpa − / − mast cell phenotype was not associated with defects in degranulation in vitro or passive cutaneous anaphylaxis in vivo. Collectively, Mc-cpa plays a crucial role for the generation of phenotypically mature mast cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Low Dose Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetes in Rat Insulin Promoter-mCD80-Transgenic Mice Is T Cell Autoantigen-Specific and CD28 Dependent

Klaus Pechhold; Noelle Patterson; Carmen Blum; Christine L. Fleischacker; Bernhard O. Boehm; David M. Harlan

Although transgenic mice expressing murine B7-1 (mCD80) on their pancreatic β cells under the rat insulin-1 promoter (RIP-mCD80+ mice) rarely develop spontaneous β cell destruction and diabetes, we have previously reported the transgene-dependent induction of profound insulitis and lethal diabetes following multiple low dose injections of the β cell toxin streptozotocin (MLDS) in RIP-mCD80+ mice. Here, we have further characterized this MLDS-induced diabetes model using the RIP-mCD80+ mice and now demonstrate that disease is critically dependent on T cell signaling via CD28. Thus, although naive RIP-mCD80+ and nontransgenic littermates have comparable gross β cell mass, and immediately following MLDS induction the mice display similar degrees of insulitis and decrements in the β cell mass, only transgenic mice continued to destroy their β cells and develop insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Strikingly, MLDS-induced diabetes was completely prevented in CD28-deficient mice (RIP-mCD80+CD28−/−) due to abrogation of leukocytes infiltrating their pancreatic islets. We further characterized MLDS-induced diabetes in the RIP-mCD80+ mice by demonstrating that the MLDS-induced lymphocytic islet infiltrate contained a substantial frequency of autoantigen-specific, IFN-γ-secreting, CD8+ T cells. We conclude that MLDS-induced β cell destruction and subsequent insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in RIP-mCD80+ mice is T cell-mediated as it involves both Ag-specific recognition of self-target molecules in the inflamed pancreatic islet (signal 1) and is CD28 costimulation dependent (signal 2).

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Hervé Luche

Aix-Marseille University

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