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Dive into the research topics where Christina Förtsch is active.

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Featured researches published by Christina Förtsch.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

pH Responsive Janus-like Supramolecular Fusion Proteins for Functional Protein Delivery

Seah Ling Kuan; David Y. W. Ng; Yuzhou Wu; Christina Förtsch; Holger Barth; Mikheil Doroshenko; Kaloian Koynov; Christoph Meier; Tanja Weil

A facile, noncovalent solid-phase immobilization platform is described to assemble Janus-like supramolecular fusion proteins that are responsive to external stimuli. A chemically postmodified transporter protein, DHSA, is fused with (imino)biotinylated cargo proteins via an avidin adaptor with a high degree of spatial control. Notably, the derived heterofusion proteins are able to cross cellular membranes, dissociate at acidic pH due to the iminobiotin linker and preserve the enzymatic activity of the cargo proteins β-galactosidase and the enzymatic subunit of Clostridium botulinum C2 toxin. The mix-and-match strategy described herein opens unique opportunities to access macromolecular architectures of high structural definition and biological activity, thus complementing protein ligation and recombinant protein expression techniques.


Biomacromolecules | 2014

Cationic PAMAM dendrimers as pore-blocking binary toxin inhibitors.

Philip Förstner; Fabienne Bayer; Nnanya Kalu; Susanne Felsen; Christina Förtsch; Abrar Aloufi; David Y. W. Ng; Tanja Weil; Ekaterina M. Nestorovich; Holger Barth

Dendrimers are unique highly branched macromolecules with numerous groundbreaking biomedical applications under development. Here we identified poly(amido amine) (PAMAM) dendrimers as novel blockers for the pore-forming B components of the binary anthrax toxin (PA63) and Clostridium botulinum C2 toxin (C2IIa). These pores are essential for delivery of the enzymatic A components of the internalized toxins from endosomes into the cytosol of target cells. We demonstrate that at low μM concentrations cationic PAMAM dendrimers block PA63 and C2IIa to inhibit channel-mediated transport of the A components, thereby protecting HeLa and Vero cells from intoxication. By channel reconstitution and high-resolution current recording, we show that the PAMAM dendrimers obstruct transmembrane PA63 and C2IIa pores in planar lipid bilayers at nM concentrations. These findings suggest a new potential role for the PAMAM dendrimers as effective polyvalent channel-blocking inhibitors, which can protect human target cells from intoxication with binary toxins from pathogenic bacteria.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2015

Clostridial C3 Toxins Target Monocytes/Macrophages and Modulate Their Functions

Holger Barth; Stephan Fischer; Amelie Möglich; Christina Förtsch

The C3 enzymes from Clostridium (C.) botulinum (C3bot) and Clostridium limosum (C3lim) are single chain protein toxins of about 25 kDa that mono-ADP-ribosylate Rho-A, -B, and -C in the cytosol of mammalian cells. We discovered that both C3 proteins are selectively internalized into the cytosol of monocytes and macrophages by an endocytotic mechanism, comparable to bacterial AB-type toxins, while they are not efficiently taken up into the cytosol of other cell types including epithelial cells and fibroblasts. C3-treatment results in disturbed macrophage functions, such as migration and phagocytosis, suggesting a novel function of clostridial C3 toxins as virulence factors, which selectively interfere with these immune cells. Moreover, enzymatic inactive C3 protein serves as a transport system to selectively deliver pharmacologically active molecules into the cytosol of monocytes/macrophages without damaging these cells. This review addresses also the generation of C3-based molecular tools for experimental macrophage pharmacology and cell biology as well as the exploitation of C3 for development of novel therapeutic strategies against monocyte/macrophage-associated diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2013

C3 Rho-Inhibitor for Targeted Pharmacological Manipulation of Osteoclast-Like Cells

Andrea Tautzenberger; Christina Förtsch; Christian Zwerger; Lydia Dmochewitz; Ludwika Kreja; Anita Ignatius; Holger Barth

The C3 toxins from Clostridium botulinum (C3bot) and Clostridium limosum (C3lim) as well as C3-derived fusion proteins are selectively taken up into the cytosol of monocytes/macrophages where the C3-catalyzed ADP-ribosylation of Rho results in inhibition of Rho-signalling and characteristic morphological changes. Since the fusion toxin C2IN-C3lim was efficiently taken up into and inhibited proliferation of murine macrophage-like RAW 264.7 cells, its effects on RAW 264.7-derived osteoclasts were investigated. C2IN-C3lim was taken up into differentiated osteoclasts and decreased their resorption activity. In undifferentiated RAW 264.7 cells, C2IN-C3lim-treatment significantly decreased their differentiation into osteoclasts as determined by counting the multi-nucleated, TRAP-positive cells. This inhibitory effect was concentration- and time-dependent and most efficient when C2IN-C3lim was applied in the early stage of osteoclast-formation. A single-dose application of C2IN-C3lim at day 0 and its subsequent removal at day 1 reduced the number of osteoclasts in a comparable manner while C2IN-C3lim-application at later time points did not reduce the number of osteoclasts to a comparable degree. Control experiments with an enzymatically inactive C3 protein revealed that the ADP-ribosylation of Rho was essential for the observed effects. In conclusion, the results indicate that Rho-activity is crucial during the early phase of osteoclast-differentiation. Other bone cell types such as pre-osteoblastic cells were not affected by C2IN-C3lim. Due to their cell-type selective and specific mode of action, C3 proteins and C3-fusions might be valuable tools for targeted pharmacological manipulation of osteoclast formation and activity, which could lead to development of novel therapeutic strategies against osteoclast-associated diseases.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A recombinant fusion toxin based on enzymatic inactive C3bot1 selectively targets macrophages.

Lydia Dmochewitz; Christina Förtsch; Christian Zwerger; Martin Vaeth; Edward Felder; Markus Huber-Lang; Holger Barth

Background The C3bot1 protein (∼23 kDa) from Clostridium botulinum ADP-ribosylates and thereby inactivates Rho. C3bot1 is selectively taken up into the cytosol of monocytes/macrophages but not of other cell types such as epithelial cells or fibroblasts. Most likely, the internalization occurs by a specific endocytotic pathway via acidified endosomes. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, we tested whether enzymatic inactive C3bot1E174Q serves as a macrophage-selective transport system for delivery of enzymatic active proteins into the cytosol of such cells. Having confirmed that C3bot1E174Q does not induce macrophage activation, we used the actin ADP-ribosylating C2I (∼50 kDa) from Clostridium botulinum as a reporter enzyme for C3bot1E174Q-mediated delivery into macrophages. The recombinant C3bot1E174Q-C2I fusion toxin was cloned and expressed as GST-protein in Escherichia coli. Purified C3bot1E174Q-C2I was recognized by antibodies against C2I and C3bot and showed C2I-specific enzyme activity in vitro. When applied to cultured cells C3bot1E174Q-C2I ADP-ribosylated actin in the cytosol of macrophages including J774A.1 and RAW264.7 cell lines as well as primary cultured human macrophages but not of epithelial cells. Together with confocal fluorescence microscopy experiments, the biochemical data indicate the selective uptake of a recombinant C3-fusion toxin into the cytosol of macrophages. Conclusions/Significance In summary, we demonstrated that C3bot1E174Q can be used as a delivery system for fast, selective and specific transport of enzymes into the cytosol of living macrophages. Therefore, C3-based fusion toxins can represent valuable molecular tools in experimental macrophage pharmacology and cell biology as well as attractive candidates to develop new therapeutic approaches against macrophage-associated diseases.


Advanced Science | 2018

Boosting Antitumor Drug Efficacy with Chemically Engineered Multidomain Proteins

Seah Ling Kuan; Stephan Fischer; Susanne Hafner; Tao Wang; Tatiana Syrovets; Weina Liu; Yu Tokura; David Y. W. Ng; Andreas Riegger; Christina Förtsch; Daniela Jäger; Thomas F. E. Barth; Thomas Simmet; Holger Barth; Tanja Weil

Abstract A facile chemical approach integrating supramolecular chemistry, site‐selective protein chemistry, and molecular biology is described to engineer synthetic multidomain protein therapeutics that sensitize cancer cells selectively to significantly enhance antitumor efficacy of existing chemotherapeutics. The desired bioactive entities are assembled via supramolecular interactions at the nanoscale into structurally ordered multiprotein complexes comprising a) multiple copies of the chemically modified cyclic peptide hormone somatostatin for selective targeting and internalization into human A549 lung cancer cells expressing SST‐2 receptors and b) a new cysteine mutant of the C3bot1 (C3) enzyme from Clostridium botulinum, a Rho protein inhibitor that affects and influences intracellular Rho‐mediated processes like endothelial cell migration and blood vessel formation. The multidomain protein complex, SST3‐Avi‐C3, retargets C3 enzyme into non‐small cell lung A549 cancer cells and exhibits exceptional tumor inhibition at a concentration ≈100‐fold lower than the clinically approved antibody bevacizumab (Avastin) in vivo. Notably, SST3‐Avi‐C3 increases tumor sensitivity to a conventional chemotherapeutic (doxorubicin) in vivo. These findings show that the integrated approach holds vast promise to expand the current repertoire of multidomain protein complexes and can pave the way to important new developments in the area of targeted and combination cancer therapy.


Macromolecular Bioscience | 2016

A Supramolecular Approach toward Bioinspired PAMAM-Dendronized Fusion Toxins

Seah Ling Kuan; Christina Förtsch; David Y. W. Ng; Stephan Fischer; Yu Tokura; Weina Liu; Yuzhou Wu; Kaloian Koynov; Holger Barth; Tanja Weil

Nature has provided a highly optimized toolbox in bacterial endotoxins with precise functions dictated by their clear structural division. Inspired by this streamlined design, a supramolecular approach capitalizing on the strong biomolecular (streptavidin (SA))-biotin interactions is reported herein to prepare two multipartite fusion constructs, which involves the generation 2.0 (D2) or generation 3.0 (D3) polyamidoamine-dendronized transporter proteins (dendronized streptavidin (D3SA) and dendronized human serum albumin (D2HSA)) non-covalently fused to the C3bot1 enzyme from Clostridium botulinum, a potent and specific Rho-inhibitor. The fusion constructs, D3SA-C3 and D2HSA-C3, represent the first examples of dendronized protein transporters that are fused to the C3 enzyme, and it is successfully demonstrated that the C3 Rho-inhibitor is delivered into the cytosol of mammalian cells as determined from the characteristic C3-mediated changes in cell morphology and confocal microscopy. The design circumvents the low uptake of the C3 enzyme by eukaryotic cells and holds great promise for reprogramming the properties of toxin enzymes using a supramolecular approach to broaden their therapeutic applications.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2015

Programmable Biopolymers for Advancing Biomedical Applications of Fluorescent Nanodiamonds

Yuzhou Wu; Anna Ermakova; Weina Liu; Goutam Pramanik; Tran Minh Vu; Andrea Kurz; Liam P. McGuinness; Boris Naydenov; Susanne Hafner; Rolf Reuter; Joerg Wrachtrup; Junichi Isoya; Christina Förtsch; Holger Barth; Thomas Simmet; Fedor Jelezko; Tanja Weil


Chemical Communications | 2014

Programmable protein–DNA hybrid hydrogels for the immobilization and release of functional proteins

Yuzhou Wu; Chuang Li; Felix Boldt; Yanran Wang; Seah Ling Kuan; Thuy Tam Tran; Viktoria Mikhalevich; Christina Förtsch; Holger Barth; Zhongqiang Yang; Dongsheng Liu; Tanja Weil


Archives of Toxicology | 2018

Rho-inhibiting C2IN-C3 fusion toxin inhibits chemotactic recruitment of human monocytes ex vivo and in mice in vivo

Tobias Martin; Amelie Möglich; Ina Felix; Christina Förtsch; Anne Rittlinger; Annette Palmer; Stephanie Denk; Julian M. Schneider; Lena Notbohm; Mona Vogel; Hartmut Geiger; Stephan Paschke; Markus Huber-Lang; Holger Barth

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