Hm Curth
University of Cologne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hm Curth.
Cancer Cell | 2015
Vangelis Kondylis; Apostolos Polykratis; Hanno Ehlken; Laura Ochoa-Callejero; Beate K. Straub; Santosh Krishna-Subramanian; Trieu-My Van; Hm Curth; Nicole Heise; Falk Weih; Ulf Klein; Peter Schirmacher; Michelle A. Kelliher; Manolis Pasparakis
Summary IκB kinase/nuclear factor κB (IKK/NF-κB) signaling exhibits important yet opposing functions in hepatocarcinogenesis. Mice lacking NEMO in liver parenchymal cells (LPC) spontaneously develop steatohepatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) suggesting that NF-κB prevents liver disease and cancer. Here, we show that complete NF-κB inhibition by combined LPC-specific ablation of RelA, c-Rel, and RelB did not phenocopy NEMO deficiency, but constitutively active IKK2-mediated NF-κB activation prevented hepatocellular damage and HCC in NEMOLPC-KO mice. Knock-in expression of kinase inactive receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1) prevented hepatocyte apoptosis and HCC, while RIPK1 ablation induced TNFR1-associated death domain protein (TRADD)-dependent hepatocyte apoptosis and liver tumors in NEMOLPC-KO mice, revealing distinct kinase-dependent and scaffolding functions of RIPK1. Collectively, these results show that NEMO prevents hepatocarcinogenesis by inhibiting RIPK1 kinase activity-driven hepatocyte apoptosis through NF-κB-dependent and -independent functions.
Stem Cells and Development | 2012
Stephanie Schievenbusch; Elisabeth Sauer; Hm Curth; Sigrid Schulte; Münevver Demir; Ulrich Toex; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
We have previously identified Neighbor of Punc E 11 (Nope) as a specific cell surface marker of stem/progenitor cells in the murine fetal liver that is also expressed in hepatocellular carcinoma. Here, we focus on the differential expression pattern of Nope during murine fetal and postnatal liver development as well as in a normal and regenerating adult liver including oval cell activation. In the fetal liver, Nope shows a constantly high expression level and is a useful surface marker for the identification of Dlk, E-cadherin, and CD133-positive hepatoblasts by flow cytometry. Postnatally, Nope expression declines rapidly and remains barely detectable in the adult liver as shown by quantitative real-time reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and western blot analyses. Immunohistochemically, costainings for Nope- and epithelial-specific markers (E-cadherin), markers of early hepatoblasts (alpha-fetoprotein), and biliary marker proteins (CK19) demonstrate that Nope is initially expressed on bipotent hepatoblasts and persists thereafter on commited hepatocytic as well as cholangiocytic progenitor cells during late fetal liver development. Postnatally, Nope loses its circular expression pattern and is specifically directed to the sinusoidal membrane of early hepatocytes. While Nope is only weakly expressed on cholangiocytes in the normal adult liver, activated stem/progenitor (oval) cells clearly coexpress Nope together with the common markers A6, EpCAM, and CD24 in the 3,5-diethoxycarbonyl-1,4-dihydrocollidine mouse model. In conclusion, Nope should be most useful in future research to define the differentiation stage of hepatic-specified cells of various sources and is a promising candidate to identify and isolate hepatic stem cells from the adult liver.
International Journal of Cancer | 2011
Jens Uwe Marquardt; Maria Quasdorff; Heike Varnholt; Hm Curth; Senait Mesghenna; Ulrike Protzer; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the 5th common malignancy worldwide, but established markers fail to detect up to one third of HCC. We have recently identified Neighbor of Punc E11 (Nope) as a surface marker for murine fetal liver stem cells. Similar to commonly used HCC markers such as α‐Fetoprotein (Afp) and Glypican‐3 (Gpc‐3), we here establish Nope as an oncofetal marker of murine and human HCC and investigate its specific expression in hepatoma cell lines and primary HCC. Murine and human hepatoma cell lines and Cre‐inducible SV40 T‐antigen transgenic mice (Alb‐SV40TAgind) were analyzed for Nope expression in comparison to common HCC markers by quantitative RT‐PCR, Western blot analyses and immunohistochemistry. Nope expression in primary human HCC was investigated using Oncomine Microarray database. Nope expression was elevated in 8 of 10 investigated murine and human hepatoma cell lines and in all tumors of our oncogenic mouse model but remained undetectable in normal liver and at preneoplastic stages of murine hepatocarcinogenesis. Furthermore, a significant induction of Nope was detected in primary human cancers compared to corresponding normal or cirrhotic tissue. Nope expression in tumor specimens and murine cell lines correlated closely with expression levels of Gpc‐3, whereas expression levels of Afp showed high variations. In conclusion, we identified Nope as a novel oncofetal surface marker for murine and human HCC. Nope is specifically expressed by epithelial tumor cells but not in preneoplastic stages and is a promising marker for clinical application because of its high detection rate in Afp‐positive and Afp‐negative tumors.
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2016
A Bowe; V Mueck; Hm Curth; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2015
V Hoffmann; A Bowe; Hm Curth; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2015
Hm Curth; A Bowe; V Hoffmann; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2015
Hm Curth; A Bowe; V Hoffmann; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2014
V Hoffmann; A Bowe; S Schievenbusch; Hm Curth; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2013
Hm Curth; A Bowe; Margarete Odenthal; F Kütting; V Hoffmann; G Holz; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff
Zeitschrift Fur Gastroenterologie | 2013
A Bowe; S Schievenbusch; Hm Curth; Tobias Goeser; Dirk Nierhoff