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Dive into the research topics where Dieter Steinhilber is active.

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Featured researches published by Dieter Steinhilber.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2002

Hyperforin is a dual inhibitor of cyclooxygenase-1 and 5-lipoxygenase.

Dana Albert; Ilse Zündorf; Theo Dingermann; Walter E. Müller; Dieter Steinhilber; Oliver Werz

The acylphloroglucinol derivative hyperforin is the major lipophilic constituent in the herb Hypericum perforatum (St. Johns wort). The aim of the present study was to investigate if hyperforin as well as extracts of H. perforatum can suppresses the activities of 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO) and cyclooxygenases (COX), key enzymes in the formation of proinflammatory eicosanoids from arachidonic acid (AA). In freshly isolated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes stimulated with Ca(2+) ionophore A23187, hyperforin inhibited 5-LO product formation with IC(50) values of about 1-2 microM, in the absence or presence of exogenous AA (20 microM), respectively, being almost equipotent to the well-documented 5-LO inhibitor zileuton (IC(50) = 0.5-1 microM). Experiments with purified human 5-LO demonstrate that hyperforin is a direct 5-LO inhibitor (IC(50) approximately 90 nM), acting in an uncompetitive fashion. In thrombin- or ionophore-stimulated human platelets, hyperforin suppressed COX-1 product (12(S)-hydroxyheptadecatrienoic acid) formation with an IC(50) of 0.3 and 3 microM, respectively, being about 3- to 18-fold more potent than aspirin. At similar concentrations, hyperforin suppressed COX-1 activity in platelets in presence of exogenous AA (20 microM) as well as in cell-free systems. Hyperforin could not interfere with COX-2 product formation and did not significantly inhibit 12- or 15-LO in platelets or leukocytes, respectively. We conclude that hyperforin acts as a dual inhibitor of 5-LO and COX-1 in intact cells as well as on the catalytic activity of the crude enzymes, suggesting therapeutic potential in inflammatory and allergic diseases connected to eicosanoids.


The FASEB Journal | 2002

Extracellular signal-regulated kinases phosphorylate 5-lipoxygenase and stimulate 5-lipoxygenase product formation in leukocytes

Oliver Werz; Eva Bürkert; Lutz Fischer; Dagmar Szellas; David Dishart; Bengt Samuelsson; Olof Rådmark; Dieter Steinhilber

5‐Lipoxygenase (5‐LO) is the key enzyme in the biosynthesis of proinflammatory leukotrienes. Here, we demonstrate that extracellular signal‐regulated kinases (ERKs) can phosphorylate 5‐LO in vitro. Efficient phosphorylation required the presence of unsaturated fatty acids and was abolished when Ser‐663 was mutated to alanine. In intact HeLa cells stimulated with arachidonic acid (AA), impaired 5‐LO product formation was evident in cells expressing the S663A‐5‐LO mutant compared with cells expressing wild‐type 5‐LO. For Mono Mac 6 cells, priming with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) before stimulation with ionophore was required for ERK1/2 activation and efficient 5‐LO phosphorylation, in parallel with substantial AA release and 5‐LO product formation. Inhibition of PKC by GF109203x or MEK1/2 by U0126 (or PD98059) abolished the 5‐LO up‐regulation effects of PMA. In contrast, these inhibitors failed to suppress 5‐LO product formation induced by stimuli such as AA plus ionophore, which apparently do not involve the ERK1/2 pathway. Based on inhibitor studies, ERKs are also involved in AA‐stimulated 5‐LO product formation in PMNL, whereas a role for ERKs is not apparent in 5‐LO activation induced by ionophore or cell stress. Finally, the data suggest that ERKs and p38 MAPK‐regulated MAPKAPKs can act in conjunction to stimulate 5‐LO by phosphorylation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Arachidonic Acid Promotes Phosphorylation of 5-Lipoxygenase at Ser-271 by MAPK-activated Protein Kinase 2 (MK2)

Oliver Werz; Dagmar Szellas; Dieter Steinhilber; Olof Rådmark

We demonstrated previously that 5-lipoxygenase (5-LO), a key enzyme in leukotriene biosynthesis, can be phosphorylated by p38 MAPK-regulated MAPKAP kinases (MKs). Here we show that mutation of Ser-271 to Ala in 5-LO abolished MK2 catalyzed phosphorylation and clearly reduced phosphorylation by kinases prepared from stimulated polymorphonuclear leukocytes and Mono Mac 6 cells. Compared with heat shock protein 27 (Hsp-27), 5-LO was a weak substrate for MK2. However, the addition of unsaturated fatty acids (i.e. arachidonate 1–50 μm) up-regulated phosphorylation of 5-LO, but not of Hsp-27, by active MK2 in vitro, resulting in a similar phosphorylation as for Hsp-27. 5-LO was phosphorylated also by other serine/threonine kinases recognizing the motif Arg-Xaa-Xaa-Ser (protein kinase A, Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent kinase II), but these activities were not increased by fatty acids. HeLa cells expressing wild type 5-LO or S271A-5-LO, showed prominent 5-LO activity when incubated with Ca2+-ionophore plus arachidonate. However, when stimulated with only exogenous arachidonic acid, activity for the S271A mutant was significantly lower as compared with wild type 5-LO. It appears that phosphorylation at Ser-271 is more important for 5-LO activity induced by a stimulus that does not prominently increase intracellular Ca2+ and that arachidonic acid stimulates leukotriene biosynthesis also by promoting this MK2-catalyzed phosphorylation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Lipoxygenase mediates invasion of intrametastatic lymphatic vessels and propagates lymph node metastasis of human mammary carcinoma xenografts in mouse

Dontscho Kerjaschki; Zsuzsanna Bago-Horvath; Margaretha Rudas; Veronika Sexl; Christine Schneckenleithner; Susanne Wolbank; Gregor Bartel; Sigurd Krieger; Romana Kalt; Brigitte Hantusch; Thomas Keller; Katalin Nagy-Bojarszky; Nicole Huttary; Ingrid Raab; Karin Lackner; Katharina Krautgasser; Helga Schachner; Klaus Kaserer; Sandra Rezar; Sybille Madlener; Caroline Vonach; Agnes Davidovits; Hitonari Nosaka; Monika Hämmerle; Katharina Viola; Helmut Dolznig; Martin Schreiber; Alexander Nader; Wolfgang Mikulits; Michael Gnant

In individuals with mammary carcinoma, the most relevant prognostic predictor of distant organ metastasis and clinical outcome is the status of axillary lymph node metastasis. Metastases form initially in axillary sentinel lymph nodes and progress via connecting lymphatic vessels into postsentinel lymph nodes. However, the mechanisms of consecutive lymph node colonization are unknown. Through the analysis of human mammary carcinomas and their matching axillary lymph nodes, we show here that intrametastatic lymphatic vessels and bulk tumor cell invasion into these vessels highly correlate with formation of postsentinel metastasis. In an in vitro model of tumor bulk invasion, human mammary carcinoma cells caused circular defects in lymphatic endothelial monolayers. These circular defects were highly reminiscent of defects of the lymphovascular walls at sites of tumor invasion in vivo and were primarily generated by the tumor-derived arachidonic acid metabolite 12S-HETE following 15-lipoxygenase-1 (ALOX15) catalysis. Accordingly, pharmacological inhibition and shRNA knockdown of ALOX15 each repressed formation of circular defects in vitro. Importantly, ALOX15 knockdown antagonized formation of lymph node metastasis in xenografted tumors. Furthermore, expression of lipoxygenase in human sentinel lymph node metastases correlated inversely with metastasis-free survival. These results provide evidence that lipoxygenase serves as a mediator of tumor cell invasion into lymphatic vessels and formation of lymph node metastasis in ductal mammary carcinomas.


The FASEB Journal | 2003

Phosphorylation- and stimulus-dependent inhibition of cellular 5-lipoxygenase activity by nonredox-type inhibitors

Lutz Fischer; Dagmar Szellas; Olof Rådmark; Dieter Steinhilber; Oliver Werz

Nonredox‐type 5‐lipoxygenase (5‐LO) inhibitors such as ZM230487 or L‐739.010 potently suppress leukotriene biosynthesis at low cellular peroxide tone. Here, we show that inhibition of 5‐LO product formation by nonredox‐type 5‐LO inhibitors in human isolated polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) depends on the activation pathway of 5‐LO. Thus, compared with 5‐LO product synthesis induced by the Ca2+‐mobilizing agent ionophore A23187, cell stress‐induced 5‐LO product formation involving 5‐LO kinase pathways required ∼10‐ to 100‐fold higher concentrations of ZM230487 or L‐739.010 for comparable 5‐LO inhibition. No such differences were observed for the iron ligand‐type 5‐LO inhibitor BWA4C or the novel‐type 5‐LO inhibitors hyperforin and 3‐O‐acetyl‐11‐keto‐boswellic acid. Experiments using purified 5‐LO revealed that Ca2+ is no prerequisite for potent enzyme inhibition by ZM230487, and exposure of PMNL to the combination of ionophore and cell stress did not restore potent 5‐LO suppression. Intriguingly, a significant difference in the potency of nonredox‐type inhibitors (but not of BWA4C) was determined between wild‐type 5‐LO and the mutant S271A/S663A‐5‐LO (lacking phosphorylation sites for ERK1/2 and MAPKAPK‐2) in HeLa cells. Collectively, our data suggest that compared with Ca2+‐mediated 5‐LO product formation, enzyme activation involving 5‐LO phosphorylation events specifically and strongly alters the susceptibility of 5‐LO toward nonredox‐type inhibitors in intact cells.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2009

Bioactivity-guided mapping and navigation of chemical space

Steffen Renner; Willem A. L. Van Otterlo; Marta Dominguez Seoane; Sabine Möcklinghoff; Bettina Hofmann; Stefan Wetzel; Ansgar Schuffenhauer; Peter Ertl; Tudor I. Oprea; Dieter Steinhilber; Luc Brunsveld; Daniel Rauh; Herbert Waldmann

The structure- and chemistry-based hierarchical organization of library scaffolds in tree-like arrangements provides a valid, intuitive means to map and navigate chemical space. We demonstrate that scaffold trees built using bioactivity as the key selection criterion for structural simplification during tree construction allow efficient and intuitive mapping, visualization and navigation of the chemical space defined by a given library, which in turn allows correlation of this chemical space with the investigated bioactivity and further compound design. Brachiation along the branches of such trees from structurally complex to simple scaffolds with retained yet varying bioactivity is feasible at high frequency for the five major pharmaceutically relevant target classes and allows for the identification of new inhibitor types for a given target. We provide proof of principle by identifying new active scaffolds for 5-lipoxygenase and the estrogen receptor ERalpha.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2008

Carnosic acid and carnosol potently inhibit human 5-lipoxygenase and suppress pro-inflammatory responses of stimulated human polymorphonuclear leukocytes.

Daniel Poeckel; Christine Greiner; Moritz Verhoff; Oliver Rau; Lars Tausch; Christina Hörnig; Dieter Steinhilber; Manfred Schubert-Zsilavecz; Oliver Werz

Carnosic acid (CA) and carnosol (CS) are phenolic diterpenes present in several labiate herbs like Rosmarinus officinalis (Rosemary) and Salvia officinalis (Sage). Extracts of these plants exhibit anti-inflammatory properties, but the underlying mechanisms are largely undefined. Recently, we found that CA and CS activate the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, implying an anti-inflammatory potential on the level of gene regulation. Here we address short-term effects of CA and CS on typical functions of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL). We found that (I), CA and CS inhibit the formation of pro-inflammatory leukotrienes in intact PMNL (IC(50)=15-20 microM [CA] and 7 microM [CS], respectively) as well as purified recombinant 5-lipoxygenase (EC number 1.13.11.34, IC(50)=1 microM [CA] and 0.1 microM [CS], respectively), (II) both CA and CS potently antagonise intracellular Ca(2+) mobilisation induced by a chemotactic stimulus, and (III) CA and CS attenuate formation of reactive oxygen species and the secretion of human leukocyte elastase (EC number 3.4.21.37). Together, our findings provide a pharmacological basis for the anti-inflammatory properties reported for CS- and CA-containing extracts.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2014

Vitamin D in inflammatory diseases

Thea K. Wöbke; Bernd L. Sorg; Dieter Steinhilber

Changes in vitamin D serum levels have been associated with inflammatory diseases, such as inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, multiple sclerosis (MS), atherosclerosis, or asthma. Genome- and transcriptome-wide studies indicate that vitamin D signaling modulates many inflammatory responses on several levels. This includes (i) the regulation of the expression of genes which generate pro-inflammatory mediators, such as cyclooxygenases or 5-lipoxygenase, (ii) the interference with transcription factors, such as NF-κB, which regulate the expression of inflammatory genes and (iii) the activation of signaling cascades, such as MAP kinases which mediate inflammatory responses. Vitamin D targets various tissues and cell types, a number of which belong to the immune system, such as monocytes/macrophages, dendritic cells (DCs) as well as B- and T cells, leading to individual responses of each cell type. One hallmark of these specific vitamin D effects is the cell-type specific regulation of genes involved in the regulation of inflammatory processes and the interplay between vitamin D signaling and other signaling cascades involved in inflammation. An important task in the near future will be the elucidation of the regulatory mechanisms that are involved in the regulation of inflammatory responses by vitamin D on the molecular level by the use of techniques such as chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), ChIP-seq, and FAIRE-seq.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Coactosin-like protein supports 5-lipoxygenase enzyme activity and up-regulates leukotriene A4 production

Marija Rakonjac; Lutz Fischer; Patrick Provost; Oliver Werz; Dieter Steinhilber; Bengt Samuelsson; Olof Rådmark

Regulation of 5-lipoxygenase (5LO) activity is a key determinant for the biosynthesis of proinflammatory leukotrienes. Coactosin-like protein (CLP) is an F-actin-binding protein that can also bind 5LO. Here, we report that CLP can up-regulate and modulate 5LO activity [formation of 5(S)-hydroperoxy-6-trans-8,11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid (5-HPETE)], 5(S)-hydroxy-6-trans-8,11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid (5-HETE), and 5(S)-trans-5,6-oxido-7,9-trans-11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid (LTA4) in vitro. Three findings are presented. First, CLP up-regulates Ca2+-induced 5LO activity, in the absence of phosphatidylcholine (membrane). Apparently, CLP can function as a scaffold for 5LO, similar to membranes. Second, CLP gives a considerable (3-fold) increase in the amount of LTA4 formed by 5LO, when present together with phosphatidylcholine. Third, CLP increases the ratio of 5-HETE/5-HPETE. These effects require protein interaction by Trp residues in ligand-binding loops of the 5LO β-sandwich; both binding and stimulatory effects of CLP were abolished for the mutant 5LO-W13/75/102A. In polymorphonuclear leukocytes stimulated with Ca2+ ionophore, both CLP and 5LO associated with the nucleus, whereas in resting cells, CLP and 5LO were cytosolic. These findings establish CLP as a factor relevant for 5LO product formation. Functioning as a 5LO scaffold, CLP may provide a basis for the formation of 5-HETE in the cytosol of different cell types. Furthermore, in stimulated cells, CLP appears to function in a complex together with 5LO and membranes, increasing the capacity of 5LO for leukotriene biosynthesis.


Basic & Clinical Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2014

Recent Advances in the Search for Novel 5‐Lipoxygenase Inhibitors

Dieter Steinhilber; Bettina Hofmann

5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) is an important enzyme of the arachidonic acid cascade and catalyses with the help of FLAP, the 5-LO-activating protein, the formation of bioactive leukotrienes (LTs). LTs are inflammatory mediators playing a pathophysiological role in different diseases such as asthma, allergic rhinitis as well as cardiovascular diseases and certain types of cancer. Up to now, only one 5-LO inhibitor is on the market, zileuton for the treatment of asthma. With the rising number of indications for anti-LT therapy, 5-LO inhibitor drug development becomes more and more important. This MiniReview gives an update on 5-LO inhibitors currently under clinical development. Furthermore, the recent advances in the search for novel 5-lipoxygenase inhibitors with a focus on computational methods are summarized. Currently, licofelone is the compound with the highest clinical development status (completed phase III trials). 5-LO inhibitor screening programmes based on computational methods could deliver several promising drug-like new molecules. These activities can be expected to be driven by the newly resolved structure of human 5-LO in the future, enabling structure-based drug design. For the prospective drugs in late-stage clinical development, the future will show their clinical safety and efficacy in the particular diseases.

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Oliver Werz

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Bettina Hofmann

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Ewgenij Proschak

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Gisbert Schneider

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Jürgen Stein

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Gerd Geisslinger

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Thorsten J. Maier

Goethe University Frankfurt

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