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Dive into the research topics where Jens Titze is active.

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Featured researches published by Jens Titze.


Nature | 2013

Sodium chloride drives autoimmune disease by the induction of pathogenic TH17 cells.

Markus Kleinewietfeld; Arndt Manzel; Jens Titze; Heda Kvakan; Nir Yosef; Ralf A. Linker; Dominik Müller; David A. Hafler

There has been a marked increase in the incidence of autoimmune diseases in the past half-century. Although the underlying genetic basis of this class of diseases has recently been elucidated, implicating predominantly immune-response genes, changes in environmental factors must ultimately be driving this increase. The newly identified population of interleukin (IL)-17-producing CD4+ helper T cells (TH17 cells) has a pivotal role in autoimmune diseases. Pathogenic IL-23-dependent TH17 cells have been shown to be critical for the development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model for multiple sclerosis, and genetic risk factors associated with multiple sclerosis are related to the IL-23–TH17 pathway. However, little is known about the environmental factors that directly influence TH17 cells. Here we show that increased salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) concentrations found locally under physiological conditions in vivo markedly boost the induction of murine and human TH17 cells. High-salt conditions activate the p38/MAPK pathway involving nuclear factor of activated T cells 5 (NFAT5; also called TONEBP) and serum/glucocorticoid-regulated kinase 1 (SGK1) during cytokine-induced TH17 polarization. Gene silencing or chemical inhibition of p38/MAPK, NFAT5 or SGK1 abrogates the high-salt-induced TH17 cell development. The TH17 cells generated under high-salt conditions display a highly pathogenic and stable phenotype characterized by the upregulation of the pro-inflammatory cytokines GM-CSF, TNF-α and IL-2. Moreover, mice fed with a high-salt diet develop a more severe form of EAE, in line with augmented central nervous system infiltrating and peripherally induced antigen-specific TH17 cells. Thus, increased dietary salt intake might represent an environmental risk factor for the development of autoimmune diseases through the induction of pathogenic TH17 cells.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Macrophages regulate salt-dependent volume and blood pressure by a vascular endothelial growth factor-C–dependent buffering mechanism

Agnes Machnik; Wolfgang Neuhofer; Jonathan Jantsch; Anke Dahlmann; Tuomas Tammela; Katharina Machura; Joon-Keun Park; Franz-Xaver Beck; Dominik N. Müller; Wolfgang Derer; Jennifer Goss; Agata Ziomber; Peter Dietsch; Hubertus Wagner; Nico van Rooijen; Armin Kurtz; Karl F. Hilgers; Kari Alitalo; Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Friedrich C. Luft; Dontscho Kerjaschki; Jens Titze

In salt-sensitive hypertension, the accumulation of Na+ in tissue has been presumed to be accompanied by a commensurate retention of water to maintain the isotonicity of body fluids. We show here that a high-salt diet (HSD) in rats leads to interstitial hypertonic Na+ accumulation in skin, resulting in increased density and hyperplasia of the lymphcapillary network. The mechanisms underlying these effects on lymphatics involve activation of tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein (TonEBP) in mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS) cells infiltrating the interstitium of the skin. TonEBP binds the promoter of the gene encoding vascular endothelial growth factor-C (VEGF-C, encoded by Vegfc) and causes VEGF-C secretion by macrophages. MPS cell depletion or VEGF-C trapping by soluble VEGF receptor-3 blocks VEGF-C signaling, augments interstitial hypertonic volume retention, decreases endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression and elevates blood pressure in response to HSD. Our data show that TonEBP–VEGF-C signaling in MPS cells is a major determinant of extracellular volume and blood pressure homeostasis and identify VEGFC as an osmosensitive, hypertonicity-driven gene intimately involved in salt-induced hypertension.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Immune cells control skin lymphatic electrolyte homeostasis and blood pressure

Helge Wiig; Agnes Schröder; Wolfgang Neuhofer; Jonathan Jantsch; Christoph W. Kopp; Tine V. Karlsen; Michael Boschmann; Jennifer Goss; Maija Bry; Natalia Rakova; Anke Dahlmann; Sven Brenner; Olav Tenstad; Harri Nurmi; Eero Mervaala; Hubertus Wagner; Franz-Xaver Beck; Dominik Müller; Dontscho Kerjaschki; Friedrich C. Luft; David G. Harrison; Kari Alitalo; Jens Titze

The skin interstitium sequesters excess Na+ and Cl- in salt-sensitive hypertension. Mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS) cells are recruited to the skin, sense the hypertonic electrolyte accumulation in skin, and activate the tonicity-responsive enhancer-binding protein (TONEBP, also known as NFAT5) to initiate expression and secretion of VEGFC, which enhances electrolyte clearance via cutaneous lymph vessels and increases eNOS expression in blood vessels. It is unclear whether this local MPS response to osmotic stress is important to systemic blood pressure control. Herein, we show that deletion of TonEBP in mouse MPS cells prevents the VEGFC response to a high-salt diet (HSD) and increases blood pressure. Additionally, an antibody that blocks the lymph-endothelial VEGFC receptor, VEGFR3, selectively inhibited MPS-driven increases in cutaneous lymphatic capillary density, led to skin Cl- accumulation, and induced salt-sensitive hypertension. Mice overexpressing soluble VEGFR3 in epidermal keratinocytes exhibited hypoplastic cutaneous lymph capillaries and increased Na+, Cl-, and water retention in skin and salt-sensitive hypertension. Further, we found that HSD elevated skin osmolality above plasma levels. These results suggest that the skin contains a hypertonic interstitial fluid compartment in which MPS cells exert homeostatic and blood pressure-regulatory control by local organization of interstitial electrolyte clearance via TONEBP and VEGFC/VEGFR3-mediated modification of cutaneous lymphatic capillary function.


Hypertension | 2013

(23)Na magnetic resonance imaging-determined tissue sodium in healthy subjects and hypertensive patients

Christoph W. Kopp; Peter Linz; Anke Dahlmann; Matthias Hammon; Jonathan Jantsch; Dominik Müller; Roland E. Schmieder; Alexander Cavallaro; Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Michael Uder; Friedrich C. Luft; Jens Titze

High dietary salt intake is associated with hypertension; the prevalence of salt-sensitive hypertension increases with age. We hypothesized that tissue Na+ might accumulate in hypertensive patients and that aging might be accompanied by Na+ deposition in tissue. We implemented 23Na magnetic resonance imaging to measure Na+ content of soft tissues in vivo earlier, but had not studied essential hypertension. We report on a cohort of 56 healthy control men and women, and 57 men and women with essential hypertension. The ages ranged from 22 to 90 years. 23Na magnetic resonance imaging measurements were made at the level of the calf. We observed age-dependent increases in Na+ content in muscle in men, whereas muscle Na+ content did not change with age in women. We estimated water content with conventional MRI and found no age-related increases in muscle water in men, despite remarkable Na+ accumulation, indicating water-free Na+ storage in muscle. With increasing age, there was Na+ deposition in the skin in both women and men; however, skin Na+ content remained lower in women. Similarly, this sex difference was found in skin water content, which was lower in women than in men. In contrast to muscle, increasing Na+ content was paralleled with increasing skin water content. When controlled for age, we found that patients with refractory hypertension had increased tissue Na+ content, compared with normotensive controls. These observations suggest that 23Na magnetic resonance imaging could have utility in assessing the role of tissue Na+ storage for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in longitudinal studies.


Hypertension | 2010

Mononuclear Phagocyte System Depletion Blocks Interstitial Tonicity-Responsive Enhancer Binding Protein/Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor C Expression and Induces Salt-Sensitive Hypertension in Rats

Agnes Machnik; Anke Dahlmann; Christoph W. Kopp; Jennifer Goss; Hubertus Wagner; N. van Rooijen; Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Dominik N. Müller; Joon-Keun Park; Friedrich C. Luft; Dontscho Kerjaschki; Jens Titze

We showed recently that mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS) cells provide a buffering mechanism for salt-sensitive hypertension by driving interstitial lymphangiogenesis, modulating interstitial Na+ clearance, and increasing endothelial NO synthase protein expression in response to very high dietary salt via a tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein/vascular endothelial growth factor C regulatory mechanism. We now tested whether isotonic saline and deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt treatment leads to a similar regulatory response in Sprague-Dawley rats. Male rats were fed a low-salt diet and received tap water (low-salt diet LSD), 1.0% saline (high-salt diet HSD), or DOCA+1.0% saline (DOCA-HSD). To test the regulatory role of interstitial MPS cells, we further depleted MPS cells with clodronate liposomes. HSD and DOCA-HSD led to Na+ accumulation in the skin, MPS-driven tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein/vascular endothelial growth factor C–mediated hyperplasia of interstitial lymph capillaries, and increased endothelial NO synthase protein expression in skin interstitium. Clodronate liposome MPS cell depletion blocked MPS infiltration in the skin interstitium, resulting in unchanged tonicity-responsive enhance binding protein/vascular endothelial growth factor C levels and absent hyperplasia of the lymph capillary network. Moreover, no increased skin endothelial NO synthase protein expression occurred in either clodronate liposome–treated HSD or DOCA-salt rats. Thus, absence of the MPS-cell regulatory response converted a salt-resistant blood-pressure state to a salt-sensitive state in HSD rats. Furthermore, salt-sensitive hypertension in DOCA-salt rats was aggravated. We conclude that MPS cells act as onsite controllers of interstitial volume and blood pressure homeostasis, providing a local regulatory salt-sensitive tonicity-responsive enhancer binding protein/vascular endothelial growth factor C–mediated mechanism in the skin to maintain normal blood pressure in states of interstitial Na+ and Cl− accumulation. Failure of this physiological extrarenal regulatory mechanism leads to a salt-sensitive blood pressure response.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2012

Vascular Inflammatory Cells in Hypertension

David G. Harrison; Paul J. Marvar; Jens Titze

Hypertension is a common disorder with uncertain etiology. In the last several years, it has become evident that components of both the innate and adaptive immune system play an essential role in hypertension. Macrophages and T cells accumulate in the perivascular fat, the heart and the kidney of hypertensive patients, and in animals with experimental hypertension. Various immunosuppressive agents lower blood pressure and prevent end-organ damage. Mice lacking lymphocytes are protected against hypertension, and adoptive transfer of T cells, but not B cells in the animals restores their blood pressure response to stimuli such as angiotensin II or high salt. Recent studies have shown that mice lacking macrophages have blunted hypertension in response to angiotensin II and that genetic deletion of macrophages markedly reduces experimental hypertension. Dendritic cells have also been implicated in this disease. Many hypertensive stimuli have triggering effects on the central nervous system and signals arising from the circumventricular organ seem to promote inflammation. Studies have suggested that central signals activate macrophages and T cells, which home to the kidney and vasculature and release cytokines, including IL-6 and IL-17, which in turn cause renal and vascular dysfunction and lead to blood pressure elevation. These recent discoveries provide a new understanding of hypertension and provide novel therapeutic opportunities for treatment of this serious disease.


Cell Metabolism | 2015

Cutaneous Na+ Storage Strengthens the Antimicrobial Barrier Function of the Skin and Boosts Macrophage-Driven Host Defense

Jonathan Jantsch; Valentin Schatz; Diana Friedrich; Agnes Schröder; Christoph W. Kopp; Isabel Siegert; Andreas Maronna; David Wendelborn; Peter Linz; Katrina J. Binger; Matthias Gebhardt; Matthias Heinig; Patrick Neubert; Fabian Fischer; Stefan Teufel; Jean-Pierre David; Clemens Neufert; Alexander Cavallaro; Natalia Rakova; Christoph Küper; Franz-Xaver Beck; Wolfgang Neuhofer; Dominik N. Müller; Gerold Schuler; Michael Uder; Christian Bogdan; Friedrich C. Luft; Jens Titze

Immune cells regulate a hypertonic microenvironment in the skin; however, the biological advantage of increased skin Na(+) concentrations is unknown. We found that Na(+) accumulated at the site of bacterial skin infections in humans and in mice. We used the protozoan parasite Leishmania major as a model of skin-prone macrophage infection to test the hypothesis that skin-Na(+) storage facilitates antimicrobial host defense. Activation of macrophages in the presence of high NaCl concentrations modified epigenetic markers and enhanced p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38/MAPK)-dependent nuclear factor of activated T cells 5 (NFAT5) activation. This high-salt response resulted in elevated type-2 nitric oxide synthase (Nos2)-dependent NO production and improved Leishmania major control. Finally, we found that increasing Na(+) content in the skin by a high-salt diet boosted activation of macrophages in a Nfat5-dependent manner and promoted cutaneous antimicrobial defense. We suggest that the hypertonic microenvironment could serve as a barrier to infection.


Hypertension | 2012

23Na Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Tissue Sodium

Christoph W. Kopp; Peter Linz; Lydia Wachsmuth; Anke Dahlmann; Thomas Horbach; Christof Schöfl; Wolfgang Renz; Davide Santoro; Thoralf Niendorf; Dominik Müller; Myriam Neininger; Alexander Cavallaro; Kai-Uwe Eckardt; Roland E. Schmieder; Friedrich C. Luft; Michael Uder; Jens Titze

Hypertension is linked to disturbed total-body sodium (Na+) regulation; however, measuring Na+ disposition in the body is difficult. We implemented 23Na magnetic resonance spectroscopy (23Na-MR) and imaging technique (23Na-MRI) at 9.4T for animals and 3T for humans to quantify Na+ content in skeletal muscle and skin. We compared 23Na-MRI data with actual tissue Na+ content measured by chemical analysis in animal and human tissue. We then quantified tissue Na+ content in normal humans and in patients with primary aldosteronism. We found a 29% increase in muscle Na+ content in patients with aldosteronism compared with normal women and men. This tissue Na+ was mobilized after successful treatment without accompanying weight loss. We suggest that, after further refinements, this tool could facilitate understanding the relationships between Na+ accumulation and hypertension. Furthermore, with additional technical advances, a future clinical use may be possible.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

High salt reduces the activation of IL-4- and IL-13-stimulated macrophages

Katrina J. Binger; Matthias Gebhardt; Matthias Heinig; Carola Rintisch; Agnes Schroeder; Wolfgang Neuhofer; Karl F. Hilgers; Arndt Manzel; Christian Schwartz; Markus Kleinewietfeld; Jakob Voelkl; Valentin Schatz; Ralf A. Linker; Florian Lang; David Voehringer; Mark D. Wright; Norbert Hubner; Ralf Dechend; Jonathan Jantsch; Jens Titze; Dominik N. Müller

A high intake of dietary salt (NaCl) has been implicated in the development of hypertension, chronic inflammation, and autoimmune diseases. We have recently shown that salt has a proinflammatory effect and boosts the activation of Th17 cells and the activation of classical, LPS-induced macrophages (M1). Here, we examined how the activation of alternative (M2) macrophages is affected by salt. In stark contrast to Th17 cells and M1 macrophages, high salt blunted the alternative activation of BM-derived mouse macrophages stimulated with IL-4 and IL-13, M(IL-4+IL-13) macrophages. Salt-induced reduction of M(IL-4+IL-13) activation was not associated with increased polarization toward a proinflammatory M1 phenotype. In vitro, high salt decreased the ability of M(IL-4+IL-13) macrophages to suppress effector T cell proliferation. Moreover, mice fed a high salt diet exhibited reduced M2 activation following chitin injection and delayed wound healing compared with control animals. We further identified a high salt-induced reduction in glycolysis and mitochondrial metabolic output, coupled with blunted AKT and mTOR signaling, which indicates a mechanism by which NaCl inhibits full M2 macrophage activation. Collectively, this study provides evidence that high salt reduces noninflammatory innate immune cell activation and may thus lead to an overall imbalance in immune homeostasis.


Current Opinion in Nephrology and Hypertension | 2010

Sodium sensing in the interstitium and relationship to hypertension.

Jens Titze; Agnes Machnik

Purpose of reviewInternal environment regulation, particularly volume and osmoregulation, has been a fundamental concept important to physiologists and clinicians for almost two centuries. Na+ balance, intracellular K+ homeostasis, the crucial role of the Na+,K+-ATPase pump, osmotic forces, and the overriding effect of the kidney on maintaining homeostasis are notions that have been taught by many and accepted by most for over 50 years. Nevertheless, contradictory findings, problems with simplistic balance explanations, and the notion of salt-sensitive and salt-resistant hypertension have been nagging headaches in the straightforward, two-compartment model of electrolyte balance. Recent findingsNa+ can be accumulated without commensurate water retention in the interstitium of the skin, and this skin Na+ storage is paralleled by increased polymerization and sulfation of glycosaminoglycans in the Na+ reservoir. Subcutaneous tissue macrophages express the transcription factor tonicity enhancer binding protein in response to Na+-mediated interstitial osmotic stress and thereby secrete vascular endothelial growth factor C, which stimulates lymphatic formation and endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression, suggesting that the immune system is a regulator of volume and blood pressure homeostasis. SummaryOur findings do not abrogate the notion of pressure natriuresis and renal regulatory function. However, we do suggest that extracellular Na+, volume and blood pressure homeostasis cannot be maintained without extrarenal regulatory mechanisms.

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Friedrich C. Luft

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Anke Dahlmann

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christoph W. Kopp

Medical University of Vienna

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Michael Uder

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Peter Linz

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Dominik N. Müller

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Kai-Uwe Eckardt

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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