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Dive into the research topics where Gerhard Laschober is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerhard Laschober.


Aging Cell | 2007

Reduced oxygen tension attenuates differentiation capacity of human mesenchymal stem cells and prolongs their lifespan

Christine Fehrer; Regina Brunauer; Gerhard Laschober; Hermann Unterluggauer; Stephan Reitinger; Frank Kloss; Christian Gülly; Robert Gaßner; Günter Lepperdinger

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are capable of differentiating into bone, fat, cartilage, tendon and other organ progenitor cells. Despite the abundance of MSC within the organism, little is known about their in vivo properties or about their corresponding in vivo niches. We therefore isolated MSC from spongy (cancellous) bone biopsies of healthy adults. When compared with the surrounding marrow, a fourfold higher number of colony‐forming units was found within the tight meshwork of trabecular bone surface. At these sites, oxygen concentrations range from 1% to 7%. In MSC cultured at oxygen as low as 3%, rates for cell death and hypoxia‐induced gene transcription remained unchanged, while in vitro proliferative lifespan was significantly increased, with about 10 additional population doublings before reaching terminal growth arrest. However, differentiation capacity into adipogenic progeny was diminished and no osteogenic differentiation was detectable at 3% oxygen. In turn, MSC that had previously been cultured at 3% oxygen could subsequently be stimulated to successfully differentiate at 20% oxygen. These data support our preliminary finding that primary MSC are enriched at the surface of spongy bone. Low oxygen levels in this location provide a milieu that extends cellular lifespan and furthermore is instructive for the stemness of MSC allowing proliferation upon stimulation while suppressing differentiation.


Aging Cell | 2010

miR-17, miR-19b, miR-20a, and miR-106a are down-regulated in human aging.

Matthias Hackl; Stefan Brunner; Klaus Fortschegger; Carina Schreiner; Lucia Micutkova; Christoph Mück; Gerhard Laschober; Günter Lepperdinger; Natalie Sampson; Peter Berger; Dietmar Herndler-Brandstetter; Matthias Wieser; Harald Kühnel; Alois Strasser; Mark Rinnerthaler; Michael Breitenbach; Michael Mildner; Leopold Eckhart; Erwin Tschachler; Andrea Trost; Johann W. Bauer; Christine Papak; Zlatko Trajanoski; Marcel Scheideler; Regina Grillari-Voglauer; Beatrix Grubeck-Loebenstein; Pidder Jansen-Dürr; Johannes Grillari

Aging is a multifactorial process where deterioration of body functions is driven by stochastic damage while counteracted by distinct genetically encoded repair systems. To better understand the genetic component of aging, many studies have addressed the gene and protein expression profiles of various aging model systems engaging different organisms from yeast to human. The recently identified small non‐coding miRNAs are potent post‐transcriptional regulators that can modify the expression of up to several hundred target genes per single miRNA, similar to transcription factors. Increasing evidence shows that miRNAs contribute to the regulation of most if not all important physiological processes, including aging. However, so far the contribution of miRNAs to age‐related and senescence‐related changes in gene expression remains elusive. To address this question, we have selected four replicative cell aging models including endothelial cells, replicated CD8+ T cells, renal proximal tubular epithelial cells, and skin fibroblasts. Further included were three organismal aging models including foreskin, mesenchymal stem cells, and CD8+ T cell populations from old and young donors. Using locked nucleic acid‐based miRNA microarrays, we identified four commonly regulated miRNAs, miR‐17 down‐regulated in all seven; miR‐19b and miR‐20a, down‐regulated in six models; and miR‐106a down‐regulated in five models. Decrease in these miRNAs correlated with increased transcript levels of some established target genes, especially the cdk inhibitor p21/CDKN1A. These results establish miRNAs as novel markers of cell aging in humans.


Biomaterials | 2008

The role of oxygen termination of nanocrystalline diamond on immobilisation of BMP-2 and subsequent bone formation

Frank Kloss; Robert Gassner; Johannes Preiner; Andreas Ebner; Karin Larsson; Oliver Hächl; T. Tuli; Michael Rasse; Doris Moser; Klaus Laimer; Eike A. Nickel; Gerhard Laschober; Regina Brunauer; Günther Klima; Peter Hinterdorfer; Doris Steinmüller-Nethl; Glinter Lepperdinger

Medical implants are increasingly often inserted into bone of frail patients, who are advanced in years. Due to age, severe trauma or pathology-related bone changes, osseous healing at the implant site is frequently limited. We were able to demonstrate that coating of endosseous implants with nanocrystalline diamond (NCD) allows stable functionalization by means of physisorption with BMP-2. Strong physisorption was shown to be directly related to the unique properties of NCD, and BMP-2 in its active form interacted strongly when NCD was oxygen-terminated. The binding of the protein was monitored under physiological conditions by single molecule force spectroscopy, and the respective adsorption energies were further substantiated by force-field-calculations. Implant surfaces refined in such a manner yielded enhanced osseointegration in vivo, when inserted into sheep calvaria. Our results further suggest that this technical advancement can be readily applied in clinical therapies with regard to bone healing, since primary human mesenchymal stromal cells strongly activated the expression of osteogenic markers when being cultivated on NCD physisorbed with physiological amounts of BMP-2.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2012

The impact of aging on memory T cell phenotype and function in the human bone marrow.

Dietmar Herndler-Brandstetter; Katja Landgraf; Alexandar Tzankov; Brigitte Jenewein; Regina Brunauer; Gerhard Laschober; Walther Parson; Frank Kloss; Robert Gassner; Günter Lepperdinger; Beatrix Grubeck-Loebenstein

Recently, the BM has been shown to play a key role in regulating the survival and function of memory T cells. However, the impact of aging on these processes has not yet been studied. We demonstrate that the number of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the BM is maintained during aging. However, the composition of the T cell pool in the aged BM is altered with a decline of naïve and an increase in TEM cells. In contrast to the PB, a highly activated CD8+CD28– T cell population, which lacks the late differentiation marker CD57, accumulates in the BM of elderly persons. IL‐6 and IL‐15, which are both increased in the aged BM, efficiently induce the activation, proliferation, and differentiation of CD8+ T cells in vitro, highlighting a role of these cytokines in the age‐dependent accumulation of highly activated CD8+CD28– T cells in the BM. Yet, these age‐related changes do not impair the maintenance of a high number of polyfunctional memory CD4+ and CD8+ T cells in the BM of elderly persons. In summary, aging leads to the accumulation of a highly activated CD8+CD28– T cell population in the BM, which is driven by the age‐related increase of IL‐6 and IL‐15. Despite these changes, the aged BM is a rich source of polyfunctional memory T cells and may thus represent an important line of defense to fight recurrent infections in old age.


Biogerontology | 2009

Microarray analysis reveals similarity between CD8+CD28− T cells from young and elderly persons, but not of CD8+CD28+ T cells

Lutfan Lazuardi; Dietmar Herndler-Brandstetter; Stefan Brunner; Gerhard Laschober; Günter Lepperdinger; Beatrix Grubeck-Loebenstein

We isolated highly purified CD8+CD28+ and CD8+CD28− T cell populations from healthy young and elderly persons for gene expression profiling using Affymetrix oligonucleotide microarrays. We demonstrate that the gene expression profile of CD8+CD28− T cells is very similar in young and elderly persons. In contrast, CD8+CD28+ in elderly differ from CD8+CD28+ in young persons. Hierarchical clustering revealed that CD8+CD28+ in elderly are located between CD8+CD28+ in young and CD8+CD28− (young and old) T cells regarding their differentiation state. Our study demonstrates a dichotomy of gene expression levels between CD8+CD28+ T cells in young and elderly persons but a similarity between CD8+CD28− T cells in young and elderly persons. As CD8+CD28+ T cells from elderly and young persons are distinct due to a different composition of the population, these results suggest that the gene expression profile does not depend on chronological age but depends on the differentiation state of the individual cell types.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

Aging of Murine Mesenchymal Stem Cells

Christine Fehrer; Gerhard Laschober; Günter Lepperdinger

Abstract:  Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are able to differentiate into distinct lineages such as adipo‐, osteo‐, and chondrocytes. MSCs were isolated from three mouse strains, which are short‐ (SAMP6, 9.7 months), medium‐ (SAMR1, 16.3 months), or long‐lived (C57BL/6, 28 months). We investigated primary colony‐forming units with regard to bone marrow stroma and found differences that correlate with mean life expectancies of the particular genetic backgrounds. However, MSC derived from the various mouse strains behaved equivalently in vitro with respect to growth rate. By genomic means, we analyzed the cellular milieu in vivo and found considerable differences among the various mouse strains. This implies that, although individual MSCs show an equivalent differentiation potential in vitro, the primary stem cells are greatly influenced by their molecular environment.


Aging Cell | 2010

Identification of evolutionarily conserved genetic regulators of cellular aging

Gerhard Laschober; Doris Ruli; Edith Hofer; Christoph Mück; Didac Carmona-Gutierrez; Julia Ring; Eveline Hütter; Christoph Ruckenstuhl; Lucia Micutkova; Regina Brunauer; Angelika Jamnig; Daniela Trimmel; Dietmar Herndler-Brandstetter; Stefan Brunner; Christoph Zenzmaier; Natalie Sampson; Michael Breitenbach; Kai-Uwe Fröhlich; Beatrix Grubeck-Loebenstein; Peter Berger; Matthias Wieser; Regina Grillari-Voglauer; Gerhard G. Thallinger; Johannes Grillari; Zlatko Trajanoski; Frank Madeo; Günter Lepperdinger; Pidder Jansen-Dürr

To identify new genetic regulators of cellular aging and senescence, we performed genome‐wide comparative RNA profiling with selected human cellular model systems, reflecting replicative senescence, stress‐induced premature senescence, and distinct other forms of cellular aging. Gene expression profiles were measured, analyzed, and entered into a newly generated database referred to as the GiSAO database. Bioinformatic analysis revealed a set of new candidate genes, conserved across the majority of the cellular aging models, which were so far not associated with cellular aging, and highlighted several new pathways that potentially play a role in cellular aging. Several candidate genes obtained through this analysis have been confirmed by functional experiments, thereby validating the experimental approach. The effect of genetic deletion on chronological lifespan in yeast was assessed for 93 genes where (i) functional homologues were found in the yeast genome and (ii) the deletion strain was viable. We identified several genes whose deletion led to significant changes of chronological lifespan in yeast, featuring both lifespan shortening and lifespan extension. In conclusion, an unbiased screen across species uncovered several so far unrecognized molecular pathways for cellular aging that are conserved in evolution.


Rejuvenation Research | 2011

Age-specific changes of mesenchymal stem cells are paralleled by upregulation of CD106 expression as a response to an inflammatory environment.

Gerhard Laschober; Regina Brunauer; Angelika Jamnig; Sarvpreet Singh; Ulrich Hafen; Christine Fehrer; Frank Kloss; Robert Gassner; Günter Lepperdinger

Regeneration, tissue remodeling, and organ repair after injury, which rely on the regulated activity of tissue-borne stem cells, become increasingly compromised with advancing age. Mesenchymal stroma cells were isolated from bone of differently aged healthy donors. The rare population of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) contained in the primary cell isolates barely declined in number, yet the stem cells displayed diminished long-term proliferation potential relative to the donor age and the expression of vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (VCAM-1; CD106) was elevated on primary MSCs. In CD106(bright) MSCs, the abundance of a panel of stemness transcription factors remained unchanged. Because the CD106 level could be further enhanced by proinflammatory cytokines, we considered the rate of VCAM-1 expression to be a good reflection of an endogenous inflammatory milieu to which the MSCs are exposed. Treatment of MSCs with increasing doses of interferon-γ exerted no immediate influence on their self-renewal capacity. However, it impacted on the differentiation potential toward the adipogenic or osteogenic lineage. Moderately elevated levels of inflammatory stimuli supported osteoblastogenesis whereas the same treatment reduced adipogenic differentiation in MSCs from young and intermediately aged donors. In MSCs from elderly donors, however, osteoblastogenesis was greatly diminished in an inflammatory environment whereas adipogenic differentiation remained unchanged. Conclusively, moderate levels of inflammatory stimuli are being interpreted by MSCs at a young age as instructive signals for osteoblastogenesis, whereas at old age, an inflammatory milieu may effectively suppress bone remodeling and repair by tissue-borne MSCs while uninterrupted adipogenic differentiation may lead to adipose upgrowth.


Experimental Gerontology | 2009

Leptin receptor/CD295 is upregulated on primary human mesenchymal stem cells of advancing biological age and distinctly marks the subpopulation of dying cells.

Gerhard Laschober; Regina Brunauer; Angelika Jamnig; Christine Fehrer; Brigitte Greiderer; Günter Lepperdinger

During the lifetime of an adult organism, stem cells face extrinsic and intrinsic aging. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) can be expanded in culture, and the proliferation potential of individual cell isolates before growing senescent appear to be dependent on fitness and age of the donor, respectively. To date no molecular markers are available, which specifically reflect the degree of cellular aging in a population of MSC. Employing a genomic approach, we noticed that the gene encoding leptin receptor (also termed OB-R) is differentially regulated in MSC derived from aged donors as well as in MSC that had been stressed due to cultivation under hyperoxic conditions. We further observed that the leptin receptor transcript levels in primary MSC isolates are inversely correlated with the prospective number of generations that are ahead of these cells in culture, i.e., the number of population doublings that will occur in long term culture prior to cessation of growth due to replicative senescence. The MSC subpopulation, which exhibited distinctly elevated levels of leptin receptor or CD295 at the cell surface, is indistinguishable from dying cells. Considered together with the observation that primary MSC derived from healthy individuals showed proliferation capacities that declined at differentially increasing rates, we concluded that attenuation of MSC proliferation potential during aging greatly relies on the strictly increasing withdrawal of cells due to cell death.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Mouse testicular hyaluronidase-like proteins SPAM1 and HYAL5 but not HYALP1 degrade hyaluronan.

Stephan Reitinger; Gerhard Laschober; Christine Fehrer; Brigitte Greiderer; Günter Lepperdinger

Besides SPAM1 (sperm adhesion molecule 1; formerly named PH-20), further hyaluronidase-like proteins, HYAL5 (hyaluronoglucosaminidase 5) and HYALP1 (hyaluronoglucosaminidase pseudogene 1) are also expressed in murine testicular tissue. As they share a high degree of sequence similarity with known hyaluronidases, all three polypeptides could potentially exhibit hyaluronidase activity, a function that is beneficial for spermatozoa in order to penetrate the hyaluronan-rich cumulus, which surrounds the oocyte. Recently, it was reported that SPAM1-deficient mice are fertile and spermatozoa derived from mutant mice still exhibit hyaluronidase activity [Baba, Kashiwabara, Honda, Yamagata, Wu, Ikawa, Okabe and Baba (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 30310-30314]. We have now recombinantly expressed mouse SPAM1, HYAL5 and HYALP1 in Xenopus laevis oocytes and determined their respective expression pattern in testis. Transcripts of all three genes are expressed in seminiferous tubules in regions where maturing spermatogenic cells reside. SPAM1 and HYAL5 but not HYALP1 proteins exhibit hyaluronidase activity at neutral pH. The two active hyaluronidases are both bound to the cell surface via a glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. Furthermore, structural characteristics are discussed that are necessary for hyaluronidases in order to exhibit hyaluronan cleavage.

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Günter Lepperdinger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Regina Brunauer

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Christine Fehrer

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Frank Kloss

Innsbruck Medical University

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Angelika Jamnig

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Stefan Brunner

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Robert Gassner

Innsbruck Medical University

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Brigitte Greiderer

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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