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Dive into the research topics where David Haschka is active.

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Featured researches published by David Haschka.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2014

Iron at the interface of immunity and infection

Manfred Nairz; David Haschka; Egon Demetz; Günter Weiss

Both, mammalian cells and microbes have an essential need for iron, which is required for many metabolic processes and for microbial pathogenicity. In addition, cross-regulatory interactions between iron homeostasis and immune function are evident. Cytokines and the acute phase protein hepcidin affect iron homeostasis leading to the retention of the metal within macrophages and hypoferremia. This is considered to result from a defense mechanism of the body to limit the availability of iron for extracellular pathogens while on the other hand the reduction of circulating iron results in the development of anemia of inflammation. Opposite, iron and the erythropoiesis inducing hormone erythropoietin affect innate immune responses by influencing interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) mediated (iron) or NF-kB inducible (erythropoietin) immune effector pathways in macrophages. Thus, macrophages loaded with iron lose their ability to kill intracellular pathogens via IFN-γ mediated effector pathways such as nitric oxide (NO) formation. Accordingly, macrophages invaded by the intracellular bacterium Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium increase the expression of the iron export protein ferroportin thereby reducing the availability of iron for intramacrophage bacteria while on the other side strengthening anti-microbial macrophage effector pathways via increased formation of NO or TNF-α. In addition, certain innate resistance genes such as natural resistance associated macrophage protein function (Nramp1) or lipocalin-2 exert part of their antimicrobial activity by controlling host and/or microbial iron homeostasis. Consequently, pharmacological or dietary modification of cellular iron trafficking enhances host resistance to intracellular pathogens but may increase susceptibility to microbes in the extracellular compartment and vice versa. Thus, the control over iron homeostasis is a central battlefield in host–pathogen interplay influencing the course of an infectious disease in favor of either the mammalian host or the pathogenic invader.


Gut | 2014

Hypoxia induced downregulation of hepcidin is mediated by platelet derived growth factor BB

Thomas Sonnweber; David Nachbaur; Andrea Schroll; Manfred Nairz; Markus Seifert; Egon Demetz; David Haschka; Mitterstiller Am; Kleinsasser A; Burtscher M; Trübsbach S; Anthony T. Murphy; Wroblewski; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Mleczko-Sanecka K; Chiara Vecchi; Martina U. Muckenthaler; Antonello Pietrangelo; Igor Theurl; Günter Weiss

Objective Hypoxia affects body iron homeostasis; however, the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. Design Using a standardised hypoxia chamber, 23 healthy volunteers were subjected to hypoxic conditions, equivalent to an altitude of 5600 m, for 6 h. Subsequent experiments were performed in C57BL/6 mice, CREB-H knockout mice, primary hepatocytes and HepG2 cells. Results Exposure of subjects to hypoxia resulted in a significant decrease of serum levels of the master regulator of iron homeostasis hepcidin and elevated concentrations of platelet derived growth factor (PDGF)-BB. Using correlation analysis, we identified PDGF-BB to be associated with hypoxia mediated hepcidin repression in humans. We then exposed mice to hypoxia using a standardised chamber and observed downregulation of hepatic hepcidin mRNA expression that was paralleled by elevated serum PDGF-BB protein concentrations and higher serum iron levels as compared with mice housed under normoxic conditions. PDGF-BB treatment in vitro and in vivo resulted in suppression of both steady state and BMP6 inducible hepcidin expression. Mechanistically, PDGF-BB inhibits hepcidin transcription by downregulating the protein expression of the transcription factors CREB and CREB-H, and pharmacological blockade or genetic ablation of these pathways abrogated the effects of PDGF-BB toward hepcidin expression. Conclusions Hypoxia decreases hepatic hepcidin expression by a novel regulatory pathway exerted via PDGF-BB, leading to increased availability of circulating iron that can be used for erythropoiesis.


Nature Medicine | 2016

On-demand erythrocyte disposal and iron recycling requires transient macrophages in the liver

Igor Theurl; Ingo Hilgendorf; Manfred Nairz; Piotr Tymoszuk; David Haschka; Malte Asshoff; Shun He; Louisa M.S. Gerhardt; Tobias A. W. Holderried; Markus Seifert; Sieghart Sopper; Ashley M. Fenn; Atsushi Anzai; Sara Rattik; Cameron S. McAlpine; Milan Theurl; Peter Wieghofer; Yoshiko Iwamoto; Georg F. Weber; Nina K Harder; Benjamin G. Chousterman; Tara Arvedson; Mary McKee; Fudi Wang; Oliver M D Lutz; Emanuele Rezoagli; Lorenzo Berra; Marco Prinz; Matthias Nahrendorf; Guenter Weiss

Iron is an essential component of the erythrocyte protein hemoglobin and is crucial to oxygen transport in vertebrates. In the steady state, erythrocyte production is in equilibrium with erythrocyte removal. In various pathophysiological conditions, however, erythrocyte life span is compromised severely, which threatens the organism with anemia and iron toxicity. Here we identify an on-demand mechanism that clears erythrocytes and recycles iron. We show that monocytes that express high levels of lymphocyte antigen 6 complex, locus C1 (LY6C1, also known as Ly-6C) ingest stressed and senescent erythrocytes, accumulate in the liver via coordinated chemotactic cues, and differentiate into ferroportin 1 (FPN1, encoded by SLC40A1)-expressing macrophages that can deliver iron to hepatocytes. Monocyte-derived FPN1+Tim-4neg macrophages are transient, reside alongside embryonically derived T cell immunoglobulin and mucin domain containing 4 (Timd4, also known as Tim-4)high Kupffer cells (KCs), and depend on the growth factor Csf1 and the transcription factor Nrf2 (encoded by Nfe2l2). The spleen, likewise, recruits iron-loaded Ly-6Chigh monocytes, but these do not differentiate into iron-recycling macrophages, owing to the suppressive action of Csf2. The accumulation of a transient macrophage population in the liver also occurs in mouse models of hemolytic anemia, anemia of inflammation, and sickle cell disease. Inhibition of monocyte recruitment to the liver during stressed erythrocyte delivery leads to kidney and liver damage. These observations identify the liver as the primary organ that supports rapid erythrocyte removal and iron recycling, and uncover a mechanism by which the body adapts to fluctuations in erythrocyte integrity.


Cell Metabolism | 2014

The Arachidonic Acid Metabolome Serves as a Conserved Regulator of Cholesterol Metabolism

Egon Demetz; Andrea Schroll; Kristina Auer; Christiane Heim; Josef R. Patsch; Philipp Eller; Markus Theurl; Igor Theurl; Milan Theurl; Markus Seifert; Daniela Lener; Ursula Stanzl; David Haschka; Malte Asshoff; Stefanie Dichtl; Manfred Nairz; Eva Huber; Martin Stadlinger; Alexander R. Moschen; Xiaorong Li; Petra Pallweber; Hubert Scharnagl; Tatjana Stojakovic; Winfried März; Marcus E. Kleber; Katia Garlaschelli; Patrizia Uboldi; Alberico L. Catapano; Frans Stellaard; Mats Rudling

Summary Cholesterol metabolism is closely interrelated with cardiovascular disease in humans. Dietary supplementation with omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids including arachidonic acid (AA) was shown to favorably affect plasma LDL-C and HDL-C. However, the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. By combining data from a GWAS screening in >100,000 individuals of European ancestry, mediator lipidomics, and functional validation studies in mice, we identify the AA metabolome as an important regulator of cholesterol homeostasis. Pharmacological modulation of AA metabolism by aspirin induced hepatic generation of leukotrienes (LTs) and lipoxins (LXs), thereby increasing hepatic expression of the bile salt export pump Abcb11. Induction of Abcb11 translated in enhanced reverse cholesterol transport, one key function of HDL. Further characterization of the bioactive AA-derivatives identified LX mimetics to lower plasma LDL-C. Our results define the AA metabolome as conserved regulator of cholesterol metabolism, and identify AA derivatives as promising therapeutics to treat cardiovascular disease in humans.


Blood | 2017

Momelotinib inhibits ACVR1/ALK2, decreases hepcidin production and ameliorates anemia of chronic disease in rodents

Malte Asshoff; Verena Petzer; Matthew Robert Warr; David Haschka; Piotr Tymoszuk; Egon Demetz; Markus Seifert; Wilfried Posch; Manfred Nairz; Pat Maciejewski; Peter Fowles; Christopher J. Burns; Gregg Smith; Kay Uwe Wagner; Guenter Weiss; J. Andrew Whitney; Igor Theurl

Patients with myelofibrosis (MF) often develop anemia and frequently become dependent on red blood cell transfusions. Results from a phase 2 study for the treatment of MF with the Janus kinase 1/2 (JAK1/2) inhibitor momelotinib (MMB) demonstrated that MMB treatment ameliorated anemia, which was unexpected for a JAK1/2 inhibitor, because erythropoietin-mediated JAK2 signaling is essential for erythropoiesis. Using a rat model of anemia of chronic disease, we demonstrated that MMB treatment can normalize hemoglobin and red blood cell numbers. We found that this positive effect is driven by direct inhibition of the bone morphogenic protein receptor kinase activin A receptor, type I (ACVR1), and the subsequent reduction of hepatocyte hepcidin production. Of note, ruxolitinib, a JAK1/2 inhibitor approved for the treatment of MF, had no inhibitory activity on this pathway. Further, we demonstrated the effect of MMB is not mediated by direct inhibition of JAK2-mediated ferroportin (FPN1) degradation, because neither MMB treatment nor myeloid-specific deletion of JAK2 affected FPN1 expression. Our data support the hypothesis that the improvement of inflammatory anemia by MMB results from inhibition of ACVR1-mediated hepcidin expression in the liver, which leads to increased mobilization of sequestered iron from cellular stores and subsequent stimulation of erythropoiesis.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2015

Iron Regulatory Proteins Mediate Host Resistance to Salmonella Infection

Manfred Nairz; Dunja Ferring-Appel; Daniela Casarrubea; Thomas Sonnweber; Lydie Viatte; Andrea Schroll; David Haschka; Ferric C. Fang; Matthias W. Hentze; Guenter Weiss; Bruno Galy

Macrophages are essential for systemic iron recycling, and also control iron availability to pathogens. Iron metabolism in mammalian cells is orchestrated posttranscriptionally by iron-regulatory proteins (IRP)-1 and -2. Here, we generated mice with selective and combined ablation of both IRPs in macrophages to investigate the role of IRPs in controlling iron availability. These animals are hyperferritinemic but otherwise display normal clinical iron parameters. However, mutant mice rapidly succumb to systemic infection with Salmonella Typhimurium, a pathogenic bacterium that multiplies within macrophages, with increased bacterial burdens in liver and spleen. Ex vivo infection experiments indicate that IRP function restricts bacterial access to iron via the EntC and Feo bacterial iron-acquisition systems. Further, IRPs contain Salmonella by promoting the induction of lipocalin 2, a host antimicrobial factor that inhibits bacterial uptake of iron-laden siderophores, and by suppressing the ferritin iron pool. This work reveals the importance of the IRPs in innate immunity.


Cellular Microbiology | 2016

Heme oxygenase 1 controls early innate immune response of macrophages to Salmonella Typhimurium infection

Anna Maria Mitterstiller; David Haschka; Stefanie Dichtl; Manfred Nairz; Egon Demetz; Heribert Talasz; Miguel P. Soares; Elisa Einwallner; Harald Esterbauer; Ferric C. Fang; Stephan Geley; Guenter Weiss

Macrophages are central for the immune control of intracellular microbes. Heme oxygenase 1 (HO‐1, hmox) is the first and rate limiting enzyme in the breakdown of heme originating from degraded senescent erythrocytes and heme‐proteins, yielding equal amounts of iron, carbon monoxide and biliverdin. HO‐1 is strongly up‐regulated in macrophages in response to inflammatory signals, including bacterial endotoxin. In view of the essential role of iron for the growth and proliferation of intracellular bacteria along with known effects of the metal on innate immune function, we examined whether HO‐1 plays a role in the control of infection with the intracellular bacterium Salmonella Typhimurium. We studied the course of infection in stably‐transfected murine macrophages (RAW264.7) bearing a tetracycline‐inducible plasmid producing hmox shRNA and in primary HO‐1 knockout macrophages. While uptake of bacteria into macrophages was not affected, a significantly reduced survival of intracellular Salmonella was observed upon hmox knockdown or pharmacological hmox inhibition, which was independent of Nramp1 functionality. This could be traced to limitation of iron availability for intramacrophage bacteria along with enhanced stimulation of innate immune effector pathways, including the formation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species and increased TNF‐α expression. Mechanistically, these latter effects result from intracellular iron limitation with subsequent activation of NF‐κB and further inos, tnfa and p47phox transcription along with reduced formation of the anti‐inflammatory and radical scavenging molecules, CO and biliverdin as a consequence of HO‐1 silencing.


Haematologica | 2014

Hepcidin as a predictive factor and therapeutic target in erythropoiesis- stimulating agent treatment for anemia of chronic disease in rats

Milan Theurl; Manfred Nairz; Andrea Schroll; Thomas Sonnweber; Malte Asshoff; David Haschka; Markus Seifert; Wolfgang Willenbacher; Doris Wilflingseder; Wilfried Posch; Anthony T. Murphy; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Igor Theurl; Günter Weiss

Anemia of chronic disease is a multifactorial disorder, resulting mainly from inflammation-driven reticuloendothelial iron retention, impaired erythropoiesis, and reduced biological activity of erythropoietin. Erythropoiesis-stimulating agents have been used for the treatment of anemia of chronic disease, although with varying response rates and potential adverse effects. Serum concentrations of hepcidin, a key regulator of iron homeostasis, are increased in patients with anemia of chronic disease and linked to the pathogenesis of this disease, because hepcidin blocks cellular iron egress, thus limiting availability of iron for erythropoiesis. We tested whether serum hepcidin levels can predict and affect the therapeutic efficacy of erythropoiesis-stimulating agent treatment using a well-established rat model of anemia of chronic disease. We found that high pre-treatment hepcidin levels correlated with an impaired hematologic response to an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent in rats with anemia of chronic disease. Combined treatment with an erythropoiesis-stimulating agent and an inhibitor of hepcidin expression, LDN-193189, significantly reduced serum hepcidin levels, mobilized iron from tissue stores, increased serum iron levels and improved hemoglobin levels more effectively than did the erythropoiesis-stimulating agent or LDN-193189 monotherapy. In parallel, both the erythropoiesis-stimulating agent and erythropoiesis-stimulating agent/LDN-193189 combined reduced the expression of cytokines known to inhibit erythropoiesis. We conclude that serum hepcidin levels can predict the hematologic responsiveness to erythropoiesis-stimulating agent therapy in anemia of chronic disease. Pharmacological inhibition of hepcidin formation improves the erythropoiesis-stimulating agent’s therapeutic efficacy, which may favor a reduction of erythropoiesis-stimulating agent dosages, costs and side effects.


European Journal of Immunology | 2015

Lipocalin-2 ensures host defense against Salmonella Typhimurium by controlling macrophage iron homeostasis and immune response.

Manfred Nairz; Andrea Schroll; David Haschka; Stefanie Dichtl; Thomas Sonnweber; Igor Theurl; Milan Theurl; Ewald Lindner; Egon Demetz; Malte Aßhoff; Rosa Bellmann-Weiler; Raphael Müller; Romana R. Gerner; Alexander R. Moschen; Nadja Baumgartner; Patrizia Moser; Heribert Talasz; Herbert Tilg; Ferric C. Fang; Günter Weiss

Lipocalin‐2 (Lcn2) is an innate immune peptide with pleiotropic effects. Lcn2 binds iron‐laden bacterial siderophores, chemo‐attracts neutrophils and has immunomodulatory and apoptosis‐regulating effects.


Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine | 2016

Correlates of serum hepcidin levels and its association with cardiovascular disease in an elderly general population.

Raimund Pechlaner; Stefan Kiechl; Manuel Mayr; Peter Santer; Siegfried Weger; David Haschka; Sukhvinder S. Bansal; Johann Willeit; Günter Weiss

Abstract Background: The expression of the key iron regulatory hormone hepcidin is regulated by iron availability, inflammation, hormones, hypoxia, and anaemia. Increased serum concentrations of hepcidin have recently been linked to atherosclerosis. We studied demographic, haematologic, biochemical, and dietary correlates of serum hepcidin levels and its associations with incident cardiovascular disease and with carotid atherosclerosis. Methods: Serum hepcidin concentrations were measured by tandem mass spectrometry in samples taken in 2000 from 675 infection-free participants of the prospective population-based Bruneck study (age, mean±standard deviation, 66.0±10.2; 48.1% male). Blood parameters were measured by standard methods. Dietary intakes of iron and alcohol were surveyed with a food frequency questionnaire. Carotid atherosclerosis (365 cases) was assessed by ultrasound and subjects were observed for incident stroke, myocardial infarction, or sudden cardiac death (91 events) until 2010. Results: Median (interquartile range) hepcidin levels were 2.27 nM (0.86, 4.15). Most hepcidin correlates were in line with hepcidin as an indicator of iron stores. Independently of ferritin, hepcidin was related directly to physical activity (p=0.024) and fibrinogen (p<0.0001), and inversely to alcohol intake (p=0.006), haemoglobin (p=0.027), and γ-glutamyltransferase (p<0.0001). Hepcidin and hepcidin-to-ferritin ratio were not associated with prevalent carotid atherosclerosis (p=0.43 and p=0.79) or with incident cardiovascular disease (p=0.62 and p=0.33). Conclusions: In this random sample of the general community, fibrinogen and γ-glutamyltransferase were the most significant hepcidin correlates independent of iron stores, and hepcidin was related to neither atherosclerosis nor cardiovascular disease.

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Manfred Nairz

Innsbruck Medical University

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Igor Theurl

Innsbruck Medical University

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Günter Weiss

Innsbruck Medical University

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Egon Demetz

Innsbruck Medical University

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Markus Seifert

Innsbruck Medical University

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Stefanie Dichtl

Innsbruck Medical University

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Guenter Weiss

Innsbruck Medical University

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Piotr Tymoszuk

Innsbruck Medical University

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Andrea Schroll

Innsbruck Medical University

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Thomas Sonnweber

Innsbruck Medical University

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