Jesper Pass
Novo Nordisk
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Featured researches published by Jesper Pass.
Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2007
Jesper Pass; Annika Jögi; Ida K. Lund; Birgitte Rønø; Morten G. Rasch; Henrik Gårdsvoll; Leif R. Lund; John Rømer; Keld Danø; Gunilla Høyer-Hansen
Binding of urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) to its cellular receptor, uPAR, potentiates plasminogen activation and localizes it to the cell surface. Focal plasminogen activation is involved in both normal and pathological tissue remodeling processes including cancer invasion. The interaction between uPA and uPAR therefore represents a potential target for anti-invasive cancer therapy. Inhibitors of the human uPA-uPAR interaction have no effect in the murine system. To enable in-vivo studies in murine cancer models we have now generated murine monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against murine uPAR (muPAR) by immunizing uPAR-deficient mice with recombinant muPAR and screened for antibodies, which inhibit the muPA-muPAR interaction. Two of the twelve mAbs obtained, mR1 and mR2, interfered with the interaction between muPAR and the amino-terminal fragment of muPA (mATF) when analyzed by surface plasmon resonance. The epitope for mR1 is located on domain I of muPAR, while that of mR2 is on domains (II-III). In cell binding experiments using radiolabelled mATF, the maximal inhibition obtained with mR1 was 85% while that obtained with mR2 was 50%. The IC(50) value for mR1 was 0.67 nM compared to 0.14 nM for mATF. In an assay based on modified anthrax toxins, requiring cell-bound muPA activity for its cytotoxity, an approximately 50% rescue of the cells could be obtained by addition of mR1. Importantly, in-vivo efficacy of mR1 was demonstrated by the ability of mR1 to rescue mice treated with a lethal dose of uPA-activatable anthrax toxins.
Journal of Immunology | 2015
Heidi S. Schultz; Louise Maymann Nitze; Louise Hjerrild Zeuthen; Pernille Keller; Albrecht Gruhler; Jesper Pass; Jianhe Chen; Li Guo; Andrew J. Fleetwood; John A. Hamilton; Martin W. Berchtold; Svetlana Panina
Osteoclast-associated receptor (OSCAR) is widely expressed on human myeloid cells. Collagen types (Col)I, II, and III have been described as OSCAR ligands, and ColII peptides can induce costimulatory signaling in receptor activator for NF-κB–dependent osteoclastogenesis. In this study, we isolated collagen as an OSCAR-interacting protein from the membranes of murine osteoblasts. We have investigated a functional outcome of the OSCAR–collagen interaction in human monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DCs). OSCAR engagement by ColI/II-induced activation/maturation of DCs is characterized by upregulation of cell surface markers and secretion of cytokines. These collagen-matured DCs (Col-DCs) were efficient drivers of allogeneic and autologous naive T cell proliferation. The T cells expanded by Col-DCs secreted cytokines with no clear T cell polarization pattern. Global RNA profiling revealed that multiple proinflammatory mediators, including cytokines and cytokine receptors, components of the stable immune synapse (namely CD40, CD86, CD80, and ICAM-1), as well as components of TNF and TLR signaling, are transcriptional targets of OSCAR in DCs. Our findings indicate the existence of a novel pathway by which extracellular matrix proteins locally drive maturation of DCs during inflammatory conditions, for example, within synovial tissue of rheumatoid arthritis patients, where collagens become exposed during tissue remodeling and are thus accessible for interaction with infiltrating precursors of DCs.
Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2012
Ida K. Lund; Morten Grønbech Rasch; Signe Ingvarsen; Jesper Pass; Daniel H Madsen; Lars Henning Engelholm; Niels Behrendt; Gunilla Høyer-Hansen
Identification of targets for cancer therapy requires the understanding of the in vivo roles of proteins, which can be derived from studies using gene-targeted mice. An alternative strategy is the administration of inhibitory monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), causing acute disruption of the target protein function(s). This approach has the advantage of being a model for therapeutic targeting. mAbs for use in mouse models can be obtained through immunization of gene-deficient mice with the autologous protein. Such mAbs react with both species-specific epitopes and epitopes conserved between species. mAbs against proteins involved in extracellular proteolysis, including plasminogen activators urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA), tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), their inhibitor PAI-1, the uPA receptor (uPAR), two matrix metalloproteinases (MMP9 and MMP14), as well as the collagen internalization receptor uPARAP, have been developed. The inhibitory mAbs against uPA and uPAR block plasminogen activation and thereby hepatic fibrinolysis in vivo. Wound healing, another plasmin-dependent process, is delayed by an inhibitory mAb against uPA in the adult mouse. Thromboembolism can be inhibited by anti-PAI-1 mAbs in vivo. In conclusion, function-blocking mAbs are well-suited for targeted therapy in mouse models of different diseases, including cancer.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2008
Morten G. Rasch; Jesper Pass; Martin Illemann; Gunilla Høyer-Hansen; Ida K. Lund
The urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (uPAR) is a versatile three-domain GPI-anchored protein, which binds urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and thereby focalises plasminogen activation on the cell surface. Generation of a proteolytic potential is essential in both normal physiological and pathological extracellular tissue remodelling processes. uPA can also cleave uPAR, resulting in liberation of the amino-terminal domain I, which encompasses binding sites for both uPA and the adhesion molecule, vitronectin. In order to localise the different uPAR forms on the plasma membrane of murine monocyte macrophage-like P388D.1 cells, we have now generated and characterised two high-affinity murine mAbs, mR3 and mR4, raised against murine uPAR. mR3 was found to recognise an epitope located in domain I of uPAR. Surface plasmon resonance analyses and cell binding studies revealed that this mAb was able to bind preformed complexes of murine pro-uPA and murine uPAR. In contrast, mR4 recognises domains II-III in uPAR and does not bind preformed pro-uPA-uPAR complexes in similar analyses. Immunofluorescence microscopy of P388D.1 cells revealed that mR3 stained the cells equally well in the presence or absence of saturation with the amino-terminal fragment of uPA, ATF. However, the signal intensity obtained using another uPAR domain I specific mAb, mR1, was significantly reduced upon ATF saturation. Furthermore, when adding ATF, mR4 selectively stained the cleaved receptor. Applying these newly generated mAbs, we additionally demonstrated that cleaved and intact uPAR was evenly distributed on the surface of these cells.
Journal of Immunology | 2018
Kasper Almholt; Josephine B. Hebsgaard; Anneline Nansen; Christina Andersson; Jesper Pass; Birgitte Rønø; Peter Thygesen; Hermann Pelzer; Mette Loftager; Ida K. Lund; Gunilla Høyer-Hansen; Thomas Frisch; Claus Jensen; K. S. Otte; Niels Søe; Else Marie Bartels; Martin Andersen; Henning Bliddal; Pernille A. Usher
Genetic absence of the urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) reduces arthritis progression in the collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) mouse model to an extent just shy of disease abrogation, but this remarkable observation has not been translated into therapeutic intervention. Our aim was to test the potential in mice of an Ab that blocks the proteolytic capacity of uPA in the CIA model and the delayed-type hypersensitivity arthritis model. A second aim was to determine the cellular origins of uPA and the uPA receptor (uPAR) in joint tissue from patients with rheumatoid arthritis. A mAb that neutralizes mouse uPA significantly reduced arthritis progression in the CIA and delayed-type hypersensitivity arthritis models. In the CIA model, the impact of anti-uPA treatment was on par with the effect of blocking TNF-α by etanercept. A pharmacokinetics evaluation of the therapeutic Ab revealed target-mediated drug disposition consistent with a high turnover of endogenous uPA. The cellular expression patterns of uPA and uPAR were characterized by double immunofluorescence in the inflamed synovium from patients with rheumatoid arthritis and compared with synovium from healthy donors. The arthritic synovium showed expression of uPA and uPAR in neutrophils, macrophages, and a fraction of endothelial cells, whereas there was little or no expression in synovium from healthy donors. The data from animal models and human material provide preclinical proof-of-principle that validates uPA as a novel therapeutic target in rheumatic diseases.
Biochemistry | 2004
Lene Udby; Ole E. Sørensen; Jesper Pass; Anders H. Johnsen; Niels Behrendt; Niels Borregaard; Lars Kjeldsen
Archive | 2009
Jesper Pass; Søren Østergaard; Jes Thorn Clausen
Archive | 2012
Li Guo; Svetlana Panina; Jesper Pass; Louise Hjerrild Zeuthen; Louise Maymann Nitze
Archive | 2015
Søren Berg Padkjær; Jesper Pass; Gustav Røder; Kasper Almholt; Pernille A. Usher
Archive | 2014
Jesper Pass; Jes Thorn Clausen; Anders Svensson; Rune Salbo; John Rømer Nielsen; Søren Berg Padkjær; Hanne B. Rasmussen