Claus Dittmar
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Claus Dittmar.
Annals of Neurology | 2003
Juergen Voges; Regina Reszka; Axel Gossmann; Claus Dittmar; Raphaela Richter; Guido Garlip; Lutz W. Kracht; Heinz H. Coenen; Volker Sturm; Karl Wienhard; Wolf-Dieter Heiss; Andreas H. Jacobs
In a prospective phase I/II clinical study, we treated eight patients suffering from recurrent glioblastoma multiform with stereotactically guided intratumoral convection‐enhanced delivery of an HSV‐1‐tk gene–bearing liposomal vector and systemic ganciclovir. Noninvasive identification of target tissue together with assessment of vector‐distribution volume and the effects of gene therapy were achieved using magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography. The treatment was tolerated well without major side effects. In two of eight patients, we observed a greater than 50% reduction of tumor volume and in six of eight patients focal treatment effects. Intracerebral infusion of contrast medium before vector application displayed substantial inhomogeneity of tissue staining indicating the need of test infusions to monitor the mechanical distribution of vectors. Visualization of therapeutic effects on tumor metabolism and documentation of gene expression using positron emission tomography indicated that molecular imaging technology appears to be essential for the further development of biological treatment strategies.
Molecular Imaging | 2002
Andreas H. Jacobs; Claus Dittmar; Alexandra Winkeler; Guido Garlip; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
Gliomas are the most common types of brain tumors. Although sophisticated regimens of conventional therapies are being carried out to treat patients with gliomas, the disease invariably leads to death over months or years. Before new and potentially more effective treatment strategies, such as gene- and cell-based therapies, can be effectively implemented in the clinical application, certain prerequisites have to be established. First of all, the exact localization, extent, and metabolic activity of the glioma must be determined to identify the biologically active target tissue for a biological treatment regimen; this is usually performed by imaging the expression of up-regulated endogenous genes coding for glucose or amino acid transporters and cellular hexokinase and thymidine kinase genes, respectively. Second, neuronal function and functional changes within the surrounding brain tissue have to be assessed in order to save this tissue from therapy-induced damage. Third, pathognomonic genetic changes leading to disease have to be explored on the molecular level to serve as specific targets for patient-tailored therapies. Last, a concerted noninvasive analysis of both endogenous and exogenous gene expression in animal models as well as the clinical setting is desirable to effectively translate new treatment strategies from experimental into clinical application. All of these issues can be addressed by multimodal radionuclide and magnetic resonance imaging techniques and fall into the exciting and fast growing field of molecular and functional imaging. Noninvasive imaging of endogenous gene expression by means of positron emission tomography (PET) may reveal insight into the molecular basis of pathogenesis and metabolic activity of the glioma and the extent of treatment response. When exogenous genes are introduced to serve for a therapeutic function, PET imaging may reveal the assessment of the “location,” “magnitude,” and “duration” of therapeutic gene expression and its relation to the therapeutic effect. Detailed reviews on molecular imaging have been published from the perspective of radionuclide imaging (Gambhir et al., 2000; Blasberg and Tjuvajev, 2002) as well as magnetic resonance and optical imaging (Weissleder, 2002). The present review focuses on molecular imaging of gliomas with special reference on the status and perspectives of imaging of endogenous and exogenously introduced gene expression in order to develop improved diagnostics and more effective treatment strategies of gliomas and, in that, to eventually improve the grim prognosis of this devastating disease.
Human Gene Therapy | 2003
Andreas H. Jacobs; Alexandra Winkeler; Markus Hartung; Mark Slack; Claus Dittmar; Christiane Kummer; Christoph Knoess; Norbert Galldiks; Stefan Vollmar; Klaus Wienhard; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
For the development of efficient and safe gene therapy protocols for clinical application it is desirable to determine the tissue dose of vector-mediated therapeutic gene expression noninvasively in vivo. The herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase gene (HSV-1-tk) has been shown to function as a marker gene for the direct noninvasive in vivo localization of thymidine kinase (TK) expression by positron emission tomography (PET). Using bicistronic or multicistronic gene-expressing cassettes with tk as the PET marker gene, the quantitative analysis of tk gene expression may indirectly indicate the distribution and the level of expression of linked and proportionally coexpressed genes. Here, we describe the construction and functional evaluation of HSV-1 amplicon vectors mediating proportional coexpression of HSV-1-tk as PET marker gene and the enhanced green fluorescent protein gene (gfp) as proof of principle and cell culture marker gene and the Escherichia coli cytosine deaminase (cd) as therapeutic gene. Several double-/triple-gene constructs expressing HSV-1-tk, gfp, and E. coli cd were engineered based on gene fusion or the use of an internal ribosome entry site (IRES). Functional analysis in cell culture (green fluorescent protein [GFP] fluorescence and sensitivity to the prodrugs ganciclovir [GCV] and 5-fluorocytosine [5-FC]) and Western blots were carried out after infection of proliferating rat 9L gliosarcoma and human Gli36 glioma cells with helper virus-free packaged HSV-1 amplicon vectors. To study the ability of PET to differentiate various levels of tk expression noninvasively in vivo, retrovirally transduced and selected populations of rat F98 and human Gli36dEGFR glioma cells with defined levels of proportionally coexpressed tk and gfp genes were grown as subcutaneous tumors in nude rats and nude mice, and tk imaging by PET was performed. To study HSV-1 amplicon vector-mediated gene coexpression in vivo, HSV-1 amplicon vectors bearing coexpression constructs were injected (4 x 10(7) to 1 x 10(8) transducing units) into subcutaneously growing Gli36dEGFR gliomas in nude animals, and tk imaging was performed 24 hr later. All vector constructs mediated GFP expression and sensitized 9L and Gli36 cells toward GCV- and 5-FC-mediated cell killing in a drug dose-dependent manner, respectively. The levels of gene expression varied depending on the location of the genes within the constructs indicating the influence of the IRES on the level of expression of the second gene. Moreover, functional proportional coexpression of the PET marker gene HSV-1-tk and the linked therapeutic E. coli cd gene was observed. In selected tumor cell populations, subtle IRES-dependent differences of tk gene expression could be noninvasively distinguished by PET with good correlation between quantitative assays for IRES-dependent attenuated GFP and TK expression in culture and in vivo. After infection of subcutaneously growing gliomas with HSV-1 amplicon vectors, various levels of TK expression were found ranging from 0.011-0.062 percentage injected dose per gram (%ID/g). These values were 4.0- to 5.7-fold lower than positive control tumor cells. TK expression could be imaged by PET in vivo even with the tk gene located at the weak position downstream from the IRES. In conclusion, these HSV-1 amplicon vectors carrying HSV-1-tk as PET marker gene and any linked therapeutic gene will serve an indirect noninvasive assessment of the distribution of therapeutic gene expression by PET. Monitoring the correlation between primary transduction and therapeutic efficiency of a given vector is highly desirable for the development of safe and efficient gene therapy and vector application protocols in clinical applications.
Technology in Cancer Research & Treatment | 2002
Andreas H. Jacobs; Alexandra Winkeler; Claus Dittmar; Axel Gossmann; M. Deckert; Lutz W. Kracht; Alexander Thiel; Guido Garlip; Ruediger Hilker; Jan Sobesky; Stefan Vollmar; C. Kummer; R. Graf; Jürgen Voges; Klaus Wienhard; Karl Herholz; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
Gliomas are the most common types of brain tumors, which invariably lead to death over months or years. Before new and potentially more effective treatment strategies, such as gene therapy, can be effectively introduced into clinical application the following goals must be reached: (1) the determination of localization, extent and metabolic activity of the glioma; (2) the assessment of functional changes within the surrounding brain tissue; (3) the identification of genetic changes on the molecular level leading to disease; and in addition (4) a detailed non-invasive analysis of both endogenous and exogenous gene expression in animal models and in the clinical setting. Non-invasive imaging of endogenous gene expression by means of positron emission tomography (PET) may reveal insight into the molecular basis of pathogenesis and metabolic activity of the glioma and the extent of treatment response. When exogenous genes are introduced to serve for a therapeutic function, PET imaging techniques may reveal the assessment of the location, magnitude and duration of therapeutic gene expression and its relation to the therapeutic effect. Here, we review the main principles of PET imaging and its key roles in neurooncology research.
Molecular Imaging | 2007
Christiane Kummer; Alexandra Winkeler; Claus Dittmar; Bernd Bauer; Maria Adele Rueger; Benedikt Rueckriem; Michael T. Heneka; Stefan Vollmar; Klaus Wienhard; Cornel Fraefel; Wolf-Dieter Heiss; Andreas H. Jacobs
To develop efficient and safe gene therapy approaches, the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase gene (HSV-1-tk) has been shown to function as a marker gene for the direct noninvasive in vivo localization of thymidine kinase (TK) expression by positron emission tomography (PET) using radiolabeled nucleoside analogues as specific TK substrates. Moreover, the gene encoding dopamine type 2 receptor (d2r) could be used as a PET marker gene using specific radiolabeled receptor binding compounds. Here we describe the quantitative colocalization of d2r and HSV-1-tk gene expression mediated from a universal HSV-1 amplicon vector in a subcutaneous human Gli36dEGFR glioma model by PET. The HSV-1 amplicon vector was constructed using a bicistronic gene cassette to contain (1) the d2r80A mutant, which is able to bind its ligand racloprid but unable to activate downstream signal transduction pathways, and (2) the tk39 mutant with enhanced enzymatic activity toward guanosine analogues fused to the green fluorescent protein gene (tk39gfp) serving as a marker gene in cell culture. After infection of human Gli36dEGFR glioma cells with the HSV-d2r80AIREStk39gfp (HSV-DITG) amplicon vector in cell culture, D2 receptor expression and its targeting to the cell surface were determined by Western blotting and immunolabeling. Vector application in vivo served for quantitative colocalization of d2r80A- and tk39gfp-derived PET signals employing the specific D2 receptor binding compound [11C]racloprid and the specific TK39 substrate 9-(4-[18F]fluoro-3-hydroxymethylbutyl)guanine. Our results demonstrate that for the range of gene expression studied in vivo, both enzymatic and receptor binding assays give comparable quantitative information on the level of vector-mediated gene expression in vivo. The d2r80A in combination with a specific binding compound passing the intact blood-brain barrier might be an alternative marker gene for the noninvasive assessment of vector-mediated gene expression in the brain using PET.
Gene Therapy and Regulation | 2003
Andreas H. Jacobs; Alexandra Winkeler; Claus Dittmar; Stefan Vollmar; Klaus Wienhard; Jürgen Voges; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
A phase I/II clinical trial of gene therapy for recurrent glioblastoma has been initiated in which non-invasive monitoring of the critical steps is performed by a combination of standard clinical positron-emission tomography (PET) for metabolic identification/evaluation of malignant lesions with pioneering PET imaging of HSV-1- tk transgene expression. Localization, characterization and trial follow-up of target tumors rely on multitracer PET brain imaging probed with radiolabeled 2-[ 18 F]fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG), methyl-[ 11 C]-L-methionine (MET) and 3´-deoxy-3´-[ 18 F]fluoro-L-thymidine (FLT) while the location, magnitude and duration of therapeutic HSV-1- tk transgene expression is monitored with 2´-fluoro-2´-deoxy-1-β-D-arabinofuranosyl-5-[ 124 I]iod ([ 124 I]-FIAU). In addition, in order to improve the distribution of the vector within the tumor tissue, a stereotactically guided convection-enhanced delivery (CED) protocol was devised in which the transfection of the HSV-1- tk gene into brain tumor cells is mediated by a liposome-DNA complex. Preliminary findings on a first group of five patients demonstrated that FIAU-PET imaging of HSV-1- tk expression in patients with glioblastoma is feasible and that vector-mediated gene expression may predict the therapeutic effect of ganciclovir prodrug activation. In addition, they showed that integration of magnetic resonance (MR) and PET imaging data into a 3D stereotaxic coordinate system results in an efficient non-invasive spatio-temporal monitoring of a brain gene therapy trial. Such a non-invasive imaging provides the means to identify potential critical parameters and to implement dosing/ routing adjustments that will have a critical impact on the development of standardized gene therapy protocols.
Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2002
Andreas H. Jacobs; Alexandra Winkeler; Claus Dittmar; Rüdiger Hilker; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
Molecular imaging aims towards the non‐invasive kinetic and quantitative assessment and localization of biological processes of normal and diseased cells in vivo in animal models and humans. Due to technological advances during the past years, imaging of molecular processes is a rapidly growing field, which has the potential of broad applications in the study of cell biology, biochemistry, gene/protein function and regulation, signal transduction, characterization of transgenic animals, development of new treatment strategies (gene or cell‐based) and their successful implementation into clinical application. Most importantly, the possibility to study these parameters in the same subject repeatedly over time makes molecular imaging an attractive technology to obtain reliable data and to safe recourse; for example, molecular imaging enables the assessment of an exogenously introduced therapeutic gene and the related alterations of endogenously regulated gene functions directly in the same subject. Therefore, molecular imaging will have great implications especially when molecular diagnostic and treatment modalities have to be translated from experimental into clinical application. Here, we review the three main imaging technologies, which have been developed for studying molecular processes in vivo, the disease models, which have been studied so far, and the potential future applications. J. Cell. Biochem. Suppl. 39: 98–109, 2002.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2005
Andreas H. Jacobs; Anne V. Thomas; Lutz W. Kracht; Huongfeng Li; Claus Dittmar; Guido Garlip; Norbert Galldiks; Johannes C. Klein; Jan Sobesky; Rüdiger Hilker; Stefan Vollmar; Karl Herholz; Klaus Wienhard; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
Cancer Research | 2007
Andreas H. Jacobs; Maria Adele Rueger; Alexandra Winkeler; Hong Feng Li; Stefan Vollmar; Yannic Waerzeggers; Benedict Rueckriem; Christiane Kummer; Claus Dittmar; Markus Klein; Michael T. Heneka; Ulrich Herrlinger; Cornel Fraefel; Rudolf Graf; Klaus Wienhard; Wolf-Dieter Heiss
Journal of Neuro-oncology | 2003
Andreas H. Jacobs; Jan Voges; Lutz W. Kracht; Claus Dittmar; Alexandra Winkeler; Anne V. Thomas; Klaus Wienhard; Karl Herholz; Wolf-Dieter Heiss