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Dive into the research topics where Detlev Mennerich is active.

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Featured researches published by Detlev Mennerich.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Genetics and Beyond – The Transcriptome of Human Monocytes and Disease Susceptibility

Tanja Zeller; Philipp S. Wild; Silke Szymczak; Maxime Rotival; Arne Schillert; Raphaële Castagné; Seraya Maouche; Marine Germain; Karl J. Lackner; Heidi Rossmann; Medea Eleftheriadis; Christoph Sinning; Renate B. Schnabel; Edith Lubos; Detlev Mennerich; Werner Rust; Claire Perret; Carole Proust; Viviane Nicaud; Joseph Loscalzo; Norbert Hubner; David Tregouet; Thomas Münzel; Andreas Ziegler; Laurence Tiret; Stefan Blankenberg; François Cambien

Background Variability of gene expression in human may link gene sequence variability and phenotypes; however, non-genetic variations, alone or in combination with genetics, may also influence expression traits and have a critical role in physiological and disease processes. Methodology/Principal Findings To get better insight into the overall variability of gene expression, we assessed the transcriptome of circulating monocytes, a key cell involved in immunity-related diseases and atherosclerosis, in 1,490 unrelated individuals and investigated its association with >675,000 SNPs and 10 common cardiovascular risk factors. Out of 12,808 expressed genes, 2,745 expression quantitative trait loci were detected (P<5.78×10−12), most of them (90%) being cis-modulated. Extensive analyses showed that associations identified by genome-wide association studies of lipids, body mass index or blood pressure were rarely compatible with a mediation by monocyte expression level at the locus. At a study-wide level (P<3.9×10−7), 1,662 expression traits (13.0%) were significantly associated with at least one risk factor. Genome-wide interaction analyses suggested that genetic variability and risk factors mostly acted additively on gene expression. Because of the structure of correlation among expression traits, the variability of risk factors could be characterized by a limited set of independent gene expressions which may have biological and clinical relevance. For example expression traits associated with cigarette smoking were more strongly associated with carotid atherosclerosis than smoking itself. Conclusions/Significance This study demonstrates that the monocyte transcriptome is a potent integrator of genetic and non-genetic influences of relevance for disease pathophysiology and risk assessment.


Journal of Inflammation | 2005

Characterization of Toll-like receptors in primary lung epithelial cells: strong impact of the TLR3 ligand poly(I:C) on the regulation of Toll-like receptors, adaptor proteins and inflammatory response

Mirko Ritter; Detlev Mennerich; Andreas Weith; Peter Seither

BackgroundBacterial and viral exacerbations play a crucial role in a variety of lung diseases including COPD or asthma. Since the lung epithelium is a major source of various inflammatory mediators that affect the immune response, we analyzed the inflammatory reaction of primary lung epithelial cells to different microbial molecules that are recognized by Toll-like receptors (TLR).MethodsThe effects of TLR ligands on primary small airway epithelial cells were analyzed in detail with respect to cytokine, chemokine and matrix metalloproteinase secretion. In addition, the regulation of the expression of TLRs and their adaptor proteins in small airway epithelial cells was investigated.ResultsOur data demonstrate that poly(I:C), a synthetic analog of viral dsRNA, mediated the strongest proinflammatory effects among the tested ligands, including an increased secretion of IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α, GM-CSF, GRO-α, TARC, MCP-1, MIP-3α, RANTES, IFN-β, IP-10 and ITAC as well as an increased release of MMP-1, MMP-8, MMP-9, MMP-10 and MMP-13. Furthermore, our data show that poly(I:C) as well as type-1 and type-2 cytokines have a pronounced effect on the expression of TLRs and molecules involved in TLR signaling in small airway epithelial cells. Poly(I:C) induced an elevated expression of TLR1, TLR2 and TLR3 and increased the gene expression of the general TLR adaptor MyD88 and IRAK-2. Simultaneously, poly(I:C) decreased the expression of TLR5, TLR6 and TOLLIP.ConclusionPoly(I:C), an analog of viral dsRNA and a TLR3 ligand, triggers a strong inflammatory response in small airway epithelial cells that is likely to contribute to viral exacerbations of pulmonary diseases like asthma or COPD. The pronounced effects of poly(I:C) on the expression of Toll-like receptors and molecules involved in TLR signaling is assumed to influence the immune response of the lung epithelium to viral and bacterial infections. Likewise, the regulation of TLR expression by type-1 and type-2 cytokines is important considering the impact of exogenous and endogenous TLR ligands on Th1 or Th2 driven pulmonary inflammations like COPD or asthma, respectively.


PLOS ONE | 2009

miR-155 Inhibition Sensitizes CD4+ Th Cells for TREG Mediated Suppression

Heiko F. Stahl; Tanja Fauti; Nina Ullrich; Tobias Bopp; Jan Kubach; Werner Rust; Paul Labhart; Vassili Alexiadis; Christian Becker; Mathias Hafner; Andreas Weith; Martin Lenter; Helmut Jonuleit; Edgar Schmitt; Detlev Mennerich

Background In humans and mice naturally occurring CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (nTregs) are a thymus-derived subset of T cells, crucial for the maintenance of peripheral tolerance by controlling not only potentially autoreactive T cells but virtually all cells of the adaptive and innate immune system. Recent work using Dicer-deficient mice irrevocably demonstrated the importance of miRNAs for nTreg cell-mediated tolerance. Principal Findings DNA-Microarray analyses of human as well as murine conventional CD4+ Th cells and nTregs revealed a strong up-regulation of mature miR-155 (microRNA-155) upon activation in both populations. Studying miR-155 expression in FoxP3-deficient scurfy mice and performing FoxP3 ChIP-Seq experiments using activated human T lymphocytes, we show that the expression and maturation of miR-155 seem to be not necessarily regulated by FoxP3. In order to address the functional relevance of elevated miR-155 levels, we transfected miR-155 inhibitors or mature miR-155 RNAs into freshly-isolated human and mouse primary CD4+ Th cells and nTregs and investigated the resulting phenotype in nTreg suppression assays. Whereas miR-155 inhibition in conventional CD4+ Th cells strengthened nTreg cell-mediated suppression, overexpression of mature miR-155 rendered these cells unresponsive to nTreg cell-mediated suppression. Conclusion Investigation of FoxP3 downstream targets, certainly of bound and regulated miRNAs revealed the associated function between the master regulator FoxP3 and miRNAs as regulators itself. miR-155 is shown to be crucially involved in nTreg cell mediated tolerance by regulating the susceptibility of conventional human as well as murine CD4+ Th cells to nTreg cell-mediated suppression.


BMC Genomics | 2010

Comparison of normalization methods for Illumina BeadChip HumanHT-12 v3

Ramona Schmid; Patrick Baum; Carina Ittrich; Katrin Fundel-Clemens; Wolfgang Huber; Benedikt Brors; Roland Eils; Andreas Weith; Detlev Mennerich; Karsten Quast

BackgroundNormalization of microarrays is a standard practice to account for and minimize effects which are not due to the controlled factors in an experiment. There is an overwhelming number of different methods that can be applied, none of which is ideally suited for all experimental designs. Thus, it is important to identify a normalization method appropriate for the experimental setup under consideration that is neither too negligent nor too stringent. Major aim is to derive optimal results from the underlying experiment. Comparisons of different normalization methods have already been conducted, none of which, to our knowledge, comparing more than a handful of methods.ResultsIn the present study, 25 different ways of pre-processing Illumina Sentrix BeadChip array data are compared. Among others, methods provided by the BeadStudio software are taken into account. Looking at different statistical measures, we point out the ideal versus the actual observations. Additionally, we compare qRT-PCR measurements of transcripts from different ranges of expression intensities to the respective normalized values of the microarray data. Taking together all different kinds of measures, the ideal method for our dataset is identified.ConclusionsPre-processing of microarray gene expression experiments has been shown to influence further downstream analysis to a great extent and thus has to be carefully chosen based on the design of the experiment. This study provides a recommendation for deciding which normalization method is best suited for a particular experimental setup.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Next-generation insights into regulatory T cells: expression profiling and FoxP3 occupancy in Human

Fabian Birzele; Tanja Fauti; Heiko F. Stahl; Martin Lenter; Eric Simon; Dagmar Knebel; Andreas Weith; Tobias Hildebrandt; Detlev Mennerich

Regulatory T-cells (Treg) play an essential role in the negative regulation of immune answers by developing an attenuated cytokine response that allows suppressing proliferation and effector function of T-cells (CD4+ Th). The transcription factor FoxP3 is responsible for the regulation of many genes involved in the Treg gene signature. Its ablation leads to severe immune deficiencies in human and mice. Recent developments in sequencing technologies have revolutionized the possibilities to gain insights into transcription factor binding by ChiP-seq and into transcriptome analysis by mRNA-seq. We combine FoxP3 ChiP-seq and mRNA-seq in order to understand the transcriptional differences between primary human CD4+ T helper and regulatory T-cells, as well as to study the role of FoxP3 in generating those differences. We show, that mRNA-seq allows analyzing the transcriptomal landscape of T-cells including the expression of specific splice variants at much greater depth than previous approaches, whereas 50% of transcriptional regulation events have not been described before by using diverse array technologies. We discovered splicing patterns like the expression of a kinase-dead isoform of IRAK1 upon T-cell activation. The immunoproteasome is up-regulated in both Treg and CD4+ Th cells upon activation, whereas the ‘standard’ proteasome is up-regulated in Tregs only upon activation.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2009

An expression module of WIPF1-coexpressed genes identifies patients with favorable prognosis in three tumor types.

Eike Staub; Joern Groene; Maya Heinze; Detlev Mennerich; Stefan Roepcke; Irina Klaman; Bernd Hinzmann; Esmeralda Castanos-Velez; Christian Pilarsky; Benno Mann; Thomas Brümmendorf; Birgit Weber; H. J. Buhr; André Rosenthal

Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS) predisposes patients to leukemia and lymphoma. WAS is caused by mutations in the protein WASP which impair its interaction with the WIPF1 protein. Here, we aim to identify a module of WIPF1-coexpressed genes and to assess its use as a prognostic signature for colorectal cancer, glioma, and breast cancer patients. Two public colorectal cancer microarray data sets were used for discovery and validation of the WIPF1 co-expression module. Based on expression of the WIPF1 signature, we classified more than 400 additional tumors with microarray data from our own experiments or from publicly available data sets according to their WIPF1 signature expression. This allowed us to separate patient populations for colorectal cancers, breast cancers, and gliomas for which clinical characteristics like survival times and times to relapse were analyzed. Groups of colorectal cancer, breast cancer, and glioma patients with low expression of the WIPF1 co-expression module generally had a favorable prognosis. In addition, the majority of WIPF1 signature genes are individually correlated with disease outcome in different studies. Literature gene network analysis revealed that among WIPF1 co-expressed genes known direct transcriptional targets of c-myc, ESR1 and p53 are enriched. The mean expression profile of WIPF1 signature genes is correlated with the profile of a proliferation signature. The WIPF1 signature is the first microarray-based prognostic expression signature primarily developed for colorectal cancer that is instrumental in other tumor types: low expression of the WIPF1 module is associated with better prognosis.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2010

CHO gene expression profiling in biopharmaceutical process analysis and design

Jochen Schaub; Christoph Clemens; Peter Schorn; Tobias Hildebrandt; Werner Rust; Detlev Mennerich; Hitto Kaufmann; Torsten W. Schulz

Increase in both productivity and product yields in biopharmaceutical process development with recombinant protein producing mammalian cells can be mainly attributed to the advancements in cell line development, media, and process optimization. Only recently, genome-scale technologies enable a system-level analysis to elucidate the complex biomolecular basis of protein production in mammalian cells promising an increased process understanding and the deduction of knowledge-based approaches for further process optimization. Here, the use of gene expression profiling for the analysis of a low titer (LT) and high titer (HT) fed batch process using the same IgG producing CHO cell line was investigated. We found that gene expression (i) significantly differed in HT versus LT process conditions due to differences in applied chemically defined, serum-free media, (ii) changed over the time course of the fed batch processes, and that (iii) both metabolic pathways and 14 biological functions such as cellular growth or cell death were affected. Furthermore, detailed analysis of metabolism in a standard process format revealed the potential use of transcriptomics for rational media design as is shown for the case of lipid metabolism where the product titer could be increased by about 20% based on a lipid modified basal medium. The results demonstrate that gene expression profiling can be an important tool for mammalian biopharmaceutical process analysis and optimization.


Molecular Cancer | 2006

A genome-wide map of aberrantly expressed chromosomal islands in colorectal cancer

Eike Staub; Jörn Gröne; Detlev Mennerich; Stefan Röpcke; Irina Klamann; Bernd Hinzmann; Esmeralda Castanos-Velez; Benno Mann; Christian Pilarsky; Thomas Brümmendorf; Birgit Weber; H. J. Buhr; André Rosenthal

BackgroundCancer development is accompanied by genetic phenomena like deletion and amplification of chromosome parts or alterations of chromatin structure. It is expected that these mechanisms have a strong effect on regional gene expression.ResultsWe investigated genome-wide gene expression in colorectal carcinoma (CRC) and normal epithelial tissues from 25 patients using oligonucleotide arrays. This allowed us to identify 81 distinct chromosomal islands with aberrant gene expression. Of these, 38 islands show a gain in expression and 43 a loss of expression. In total, 7.892 genes (25.3% of all human genes) are located in aberrantly expressed islands. Many chromosomal regions that are linked to hereditary colorectal cancer show deregulated expression. Also, many known tumor genes localize to chromosomal islands of misregulated expression in CRC.ConclusionAn extensive comparison with published CGH data suggests that chromosomal regions known for frequent deletions in colon cancer tend to show reduced expression. In contrast, regions that are often amplified in colorectal tumors exhibit heterogeneous expression patterns: even show a decrease of mRNA expression. Because for several islands of deregulated expression chromosomal aberrations have never been observed, we speculate that additional mechanisms (like abnormal states of regional chromatin) also have a substantial impact on the formation of co-expression islands in colorectal carcinoma.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Phenocopy - a strategy to qualify chemical compounds during hit-to-lead and/or lead optimization

Patrick Baum; Ramona Schmid; Carina Ittrich; Werner Rust; Katrin Fundel-Clemens; Susanne Siewert; Martin Baur; Lisa Mara; Lore M. Gruenbaum; Armin Heckel; Roland Eils; Roland E. Kontermann; Gerald Jürgen Roth; Florian Gantner; Andreas Schnapp; John Edward Park; Andreas Weith; Karsten Quast; Detlev Mennerich

A phenocopy is defined as an environmentally induced phenotype of one individual which is identical to the genotype-determined phenotype of another individual. The phenocopy phenomenon has been translated to the drug discovery process as phenotypes produced by the treatment of biological systems with new chemical entities (NCE) may resemble environmentally induced phenotypic modifications. Various new chemical entities exerting inhibition of the kinase activity of Transforming Growth Factor β Receptor I (TGF-βR1) were qualified by high-throughput RNA expression profiling. This chemical genomics approach resulted in a precise time-dependent insight to the TGF-β biology and allowed furthermore a comprehensive analysis of each NCEs off-target effects. The evaluation of off-target effects by the phenocopy approach allows a more accurate and integrated view on optimized compounds, supplementing classical biological evaluation parameters such as potency and selectivity. It has therefore the potential to become a novel method for ranking compounds during various drug discovery phases.


Prostaglandins & Other Lipid Mediators | 2009

Comparison of microsomal prostaglandin E synthase-1 deletion and COX-2 inhibition in acute cardiac ischemia in mice.

Dongmei Wu; Detlev Mennerich; Kirsten Arndt; Kenji Sugiyama; Naoko Ozaki; Karoline Schwarz; Jianqin Wei; Heng Wu; Nanette H. Bishopric; Henri Doods

The aim of the present study was to compare the effects of genetic mPGES-1 loss and COX-2 inhibition on myocardial damage after coronary occlusion. mPGES-1(-/-) mice and their wild-type littermates were injected with vehicle or COX-2 inhibitor (celecoxib), and 30min later the left coronary artery was surgically occluded. At 24h, myocardial infarct (MI) volume was measured histologically. Post-MI survival was reduced in WT mice receiving celecoxib (12/20) compared with vehicle-treated controls (12/12) or the loss of mPGES-1 (13/13) together with increased phosphokinase (CPK) and cardiac troponin-I release. Endogenous mPGES-1 expression was unchanged by ischemia in WT mice and absent in mPGES-1(-/-) hearts. COX-2 expression was markedly increased at 24h after MI in WT hearts; this upregulation was largely attenuated in mPGES-1(-/-) mice. We conclude that loss of mPGES-1 prevents the upregulation of COX-2 after myocardial infarct, and in contrast to inhibition of COX-2, does not increase ischemic myocardial damage.

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André Rosenthal

National Institutes of Health

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Christian Pilarsky

Dresden University of Technology

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