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Dive into the research topics where Herbert Wiegandt is active.

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Featured researches published by Herbert Wiegandt.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Integrity and barrier function of the epidermis critically depend on glucosylceramide synthesis.

Richard Jennemann; Roger Sandhoff; Lutz Langbein; Sylvia Kaden; Ulrike Rothermel; Hichem Gallala; Konrad Sandhoff; Herbert Wiegandt; Hermann Josef Gröne

Ceramides are vital components of the water barrier in mammalian skin. Epidermis-specific, a major ceramide portion contains ω-hydroxy very long chain fatty acids (C30–C36). These ω-hydroxy ceramides (Cers) are found in the extracellular lamellae of the stratum corneum either as linoleic acyl esters or protein bound. Glucosylceramide is the major glycosphingolipid of the epidermis. Synthesized from ceramide and UDP-glucose, it is thought to be itself an intracellular precursor and carrier for extracellular ω-hydroxy ceramides. To investigate whether GlcCer is an obligatory intermediate in ceramide metabolism to maintain epidermal barrier function, a mouse with an epidermis-specific glucosylceramide synthase (Ugcg) deficiency has been generated. Four days after birth animals devoid of GlcCer synthesis in keratinocytes showed a pronounced desquamation of the stratum corneum and extreme transepidermal water loss leading to death. The stratum corneum appeared as a thick unstructured mass. Lamellar bodies of the stratum granulosum did not display the usual ordered inner structure and were often irregularly arranged. Although the total amount of epidermal protein-bound ceramides remained unchanged, epidermal-free ω-hydroxy ceramides increased 4-fold and ω-hydroxy sphingomyelins, almost not detectable in wild type epidermis, emerged in quantities comparable with lost GlcCer. We conclude that the transient formation of GlcCer is vital for a regular arrangement of lipids and proteins in lamellar bodies and for the maintenance of the epidermal barrier.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Male Germ Cells Require Polyenoic Sphingolipids with Complex Glycosylation for Completion of Meiosis A LINK TO CERAMIDE SYNTHASE-3

Mariona Rabionet; Aarnoud C. van der Spoel; Chia Chen Chuang; Benita Von Tümpling-Radosta; Manja Litjens; Diane Bouwmeester; Christina C. Hellbusch; Christian Körner; Herbert Wiegandt; Karin Gorgas; Frances M. Platt; Hermann Josef Gröne; Roger Sandhoff

Previously, it was found that a novel class of neutral fucosylated glycosphingolipids (GSLs) is required for male fertility. These lipids contain very long-chain (C26-C32) polyunsaturated (4-6 double bonds) fatty acid residues (VLC-PUFAs). To assess the role of these complex GSLs in spermatogenesis, we have now investigated with which of the testicular cell types these lipids are associated. During postnatal development, complex glycosylated and simple VLC-PUFA sphingolipids were first detectable at day 15, when the most advanced germ cells are pachytene spermatocytes. Their synthesis is most likely driven by ceramide synthase-3. This enzyme is encoded by the Cers3/Lass3 gene (longevity assurance genes), and out of six members of this gene family, only Cers3 mRNA expression was limited to germ cells, where it was up-regulated more than 700-fold during postnatal testicular maturation. Increasing levels of neutral complex VLC-PUFA GSLs also correlated with the progression of spermatogenesis in a series of male sterile mutants with arrests at different stages of spermatogenesis. Remarkably, fucosylation of the complex VLC-PUFA GSLs was not essential for spermatogenesis, as fucosylation-deficient mice produced nonfucosylated versions of the complex testicular VLC-PUFA GSLs, had complete spermatogenesis, and were fertile. Nevertheless, sterile Galgt1-/- mice, with a defective meiotic cytokinesis and a subsequent block in spermiogenesis, lacked complex but contained simple VLC-PUFA GSLs, as well as VLC-PUFA ceramides and sphingomyelins, indicating that the latter lipids are not sufficient for completion of spermatogenesis. Thus, our data imply that both glycans and the particular acyl chains of germinal sphingolipids are relevant for proper completion of meiosis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Sulfatides are required for renal adaptation to chronic metabolic acidosis

Paula Stettner; Soline Bourgeois; Christian Marsching; Milena Traykova-Brauch; Stefan Porubsky; Viola Nordström; Carsten Hopf; Robert Koesters; Roger Sandhoff; Herbert Wiegandt; Carsten A. Wagner; Hermann Josef Gröne; Richard Jennemann

Urinary ammonium excretion by the kidney is essential for renal excretion of sufficient amounts of protons and to maintain stable blood pH. Ammonium secretion by the collecting duct epithelia accounts for the majority of urinary ammonium; it is driven by an interstitium-to-lumen NH3 gradient due to the accumulation of ammonium in the medullary and papillary interstitium. Here, we demonstrate that sulfatides, highly charged anionic glycosphingolipids, are important for maintaining high papillary ammonium concentration and increased urinary acid elimination during metabolic acidosis. We disrupted sulfatide synthesis by a genetic approach along the entire renal tubule. Renal sulfatide-deficient mice had lower urinary pH accompanied by lower ammonium excretion. Upon acid diet, they showed impaired ammonuria, decreased ammonium accumulation in the papilla, and chronic hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis. Expression levels of ammoniagenic enzymes and Na+-K+/NH4+-2Cl− cotransporter 2 were higher, and transepithelial NH3 transport, examined by in vitro microperfusion of cortical and outer medullary collecting ducts, was unaffected in mutant mice. We therefore suggest that sulfatides act as counterions for interstitial ammonium facilitating its retention in the papilla. This study points to a seminal role of sulfatides in renal ammonium handling, urinary acidification, and acid–base homeostasis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Glycosphingolipids are essential for intestinal endocytic function.

Richard Jennemann; Sylvia Kaden; Roger Sandhoff; Viola Nordström; Shijun Wang; Martina Volz; Sylvie Robine; Nicole Amen; Ulrike Rothermel; Herbert Wiegandt; Hermann Josef Gröne

Background: The intestine contains high concentrations of glycosphingolipids, but their function remained unclear. Results: In newborn mice lacking glycosphingolipids, intestinal epithelia were indistinguishable from control littermates. However, a few days after birth, severe defects in epithelial differentiation occurred. Conclusion: Glycosphingolipid expression in the intestinal epithelium is quintessential for maintenance of resorptive function. Significance: Glycosphingolipids are essential for enterocyte function but not for brush border formation. Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) constitute major components of enterocytes and were hypothesized to be potentially important for intestinal epithelial polarization. The enzyme UDP-glucose ceramide glucosyltransferase (Ugcg) catalyzes the initial step of GSL biosynthesis. Newborn and adult mice with enterocyte-specific genetic deletion of the gene Ugcg were generated. In newborn mutants lacking GSLs at day P0, intestinal epithelia were indistinguishable from those in control littermates displaying an intact polarization with regular brush border. However, those mice were not consistently able to absorb nutritional lipids from milk. Between postnatal days 5 and 7, severe defects in intestinal epithelial differentiation occurred accompanied by impaired intestinal uptake of nutrients. Villi of mutant mice became stunted, and enterocytes lacked brush border. The defects observed in mutant mice caused diarrhea, malabsorption, and early death. In this study, we show that GSLs are essential for enterocyte resorptive function but are primarily not for polarization; GSLs are required for intracellular vesicular transport in resorption-active intestine.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Cell-specific deletion of glucosylceramide synthase in brain leads to severe neural defects after birth

Richard Jennemann; Roger Sandhoff; Shijun Wang; Eva Kiss; Norbert Gretz; Cecilia Zuliani; Ana Martin-Villalba; Richard Jäger; Hubert Schorle; Marc Kenzelmann; Mahnaz Bonrouhi; Herbert Wiegandt; Hermann Josef Gröne


Biological Chemistry | 1973

Gangliosides of Extraneural Organs

Herbert Wiegandt


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Novel Class of Glycosphingolipids Involved in Male Fertility

Roger Sandhoff; Rudolf Geyer; Richard Jennemann; Claudia Paret; Eva Kiss; Tadashi Yamashita; Karin Gorgas; Tjeerd P. Sijmonsma; Masao Iwamori; Catherine Finaz; Richard L. Proia; Herbert Wiegandt; Hermann Josef Gröne


Biological Chemistry | 1974

Ganglioside accumulation by transformed murine fibroblasts (3T3) cells and canine erythrocytes.

Thomas W. Keenan; Werner W. Franke; Herbert Wiegandt


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2005

Chemokines bind to sulfatides as revealed by surface plasmon resonance

Roger Sandhoff; Heike Grieshaber; Roghieh Djafarzadeh; Tjeerd P. Sijmonsma; Amanda E. I. Proudfoot; Tracy M. Handel; Herbert Wiegandt; Peter J. Nelson; Hermann Josef Gröne


Biological Chemistry | 1968

[Identification of a lipoprotein with antigenic activity in the Lp-system].

Herbert Wiegandt; Kurt Lipp; Gerhard Wendt

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Hermann Josef Gröne

German Cancer Research Center

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Roger Sandhoff

German Cancer Research Center

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Richard Jennemann

German Cancer Research Center

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Shijun Wang

German Cancer Research Center

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Sylvia Kaden

German Cancer Research Center

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Ulrike Rothermel

German Cancer Research Center

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Viola Nordström

German Cancer Research Center

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Eva Kiss

German Cancer Research Center

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Martina Volz

German Cancer Research Center

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Nicole Amen

German Cancer Research Center

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