Gerrit Erdmann
German Cancer Research Center
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Gerrit Erdmann.
Nature Communications | 2013
Oksana Voloshanenko; Gerrit Erdmann; Taronish D. Dubash; Iris Augustin; Marie Metzig; Giusi Moffa; Christian Hundsrucker; Grainne Kerr; Thomas Sandmann; Benedikt Anchang; Kubilay Demir; Christina Boehm; Svenja Leible; Claudia R. Ball; Hanno Glimm; Rainer Spang; Michael Boutros
Aberrant regulation of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway has an important role during the onset and progression of colorectal cancer, with over 90% of cases of sporadic colon cancer featuring mutations in APC or β-catenin. However, it has remained a point of controversy whether these mutations are sufficient to activate the pathway or require additional upstream signals. Here we show that colorectal tumours express elevated levels of Wnt3 and Evi/Wls/GPR177. We found that in colon cancer cells, even in the presence of mutations in APC or β-catenin, downstream signalling remains responsive to Wnt ligands and receptor proximal signalling. Furthermore, we demonstrate that truncated APC proteins bind β-catenin and key components of the destruction complex. These results indicate that cells with mutations in APC or β-catenin depend on Wnt ligands and their secretion for a sufficient level of β-catenin signalling, which potentially opens new avenues for therapeutic interventions by targeting Wnt secretion via Evi/Wls.
Biotechnology Journal | 2010
Christina Falschlehner; Sandra Steinbrink; Gerrit Erdmann; Michael Boutros
RNA interference (RNAi) has become a powerful tool to dissect cellular pathways and characterize gene functions. The availability of genome‐wide RNAi libraries for various model organisms and mammalian cells has enabled high‐throughput RNAi screenings. These RNAi screens successfully identified key components that had previously been missed in classical forward genetic screening approaches and allowed the assessment of combined loss‐of‐function phenotypes. Crucially, the quality of RNAi screening results depends on quantitative assays and the choice of the right biological context. In this review, we provide an overview on the design and application of high‐throughput RNAi screens as well as data analysis and candidate validation strategies.
Cell Reports | 2013
Kubilay Demir; Nadine Kirsch; Carlo A. Beretta; Gerrit Erdmann; Dierk Ingelfinger; Enrico Moro; Francesco Argenton; Matthias Carl; Christof Niehrs; Michael Boutros
Wnt/β-catenin signaling plays an important role in embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis. When Wnt ligands bind to the receptor complex, LRP5/6 coreceptors are activated by phosphorylation and concomitantly endocytosed. In vertebrates, Wnt ligands induce caveolin-dependent endocytosis of LRP6 to relay signal downstream, whereas antagonists such as Dickkopf promote clathrin-dependent endocytosis, leading to inhibition. However, little is known about how LRP6 is directed to different internalization mechanisms, and how caveolin-dependent endocytosis is mediated. In an RNAi screen, we identified the Rab GTPase RAB8B as being required for Wnt/β-catenin signaling. RAB8B depletion reduces LRP6 activity, β-catenin accumulation, and induction of Wnt target genes, whereas RAB8B overexpression promotes LRP6 activity and internalization and rescues inhibition of caveolar endocytosis. In Xenopus laevis and Danio rerio, RAB8B morphants show lower Wnt activity during embryonic development. Our results implicate RAB8B as an essential evolutionary conserved component of Wnt/β-catenin signaling through regulation of LRP6 activity and endocytosis.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Daniel F. Gilbert; Gerrit Erdmann; Xian Zhang; Anja Fritzsche; Kubilay Demir; Andreas Jaedicke; Katja Muehlenberg; Erich E. Wanker; Michael Boutros
Cell-based high-throughput RNAi screening has become a powerful research tool in addressing a variety of biological questions. In RNAi screening, one of the most commonly applied assay system is measuring the fitness of cells that is usually quantified using fluorescence, luminescence and absorption-based readouts. These methods, typically implemented and scaled to large-scale screening format, however often only yield limited information on the cell fitness phenotype due to evaluation of a single and indirect physiological indicator. To address this problem, we have established a cell fitness multiplexing assay which combines a biochemical approach and two fluorescence-based assaying methods. We applied this assay in a large-scale RNAi screening experiment with siRNA pools targeting the human kinome in different modified HEK293 cell lines. Subsequent analysis of ranked fitness phenotypes assessed by the different assaying methods revealed average phenotype intersections of 50.7±2.3%–58.7±14.4% when two indicators were combined and 40–48% when a third indicator was taken into account. From these observations we conclude that combination of multiple fitness measures may decrease false-positive rates and increases confidence for hit selection. Our robust experimental and analytical method improves the classical approach in terms of time, data comprehensiveness and cost.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Johannes Betge; Grainne Kerr; Thilo Miersch; Svenja Leible; Gerrit Erdmann; Christian Galata; T Zhan; Timo Gaiser; Stefan Post; Matthias P. Ebert; Karoline Horisberger; Michael Boutros
Next generation sequencing (NGS) is an emerging technology becoming relevant for genotyping of clinical samples. Here, we assessed the stability of amplicon sequencing from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) and paired frozen samples from colorectal cancer metastases with different analysis pipelines. 212 amplicon regions in 48 cancer related genes were sequenced with Illumina MiSeq using DNA isolated from resection specimens from 17 patients with colorectal cancer liver metastases. From ten of these patients, paired fresh frozen and routinely processed FFPE tissue was available for comparative study. Sample quality of FFPE tissues was determined by the amount of amplifiable DNA using qPCR, sequencing libraries were evaluated using Bioanalyzer. Three bioinformatic pipelines were compared for analysis of amplicon sequencing data. Selected hot spot mutations were reviewed using Sanger sequencing. In the sequenced samples from 16 patients, 29 non-synonymous coding mutations were identified in eleven genes. Most frequent were mutations in TP53 (10), APC (7), PIK3CA (3) and KRAS (2). A high concordance of FFPE and paired frozen tissue samples was observed in ten matched samples, revealing 21 identical mutation calls and only two mutations differing. Comparison of these results with two other commonly used variant calling tools, however, showed high discrepancies. Hence, amplicon sequencing can potentially be used to identify hot spot mutations in colorectal cancer metastases in frozen and FFPE tissue. However, remarkable differences exist among results of different variant calling tools, which are not only related to DNA sample quality. Our study highlights the need for standardization and benchmarking of variant calling pipelines, which will be required for translational and clinical applications.
Biotechnology Journal | 2012
Gerrit Erdmann; Christian Volz; Michael Boutros
High‐throughput RNAi or small molecule screens have proven to be powerful methodologies for the systematic dissection of cellular processes. In model organisms and cell lines, large‐scale screens have identified key components of many cellular pathways and helped to identify novel targets in disease‐relevant pathways. Image‐based high‐content screening has become an increasingly important tool in high‐throughput screening, enabling changes in phenotype characteristics, such as cell morphology and cell differentiation, to be monitored. In this review, we discuss the use of image‐based screening approaches to explore the behavior of adult, embryonic, and induced pluripotent stem cells. First, we review how current pluripotency and differentiation assays can be adapted to high‐throughput formats. We then describe general aspects of image‐based screening of cells and present an outlook on challenges for screening stem cells.
Journal of extracellular vesicles | 2017
Kerstin Menck; Can Sönmezer; Thomas Stefan Worst; Matthias Schulz; Gry H. Dihazi; Frank Streit; Gerrit Erdmann; Simon Kling; Michael Boutros; Claudia Binder; Julia Christina Gross
ABSTRACT Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are membrane particles secreted from cells into all body fluids. Several EV populations exist differing in size and cellular origin. Using differential centrifugation EVs pelleting at 14,000 g (“microvesicles” (MV)) and 100,000 g (“exosomes”) are distinguishable by protein markers. Neutral sphingomyelinase (nSMase) inhibition has been shown to inhibit exosome release from cells and has since been used to study their functional implications. How nSMases (also known as SMPD2 and SMPD3) affect the basal secretion of MVs is unclear. Here we investigated how SMPD2/3 impact both EV populations. SMPD2/3 inhibition by GW4869 or RNAi decreases secretion of exosomes, but also increases secretion of MVs from the plasma membrane. Both populations differ significantly in metabolite composition and Wnt proteins are specifically loaded onto MVs under these conditions. Taken together, our data reveal a novel regulatory function of SMPD2/3 in vesicle budding from the plasma membrane and clearly suggest that – despite the different vesicle biogenesis – the routes of vesicular export are adaptable.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Giusi Moffa; Gerrit Erdmann; Oksana Voloshanenko; Christian Hundsrucker; Mohammad Javad Sadeh; Michael Boutros; Rainer Spang
Cellular signalling pathways consolidate multiple molecular interactions into working models of signal propagation, amplification, and modulation. They are described and visualized as networks. Adjusting network topologies to experimental data is a key goal of systems biology. While network reconstruction algorithms like nested effects models are well established tools of computational biology, their data requirements can be prohibitive for their practical use. In this paper we suggest focussing on well defined aspects of a pathway and develop the computational tools to do so. We adapt the framework of nested effect models to focus on a specific aspect of activated Wnt signalling in HCT116 colon cancer cells: Does the activation of Wnt target genes depend on the secretion of Wnt ligands or do mutations in the signalling molecule β-catenin make this activation independent from them? We framed this question into two competing classes of models: Models that depend on Wnt ligands secretion versus those that do not. The model classes translate into restrictions of the pathways in the network topology. Wnt dependent models are more flexible than Wnt independent models. Bayes factors are the standard Bayesian tool to compare different models fairly on the data evidence. In our analysis, the Bayes factors depend on the number of potential Wnt signalling target genes included in the models. Stability analysis with respect to this number showed that the data strongly favours Wnt ligands dependent models for all realistic numbers of target genes.
Genome Medicine | 2015
Gerrit Erdmann; Michael Suchanek; Patrick Horn; Fabian Graf; Christian Volz; Thomas Horn; Xian Zhang; Wolfgang Wagner; Anthony D. Ho; Michael Boutros
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are promising candidates for cellular therapies ranging from tissue repair in regenerative medicine to immunomodulation in graft versus host disease after allogeneic transplantation or in autoimmune diseases. Nonetheless, progress has been hampered by their enormous phenotypic as well as functional heterogeneity and the lack of uniform standards and guidelines for quality control. In this study, we describe a method to perform cellular phenotyping by high-throughput RNA interference in primary human bone marrow MSCs. We have shown that despite heterogeneity of MSC populations, robust functional assays can be established that are suitable for high-throughput and high-content screening. We profiled primary human MSCs against human fibroblasts. Network analysis showed a kinome fingerprint that differs from human primary fibroblasts as well as fibroblast cell lines. In conclusion, this study shows that high-throughput screening in primary human MSCs can be reliably used for kinome fingerprinting.
Science Signaling | 2017
Iris Augustin; Dyah L. Dewi; Jennifer Hundshammer; Gerrit Erdmann; Grainne Kerr; Michael Boutros
Wnt signaling ensures proper chromosome segregation and genomic stability in proliferating embryonic stem cells. Genomic instability without Wnt Unlike most cells in the body, embryonic stem cells renew themselves and can differentiate into almost any cell type. Although embryonic stem cells have been proposed to treat a myriad of human diseases, their use is fraught with the risk of the formation of noncancerous tumors called teratomas. The Wnt family of ligands promotes both the self-renewal and differentiation of embryonic stem cells. Augustin et al. either genetically ablated or overexpressed Evi, a protein that transports Wnts through the secretory pathway, in mouse embryonic stem cells, which would be expected to block or enhance the secretion of any of the Wnt family of ligands produced by these cells. Reducing Wnt secretion reduced the incidence of teratoma formation by Evi-deficient embryonic stem cells injected into mice. Furthermore, Wnt secretion ensured that proliferating embryonic stem cells segregated chromosomes properly and did not undergo apoptosis. Thus, enhancing Wnt signaling may prevent genomic instability in embryonic stem cells, which could help advance therapeutic application of stem cells. Wnt signaling plays an important role in the self-renewal and differentiation of stem cells. The secretion of Wnt ligands requires Evi (also known as Wls). Genetically ablating Evi provides an experimental approach to studying the consequence of depleting all redundant Wnt proteins, and overexpressing Evi enables a nonspecific means of increasing Wnt signaling. We generated Evi-deficient and Evi-overexpressing mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs) to analyze the role of autocrine Wnt production in self-renewal and differentiation. Self-renewal was reduced in Evi-deficient ESCs and increased in Evi-overexpressing ESCs in the absence of leukemia inhibitory factor, which supports the self-renewal of ESCs. The differentiation of ESCs into cardiomyocytes was enhanced when Evi was overexpressed and teratoma formation and growth of Evi-deficient ESCs in vivo were impaired, indicating that autocrine Wnt ligands were necessary for ESC differentiation and survival. ESCs lacking autocrine Wnt signaling had mitotic defects and showed genomic instability. Together, our study demonstrates that autocrine Wnt secretion is important for the survival, chromosomal stability, differentiation, and tumorigenic potential of ESCs.