Faiza Kalfalah
University of Düsseldorf
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Publication
Featured researches published by Faiza Kalfalah.
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2014
Julia Tigges; Jean Krutmann; Ellen Fritsche; Judith Haendeler; Heiner Schaal; Jens W. Fischer; Faiza Kalfalah; Hans Reinke; Guido Reifenberger; Kai Stühler; Natascia Ventura; Sabrina Gundermann; Petra Boukamp; Fritz Boege
Ageing is influenced by the intrinsic disposition delineating what is maximally possible and extrinsic factors determining how that frame is individually exploited. Intrinsic and extrinsic ageing processes act on the dermis, a post-mitotic skin compartment mainly consisting of extracellular matrix and fibroblasts. Dermal fibroblasts are long-lived cells constantly undergoing damage accumulation and (mal-)adaptation, thus constituting a powerful indicator system for human ageing. Here, we use the systematic of ubiquitous hallmarks of ageing (Lopez-Otin et al., 2013, Cell 153) to categorise the available knowledge regarding dermal fibroblast ageing. We discriminate processes inducible in culture from phenomena apparent in skin biopsies or primary cells from old donors, coming to the following conclusions: (i) Fibroblasts aged in culture exhibit most of the established, ubiquitous hallmarks of ageing. (ii) Not all of these hallmarks have been detected or investigated in fibroblasts aged in situ (in the skin). (iii) Dermal fibroblasts aged in vitro and in vivo exhibit additional features currently not considered ubiquitous hallmarks of ageing. (iv) The ageing process of dermal fibroblasts in their physiological tissue environment has only been partially elucidated, although these cells have been a preferred model of cell ageing in vitro for decades.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2013
Stefan Sobek; Ilaria Dalla Rosa; Yves Pommier; Beatrice Bornholz; Faiza Kalfalah; Hongliang Zhang; Rudolf J. Wiesner; Jürgen-Christoph von Kleist-Retzow; Frank Hillebrand; Heiner Schaal; Christian Mielke; Morten O. Christensen; Fritz Boege
Mitochondrial topoisomerase I is a genetically distinct mitochondria-dedicated enzyme with a crucial but so far unknown role in the homeostasis of mitochondrial DNA metabolism. Here, we present data suggesting a negative regulatory function in mitochondrial transcription or transcript stability. Deficiency or depletion of mitochondrial topoisomerase I increased mitochondrial transcripts, whereas overexpression lowered mitochondrial transcripts, depleted respiratory complexes I, III and IV, decreased cell respiration and raised superoxide levels. Acute depletion of mitochondrial topoisomerase I triggered neither a nuclear mito-biogenic stress response nor compensatory topoisomerase IIβ upregulation, suggesting the concomitant increase in mitochondrial transcripts was due to release of a local inhibitory effect. Mitochondrial topoisomerase I was co-immunoprecipitated with mitochondrial RNA polymerase. It selectively accumulated and rapidly exchanged at a subset of nucleoids distinguished by the presence of newly synthesized RNA and/or mitochondrial RNA polymerase. The inactive Y559F-mutant behaved similarly without affecting mitochondrial transcripts. In conclusion, mitochondrial topoisomerase I dampens mitochondrial transcription and thereby alters respiratory capacity. The mechanism involves selective association of the active enzyme with transcriptionally active nucleoids and a direct interaction with mitochondrial RNA polymerase. The inhibitory role of topoisomerase I in mitochondrial transcription is strikingly different from the stimulatory role of topoisomerase I in nuclear transcription.
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2011
Faiza Kalfalah; Christian Mielke; Morten O. Christensen; Simone Baechler; Doris Marko; Fritz Boege
SCOPE DNA damage by genistein and etoposide is determined by the half-life of topoisomerase II-DNA linkage induced [Bandele O. J. and Osheroff N., Biochemistry 2008, 47, 11900]. Here, we test whether this applies generally to dietary flavonoids and therapeutic compounds enhancing topoisomerase II-DNA cleavage (Topo II poisons). METHODS AND RESULTS We compared the impact of Topo II poisons on DNA residence kinetics of biofluorescent human topoisomerases IIα and IIβ (delineating duration of the DNA-linked enzyme state) with histone 2AX phosphorylation (delineating DNA damage response). Prolongation of topoisomerase II-DNA residence was correlated to DNA damage response, whereas topoisomerase II-DNA linkage was not. Catalytic inhibitors stabilizing topoisomerase II on unbroken DNA also exhibited such a correlation, albeit at a lower level of DNA damage response. Therapeutic Topo II poisons had stronger and more durable effects on enzyme II DNA residence and elicited stronger DNA damage responses than natural or dietary ones. CONCLUSIONS Topoisomerase II-mediated DNA damage appears related to the prolongation of enzyme DNA residence more than to enzyme-DNA cleavage. Due to this reason, genistein and other tested natural and dietary Topo II poisons have a much lower genotoxic potential than therapeutic ones under the conditions of equal topoisomerase II-DNA linkage.
Experimental Gerontology | 2014
Faiza Kalfalah; Stefan Sobek; Beatrice Bornholz; Julia Tigges; Ellen Fritsche; Jean Krutmann; Karl Köhrer; René Deenen; Sebastian Ohse; Melanie Boerries; Hauke Busch; Fritz Boege
Extrinsic skin ageing converges on the dermis, a post-mitotic tissue compartment consisting of extracellular matrix and long-lived fibroblasts prone to damage accumulation and maladaptation. Aged human fibroblasts exhibit mitochondrial and nuclear dysfunctions, which may be a cause or consequence of ageing. We report on a systematic study of human dermal fibroblasts retrieved from female donors aged 20-67 years and analysed ex vivo at low population doubling precluding replicative senescence. According to gene set enrichment analysis of genome wide array data, the most prominent age-associated change of the transcriptome was decreased expression of mitochondrial genes. Consistent with that, mitochondrial content and cell proliferation declined with donor age. This was associated with upregulation of AMP-dependent protein kinase (AMPK), increased mRNA levels of PPARγ-coactivator 1α (PGC1A) and decreased levels of NAD(+)-dependent deacetylase sirtuin 1. In the old cells the PGC1A-mediated mito-biogenetic response to direct AMPK-stimulation by AICAR was undiminished, while the PGC1A-independent mito-biogenetic response to starvation was attenuated and accompanied by increased ROS-production. In summary, these observations suggest an age-associated decline in PGC1A-independent mito-biogenesis, which is insufficiently compensated by upregulation of the AMPK/PGC1A-axis leading under baseline conditions to decreased mitochondrial content and reductive overload of residual respiratory capacity.
Aging (Albany NY) | 2016
Faiza Kalfalah; Linda Janke; Alfonso Schiavi; Julia Tigges; Alexander Ix; Natascia Ventura; Fritz Boege; Hans Reinke
Autophagy and the circadian clock counteract tissue degeneration and support longevity in many organisms. Accumulating evidence indicates that aging compromises both the circadian clock and autophagy but the mechanisms involved are unknown. Here we show that the expression levels of transcriptional repressor components of the circadian oscillator, most prominently the human Period homologue PER2, are strongly reduced in primary dermal fibroblasts from aged humans, while raising the expression of PER2 in the same cells partially restores diminished autophagy levels. The link between clock gene expression and autophagy is corroborated by the finding that the circadian clock drives cell-autonomous, rhythmic autophagy levels in immortalized murine fibroblasts, and that siRNA-mediated downregulation of PER2 decreases autophagy levels while leaving core clock oscillations intact. Moreover, the Period homologue lin-42 regulates autophagy and life span in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, suggesting an evolutionarily conserved role for Period proteins in autophagy control and aging. Taken together, this study identifies circadian clock proteins as set-point regulators of autophagy and puts forward a model, in which age-related changes of clock gene expression promote declining autophagy levels.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2015
Daniel M. Waldera Lupa; Faiza Kalfalah; Kai Safferling; Petra Boukamp; Gereon Poschmann; Elena Volpi; Françoise Bernerd; Laura Haag; Ellen Fritsche; Fritz Boege; Niels Grabe; Julia Tigges; Kai Stühler; Jean Krutmann
Aging-us | 2014
Daniel M. Waldera-Lupa; Faiza Kalfalah; Ana-Maria Florea; Steffen Sass; Fabian Kruse; Vera Rieder; Julia Tigges; Ellen Fritsche; Jean Krutmann; Hauke Busch; Melanie Boerries; Helmut E. Meyer; Fritz Boege; Fabian J. Theis; Guido Reifenberger; Kai Stühler
DNA Repair | 2007
Christian Mielke; Faiza Kalfalah; Morten O. Christensen; Fritz Boege
Aging (Albany NY) | 2015
Faiza Kalfalah; Sabine Seggewiß; Regina Walter; Julia Tigges; Maria Moreno-Villanueva; Alexander Bürkle; Sebastian Ohse; Hauke Busch; Melanie Boerries; Barbara Hildebrandt; Brigitte Royer-Pokora; Fritz Boege
Cell Cycle | 2015
Faiza Kalfalah; Elke Berg; Morten O. Christensen; René Martin Linka; Wilhelm G. Dirks; Fritz Boege; Christian Mielke