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Dive into the research topics where Jarkko Räbinä is active.

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Featured researches published by Jarkko Räbinä.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Secretor genotype (FUT2 gene) is strongly associated with the composition of Bifidobacteria in the human intestine.

Pirjo Wacklin; Harri Mäkivuokko; Noora Alakulppi; Janne Nikkilä; Heli Tenkanen; Jarkko Räbinä; Jukka Partanen; Kari Aranko; Jaana Mättö

Intestinal microbiota plays an important role in human health, and its composition is determined by several factors, such as diet and host genotype. However, thus far it has remained unknown which host genes are determinants for the microbiota composition. We studied the diversity and abundance of dominant bacteria and bifidobacteria from the faecal samples of 71 healthy individuals. In this cohort, 14 were non-secretor individuals and the remainders were secretors. The secretor status is defined by the expression of the ABH and Lewis histo-blood group antigens in the intestinal mucus and other secretions. It is determined by fucosyltransferase 2 enzyme, encoded by the FUT2 gene. Non-functional enzyme resulting from a nonsense mutation in the FUT2 gene leads to the non-secretor phenotype. PCR-DGGE and qPCR methods were applied for the intestinal microbiota analysis. Principal component analysis of bifidobacterial DGGE profiles showed that the samples of non-secretor individuals formed a separate cluster within the secretor samples. Moreover, bifidobacterial diversity (p<0.0001), richness (p<0.0003), and abundance (p<0.05) were significantly reduced in the samples from the non-secretor individuals as compared with those from the secretor individuals. The non-secretor individuals lacked, or were rarely colonized by, several genotypes related to B. bifidum, B. adolescentis and B. catenulatum/pseudocatenulatum. In contrast to bifidobacteria, several bacterial genotypes were more common and the richness (p<0.04) of dominant bacteria as detected by PCR-DGGE was higher in the non-secretor individuals than in the secretor individuals. We showed that the diversity and composition of the human bifidobacterial population is strongly associated with the histo-blood group ABH secretor/non-secretor status, which consequently appears to be one of the host genetic determinants for the composition of the intestinal microbiota. This association can be explained by the difference between the secretor and non-secretor individuals in their expression of ABH and Lewis glycan epitopes in the mucosa.


Stem Cells | 2016

Adenosinergic Immunosuppression by Human Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Requires Co‐Operation with T cells

Erja Kerkelä; Anita Laitinen; Jarkko Räbinä; Sami Valkonen; Maarit Takatalo; Antti Larjo; Johanna Veijola; Milla Lampinen; Pia Siljander; Petri Lehenkari; Kaija Alfthan; Saara Laitinen

Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) have the capacity to counteract excessive inflammatory responses. MSCs possess a range of immunomodulatory mechanisms, which can be deployed in response to signals in a particular environment and in concert with other immune cells. One immunosuppressive mechanism, not so well‐known in MSCs, is mediated via adenosinergic pathway by ectonucleotidases CD73 and CD39. In this study, we demonstrate that adenosine is actively produced from adenosine 5′‐monophosphate (AMP) by CD73 on MSCs and MSC‐derived extracellular vesicles (EVs). Our results indicate that although MSCs express CD39 at low level and it colocalizes with CD73 in bulge areas of membranes, the most efficient adenosine production from adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (ATP) requires co‐operation of MSCs and activated T cells. Highly CD39 expressing activated T cells produce AMP from ATP and MSCs produce adenosine from AMP via CD73 activity. Furthermore, adenosinergic signaling plays a role in suppression of T cell proliferation in vitro. In conclusion, this study shows that adenosinergic signaling is an important immunoregulatory mechanism of MSCs, especially in situations where ATP is present in the extracellular environment, like in tissue injury. An efficient production of immunosuppressive adenosine is dependent on the concerted action of CD39‐positive immune cells with CD73‐positive cells such as MSCs or their EVs. Stem Cells 2016;34:781–790


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2013

Nanoscale reversed-phase liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry of permethylated N-glycans

Ilja Ritamo; Jarkko Räbinä; Suvi Natunen; Leena Valmu

Reversed-phase liquid chromatography on the nanoscale coupled to electrospray tandem mass spectrometry was used to analyse a mixture of four commercial glycan standards, and the method was further adapted to N-glycans enzymatically released from alpha-1-acid glycoprotein and immunoglobulin gamma. Glycans were permethylated to enable their separation by reversed-phase chromatography and to facilitate interpretation of fragmentation data. Prior to derivatization of glycans by permethylation, they were reduced to cancel anomerism because, although feasible, it was not desired to separate α- and β-anomers. The effect of supplementing chromatographic solvent with sodium hydroxide to guide adduct formation was investigated. Raising the temperature in which the separation was performed improved chromatographic resolution and affected retention times as expected. It was shown by using the tetrasaccharides sialyl Lewis X and sialyl Lewis A that reversed-phase chromatography could achieve the separation of methylated isobaric glycan analytes. Isobaric glycans were detected among the N-glycans of immunoglobulin gamma and further analysed by tandem mass spectrometry.


Glycoconjugate Journal | 2013

Novel data analysis tool for semiquantitative LC-MS-MS2 profiling of N-glycans

Hannu Peltoniemi; Suvi Natunen; Ilja Ritamo; Leena Valmu; Jarkko Räbinä

Despite recent technical advances in glycan analysis, the rapidly growing field of glycomics still lacks methods that are high throughput and robust, and yet allow detailed and reliable identification of different glycans. LC-MS-MS2 methods have a large potential for glycan analysis as they enable separation and identification of different glycans, including structural isomers. The major drawback is the complexity of the data with different charge states and adduct combinations. In practice, manual data analysis, still largely used for MALDI-TOF data, is no more achievable for LC-MS-MS2 data. To solve the problem, we developed a glycan analysis software GlycanID for the analysis of LC-MS-MS2 data to identify and profile glycan compositions in combination with existing proteomic software. IgG was used as an example of an individual glycoprotein and extracted cell surface proteins of human fibroblasts as a more complex sample to demonstrate the power of the novel data analysis approach. N-glycans were isolated from the samples and analyzed as permethylated sugar alditols by LC-MS-MS2, permitting semiquantitative glycan profiling. The data analysis consisted of five steps: 1) extraction of LC-MS features and MS2 spectra, 2) mapping potential glycans based on feature distribution, 3) matching the feature masses with a glycan composition database and de novo generated compositions, 4) scoring MS2 spectra with theoretical glycan fragments, and 5) composing the glycan profile for the identified glycan compositions. The resulting N-glycan profile of IgG revealed 28 glycan compositions and was in good correlation with the published IgG profile. More than 50 glycan compositions were reliably identified from the cell surface N-glycan profile of human fibroblasts. Use of the GlycanID software made relatively rapid analysis of complex glycan LC-MS-MS2 data feasible. The results demonstrate that the complexity of glycan LC-MS-MS2 data can be used as an asset to increase the reliability of the identifications.


Stem Cells and Development | 2012

The i Blood Group Antigen as a Marker for Umbilical Cord Blood-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells

Tia Hirvonen; Heli Suila; Annika Kotovuori; Ilja Ritamo; Annamari Heiskanen; Pertti Sistonen; Heidi Anderson; Tero Satomaa; Juhani Saarinen; Sari Tiitinen; Jarkko Räbinä; Saara Laitinen; Suvi Natunen; Leena Valmu

Multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) offer great promise for future regenerative and anti-inflammatory therapies. However, there is a lack of methods to quickly and efficiently isolate, characterize, and ex vivo expand desired cell populations for therapeutic purposes. Single markers to identify cell populations have not been characterized; instead, all characterizations rely on panels of functional and phenotypical properties. Glycan epitopes can be used for identifying and isolating specific cell types from heterogeneous populations, on the basis of their cell-type specific expression and prominent cell surface localization. We have now studied in detail the cell surface expression of the blood group i epitope (linear poly-N-acetyllactosamine chain) in umbilical cord blood (UCB)-derived MSCs. We used flow cytometry and mass spectrometric glycan analysis and discovered that linear poly-N-acetyllactosamine structures are expressed in UCB-derived MSCs, but not in cells differentiated from them. We further verified the findings by mass spectrometric glycan analysis. Gene expression analysis indicated that the stem-cell specific expression of the i antigen is determined by β3-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase 5. The i antigen is a ligand for the galectin family of soluble lectins. We found concomitant cell surface expression of galectin-3, which has been reported to mediate the immunosuppressive effects exerted by MSCs. The i antigen may serve as an endogenous ligand for this immunosuppressive agent in the MSC microenvironment. Based on these findings, we suggest that linear poly-N-acetyllactosamine could be used as a novel UCB-MSC marker either alone or within an array of MSC markers.


Glycobiology | 2013

Metabolic glycoengineering of mesenchymal stromal cells with N-propanoylmannosamine

Suvi Natunen; Milla Lampinen; Heli Suila; Ilja Ritamo; Virve Pitkänen; Alison V. Nairn; Jarkko Räbinä; Saara Laitinen; Kelley W. Moremen; Werner Reutter; Leena Valmu

There is an increasing interest in the modification of cell surface glycosylation to improve the properties of therapeutic cells. For example, glycosylation affects the biodistribution of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs). Metabolic glycoengineering is an efficient way to modify the cell surface. The mammalian biosynthetic machinery tolerates the unnatural sialic acid precursor, N-propanoylmannosamine (ManNProp), and incorporates it into cell surface glycoconjugates. We show here by mass spectrometric analysis of cell surface N-glycans that about half of N-acetylneuraminic acid was replaced by N-propanoylneuraminic acid in the N-glycans of human umbilical cord blood-derived MSCs supplemented with ManNProp. In addition, the N-glycan profile was altered. ManNProp-supplemented cells had more multiply fucosylated N-glycan species than control cells. The fucosylated epitopes were shown in tandem mass spectrometric analysis to be Lewis x or blood group H epitopes, but not sialyl Lewis x (sLex). The amounts of tri- and tetra-antennary and polylactosamine-containing N-glycans also increased in ManNProp supplementation. In accordance with previous studies of other cell types, increased expression of the sLex epitope in ManNProp-supplemented MSCs was demonstrated by flow cytometry. In light of the N-glycan analysis, the sLex epitope in these cells is likely to be carried by O-glycans or glycolipids. sLex has been shown to target MSCs to bone marrow, which may be desirable in therapeutic applications. The present results represent the first structural analysis of an N-glycome of ManNProp-supplemented cells and demonstrate the feasibility of modifying cell surface glycosylation of therapeutic cells by this type of metabolic glycoengineering.


Scandinavian Journal of Immunology | 2014

Human umbilical cord blood-derived mesenchymal stromal cells display a novel interaction between P-selectin and galectin-1.

Heli Suila; Tia Hirvonen; A. Kotovuori; Ilja Ritamo; E. Kerkelä; Heidi Anderson; Suvi Natunen; Jarno Tuimala; Saara Laitinen; Johanna Nystedt; Jarkko Räbinä; Leena Valmu

Human multipotent mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) have been shown to exert immunomodulatory properties that have great potential in therapies for various inflammatory and autoimmune disorders. However, intravenous delivery of these cells is followed by massive cell entrapment in the lungs and insufficient homing to target tissues or organs. In targeting to tissues, MSCs and other therapeutic cells employ similar mechanisms as leucocytes, including a cascade of rolling and adhesion steps mediated by selectins, integrins and their ligands. However, the mechanisms of MSCs homing are not well understood. We discovered that P‐selectin (CD62P) binds to umbilical cord blood (UCB)‐derived MSCs independently of the previously known sialyl Lewis x (sLex)‐containing ligands such as P‐selectin glycoprotein ligand‐1 (PSGL‐1, CD162). By biochemical assays, we identified galectin‐1 as a novel ligand for P‐selectin. Galectin‐1 has previously been shown to be a key mediator of the immunosuppressive effects of human MSCs. We conclude that this novel interaction is likely to play a major role in the immunomodulatory targeting of human UCB‐derived MSCs.


BioResearch Open Access | 2013

Production of a Recombinant Antibody Specific for i Blood Group Antigen, a Mesenchymal Stem Cell Marker

Tia Hirvonen; Heli Suila; Sari Tiitinen; Suvi Natunen; Marja-Leena Laukkanen; Annika Kotovuori; Mirka Reinman; Tero Satomaa; Kaija Alfthan; Saara Laitinen; Kristiina Takkinen; Jarkko Räbinä; Leena Valmu

Abstract Multipotent mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) offer great promise for future regenerative and anti-inflammatory therapies. Panels of functional and phenotypical markers are currently used in characterization of different therapeutic stem cell populations from various sources. The i antigen (linear poly-N-acetyllactosamine) from the Ii blood group system has been suggested as a marker for MSCs derived from umbilical cord blood (UCB). However, there are currently no commercially available antibodies recognizing the i antigen. In the present study, we describe the use of antibody phage display technology to produce recombinant antibodies recognizing a structure from the surface of mesenchymal stem cells. We constructed IgM phage display libraries from the lymphocytes of a donor with an elevated serum anti-i titer. Antibody phage display technology is not dependent on immunization and thus allows the generation of antibodies against poorly immunogenic molecules, such as carbohydrates. Agglutination assays utilizing i antigen–positive red blood cells (RBCs) from UCB revealed six promising single-chain variable fragment (scFv) antibodies, three of which recognized epitopes from the surface of UCB-MSCs in flow cytometric assays. The amino acid sequence of the VH gene segment of B12.2 scFv was highly similar to the VH4.21 gene segment required to encode anti-i specificities. Further characterization of binding properties revealed that the binding of B12.2 hyperphage was inhibited by soluble linear lactosamine oligosaccharide. Based on these findings, we suggest that the B12.2 scFv we have generated is a prominent anti-i antibody that recognizes i antigen on the surface of both UCB-MSCs and RBCs. This binder can thus be utilized in UCB-MSC detection and isolation as well as in blood group serology.


Glycoconjugate Journal | 2013

Glycomic profiling of glycoproteins

Jarkko Räbinä

It has been known already since the 1950s that carbohydrates encode biological information, such as variation of blood group determinants. In the light of their importance, glycans have received relatively little attention and remained less studied than nucleic acids and proteins. However, with the increasing availability of improved tools designed to analyze protein-linkedglycans in a sensitive and reproducible manner, the understanding of the roles of glycans in a variety of living systems and processes is rapidly rising. Many new glycan functions are now emerging from the studies of tissues and organs of humans and model systems, as well as in the area of


BioResearch Open Access | 2014

Extracellular O-Linked N-Acetylglucosamine Is Enriched in Stem Cells Derived from Human Umbilical Cord Blood

Heli Suila; Tia Hirvonen; Ilja Ritamo; Suvi Natunen; Jarno Tuimala; Saara Laitinen; Heidi Anderson; Johanna Nystedt; Jarkko Räbinä; Leena Valmu

Abstract Stem cells have a unique ability to self-renew and differentiate into diverse cell types. Currently, stem cells from various sources are being explored as a promising new treatment for a variety of human diseases. A diverse set of functional and phenotypical markers are used in the characterization of specific therapeutic stem cell populations. The glycans on the stem cell surface respond rapidly to alterations in cellular state and signaling and are therefore ideal for identifying even minor changes in cell populations. Many stem cell markers are based on cell surface glycan epitopes including the widely used markers SSEA-3, SSEA-4, Tra 1-60, and Tra 1-81. We have now discovered by mRNA analysis that a novel glycosyltranferase, epidermal growth factor (EGF) domain-specific O-linked GlcNAc transferase (EOGT), is highly expressed in stem cells. EOGT is responsible for adding O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) to folded EGF domains on extracellular proteins, such as those on the Notch receptors. We were able to show by immunological assays that human umbilical cord blood–derived mesenchymal stromal cells display O-GlcNAc, the product of EOGT, and that O-GlcNAc is further elongated with galactose to form O-linked N-acetyllactosamine. We suggest that these novel glycans are involved in the fine tuning of Notch receptor signaling pathways in stem cells.

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