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Featured researches published by Hans Binder.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2002

The effect of metal cations on the phase behavior and hydration characteristics of phospholipid membranes.

Hans Binder; Olaf Zschörnig

To characterize the specificity of ion binding to phospholipids in terms of headgroup structure, hydration and lyotropic phase behavior we studied 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine as a function of relative humidity (RH) at 25 degrees C in the presence and absence of Li+, Na+, K+, Be2+, Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+, Ba2+, Zn2+ and Cu2+ ions by means of infrared (IR) spectroscopy. All divalent cations and Li+ shift the gel-to-liquid crystalline phase transition towards bigger RH values indicating stabilization of the gel state. The observed shift correlates in a linearly fashion with the electrostatic solvation free energy for most of the ions in water that in turn, is inversely related to the ionic radius. This interesting result was interpreted in terms of the excess chemical potential of mixing of hydrated ions and lipids. Calcium, zinc and partially lithium, cause a positive deviation from the linear relationship. IR spectral analysis shows that the carbonyl groups become more accessible to the water in the presence of Mg2+, Ca2+, Sr2+ and Ba2+ probably because of their involvement into the hydration shell of the ions. In contrast, Be2+, Zn2+ and Cu2+ dehydrate the carbonyl groups at small and medium RH. The ability of the lipid to take up water is distinctly reduced in the presence of Zn2+ and, partially, of Cu2+ meaning that the headgroups have become less hydrophilic. The binding mode of Be2+ to lipid headgroups involves hydrolyzed water. Polarized IR spectra show that complex formation of the phosphate groups with divalent ions gives rise to conformational changes and immobilization of the headgroups. The results are discussed in terms of the lyotropic Hofmeister series and of fusogenic activity of the ionic species.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2011

Combined Proteomic and Metabolomic Profiling of Serum Reveals Association of the Complement System with Obesity and Identifies Novel Markers of Body Fat Mass Changes

Andreas Oberbach; Matthias Blüher; Henry Wirth; Holger Till; Peter Kovacs; Yvonne Kullnick; Nadine Schlichting; Janina M. Tomm; Ulrike Rolle-Kampczyk; Jayaseelan Murugaiyan; Hans Binder; Arne Dietrich; Martin von Bergen

Obesity is associated with multiple adverse health effects and a high risk of developing metabolic and cardiovascular diseases. Therefore, there is a great need to identify circulating parameters that link changes in body fat mass with obesity. This study combines proteomic and metabolomic approaches to identify circulating molecules that discriminate healthy lean from healthy obese individuals in an exploratory study design. To correct for variations in physical activity, study participants performed a one hour exercise bout to exhaustion. Subsequently, circulating factors differing between lean and obese individuals, independent of physical activity, were identified. The DIGE approach yielded 126 differentially abundant spots representing 39 unique proteins. Differential abundance of proteins was confirmed by ELISA for antithrombin-III, clusterin, complement C3 and complement C3b, pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF), retinol binding protein 4 (RBP4), serum amyloid P (SAP), and vitamin-D binding protein (VDBP). Targeted serum metabolomics of 163 metabolites identified 12 metabolites significantly related to obesity. Among those, glycine (GLY), glutamine (GLN), and glycero-phosphatidylcholine 42:0 (PCaa 42:0) serum concentrations were higher, whereas PCaa 32:0, PCaa 32:1, and PCaa 40:5 were decreased in obese compared to lean individuals. The integrated bioinformatic evaluation of proteome and metabolome data yielded an improved group separation score of 2.65 in contrast to 2.02 and 2.16 for the single-type use of proteomic or metabolomics data, respectively. The identified circulating parameters were further investigated in an extended set of 30 volunteers and in the context of two intervention studies. Those included 14 obese patients who had undergone sleeve gastrectomy and 12 patients on a hypocaloric diet. For determining the long-term adaptation process the samples were taken six months after the treatment. In multivariate regression analyses, SAP, CLU, RBP4, PEDF, GLN, and C18:2 showed the strongest correlation to changes in body fat mass. The combined serum proteomic and metabolomic profiling reveals a link between the complement system and obesity and identifies both novel (C3b, CLU, VDBP, and all metabolites) and confirms previously discovered markers (PEDF, RBP4, C3, ATIII, and SAP) of body fat mass changes.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2015

Molecular classification of diffuse cerebral WHO grade II/III gliomas using genome- and transcriptome-wide profiling improves stratification of prognostically distinct patient groups

Michael Weller; Ruthild G. Weber; Edith Willscher; Vera Riehmer; Bettina Hentschel; Markus Kreuz; Jörg Felsberg; Ulrike Beyer; Henry Löffler-Wirth; Kerstin Kaulich; Joachim P. Steinbach; Christian Hartmann; Dorothee Gramatzki; Johannes Schramm; Manfred Westphal; Gabriele Schackert; Matthias Simon; Tobias Martens; Jan Boström; Christian Hagel; Michael Sabel; Dietmar Krex; Jörg C. Tonn; Wolfgang Wick; Susan Noell; Uwe Schlegel; Bernhard Radlwimmer; Torsten Pietsch; Markus Loeffler; Andreas von Deimling

Abstract Cerebral gliomas of World Health Organization (WHO) grade II and III represent a major challenge in terms of histological classification and clinical management. Here, we asked whether large-scale genomic and transcriptomic profiling improves the definition of prognostically distinct entities. We performed microarray-based genome- and transcriptome-wide analyses of primary tumor samples from a prospective German Glioma Network cohort of 137 patients with cerebral gliomas, including 61 WHO grade II and 76 WHO grade III tumors. Integrative bioinformatic analyses were employed to define molecular subgroups, which were then related to histology, molecular biomarkers, including isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 or 2 (IDH1/2) mutation, 1p/19q co-deletion and telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) promoter mutations, and patient outcome. Genomic profiling identified five distinct glioma groups, including three IDH1/2 mutant and two IDH1/2 wild-type groups. Expression profiling revealed evidence for eight transcriptionally different groups (five IDH1/2 mutant, three IDH1/2 wild type), which were only partially linked to the genomic groups. Correlation of DNA-based molecular stratification with clinical outcome allowed to define three major prognostic groups with characteristic genomic aberrations. The best prognosis was found in patients with IDH1/2 mutant and 1p/19q co-deleted tumors. Patients with IDH1/2 wild-type gliomas and glioblastoma-like genomic alterations, including gain on chromosome arm 7q (+7q), loss on chromosome arm 10q (−10q), TERT promoter mutation and oncogene amplification, displayed the worst outcome. Intermediate survival was seen in patients with IDH1/2 mutant, but 1p/19q intact, mostly astrocytic gliomas, and in patients with IDH1/2 wild-type gliomas lacking the +7q/−10q genotype and TERT promoter mutation. This molecular subgrouping stratified patients into prognostically distinct groups better than histological classification. Addition of gene expression data to this genomic classifier did not further improve prognostic stratification. In summary, DNA-based molecular profiling of WHO grade II and III gliomas distinguishes biologically distinct tumor groups and provides prognostically relevant information beyond histological classification as well as IDH1/2 mutation and 1p/19q co-deletion status.


International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2001

Hydration of polymeric components of cartilage — an infrared spectroscopic study on hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate

R. Servaty; Jürgen Schiller; Hans Binder; Klaus Arnold

Hydrated polysaccharides are major constituents of cartilage and play an important role in its water-binding properties. Infrared (IR) spectroscopy and sorption isotherms have been used to investigate the hydration behavior of the glycosaminoglycans hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate. IR-dichroism of the vibrational modes of the pyranose ring is found at relative humidities (RH) smaller than 84%. The IR-dichroism data for the vibrational modes of the pyranose ring have been analyzed with respect to the helical structure of these polysaccharides. The orientation vanishes at higher relative humidities (>84%), because a strong increase in the water uptake occurs in the observed sorption isotherms. Differences in the IR-absorbance of the O-H stretching mode of sorbed water between hyaluronic acid and chondroitin sulfate are shown to be caused by the additional hydration of the sulfate groups. The corresponding H-bonds are weaker than those of the hydration shell of the pyranose rings.


European Biophysics Journal | 2007

Water near lipid membranes as seen by infrared spectroscopy

Hans Binder

The ordering and H-bonding characteristics of the hydration water of the lipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC) were studied using polarized infrared spectroscopy by varying either the temperature or the relative humidity of the ambient atmosphere of multibilayer samples. The OH-stretching band of lipid-bound water was interpreted by a simplified two-state model of well-structured, low density “network” water and of less-structured dense “multimer” water. The IR-spectroscopic data reflect a rather continuous change of the water properties with increasing distance from the membrane and with changing temperature. Network and multimer water distribute across the whole polar interphase with changing composition and orientation. Upon dehydration the fraction of network water increases from about 30 to 60%, a value which is similar to that in supercooled water at −25°C. The highly ordered gel phase gives rise to an increased fraction of structured network water compared with the liquid crystalline phase. The IR order parameter shows that the water dipoles rearrange from a more parallel towards a more perpendicular orientation with respect to the membrane normal with progressive hydration.


Biophysical Chemistry | 2001

Interaction of Zn2+ with phospholipid membranes.

Hans Binder; Klaus Arnold; Anne S. Ulrich; Olaf Zschörnig

To characterize the specificity of zinc binding to phospholipid membranes in terms of headgroup structure, hydration and phase behavior we studied the zwitterionic lipid 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine as a function of hydration at 30 degreesC in the presence and absence of ZnCl2. Zinc forms a 2:1-1:1 complex with the lipid, and in particular with the negatively charged phosphate groups. Zn2(+)-bridges between neighboring lipid molecules stabilize the gel phase of the lipid relative to the liquid-crystalline state. Upon Zn2+ binding the C-O-P-O-C- backbone of the lipid headgroup changes from a gauche/gauche into the trans/trans conformation and it loses roughly 50% of the hydration shell. The ability of the Zn2(+)-bound phosphate groups to take up water is distinctly reduced, meaning that the headgroups have become less hydrophilic. The energetic cost (on the scale of Gibbs free energy) for completely dehydrating the lipid headgroups is decreased by approximately 10 kJ/mole in the presence of Zn2+. The interaction of phospholipid headgroups with Zn2+ is conveniently described by a hydrated zinc-phosphate complex the key energy contribution of which is more covalent than electrostatic in nature. Dehydration of phospholipid headgroups due to complexation with zinc cations is suggested to increase fusogenic potency of lipid membranes. Zinc appears to be one of the most potent divalent cation in inducing membrane fusion.


Biophysical Journal | 2005

Specific and Nonspecific Hybridization of Oligonucleotide Probes on Microarrays

Hans Binder; Stephan Preibisch

Gene expression analysis by means of microarrays is based on the sequence-specific binding of RNA to DNA oligonucleotide probes and its measurement using fluorescent labels. The binding of RNA fragments involving sequences other than the intended target is problematic because it adds a chemical background to the signal, which is not related to the expression degree of the target gene. The article presents a molecular signature of specific and nonspecific hybridization with potential consequences for gene expression analysis. We analyzed the signal intensities of perfect match (PM) and mismatch (MM) probes of GeneChip microarrays to specify the effect of specific and nonspecific hybridization. We found that these events give rise to different relations between the PM and MM intensities as function of the middle base of the PM, namely a triplet-like (C > G approximately T > A > 0) and a duplet-like (C approximately T > 0 > G approximately A) pattern of the PM-MM log-intensity difference upon binding of specific and nonspecific RNA fragments, respectively. The systematic behavior of the intensity difference can be rationalized on the level of basepairings of DNA/RNA oligonucleotide duplexes in the middle of the probe sequence. Nonspecific binding is characterized by the reversal of the central Watson-Crick (WC) pairing for each PM/MM probe pair, whereas specific binding refers to the combination of a WC and a self-complementary (SC) pairing in PM and MM probes, respectively. The Gibbs free energy contribution of WC pairs to duplex stability is asymmetric for purines and pyrimidines of the PM and decreases according to C > G approximately T > A. SC pairings on the average only weakly contribute to duplex stability. The intensity of complementary MM introduces a systematic source of variation which decreases the precision of expression measures based on the MM intensities.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1990

Interaction of Triton X-100 and octyl glucoside with liposomal membranes at sublytic and lytic concentrations. Spectroscopic studies.

Jürgen Lasch; J. Hoffman; W.G. Omelyanenko; A.A. Klibanov; V.P. Torchilin; Hans Binder; K. Gawrisch

The molecular mechanism of the solubilisation of phospholipid bilayers by nonionic detergents was studied by turbidity changes, carboxyfluorescein fluorescence dequenching, steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy of DPH, lifetime measurements, ANS binding and 31P-NMR. Particular attention has been paid to the effective detergent-to-lipid ratio in the lipid phase. The disturbance of the bilayer arrangement varies considerably for various detergents depending on the hydrophilic and lipophilic parts of the molecule. Small amounts of detergents with low CMC (e.g. Triton X-100) can even induce an optimisation of packing of the lipid molecules.


Applied Spectroscopy Reviews | 2003

The Molecular Architecture of Lipid Membranes—New Insights from Hydration-Tuning Infrared Linear Dichroism Spectroscopy

Hans Binder

Abstract A new, precise method of adjustment and variation of the hydration degree of materials, is presented. This humidity-titration technique has proved to be practical, relatively fast to achieve, accurate, and, last but not least, well-defined in a thermodynamic sense. It is used in combination with infrared (IR) attenuated total reflection (ATR) spectroscopy to study the hydration of selected phospholipids on a molecular level. Examples of hydration-driven, lyotropic phase transitions are presented and discussed. The second part of the article deals with the relationship between polarised IR absorption spectroscopy and the degree of molecular order in macroscopically oriented samples. The basic formulae for the analysis of IR dichroism data in terms of molecular order parameters are given. Aspects of the molecular order of lipid membranes, such as the orientation and conformation of phosphocholine (PC) headgroups before and after interaction with ions (Ca2+ and Mg2+), the segmential order of the acyl chains in fluid and solid phases, complex formation between water and the PC headgroups and the ordering of lipid-bound water are presented in the third part of this publication. These examples illustrate the effect of the hydration degree on the molecular architecture of lipid assemblies.


Nature | 2017

Multilineage communication regulates human liver bud development from pluripotency

J. Gray Camp; Keisuke Sekine; Tobias Gerber; Henry Loeffler-Wirth; Hans Binder; Malgorzata Gac; Sabina Kanton; Jorge Kageyama; Georg Damm; Daniel Seehofer; Lenka Belicova; Marc Bickle; Rico Barsacchi; Ryo Okuda; Emi Yoshizawa; Masaki Kimura; Hiroaki Ayabe; Hideki Taniguchi; Takanori Takebe; Barbara Treutlein

Conventional two-dimensional differentiation from pluripotency fails to recapitulate cell interactions occurring during organogenesis. Three-dimensional organoids generate complex organ-like tissues; however, it is unclear how heterotypic interactions affect lineage identity. Here we use single-cell RNA sequencing to reconstruct hepatocyte-like lineage progression from pluripotency in two-dimensional culture. We then derive three-dimensional liver bud organoids by reconstituting hepatic, stromal, and endothelial interactions, and deconstruct heterogeneity during liver bud development. We find that liver bud hepatoblasts diverge from the two-dimensional lineage, and express epithelial migration signatures characteristic of organ budding. We benchmark three-dimensional liver buds against fetal and adult human liver single-cell RNA sequencing data, and find a striking correspondence between the three-dimensional liver bud and fetal liver cells. We use a receptor–ligand pairing analysis and a high-throughput inhibitor assay to interrogate signalling in liver buds, and show that vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) crosstalk potentiates endothelial network formation and hepatoblast differentiation. Our molecular dissection reveals interlineage communication regulating organoid development, and illuminates previously inaccessible aspects of human liver development.

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Arsen Arakelyan

National Academy of Sciences

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Lilit Nersisyan

National Academy of Sciences

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