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Dive into the research topics where Henning Ulrich is active.

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Featured researches published by Henning Ulrich.


Cytometry Part A | 2010

Phenotypes of stem cells from diverse origin

Attila Tárnok; Henning Ulrich; Jozsef Bocsi

Stem cells have turned into promising tools for studying the mechanisms of development, regeneration, and for cell therapy of various disorders. Stem cells are found in the embryo and in most adult tissues participating in endogenous tissue regeneration. They are capable of autorenovation, often maintain their multipotency of differentiation into various tissues of their germ line and are, therefore, ideal candidates for cellular therapy taken that they can be unequivocally identified and isolated. In this review, we report stem cell marker expression used for identification of various stem cell lineages, including very small embryonic stem cells, neural, hematopoietic, mesenchymal, epithelial and limbal epithelial stem cells, endothelial progenitor cells, supra‐adventitial adipose stromal cells, adipose pericytes, and cancer stem cells. These cells usually cannot be distinguished by a single stem cell marker, because their expression partially overlaps between lineages. Recent advances in flow cytometry allowing the simultaneous detection of various markers have facilitated stem cell identification for clinical diagnosis and research. So far experimental evidence suggests the existence of cells with different properties, i.e., the capability to different in various cell types. Several studies indicate that expression of classical markers for stem cell classification, such as CD34, CD45, and CD133, may differ between the virtually same stem and progenitor cells, i.e., endothelial progenitor or mesenchymal stem cells, when they were obtained from different tissues. This finding raises questions whether phenotypic differences are due to the source or if it is only caused by different isolation and experimental conditions.


Cytometry Part A | 2014

Human Adult Stem Cells from Diverse Origins: An Overview from Multiparametric Immunophenotyping to Clinical Applications

Bruna R. Sousa; Ricardo Cambraia Parreira; Emerson Alberto da Fonseca; Maria J. Amaya; Fernanda M. P. Tonelli; S. M. S. N. Lacerda; Pritesh Lalwani; Anderson K. Santos; Katia N. Gomes; Henning Ulrich; Alexandre Hiroaki Kihara; Rodrigo R Resende

Stem cells are known for their capacity to self‐renew and differentiate into at least one specialized cell type. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) were isolated initially from bone marrow but are now known to exist in all vascularized organ or tissue in adults. MSCs are particularly relevant for therapy due to their simplicity of isolation and cultivation. The International Society for Cellular Therapy (ISCT) has proposed a set of standards to define hMSCs for laboratory investigations and preclinical studies: adherence to plastic in standard culture conditions; in vitro differentiation into osteoblasts, adipocytes, and chondroblasts; specific surface antigen expression in which ≥95% of the cells express the antigens recognized by CD105, CD73, and CD90, with the same cells lacking (≤2% positive) the antigens CD45, CD34, CD14 or CD11b, CD79a or CD19, and HLA‐DR. In this review we will take an historical overview of how umbilical cord blood, bone marrow, adipose‐derived, placental and amniotic fluid, and menstrual blood stem cells, the major sources of human MSC, can be obtained, identified and how they are being used in clinical trials to cure and treat a very broad range of conditions, including heart, hepatic, and neurodegenerative diseases. An overview of protocols for differentiation into hepatocytes, cardiomyocytes, neuronal, adipose, chondrocytes, and osteoblast cells are highlighted. We also discuss a new source of stem cells, induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS cells) and some pathways, which are common to MSCs in maintaining their pluripotent state.


Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening | 2006

DNA and RNA Aptamers: From Tools for Basic Research Towards Therapeutic Applications

Henning Ulrich; Cleber A. Trujillo; Arthur A. Nery; Janaina M. Alves; Paromita Majumder; Rodrigo R Resende; Antonio H. Martins

The systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) is a combinatorial oligonucleotide library-based in vitro selection approach in which DNA or RNA molecules are selected by their ability to bind their targets with high affinity and specificity, comparable to those of antibodies. Nucleic acids with high affinity for their targets have been selected against a wide variety of compounds, from small molecules, such as ATP, to membrane proteins and even whole organisms. Recently, the use of the SELEX technique was extended to isolate oligonucleotide ligands, also known as aptamers, for a wide range of proteins of importance for therapy and diagnostics, such as growth factors and cell surface antigens. The number of aptamers generated as inhibitors of various target proteins has increased following automatization of the SELEX process. Their diagnostic and therapeutic efficacy can be enhanced by introducing chemical modifications into the oligonucleotides to provide resistance against enzymatic degradation in body fluids. Several aptamers are currently being tested in preclinical and clinical trials, and aptamers are in the process of becoming a new class of therapeutic agents. Recently, the anti-VEGF aptamer pegaptanib received FDA approval for treatment of human ocular vascular disease.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2011

Purinergic signaling in embryonic and stem cell development

Geoffrey Burnstock; Henning Ulrich

Nucleotides are of crucial importance as carriers of energy in all organisms. However, the concept that in addition to their intracellular roles, nucleotides act as extracellular ligands specifically on receptors of the plasma membrane took longer to be accepted. Purinergic signaling exerted by purines and pyrimidines, principally ATP and adenosine, occurs throughout embryologic development in a wide variety of organisms, including amphibians, birds, and mammals. Cellular signaling, mediated by ATP, is present in development at very early stages, e.g., gastrulation of Xenopus and germ layer definition of chick embryo cells. Purinergic receptor expression and functions have been studied in the development of many organs, including the heart, eye, skeletal muscle and the nervous system. In vitro studies with stem cells revealed that purinergic receptors are involved in the processes of proliferation, differentiation, and phenotype determination of differentiated cells. Thus, nucleotides are able to induce various intracellular signaling pathways via crosstalk with other bioactive molecules acting on growth factor and neurotransmitter receptors. Since normal development is disturbed by dysfunction of purinergic signaling in animal models, further studies are needed to elucidate the functions of purinoceptor subtypes in developmental processes.


Cytometry Part A | 2013

Functions of neurotrophins and growth factors in neurogenesis and brain repair.

Sophia L. B. Oliveira; Micheli M. Pillat; Arquimedes Cheffer; Claudiana Lameu; Telma T. Schwindt; Henning Ulrich

The identification and isolation of multipotent neural stem and progenitor cells in the brain, giving rise to neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes initiated many studies in order to understand basic mechanisms of endogenous neurogenesis and repair mechanisms of the nervous system and to develop novel therapeutic strategies for cellular regeneration therapies in brain disease. A previous review (Trujillo et al., Cytometry A 2009;75:38–53) focused on the importance of extrinsic factors, especially neurotransmitters, for directing migration and neurogenesis in the developing and adult brain. Here, we extend our review discussing the effects of the principal growth and neurotrophic factors as well as their intracellular signal transduction on neurogenesis, fate determination and neuroprotective mechanisms. Many of these mechanisms have been elucidated by in vitro studies for which neural stem cells were isolated, grown as neurospheres, induced to neural differentiation under desired experimental conditions, and analyzed for embryonic, progenitor, and neural marker expression by flow and imaging cytometry techniques. The better understanding of neural stem cells proliferation and differentiation is crucial for any therapeutic intervention aiming at neural stem cell transplantation and recruitment of endogenous repair mechanisms.


Cytometry Part A | 2009

Novel perspectives of neural stem cell differentiation: From neurotransmitters to therapeutics

Cleber A. Trujillo; Telma T. Schwindt; Antonio H. Martins; Janaina M. Alves; Luiz E. Mello; Henning Ulrich

In the past years, many reports have described the existence of neural progenitor and stem cells in the adult central nervous system capable of generating new neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes. This discovery has overturned the central assumption in the neuroscience field, of no new neurons being originated in the brain after birth and provided the fundaments to understand the molecular basis of neural differentiation and to develop new therapies for neural tissue repair. Although the mechanisms underlying cell fate during neural development are not yet understood, the importance of intrinsic and extrinsic factors and of an appropriate microenvironment is well known. In this context, emerging evidence strongly suggests that glial cells play a key role in controlling multiple steps of neurogenesis. Those cells, of particular radial glia, are important for migration, cell specification, and integration of neurons into a functional neural network. This review aims to present an update in the neurogenesis area and highlight the modulation of neural stem cell differentiation by neurotransmitters, growth factors, and their receptors, with possible applications for cell therapy strategies of neurological disorders.


Cytometry Part A | 2013

Human mesenchymal stem cells: From immunophenotyping by flow cytometry to clinical applications

Arthur A. Nery; Isis C. Nascimento; Talita Glaser; Vinicius Bassaneze; José Eduardo Krieger; Henning Ulrich

Modern medicine will unequivocally include regenerative medicine as a major breakthrough in the re‐establishment of damaged or lost tissues due to degenerative diseases or injury. In this scenario, millions of patients worldwide can have their quality of life improved by stem cell implantation coupled with endogenous secretion or administration of survival and differentiation promoting factors. Large efforts, relying mostly on flow cytometry and imaging techniques, have been put into cell isolation, immunophenotyping, and studies of differentiation properties of stem cells of diverse origins. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are particularly relevant for therapy due to their simplicity of isolation. A minimal phenotypic pattern for the identification of MSCs cells requires them to be immunopositive for CD73, CD90, and CD105 expression, while being negative for CD34, CD45, and HLA‐DR and other surface markers. MSCs identified by their cell surface marker expression pattern can be readily purified from patients bone marrow and adipose tissues. Following expansion and/or predifferentiation into a desired tissue type, stem cells can be reimplanted for tissue repair in the same patient, virtually eliminating rejection problems. Transplantation of MSCs is subject of almost 200 clinical trials to cure and treat a very broad range of conditions, including bone, heart, and neurodegenerative diseases. Immediate or medium term improvements of clinical symptoms have been reported as results of many clinical studies.


Cytometry Part A | 2009

Disease‐specific biomarker discovery by aptamers

Henning Ulrich; Carsten Wrenger

RNA and DNA aptamers developed by an in vitro selection process, Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment (SELEX), comprise a novel class of high‐affinity and specific capture agents, which can be easily modified for cytometry and in vivo applications. A novel application of this technique (Cell SELEX) explores the expression of cell surface epitopes that differ between two given cell types or between healthy and diseased cells. Using whole cells as targets, aptamer libraries can be identified that bind to biomarkers expressed by target cells and not by any other cells. Aptamers have been developed that specifically interact with cell surface epitopes of trypanosomes or distinguish between the differences in molecular signature of somatic and cancer cells. Aside from its use for target cell identification by image and flow cytometry and laser‐scanning microscopy, aptamers can be used for ligand‐mediated purification and identification of their binding proteins in target cell membranes. In this review, we discuss an approach for the development of aptamers targeting parasite‐derived surface proteins of Trypanosoma and Plasmodium.


Cytometry Part A | 2004

RNA and DNA aptamers in cytomics analysis

Henning Ulrich; Antonio H. Martins; João Bosco Pesquero

The systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) technique is a combinatorial library approach in which DNA or RNA molecules (aptamers) are selected by their ability to bind their protein targets with high affinity and specificity, comparable to that of monoclonal antibodies. In contrast to antibodies conventionally selected in animals, aptamers are generated by an in vitro selection process, and can be directed against almost every target, including antigens like toxins or nonimmunogenic targets, against which conventional antibodies cannot be raised.


Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2013

Nucleic acid aptamers as high affinity ligands in biotechnology and biosensorics.

Tina Šmuc; Il-Young Ahn; Henning Ulrich

Aptamers are small nucleic acid molecules capable of binding to a wide range of target molecules with high affinity and specificity. They have been developed and widely used not only as research tools, but also as biosensors, specific antagonists, and diagnostic markers and as protein purification platform for many pharmaceutical and clinical applications. Here, in this paper we will explore biochemical aspects of aptamer-target interactions and show why aptamers rival antibodies in target recognition and purification procedures. This review will focus on strategies of using aptamers as affinity ligands for molecules of therapeutic and pharmaceutical interest including applications in chromatography and capillary electrophoresis for protein and small molecule purification. Moreover, we will also discuss aptamers whose binding parameters can be controlled on demand for diagnostic approaches and used as sensitive receptors in biosensorics. Aptamers have opened up exciting fields in basic and applied research of pharmaceutical and biotechnological interest.

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Micheli M. Pillat

Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

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Arthur A. Nery

University of São Paulo

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Rodrigo R Resende

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Talita Glaser

University of São Paulo

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