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Dive into the research topics where Christine Herzog is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Herzog.


Circulation | 2006

High-Density Lipoproteins and Their Constituent, Sphingosine-1-Phosphate, Directly Protect the Heart Against Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury In Vivo via the S1P3 Lysophospholipid Receptor

Gregor Theilmeier; Christoph Schmidt; Jörg Herrmann; Petra Keul; Michael Schäfers; Ilka Herrgott; Jan Mersmann; Jan Larmann; Sven Hermann; Jörg Stypmann; Otmar Schober; Reinhard Hildebrand; Rainer Schulz; Gerd Heusch; Michael Haude; Karin von Wnuck Lipinski; Christine Herzog; Martina Schmitz; Raimund Erbel; Jerold Chun; Bodo Levkau

Background— All treatments of acute myocardial infarction are aimed at rapid revascularization of the occluded vessel; however, no clinical strategies are currently available to protect the heart from ischemia/reperfusion injury after restitution of blood flow. We hypothesized that some of the cholesterol transport–independent biological properties of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) implied in atheroprotection may also be beneficial in settings of acute myocardial reperfusion injury. Methods and Results— In an in vivo mouse model of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion, we observed that HDL and its sphingolipid component, sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), dramatically attenuated infarction size by ≈20% and 40%, respectively. The underlying mechanism was an inhibition of inflammatory neutrophil recruitment and cardiomyocyte apoptosis in the infarcted area. In vitro, HDL and S1P potently suppressed leukocyte adhesion to activated endothelium under flow and protected rat neonatal cardiomyocytes against apoptosis. In vivo, HDL- and S1P-mediated cardioprotection was dependent on nitric oxide (NO) and the S1P3 lysophospholipid receptor, because it was abolished by pharmacological NO synthase inhibition and was completely absent in S1P3-deficient mice. Conclusions— Our data demonstrate that HDL and its constituent, S1P, acutely protect the heart against ischemia/reperfusion injury in vivo via an S1P3-mediated and NO-dependent pathway. A rapid therapeutic elevation of S1P-containing HDL plasma levels may be beneficial in patients at high risk of acute myocardial ischemia.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Syndecan-4 regulates ADAMTS-5 activation and cartilage breakdown in osteoarthritis

Frank Echtermeyer; Jessica Bertrand; Rita Dreier; Ingmar Meinecke; Katja Neugebauer; Martin Fuerst; Yun Jong Lee; Yeong Wook Song; Christine Herzog; Gregor Theilmeier; Thomas Pap

Aggrecan cleavage by a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with a thrombospondin type 1 motif, member 5 (ADAMTS-5) is crucial for the breakdown of cartilage matrix during osteoarthritis, a degenerative joint disease that leads to the progressive destruction of articular structures. The mechanisms of ADAMTS-5 activation and their links to the pathogenesis of osteoarthritis remain poorly understood, but syndecans have been shown to be involved in the activation of ADAMTS-4 (ref. 3). Here we show that syndecan-4 is specifically induced in type X collagen–producing chondrocytes both in human osteoarthritis and in murine models of the disease. The loss of syndecan-4 in genetically modified mice and intra-articular injections of syndecan-4–specific antibodies into wild-type mice protect from proteoglycan loss and thereby prevent osteoarthritic cartilage damage in a surgically induced model of osteoarthritis. The occurrence of less severe osteoarthritis-like cartilage destruction in both syndecan-4–deficient mice and syndecan-4–specific antibody–treated wild-type mice results from a marked decrease in ADAMTS-5 activity. Syndecan-4 controls the activation of ADAMTS-5 through direct interaction with the protease and through regulating mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-dependent synthesis of matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3). Our data suggest that strategies aimed at the inhibition of syndecan-4 will be of great value for the treatment of cartilage damage in osteoarthritis.


Cardiovascular Research | 2011

Syndecan-4 signalling inhibits apoptosis and controls NFAT activity during myocardial damage and remodelling

Frank Echtermeyer; Thomas Harendza; Svenja Hubrich; Anika Lorenz; Christine Herzog; Martin Mueller; Martina Schmitz; Andrea Grund; Jan Larmann; Jörg Stypmann; Bernhard Schieffer; Ralf Lichtinghagen; Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner; Kai C. Wollert; Jörg Heineke; Gregor Theilmeier

AIMS Myocardial infarction (MI) results in acute impairment of left ventricular (LV) function through the initial development of cardiomyocyte death and subsequent progression of LV remodelling. The expression of syndecan-4 (Sdc4), a transmembrane proteoglycan, is up-regulated after MI, but its function in the heart remains unknown. Here, we characterize the effects of Sdc4 deficiency in murine myocardial ischaemia and permanent infarction. METHODS AND RESULTS Targeted deletion of Sdc4 (Sdc4(-/-)) leads to increased myocardial damage after ischaemic-reperfusion injury due to enhanced cardiomyocyte apoptosis associated with reduced activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase in cardiomyocytes in vitro and in vivo. After ischaemic-reperfusion injury and permanent infarction, we observed an increase in cardiomyocyte area, nuclear translocation of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT), and transcription of the NFAT target rcan1.4 in wild-type mice. NFAT pathway activation was enhanced in Sdc4(-/-) mice. In line with the in vivo data, NFAT activation and hypertrophy occurs in isolated cardiomyocytes with reduced Sdc4 expression during phenylephrine stimulation in vitro. Despite the initially increased myocardial damage, echocardiography revealed improved LV geometry and function in Sdc4(-/-) mice 7 days after MI. CONCLUSION Interception of the Sdc4 pathway enhances infarct expansion and hypertrophic remodelling during early infarct healing in ischaemic-reperfusion injury and permanent infarction mouse models and exerts net beneficial effects on LV function.


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

Thrombomodulin's lectin-like domain reduces myocardial damage by interfering with HMGB1-mediated TLR2 signalling

Christine Herzog; Anika Lorenz; Hans-Jörg Gillmann; Arpita Chowdhury; Jan Larmann; Thomas Harendza; Frank Echtermeyer; Martin Müller; Martina Schmitz; Jörg Stypmann; Daniela G. Seidler; Martin Damm; Sebastian Stehr; Thea Koch; Kai C. Wollert; Edward M. Conway; Gregor Theilmeier

AIMS Thrombomodulin (TM), via its lectin-like domain (LLD), exhibits anti-inflammatory properties partly by sequestering the pro-inflammatory cytokine, high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1). Since myocardial damage after ischaemia and reperfusion is mediated by inflammation, we evaluated the cardioprotective effects of the LLD of TM. Using an in vivo mouse model of transient ischaemia and in vitro models of cardiomyocyte hypoxia, we assessed the ability of the LLD to suppress HMGB1-mediated activation of the receptors, receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGEs) and Toll-like receptors (TLRs) 2 and 4. METHODS AND RESULTS Thirty-minute myocardial ischaemia was induced in isoflurane-anaesthetized mice followed by 24 h of reperfusion in wild-type (WT) mice, in mice lacking the LLD of TM (TM(LeD/LeD) mice), and in WT with systemic overexpression of the LLD of TM induced by hydrodynamic transfection. Infarct size, HMGB1 protein, and apoptotic cells were significantly increased in TM(LeD/LeD) mice when compared with WT. Neonatal rat cardiomyocytes transfected with TLR2-, TLR4-, and RAGE-siRNA were exposed to hypoxia (0.8% O2) and reoxygenation (21% O2). HMGB1 augmented hypoxia-induced apoptosis in TLR2- but not in RAGE- or TLR4-suppressed cells. Administration of HMGB1- and TLR2-blocking antibodies in TM(LeD/LeD) mice prior to myocardial ischaemia diminished apoptosis. Therapeutic systemic gene therapy using the LLD reduced the infarct size and HMGB1 protein levels 24 h after reperfusion. CONCLUSION The LLD of TM suppresses HMGB1-induced and TLR2-mediated myocardial reperfusion injury and apoptosis in vitro and in vivo.


Critical Care Medicine | 2010

Toll-like receptor 2 signaling triggers fatal arrhythmias upon myocardial ischemia-reperfusion

Jan Mersmann; Alexander Koch; Nguyen Tran; René Zimmermann; Tiago Granja; Jan Larmann; Christine Herzog; Gregor Theilmeier; Stefan R. Bornstein; Carsten J. Kirschning; Kai Zacharowski

Objective:Restoration of myocardial blood flow after ischemia triggers an inflammatory response involving toll-like receptors. Toll-like receptor 2 deficiency is associated with a reduced infarct size after myocardial ischemia and reperfusion. Because a marked mortality was observed in C3HeN wild-type mice, which was absent in TLR2−/− mice, we tested whether cardiac arrhythmias are the underlying pathology and aimed to elucidate how toll-like receptor 2 ligation might prevent lethal arrhythmias. Design:Experimental animal model. Setting:University hospital research laboratory. Subjects:Male C3HeN mice. Interventions:Myocardial ischemia and reperfusion was surgically induced by ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery for 20 mins followed by 24 hrs of reperfusion. Electrocardiography was continuously recorded during the observation period through an implantable telemetry transmitter to detect cardiac arrhythmias during reperfusion. Measurements and Main Results:Toll-like receptor 2 expression was associated with a 51% mortality rate (23 of 45 mice died) after myocardial ischemia and reperfusion. Absence of toll-like receptor 2 improved survival toward 100% (17 of 17 mice survived). Electrocardiography diagnostics in conscious animals and histologic analysis revealed that absence of toll-like receptor 2 signaling prevented the formation of pathologic heart rate turbulence after myocardial ischemia and reperfusion and modulated the density of connexin 43-positive gap junctions in the ischemic area compared with wild-type hearts, indicating arrhythmia as the cause underlying the observed mortality. Conclusions:The results presented here indicate toll-like receptor 2 as a novel target for the prevention of lethal arrhythmic complications after myocardial ischemia and reperfusion.


Anesthesiology | 2009

Lidocaine Protects from Myocardial Damage due to Ischemia and Reperfusion in Mice by Its Antiapoptotic Effects

Dominik J. Kaczmarek; Christine Herzog; Jan Larmann; Hans-Jörg Gillmann; Reinhard Hildebrand; Martina Schmitz; Anik Westermann; Thomas Harendza; Robert Werdehausen; Alexander W. Osthaus; Frank Echtermeyer; Klaus Hahnenkamp; Kai C. Wollert; Gregor Theilmeier

Background:Perioperative myocardial ischemia poses a vital threat to surgical patients. Means to protect postischemic myocardium are clinically not available. Lidocaine has been demonstrated to exert antiinflammatory pleiotropic effects. The authors set out to test if lidocaine protects ischemic myocardium from reperfusion injury. Method:A mouse model of transient coronary artery ligation (30 min) and reperfusion (24 h) was used with animal care committee approval. Infarct size and area-at-risk were determined. Leukocyte recruitment was quantified on immunohistochemical stainings. Apoptosis was assessed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay to detect histone modifications and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling assays. Lidocaine effects on leukocyte-endothelial interactions were assessed in vitro by using a parallel-plate flow chamber or static adhesion assays. Results:Infarct size per area-at-risk was reduced by 27% in mice treated with a lidocaine bolus (1 mg/kg) before a continuous infusion (0.6 mg · kg–1 · h–1) during ischemia (P < 0.005). Neutrophil density in the infarct and periinfarct zone was not reduced by lidocaine, although the size of the infiltrated area was. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling–positive cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells were significantly reduced in the periinfarct zone by lidocaine. In vitro, no effect on leukocyte rolling or firm adhesion to resting or activated endothelium was demonstrable. In vitro, lidocaine reduced cardiomyocyte apoptosis induced by hypoxia and reoxygenation (3h/1h) significantly. Infarct size and in vitro cardiomyocyte apoptosis were likewise reduced when lidocaine bolus and infusion were administered after the ischemic insult. Conclusion:Lidocaine exerts cardioprotective effects when administered before or after the ischemic insult. This effect is mediated through an antiapoptotic and not through an antiinflammatory pathway and may be therapeutically exploitable.


Immunobiology | 2013

The receptor for activated complement factor 5 (C5aR) conveys myocardial ischemic damage by mediating neutrophil transmigration.

Martin Mueller; Christine Herzog; Jan Larmann; Martina Schmitz; Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner; J. Engelbert Gessner; Gregor Theilmeier

Tissue loss after myocardial ischemia with reperfusion (MI/R) is in part conveyed by neutrophil recruitment to post-ischemic myocardium. Strategies to prevent reperfusion injury would help to limit myocardial damage. The receptor for activated complement factor 5 (C5aR) plays a prominent role in inflammation. We examine the effects of C5aR-deficiency on reperfusion injury after MI/R. C5aR(-/-)-mice and their C57BL/6- (WT) littermates underwent transient myocardial ischemia followed by different time points of reperfusion. Infarct size and leukocyte infiltration were determined. Expression of C5aR, inflammatory cytokines and adhesion molecules were analyzed by real-time RT-PCR. Leukocyte-endothelial interactions were assessed by low-shear adhesion- and transmigration-assays in vitro. Myocardial C5aR mRNA expression was 2.8-fold increased by ischemia. Infarct size per area-at-risk and leukocyte recruitment into infarctions were reduced in C5aR(-/-)-compared to WT-mice as well as in WT mice treated with the C5aR-antagonist JPE1375. IL-6, IL-1β, ICAM-1 and VCAM-1 expression were not different, while TNFα expression was reduced in C5aR(-/-)-mice after MI/R. In vitro, C5aR on leukocytes is required for effective transendothelial migration but not adhesion. Expression of MMP9 and JAM-A, molecules that are involved in leukocyte transmigration, were reduced in C5aR(-/-) mice in vivo. Genetic C5aR deficiency blunts the inflammatory response in murine MI/R resulting in reduced inflammatory cell recruitment, which is due to a C5aR-dependent effect on leukocyte transmigration across inflamed endothelium into the ischemic myocardium. This effect could be related to MMP9- and JAM-A expression in response to ischemia and reperfusion.


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

Expression of fibulin-6 in failing hearts and its role for cardiac fibroblast migration

Arpita Chowdhury; Christine Herzog; Lisa Hasselbach; Houra Loghmani Khouzani; Jinli Zhang; Matthias Hammerschmidt; Carsten Rudat; Andreas Kispert; Matthias Gaestel; Manoj B. Menon; I. Tudorache; Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner; Christian Mühlfeld; Jan D. Schmitto; Martin Müller; Gregor Theilmeier

AIMS The cardiac extracellular matrix (ECM) undergoes a dynamic transition following myocardial infarction. Fibulin-6 is expressed in cell junctions particularly in tissues subjected to significant mechanical stress. Fibulin-6 deficiency results in defective cell migration in nematodes and early embryonic lethality in mice. The role of fibulin-6 in healthy and failing myocardium is unknown. We have examined the expression and distribution pattern of fibulin-6 during myocardial remodelling (MR) and detailed its effect on the migratory function of cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) in response to TGF-β1. METHODS AND RESULTS In healthy murine myocardium, fibulin-6 expression is largely confined to larger coronary arteries. It is induced during the early and the late phase of remodelling after infarction in murine hearts predominantly in the scar-muscle junction. Similar results are obtained in human ischaemic cardiomyopathy. Fibulin-6 is mostly expressed in close vicinity to vimentin-positive cells and is also abundantly expressed in vitro in cultured neonatal CF. TGF-β1 does not induce smooth muscle actin in fibroblasts deficient of fibulin-6, which also compromised their migration. Cells that had migrated expressed more fibulin-6 compared with stationary cells. Plated on fibulin-6-depleted matrix, stress fibre induction in fibroblast in response to TGF-β1 was impaired. In ex vivo explant cultures from post-infarct myocardium, the number of emigrating fibroblasts was also significantly reduced by fibulin-6 siRNA knockdown. CONCLUSION Fibulin-6, a fibroblast-released ECM protein, may play an important role during MR by imparting an effect on CF migration in close and complementary interplay with TGF-β1 signalling.


Anesthesiology | 2010

In Vivo Fluorescence-mediated Tomography for Quantification of Urokinase Receptor-dependent Leukocyte Trafficking in Inflammation

Jan Larmann; Tim Frenzel; Anke Hahnenkamp; Christine Herzog; Anika Lorenz; Andrea U. Steinbicker; Simone Calmer; Thomas Harendza; Martina Schmitz; Frank Echtermeyer; Reinhard Hildebrand; Christoph Bremer; Gregor Theilmeier

Background:Inflammation is characterized by leukocyte recruitment. Macrophages and neutrophils contribute to tissue damage and organ dysfunction. Modulating leukocyte invasion can protect from these adverse effects. Leukocyte recruitment critically depends on the urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor (u-PAR). We here use a novel technique to longitudinally quantify cell trafficking in inflammatory models in live animals. Methods:Near-infrared fluorophore-labeled leukocytes were adoptively transferred to mice with thioglycollate peritonitis to study leukocyte trafficking to sites of inflammation. Macrophage and neutrophil trafficking was followed with three-dimensional fluorescence-mediated-tomography. u-PAR−/− and wild-type macrophage recruitment was studied by cross-over adoptive cell transfer to elucidate the role of leukocytic versus u-PAR expressed on other cells. Endotoxic shock-induced pulmonary inflammation was used to study u-PARs role for pulmonary neutrophil recruitment. Results:Mice experiencing peritonitis showed a significant increase in mean fluorescence intensity because of enhanced macrophage (315%, n = 9–10), P < 0.05) or neutrophil (194%, n = 6, P < 0.02) recruitment. Fluorescence-mediated-tomography uncovered a macrophage recruitment defect in the peritonitis model for u-PAR−/− mice (147% of baseline) compared with control mice (335% of baseline, n = 8–9, P < 0.05). When u-PAR−/−-macrophages were transferred to wild-type mice fluorescence intensity increased to 145% while wild-type macrophage transfer into u-PAR−/− resulted in 192% increase compared with baseline (n = 6, P < 0.05). Reduced neutrophil recruitment in pulmonary inflammation in u-PAR−/− mice was accompanied by improved pulmonary gas exchange. Conclusion:Using noninvasive in vivo fluorescence-mediated tomography to image leukocyte recruitment in inflammatory mouse models, we describe a novel macrophage recruitment defect in u-PAR−/− mice. Targeting u-PAR for modulation of leukocyte recruitment is a promising therapeutic strategy to ameliorate leukocyte induced tissue damage.


Pharmacological Research | 2014

Detection and distribution of opioid peptide receptors in porcine myocardial tissue

M. Theisen; Silke Schlottmann; Christian August; Christine Herzog; Gregor Theilmeier; Matthias Maas; Jonas Martin Blumenstiel; Thomas Weber; Hugo Van Aken; Kristoffer Tim Kaerlein

There is growing evidence that opioid peptide receptors (OPRs) play an important role in cardiovascular function. Many studies have been conducted in swine, in view of their anatomic and physiologic similarities to humans. Until now, the presence and particularly distribution of OPRs has been unclear. Porcine myocardial tissue was obtained from both the left and right atria and ventricles. Expression of mRNA for μ-, δ- and κ-OPR was determined by reverse transcription PCR. OPR proteins were detected by Western blot, distribution and cellular location were identified using immunohistochemistry. Homogenous expression of mRNA and protein for δ- and κ-OPRs were demonstrated in all porcine myocardial tissue tested, whereas expression of μ-OPR mRNA was not demonstrated in any of the tissues tested. This study demonstrates the expression of δ- and κ-OPRs in porcine myocardial tissue. No differences in distribution of δ- and κ-OPRs were found between the four heart cavities. Modulation of cardiac function by δ- and κ-OPR agonists or antagonists is therefore possible, while μ-OPR-mediated direct cardiac effects appear unlikely, due to nonexpression of the receptor. This study demonstrates that porcine studies can further elucidate the role of OPRs in cardiac (patho-)physiology.

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Gregor Theilmeier

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jan Larmann

Hannover Medical School

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Gregor Theilmeier

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Anika Lorenz

Hannover Medical School

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