Ingrit Hamann
University of Alberta
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Featured researches published by Ingrit Hamann.
Mutation Research | 2011
Franziska Ebert; André Weiss; Milena Bültemeyer; Ingrit Hamann; Andrea Hartwig; Tanja Schwerdtle
Inorganic arsenic is a strong, widespread human carcinogen. How exactly inorganic arsenic exerts carcinogenicity in humans is as yet unclear, but it is thought to be closely related to its metabolism. At exposure-relevant concentrations arsenic is neither directly DNA reactive nor mutagenic. Thus, more likely epigenetic and indirect genotoxic effects, among others a modulation of the cellular DNA damage response and DNA repair, are important molecular mechanisms contributing to its carcinogenicity. In the present study, we investigated the impact of arsenic on several base excision repair (BER) key players in cultured human lung cells. For the first time gene expression, protein level and in case of human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (hOGG1) protein function was examined in one study, comparing inorganic arsenite and its trivalent and pentavalent mono- and dimethylated metabolites, also taking into account their cellular bioavailability. Our data clearly show that arsenite and its metabolites can affect several cellular endpoints related to DNA repair. Thus, cellular OGG activity was most sensitively affected by dimethylarsinic acid (DMA(V)), DNA ligase IIIα (LIGIIIα) protein level by arsenite and X-ray cross complementing protein 1 (XRCC1 protein) content by monomethylarsonic acid (MMA(V)), with significant effects starting at ≥3.2μM cellular arsenic. With respect to MMA(V), to our knowledge these effects are the most sensitive endpoints, related to DNA damage response, that have been identified so far. In contrast to earlier nucleotide excision repair related studies, the trivalent methylated metabolites exerted strong effects on the investigated BER key players only at cytotoxic concentrations. In summary, our data point out that after mixed arsenic species exposure, a realistic scenario after oral inorganic arsenic intake in humans, DNA repair might be affected by different mechanisms and therefore very effectively, which might facilitate the carcinogenic process of inorganic arsenic.
Mutation Research | 2009
Ingrit Hamann; Tanja Schwerdtle; Andrea Hartwig
Oxidative stress is involved in many diseases, and the search for appropriate biomarkers is one major focus in molecular epidemiology. 8-Oxoguanine (8-oxoG), a potentially mutagenic DNA lesion, is considered to be a sensitive biomarker for oxidative stress. Another approach consists in assessing the repair capacity towards 8-oxoG, mediated predominantly by the human 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (hOGG1). With respect to the latter, during the last few years so-called cleavage assays have been described, investigating the incision of (32)P-labelled and 8-oxoG damaged oligonucleotides by cell extracts. Within the present study, a sensitive non-radioactive test system based on a Cy5-labelled oligonucleotide has been established. Sources of incision activity are isolated proteins or extracts prepared from cultured cells and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). After comparing different oligonucleotide structures, a hairpin-like structure was selected which was not degraded by cell extracts. Applying this test system the impact of copper on the activity of isolated hOGG1 and on hOGG activity in A549 cells was examined, showing a distinct inhibition of the isolated protein at low copper concentration as compared to a modest inhibition of hOGG activity in cells at beginning cytotoxic concentrations. For investigating PBMC, all reaction conditions, including the amounts of oligonucleotide and cell extract as well as the reaction time have been optimized. The incision activities of PBMC protein extracts obtained from different donors have been investigated, and inter-individual differences have been observed. In summary, the established method is as sensitive and even faster than the radioactive technique, and additionally, offers the advantage of reduced costs and low health risk.
Redox biology | 2013
Ingrit Hamann; Lars-Oliver Klotz
FoxO transcription factors and their regulators in the phosphoinositide 3′-kinase (PI3K)/Akt signaling pathway play an important role in the control of cellular processes involved in carcinogenesis, such as proliferation and apoptosis. We have previously demonstrated that physiologically relevant heavy metal ions, such as copper or zinc ions, can stimulate this pathway, triggering phosphorylation and nuclear export of FoxO transcription factors. The present study aims at investigating the effect of arsenite on FoxO transcription factors and the role of PI3K/Akt signaling therein. Exposure of HaCaT human keratinocytes to arsenite resulted in a distinct decrease of glutathione levels only at cytotoxic concentrations. In contrast, a strong phosphorylation of FoxO1a/FoxO3a and Akt was observed at subcytotoxic concentrations of arsenite in HaCaT human keratinocytes. A time- and concentration-dependent increase in phosphorylation of FoxO1a and FoxO3a at sites known to be phosphorylated by Akt as well as phosphorylation of Akt at Ser-473 was detected. These phosphorylations were blunted in the presence of wortmannin, pointing to the involvement of PI3K.
Mutation Research | 2012
Ingrit Hamann; Charlotte König; Constanze Richter; Gunnar Jahnke; Andrea Hartwig
The tumor suppressor protein p53, often called the guardian of the genome, is involved in important cellular processes, such as cell cycle control, apoptosis and DNA repair. With respect to BER, p53 might physically interact with and affect the transcription of different BER proteins such as hOGG1, APE1 or Polβ. In studies in HCT116 p53(-/-) cells previously published, activity and mRNA expression of hOGG1 were found to be significantly decreased, while down-regulation of APE1 mRNA and protein levels in response to genotoxic stress were only described in HCT116 p53(+/+) cells, but not in the isogenic p53 knockout cell line. The predominantly indirect genotoxic carcinogen cadmium inhibits the BER pathway and potentially interferes with zinc binding proteins such as p53. Therefore, this study was accomplished to investigate whether p53 is involved in the cadmium-induced inhibition of BER activity. To address this issue we applied a non-radioactive cleavage test system based on a Cy5-labeled oligonucleotide. We present evidence that p53 is not essential for hOGG1 and APE1 gene expression as well as OGG and APE activity in unstressed HCT116 cells; however, it plays an important role in the cellular response to cadmium treatment. Here, a direct involvement of p53 was only observed with respect to APE1 gene expression contributing to an altered APE activity, while OGG activity was presumably affected indirectly due to a stronger accumulation of cadmium in HCT116 p53(+/+) cells. In summary, p53 indeed affects the BER pathway directly and indirectly in response to cadmium treatment.
Breast Cancer Research | 2015
Melinda Wuest; Manuela Kuchar; Sai Kiran Sharma; Susan Richter; Ingrit Hamann; Monica Wang; Larissa Vos; John R. Mackey; Frank Wuest; Reik Löser
IntroductionLysyl oxidase (LOX; ExPASy ENZYME entry: EC 1.4.3.13) and members of the LOX-like family, LOXL1–LOXL4, are copper-dependent enzymes that can modify proteins of the extracellular matrix. Expression of LOX is elevated in many human cancers, including breast cancer. LOX expression correlates with the level of tissue hypoxia, and it is known to play a critical role in breast cancer metastasis. The goal of the present study was to target LOX with (1) molecular probe fluorescent labeling to visualize LOX in vitro and (2) a radiolabeled peptide to target LOX in vivo in three different preclinical models of breast cancer.MethodsGene expression of all five members of the LOX family was analyzed at the transcript level via microarray analysis using tissue biopsy samples from 176 patients with breast cancer. An oligopeptide sequence (GGGDPKGGGGG) was selected as a substrate-based, LOX-targeting structure. The peptide was labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) for confocal microscopy experiments with the murine breast cancer cell line EMT-6. In vivo molecular imaging experiments were performed using a C-terminal amidated peptide, GGGDPKGGGGG, labeled with a short-lived positron emitter, fluorine-18 (18F), for positron emission tomography (PET) in three different breast cancer models: EMT6, MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231. The PET experiments were carried out in the presence or absence of β-aminopropionitrile (BAPN), an irreversible inhibitor of LOX.ResultsImmunostaining experiments using a LOX-specific antibody on EMT-6 cells cultured under hypoxic conditions confirmed the elevation of LOX expression in these cells. An FITC-labeled oligopeptide, FITC-Ava-GGGDPKGGGGG-NH2, was found to be localized in different cellular compartments under these conditions. After injection of [18F]fluorobenzoate-GGGDPKGGGGG-NH2, radioactivity uptake was visible in all three breast cancer models in vivo. Tumor uptake was reduced by predosing the animals with 2 mg of BAPN 4 h or 24 h before injection of the radiotracer.ConclusionsThe present data support further investigation into the development of LOX-binding radiolabeled peptides as molecular probes for molecular imaging of LOX expression in cancer.
Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2014
Jenilee D. Way; Monica Wang; Ingrit Hamann; Melinda Wuest; Frank Wuest
INTRODUCTION (18)F-labeled amino acids are important PET radiotracers for molecular imaging of cancer. This study describes synthesis and radiopharmacological evaluation of 2-amino-5-(4-[(18)F]fluorophenyl)pent-4-ynoic acid ([(18)F]FPhPA) as a novel amino acid radiotracer for oncologic imaging. METHODS (18)F]FPhPA was prepared using Pd-mediated Sonogashira cross-coupling reaction between 4-[(18)F]fluoroiodobenzene ([(18)F]FIB) and propargylglycine. The radiopharmacological profile of [(18)F]FPhPA was evaluated in comparison with O-(2-[(18)F]fluoroethyl)-L-tyrosine ([(18)F]FET) using the murine breast cancer cell line EMT6 involving cellular uptake studies, radiotracer uptake competitive inhibition experiments and small animal PET imaging. RESULTS (18)F]FPhPA was prepared in 42±10% decay-corrected radiochemical yield with high radiochemical purity >95% after semi-preparative HPLC purification. Cellular uptake of L-[(18)F]FPhPA reached a maximum of 58±14 % radioactivity/mg protein at 90 min. Lower uptake was observed for racemic and D-[(18)F]FPhPA. Radiotracer uptake inhibition studies by synthetic and naturally occurring amino acids suggested that Na(+)-dependent system ASC, especially ASCT2, and Na(+)-independent system L are important amino acid transporters for [(18)F]FPhPA uptake into EMT6 cells. Small animal PET studies demonstrated similar high tumor uptake of [(18)F]FPhPA in EMT6 tumor-bearing mice compared to [(18)F]FET reaching a maximum standardized uptake value (SUV) of 1.35 after 60 min p.i.. Muscle uptake of [(18)F]FPhPA was higher (SUV30min=0.65) compared to [(18)F]FET (SUV30min=0.40), whereas [(18)F]FPhPA showed a more rapid uptake and clearance from the brain compared to [(18)F]FET. CONCLUSION L-[(18)F]FPhPA is the first (18)F-labeled amino acid prepared through Pd-mediated cross-coupling reaction. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PATIENT CARE L-[(18)F]FPhPA displayed promising properties as a novel amino acid radiotracer for molecular imaging of system ASC and system L amino acid transporters in cancer.
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2011
Anna Eckers; Elisabeth Sauerbier; Anwar Anwar-Mohamed; Ingrit Hamann; Charlotte Esser; Peter Schroeder; Ayman O.S. El-Kadi; Lars-Oliver Klotz
FHRE-Luc is a promoter reporter construct that is widely used to assess the activity of FoxO (forkhead box, class O) transcription factors. We here demonstrate that this promoter construct responds to exposure of HepG2 human hepatoma cells to known agonists of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), 3-methylcholanthrene, benzo(a)pyrene, and 6-formylindolo[3,2-b]carbazole. However, FHRE-Luc activation did not coincide with FoxO DNA binding or changes in Akt-induced FoxO phosphorylation after treatment with AhR agonists. Testing FHRE-Luc deletion constructs and using AhR-deficient cells, we found that FHRE-Luc activation by AhR agonists is due to a functional xenobiotic-response element (XRE) spanning the backbone/insert border of the reporter plasmid. In conclusion, care must be taken when using FHRE-Luc to assess FoxO activity in response to stimuli that potentially interfere with xenobiotic signaling.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2018
Melinda Wuest; Ingrit Hamann; Vincent Bouvet; Darryl D. Glubrecht; Alison Marshall; Brendan Trayner; Olivier-Mohamad Soueidan; Daniel Krys; Michael Wagner; Chris I. Cheeseman; F. G. West; Frank Wuest
Use of [18F]FDG-positron emission tomography (PET) in clinical breast cancer (BC) imaging is limited mainly by insufficient expression levels of facilitative glucose transporter (GLUT)1 in up to 50% of all patients. Fructose-specific facilitative hexose transporter GLUT5 represents an alternative biomarker for PET imaging of hexose metabolism in BC. The goal of the present study was to compare the uptake characteristics of selected hexose-based PET radiotracers in murine BC model EMT6. Uptake of 1-deoxy-1-[18F]fluoro-d-fructose (1-[18F]FDF), 6-deoxy-6-[18F]fluoro-d-fructose (6-[18F]FDF), 1-deoxy-1-[18F]fluoro-2,5-anhydro-mannitol (1-[18F]FDAM), 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-glucose (2-[18F]FDG), and 6-deoxy-6-[18F]fluoro-d-glucose (6-[18F]FDG) was studied in EMT6 cells, tumors, and muscle and correlated to GLUT1 and GLUT5 expression levels. Fructose-derivative 6-[18F]FDF revealed greater tumor uptake than did structural analog 1-[18F]FDF, whereas 1-[18F]FDAM with locked anomeric configuration showed similar low tumor uptake to that of 1-[18F]FDF. Glucose-derivative 6-[18F]FDG reached maximum tumor uptake at 20 minutes, with no further accumulation over time. Uptake of 2-[18F]FDG was greatest and continuously increasing owing to metabolic trapping through phosphorylation by hexokinase II. In EMT6 tumors, GLUT5 mRNA expression was 20,000-fold lower compared with GLUT1. Whereas the latter was much greater in tumor than in muscle tissue (GLUT1 50:1), the opposite was found for GLUT5 mRNA expression (GLUT5 1:6). GLUT5 protein levels were higher in tumor versus muscle tissue as determined by Western blot and immunohistochemistry. Our data suggest that tumor uptake of fructose metabolism-targeting radiotracers 1-[18F]FDF, 6-[18F]FDF, and 1-[18F]FDAM does not correlate with GLUT5 mRNA levels but is linked to GLUT5 protein levels. In conclusion, our results highlight the importance of detailed biochemical studies on GLUT protein expression levels in combination with PET imaging studies for functional characterization of GLUTs in BC.
Nuclear Medicine and Biology | 2017
Michael Wagner; Melinda Wuest; Ingrit Hamann; Ana Lopez-Campistrous; Todd McMullen; Frank Wuest
INTRODUCTION Receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha (PDGFRα) was recently identified as a molecular switch for dedifferentiation in thyroid cancer that predicts resistance to therapy as well as recurrence of disease in papillary thyroid cancer. Here we describe the radiolabeling and functional characterization of an imaging probe based on a PDGFRα-specific monoclonal antibody (mAb) for immuno-PET imaging of PDGFRα in papillary thyroid cancer. METHODS Antibody D13C6 (Cell Signaling) was decorated with chelator NOTA using bioconjugation reaction with 2-(p-NCS-Bz)-NOTA. Radiolabeling was carried out using 40 μg of antibody-NOTA conjugate with 143-223 MBq of [64Cu]CuCl2 in 0.25 M NaOAc (pH 5.5) at 30 °C for 1 h. The reaction mixture was purified with size-exclusion chromatography (PD-10 column). PDGFRα and mock transfected B-CPAP thyroid cancer cells lines for validation of 64Cu-labeled immuno-conjugates were generated using LVX-Tet-On technology. PET imaging was performed in NSG mice bearing bilaterally-induced PDGFRα (+/-) B-CPAP tumors. RESULTS Bioconjugation of NOTA chelator to monoclonal antibody D13C6 resulted in 2.8 ± 1.3 chelator molecules per antibody as determined by radiometric titration with 64Cu. [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-D13C6 was isolated in high radiochemical purity (>98%) and good radiochemical yields (19-61%). The specific activity was 0.9-5.1 MBq/μg. Cellular uptake studies revealed a specific radiotracer uptake in PDGFRα expressing cells compared to control cells. PET imaging resulted in SUVmean values of ~5.5 for PDGFRα (+) and ~2 for PDGFRα (-) tumors, after 48 h p.i.. After 1 h, radiotracer uptake was also observed in the bone marrow (SUVmean ~5) and spleen (SUVmean ~8.5). CONCLUSION Radiolabeled antibody [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-D13C6 represents a novel and promising radiotracer for immuno-PET imaging of PDGFRα in metastatic papillary thyroid cancer. ADVANCES IN KNOWLEDGE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PATIENT CARE The presented work has the potential to allow physicians to identify papillary thyroid cancer patients at risk of metastases by using the novel immuno-PET imaging assay based on PDGFRα-targeting antibody [64Cu]Cu-NOTA-D13C6.
Redox biology | 2019
Andrea Gille; Abdullah Turkistani; Dimitrios Tsitsipatis; Xiaoqing Hou; Sarah Tauber; Ingrit Hamann; Nadine Urban; Katrin Erler; Holger Steinbrenner; Lars-Oliver Klotz
Diethyl maleate (DEM), a thiol-reactive α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compound, depletes glutathione (GSH) in exposed cells and was previously shown by us to elicit a stress response in Caenorhabditis elegans that, at lower concentrations, results in enhanced stress resistance and longer lifespan. This hormetic response was mediated through both the Nrf2 ortholog, SKN-1, and the forkhead box O (FOXO) family transcription factor DAF-16. As FOXO signaling is evolutionarily conserved, we analyzed here the effects of DEM exposure on FOXO in cultured human cells (HepG2, HEK293). DEM elicited nuclear accumulation of GFP-coupled wild-type human FOXO1, as well as of a cysteine-deficient FOXO1 mutant. Despite the nuclear accumulation of FOXO1, neither FOXO1 DNA binding nor FOXO target gene expression were stimulated, suggesting that DEM causes nuclear accumulation but not activation of FOXO1. FOXO1 nuclear exclusion elicited by insulin or xenobiotics such as arsenite or copper ions was attenuated by DEM, suggesting that DEM interfered with nuclear export. In addition, insulin-induced FOXO1 phosphorylation at Thr-24, which is associated with FOXO1 nuclear exclusion, was attenuated upon exposure to DEM. Different from FOXO-dependent expression of genes, Nrf2 target gene mRNAs were elevated upon exposure to DEM. These data suggest that, different from C. elegans, DEM elicits opposing effects on the two stress-responsive transcription factors, Nrf2 and FOXO1, in cultured human cells.