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Dive into the research topics where Jan Kazenwadel is active.

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Featured researches published by Jan Kazenwadel.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

GATA2 is required for lymphatic vessel valve development and maintenance

Jan Kazenwadel; Kelly L. Betterman; Chan-Eng Chong; Philippa H. Stokes; Young Koung Lee; Genevieve A. Secker; Yan Agalarov; Cansaran Saygili Demir; David Lawrence; Drew L. Sutton; Sébastien Tabruyn; Naoyuki Miura; Marjo Salminen; Tatiana V. Petrova; Jacqueline M. Matthews; Christopher N. Hahn; Hamish S. Scott; Natasha L. Harvey

Heterozygous germline mutations in the zinc finger transcription factor GATA2 have recently been shown to underlie a range of clinical phenotypes, including Emberger syndrome, a disorder characterized by lymphedema and predisposition to myelodysplastic syndrome/acute myeloid leukemia (MDS/AML). Despite well-defined roles in hematopoiesis, the functions of GATA2 in the lymphatic vasculature and the mechanisms by which GATA2 mutations result in lymphedema have not been characterized. Here, we have provided a molecular explanation for lymphedema predisposition in a subset of patients with germline GATA2 mutations. Specifically, we demonstrated that Emberger-associated GATA2 missense mutations result in complete loss of GATA2 function, with respect to the capacity to regulate the transcription of genes that are important for lymphatic vessel valve development. We identified a putative enhancer element upstream of the key lymphatic transcriptional regulator PROX1 that is bound by GATA2, and the transcription factors FOXC2 and NFATC1. Emberger GATA2 missense mutants had a profoundly reduced capacity to bind this element. Conditional Gata2 deletion in mice revealed that GATA2 is required for both development and maintenance of lymphovenous and lymphatic vessel valves. Together, our data unveil essential roles for GATA2 in the lymphatic vasculature and explain why a select catalogue of human GATA2 mutations results in lymphedema.


PLOS ONE | 2012

In Vitro Assays Using Primary Embryonic Mouse Lymphatic Endothelial Cells Uncover Key Roles for FGFR1 Signalling in Lymphangiogenesis

Jan Kazenwadel; Genevieve A. Secker; Kelly L. Betterman; Natasha L. Harvey

Despite the importance of blood vessels and lymphatic vessels during development and disease, the signalling pathways underpinning vessel construction remain poorly characterised. Primary mouse endothelial cells have traditionally proven difficult to culture and as a consequence, few assays have been developed to dissect gene function and signal transduction pathways in these cells ex vivo. Having established methodology for the purification, short-term culture and transfection of primary blood (BEC) and lymphatic (LEC) vascular endothelial cells isolated from embryonic mouse skin, we sought to optimise robust assays able to measure embryonic LEC proliferation, migration and three-dimensional tube forming ability in vitro. In the course of developing these assays using the pro-lymphangiogenic growth factors FGF2 and VEGF-C, we identified previously unrecognised roles for FGFR1 signalling in lymphangiogenesis. The small molecule FGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor SU5402, but not inhibitors of VEGFR-2 (SU5416) or VEGFR-3 (MAZ51), inhibited FGF2 mediated LEC proliferation, demonstrating that FGF2 promotes proliferation directly via FGF receptors and independently of VEGF receptors in primary embryonic LEC. Further investigation revealed that FGFR1 was by far the predominant FGF receptor expressed by primary embryonic LEC and correspondingly, siRNA-mediated FGFR1 knockdown abrogated FGF2 mediated LEC proliferation. While FGF2 potently promoted LEC proliferation and migration, three dimensional tube formation assays revealed that VEGF-C primarily promoted LEC sprouting and elongation, illustrating that FGF2 and VEGF-C play distinct, cooperative roles in lymphatic vascular morphogenesis. These assays therefore provide useful tools able to dissect gene function in cellular events important for lymphangiogenesis and implicate FGFR1 as a key player in developmental lymphangiogenesis in vivo.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Arap3 is dysregulated in a mouse model of hypotrichosis-lymphedema-telangiectasia and regulates lymphatic vascular development

Joëlle Kartopawiro; Neil I. Bower; Tara Karnezis; Jan Kazenwadel; Kelly L. Betterman; Emmanuelle Lesieur; Katarzyna Koltowska; Jonathan W. Astin; Philip S. Crosier; Sonja Vermeren; Marc G. Achen; Steven A. Stacker; Kelly Smith; Natasha L. Harvey; Mathias Francois; Benjamin M. Hogan

Mutations in SOX18, VEGFC and Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor 3 underlie the hereditary lymphatic disorders hypotrichosis-lymphedema-telangiectasia (HLT), Milroy-like lymphedema and Milroy disease, respectively. Genes responsible for hereditary lymphedema are key regulators of lymphatic vascular development in the embryo. To identify novel modulators of lymphangiogenesis, we used a mouse model of HLT (Ragged Opossum) and performed gene expression profiling of aberrant dermal lymphatic vessels. Expression studies and functional analysis in zebrafish and mice revealed one candidate, ArfGAP with RhoGAP domain, Ankyrin repeat and PH domain 3 (ARAP3), which is down-regulated in HLT mouse lymphatic vessels and necessary for lymphatic vascular development in mice and zebrafish. We position this known regulator of cell behaviour during migration as a mediator of the cellular response to Vegfc signalling in lymphatic endothelial cells in vitro and in vivo. Our data refine common mechanisms that are likely to contribute during both development and the pathogenesis of lymphatic vascular disorders.


Developmental Biology | 2014

Control of retinoid levels by CYP26B1 is important for lymphatic vascular development in the mouse embryo.

Josephine Bowles; Genevieve A. Secker; Christelle Nguyen; Jan Kazenwadel; Vy Truong; Emmanuelle Frampton; Cameron Curtis; Renae Skoczylas; Tara-Lynn Davidson; Naoyuki Miura; Young-Kwon Hong; Peter Koopman; Natasha L. Harvey; Mathias Francois

During embryogenesis, lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells first arise from a subset of blood vascular endothelial cells in the dorsolateral aspects of the cardinal veins. The molecular cues responsible for defining the regionalisation of such a discrete pool of progenitors remain uncharacterised. Here we identify a novel function for CYP26B1, an enzyme known to play a role in tissue morphogenesis by fine-tuning retinoic acid (RA) concentration, in regulating lymphangiogenesis. Cyp26b1-null mice, in which RA levels are elevated, exhibited an increased number of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells in the cardinal veins, together with hyperplastic, blood filled lymph sacs and hyperplastic dermal lymphatic vessels. Conversely, mice over-expressing Cyp26b1 had hypoplastic lymph sacs and lymphatic vessels. Our data suggest that RA clearance by CYP26B1 in the vicinity of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells is important for determining the position and size of the progenitor pool specified. Our studies identify a genetic pathway that underpins the architecture of the developing lymphatics and define CYP26B1 as a novel modulator of lymphatic vascular patterning.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2011

Differential expression of microRNA-1 in dorsal root ganglion neurons

Isabell Bastian; Sunil Tam Tam; Xin-Fu Zhou; Jan Kazenwadel; Mark B. Van der Hoek; Michael Michael; Ian L. Gibbins; Rainer Viktor Haberberger

Damage to sensory neurons induces neural repair, regrowth and hyperexcitability. The regulation of such responses to injury must be organized in some way by the neurons. Regulation can occur at the post-transcriptional level via microRNAs (miRNAs). miRNAs are small non-coding RNAs that influence the stability or translation of mRNAs and thereby regulate gene expression. Although nociceptive neurons show transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulatory mechanisms at many levels, miRNAs have not yet been systematically investigated in these neurons. Based on our preliminary array data we investigated the presence of miR-1 in dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons of mice and humans. We detected miR-1 in total RNA from human and mouse DRG and localised miR-1 in human and murine sensory neurons in situ. In Situ Hybridization detected miR-1 expression by nearly all DRG neurons. In vitro studies of enriched sensory neuron subpopulations from mouse DRG showed higher miR-1 expression levels in I-B4 negative neurons compared with I-B4 positive cells. Culturing of primary sensory neurons reduced the relative miR-1 expression levels independent of the presence or absence of laminin on the culture substrate. Transfection with a miR-1 mimic induced a massive increase in neuronal miR-1 associated with attenuated neurite outgrowth. This first description of miR-1 in sensory neurons including nociceptors suggests that miR-1 has a role in modulating neurite outgrowth.


Developmental Dynamics | 2016

Morphogenesis of the lymphatic vasculature: A focus on new progenitors and cellular mechanisms important for constructing lymphatic vessels.

Jan Kazenwadel; Natasha L. Harvey

Lymphatic vessels serve crucial roles in the regulation of tissue fluid homeostasis, dietary lipid absorption and immune cell trafficking. Defects in lymphatic vessel morphogenesis and function have been associated with lymphedema, obesity, hypertension and tumour metastasis. Morphogenetic events important for construction of the lymphatic vasculature during development include the specification and emergence of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells, their differentiation and assembly into interconnected vessels and vascular remodeling, ultimately giving rise to a functional vascular network. Despite the embryonic origins of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells being long debated, work performed over the last decade had overwhelmingly supported at least a great majority of progenitor cells arising from the venous vasculature. Here, we review the most recent advances in the field of lymphatic vessel morphogenesis, with a focus on studies that have identified novel sources of embryonic lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells, together with the cellular mechanisms by which lymphatic vessels are initially assembled. Developmental Dynamics 245:209–219, 2016.


Nature Communications | 2018

Matrix stiffness controls lymphatic vessel formation through regulation of a GATA2-dependent transcriptional program

Maike Frye; Andrea Taddei; Cathrin Dierkes; Ines Martinez-Corral; Matthew Fielden; Henrik Ortsäter; Jan Kazenwadel; Dinis P. Calado; Pia Ostergaard; Marjo Salminen; Liqun He; Natasha L. Harvey; Friedemann Kiefer; Taija Mäkinen

Tissue and vessel wall stiffening alters endothelial cell properties and contributes to vascular dysfunction. However, whether extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness impacts vascular development is not known. Here we show that matrix stiffness controls lymphatic vascular morphogenesis. Atomic force microscopy measurements in mouse embryos reveal that venous lymphatic endothelial cell (LEC) progenitors experience a decrease in substrate stiffness upon migration out of the cardinal vein, which induces a GATA2-dependent transcriptional program required to form the first lymphatic vessels. Transcriptome analysis shows that LECs grown on a soft matrix exhibit increased GATA2 expression and a GATA2-dependent upregulation of genes involved in cell migration and lymphangiogenesis, including VEGFR3. Analyses of mouse models demonstrate a cell-autonomous function of GATA2 in regulating LEC responsiveness to VEGF-C and in controlling LEC migration and sprouting in vivo. Our study thus uncovers a mechanism by which ECM stiffness dictates the migratory behavior of LECs during early lymphatic development.Mechanical cues are known to influence endothelial cell behavior. Here Frye et al. show that lymphatic endothelial cell progenitors experience varying degrees of matrix stiffness during development, and that matrix stiffness regulates GATA2 expression to drive lymphatic vessel formation.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2018

Lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells: origins and roles in lymphangiogenesis

Jan Kazenwadel; Natasha L. Harvey

How are lymphatic vessels built? What are the sources of progenitor cells employed to construct lymphatic vessels during embryogenesis and in pathological situations? Are lymphatic vessels in different tissues built the same way? These questions have been highly topical and actively debated in the field of lymphangiogenesis research for more than 100 years. While embryonic veins and cells of mesenchymal origin have been recognised as sources of embryonic lymphatic endothelial cells for many years, recent advances in technology have revealed the existence of additional sources of lymphatic endothelial cells important for embryonic lymphangiogenesis. Intriguingly, distinct progenitor cell sources appear to be employed in a tissue specific manner during development. Gaining further insight into the identity of lymphatic endothelial progenitor cells and the signals that direct their assembly, both during development and in disease, has the potential to enable the design of therapeutics able to selectively target specific lymphatic vessel beds, a feature likely to prove valuable for the treatment of human disorders including cancer, lymphoedema and inflammatory disease.


Blood | 2012

Loss-of-function germline GATA2 mutations in patients with MDS/AML or MonoMAC syndrome and primary lymphedema reveal a key role for GATA2 in the lymphatic vasculature

Jan Kazenwadel; Genevieve A. Secker; Yajuan J. Liu; Jill A. Rosenfeld; Robert S. Wildin; Jennifer Cuellar-Rodriguez; Amy P. Hsu; Sarah Dyack; Conrad V. Fernandez; Chan Eng Chong; Milena Babic; Peter Bardy; Akiko Shimamura; Michael Zhang; Tom Walsh; Steven M. Holland; Dennis D. Hickstein; Marshall S. Horwitz; Christopher N. Hahn; Hamish S. Scott; Natasha L. Harvey


Blood | 2010

Prox1 expression is negatively regulated by miR-181 in endothelial cells

Jan Kazenwadel; Michael Michael; Natasha L. Harvey

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Natasha L. Harvey

University of South Australia

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Genevieve A. Secker

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Kelly L. Betterman

Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science

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Hamish S. Scott

Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science

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Michael Michael

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre

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Andrew G. Bert

Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science

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