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Dive into the research topics where Gerolf Zimmermann is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerolf Zimmermann.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

Human Chorionic Gonadotropin Attracts Regulatory T Cells into the Fetal-Maternal Interface during Early Human Pregnancy

Anne Schumacher; Nadja Brachwitz; Sindy Sohr; Kurt Engeland; Stefanie Langwisch; Tobias Alexander; Andrei Taran; Sara Fill Malfertheiner; Serban-Dan Costa; Gerolf Zimmermann; Cindy Nitschke; Hans-Dieter Volk; Henry Alexander; Matthias Gunzer; Ana Claudia Zenclussen

Regulatory T cells (Treg) expand during pregnancy and are present at the fetal-maternal interface at very early stages in pregnancy. The migration mechanisms of Treg to the pregnant uterus are still unclear. Human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) is secreted by the blastocyst immediately after fertilization and has chemoattractant properties. Therefore, we sought to analyze whether hCG secreted by early trophoblasts attracts Treg to the uterus and hence contributes to maternal tolerance toward the fetus. Decidua and placenta tissue samples from patients having spontaneous abortions or ectopic pregnancies were employed to evaluate Treg and hCG levels. Age-matched samples from normal pregnant women served as controls. We further performed in vitro studies with primary first trimester trophoblast cells and a choriocarcinoma cell line (JEG-3) aiming to evaluate the ability of secreted hCG to attract Treg. Patients having miscarriages or ectopic pregnancy presented significantly decreased hCG mRNA and protein levels associated with decreased Foxp3, neuropilin-1, IL-10, and TGF-β mRNA levels as compared with normal pregnant women. Using migration assays we demonstrated that Treg were attracted by hCG-producing trophoblasts or choriocarcinoma cells. Treg migration toward cells transfected with hCG expression vectors confirmed the chemoattractant ability of hCG. Our data clearly show that hCG produced by trophoblasts attracts Treg to the fetal-maternal interface. High hCG levels at very early pregnancy stages ensure Treg to migrate to the site of contact between paternal Ags and maternal immune cells and to orchestrate immune tolerance toward the fetus.


Biology of Reproduction | 2009

Epithelial Human Chorionic Gonadotropin Is Expressed and Produced in Human Secretory Endometrium During the Normal Menstrual Cycle

Gerolf Zimmermann; Wilfried Ackermann; Henry Alexander

Abstract The objective of this study was to determine whether beta human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) (CGB) subunits and alpha hCG (CGA) subunits are expressed and the hCG dimer is produced in normal human cyclic endometrium. Endometrial specimens were collected for histological dating from women undergoing treatment in our division of human reproduction. RNA from normal secretory endometrium was extracted, and CGB and CGA gene expression was assessed by semiquantitative PCR. Adequate secretory endometrial specimens were homogenized using protease inhibitors. Proteins present in the supernatant were separated electrophoretically, and molecular hCG isoforms were detected by Western blot. The supernatant hCG concentrations were measured by ELISA. We characterized hCG and leukocytes in endometrial specimens by immunohistochemistry. Uterine flushing was performed to confirm endometrial hCG secretion into the uterine fluid. A full-length CGB mRNA encompassing the exon 1 promoter region and the structure exons 2 and 3 (including the C-terminal peptide) was expressed in normal secretory endometrial specimens (similar to CGA) during the early secretory phase of the menstrual cycle, up to an optimum at the midsecretory to late secretory phases. In homogenate supernatants obtained from normal secretory endometrium, hormone concentrations of dimeric hCG were approximately 5 mU per 10 mg of tissue, compared with considerably smaller concentrations of corresponding single free CGB subunit. Single chains of CGB, CGA, and dimeric molecular hCG isoforms were found in endometrial specimens by Western blot. Glandular endometrial hCG production is demonstrated immunohistochemically, with an increase toward the late secretory phase vs. the early secretory phase of the normal secretory menstrual cycle. However, glandular hCG release is diminished or absent in the dyssynchronous or missing endometrial secretory transformation. Endogenous endometrial hCG may be important for implantation and maintenance of pregnancy.


Neuroscience Letters | 1993

Weak magnetic fields change extinction of a conditioned reaction and daytime melatonin levels in the rat

Armin Jentsch; Martina Lehmann; Elfrun Schöne; Franz Thoss; Gerolf Zimmermann

Altogether 100 albino rats were conditioned to flee after an acoustic stimulus (1000 Hz). During the following retention period (extinction of the reaction), half of the animals (test group) were exposed to a vertically directed, weak and extremely low-frequency magnetic field (10 Hz, 10(-4) T). Under the fields influence, the animals showed an increased retention of conditioned reactions and had an elevated level of serum melatonin compared with the animals of the control group. These effects disappeared when the investigation was performed in the dark.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Chorionic gonadotropin and its receptor are both expressed in human retina, possible implications in normal and pathological conditions.

Sladjana Dukic-Stefanovic; Jan Walther; Sebastian Wosch; Gerolf Zimmermann; Peter Wiedemann; Henry Alexander; Thomas Claudepierre

Extra-gonadal role of gonadotropins has been re-evaluated over the last 20 years. In addition to pituitary secretion of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), the CNS has been clearly identified as a source of hCG acting locally to influence behaviour. Here we demonstrated that human retina is producing this gonadotropin that acts as a neuroactive molecule. Müller glial and retinal pigmented epithelial (RPE) cells are producing hCG that may affects neighbour cells expressing its receptor, namely cone photoreceptors. It was previously described that amacrine and retinal ganglion (RGC) cells are targets of the gonadotropin releasing hormone that control the secretion of all gonadotropins. Therefore our findings suggest that a complex neuroendocrine circuit exists in the retina, involving hCG secreting cells (glial and RPE), hCG targets (photoreceptors) and hCG-release controlling cells (amacrine and RGC). The exact physiological functions of this circuit have still to be identified, but the proliferation of photoreceptor-derived tumor induced by hCG demonstrated the need to control this neuroendocrine loop.


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

Expression and Production of Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (hCG) in the Normal Secretory Endometrium: Evidence of CGB7 and/or CGB6 Beta hCG Subunit Gene Expression

Gerolf Zimmermann; Wilfried Ackermann; Henry Alexander

ABSTRACT We have previously confirmed glandular cell CGB and CGA subunit mRNA gene expression as well as the expression of their dimeric and single-subunit human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) proteins in normal secretory transformed endometrium. The objective of this study was to investigate the endometrial epithelial gene locus of the human hCG/LH gene cluster from CGB genes responsible for gene expression. For this study, endometrial specimens were selected from women characterized using our endometrium score and hCG staining index that had normal secretory transformed endometrium and optimal hCG staining. Using full-length CGB mRNA sequence analysis, we found that epithelial CGB is (co)expressed as the product of gene locus CGB7 and CGB6 (48%), as single CGB7 (42%), or to a lower percentage as single CGB6 (10%). In addition to known differences between these genes and CGB5, the nucleotide sequence of the mRNA differs between CGB7 and CGB6 in the untranslated promoter region and in translated exon 2. Immunohistochemical results show that endometrial joint CGB7 and CGB6, single CGB7, and single CGB6 mRNA expression lead to the release of endometrial hCG. Gene-specific antibodies for CGB7 reveal secretory endometrial hCG production, which is not observed for gene-specific CGB5 antibodies, whereas the placenta is positive for CGB5 and negative for CGB7 antibody as revealed by immunohistochemistry and Western blot hCG isoform analysis. Only endometrial CGB7 expression seems to be supported specifically by secretory endometrial transcription factors. In conclusion, epithelial hCG is expressed and produced as CGB7 and/or CGB6 but not CGB5, and it is produced together with CGA as a secretory transformation marker in the normal secretory phase endometrium.


World Journal of Urology | 2012

Enhanced urothelial expression of human chorionic gonadotropin beta (hCGβ) in bladder pain syndrome/interstitial cystitis (BPS/IC)

Thilo Schwalenberg; Jens-Uwe Stolzenburg; Phuc Ho Thi; Tobias Mallock; Siegurd Hartenstein; Henry Alexander; Gerolf Zimmermann; Rudolf Hohenfellner; Stefan Denzinger; Maximilian Burger; Lars-Christian Horn; Jochen Neuhaus


FEBS Journal | 1976

Self-Association of Human Erythrocyte Phosphofructokinase Kinetic Behaviour in Dependence on Enzyme Concentration and Mode of Association

Klaus-Wolfgang Wenzel; Boris I. Kurganov; Gerolf Zimmermann; Victor A. Yakovlev; Wolfgang Schellenberger; Eberhard Hofmann


FEBS Journal | 1973

Studies on the Association Behaviour of Human‐Erythrocyte Phosphofructokinase

Gerolf Zimmermann; Klaus Wolfgang Wenzel; Joachim Gauer; Eberhard Hofmann


Archive | 2004

Method and means for the determination of defined states or modifications in the mucus of the uterus or in the epithelium of other organs

Henry Alexander; Gerolf Zimmermann


Archive | 2003

Method and means for determining specific conditions or changes in the uterine epithelium and in the epithelium of other organs

Gerolf Zimmermann; Henry Alexander

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Anne Schumacher

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Hans-Dieter Volk

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Ana Claudia Zenclussen

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Andrei Taran

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Cindy Nitschke

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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