Julia Obländer
Heidelberg University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Julia Obländer.
Cell Stem Cell | 2014
Hind Medyouf; Maximilian Mossner; Johann Christoph Jann; Florian Nolte; Simon Raffel; Carl Herrmann; Amelie Lier; Christian Eisen; Verena Nowak; Bettina Zens; Katja Müdder; Corinna Klein; Julia Obländer; Stephanie Fey; Jovita Vogler; Alice Fabarius; Eva Riedl; Henning Roehl; Alexander Kohlmann; Marita Staller; Claudia Haferlach; Nadine Müller; Thilo John; Uwe Platzbecker; Georgia Metzgeroth; Wolf K. Hofmann; Andreas Trumpp; Daniel Nowak
Myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs) are a heterogeneous group of myeloid neoplasms with defects in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) and possibly the HSPC niche. Here, we show that patient-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (MDS MSCs) display a disturbed differentiation program and are essential for the propagation of MDS-initiating Lin(-)CD34(+)CD38(-) stem cells in orthotopic xenografts. Overproduction of niche factors such as CDH2 (N-Cadherin), IGFBP2, VEGFA, and LIF is associated with the ability of MDS MSCs to enhance MDS expansion. These factors represent putative therapeutic targets in order to disrupt critical hematopoietic-stromal interactions in MDS. Finally, healthy MSCs adopt MDS MSC-like molecular features when exposed to hematopoietic MDS cells, indicative of an instructive remodeling of the microenvironment. Therefore, this patient-derived xenograft model provides functional and molecular evidence that MDS is a complex disease that involves both the hematopoietic and stromal compartments. The resulting deregulated expression of niche factors may well also be a feature of other hematopoietic malignancies.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013
Maximilian Mossner; Florian Nolte; Gero Hütter; Jana Reins; Marion Klaumünzer; Verena Nowak; Julia Obländer; Katrin Ackermann; Silke Will; Henning Röhl; Uwe Neumann; Martin Neumann; Olaf Hopfer; Claudia D. Baldus; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Daniel Nowak
Background Investigation of X-chromosome inactivation patterns (XCIP) by determination of differential CpG-methylation has been widely applied for investigation of female cell clonality. Using this approach the clonal origin of various tumours has been corroborated. Controversially, strong age-related increase of peripheral blood (PB) cell clonality in haematologically healthy female subjects was reported. Recently, transcriptional XCIP ratio analysis challenged these results and questioned the suitability of methylation based clonality assays. Methods To reinvestigate XCIP-skewing in CD34, low-density mononuclear bone marrow (BM) as well as PB cells from healthy female subjects and patients with myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), we established a transcriptional assay using pyrosequencing technique for quantification of single nucleotide polymorphism allele frequencies, representative for XCIP ratios. Results Our assay provides high sensitivity for XCIP ratio assessment as determined by standard curves, reproducibility, inter-marker correlation as well as correlation with the DNA-methylation based human androgen receptor (HUMARA) assay. Notably, in agreement with most studies investigating this issue, significant age-related increase of XCIP skewing in PB cells from healthy elderly female subjects was confirmed. Moreover, XCIP ratio analysis suggests even stronger clonal manifestation in BM and CD34 cells. In MDS, XCIP skewing levels were distinctively elevated as compared with controls of similar age and higher degrees were associated with poor clinical outcome. Conclusions Transcriptional clonal profiling via pyrosequencing allows accurate assessment of XCIP ratios, confirms the validity of the DNA-methylation based HUMARA assay and reveals important insights into ageing healthy and myelodysplastic haematopoiesis.
Leukemia | 2016
Maximilian Mossner; J-C Jann; Daniel Nowak; Uwe Platzbecker; Aristoteles Giagounidis; Katharina Götze; Anne Letsch; Detlef Haase; Katayoon Shirneshan; F Braulke; Richard F. Schlenk; Torsten Haferlach; P Schafhausen; Gesine Bug; Michael Lübbert; Arnold Ganser; G Büsche; E Schuler; Verena Nowak; Jovita Pressler; Julia Obländer; Stephanie Fey; Nadine Müller; E Lauinger-Lörsch; Georgia Metzgeroth; C Weiß; W-K Hofmann; Ulrich Germing; Florian Nolte
Prevalence, clonal dynamics and clinical impact of TP53 mutations in patients with myelodysplastic syndrome with isolated deletion (5q) treated with lenalidomide: results from a prospective multicenter study of the german MDS study group (GMDS)
Blood | 2018
Heike Pfeifer; Katharina Raum; Sandra Markovic; Verena Nowak; Stephanie Fey; Julia Obländer; Jovita Pressler; Verena Böhm; Monika Brüggemann; Lydia Wunderle; Andreas Hüttmann; Ralph Wäsch; Joachim Beck; Matthias Stelljes; Andreas Viardot; Fabian Lang; Dieter Hoelzer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Hubert Serve; Christel Weiss; Nicola Goekbuget; Oliver G. Ottmann; Daniel Nowak
We investigated the role of copy number alterations to refine risk stratification in adult Philadelphia chromosome positive (Ph)+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) treated with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and allogeneic stem cell transplantation (aSCT). Ninety-seven Ph+ ALL patients (median age 41 years; range 18-64 years) within the prospective multicenter German Multicenter ALL Study Group studies 06/99 (n = 8) and 07/2003 (n = 89) were analyzed. All patients received TKI and aSCT in first complete remission (CR1). Copy number analysis was performed with single nucleotide polymorphism arrays and validated by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. The frequencies of recurrently deleted genes were: IKZF1, 76%; CDKN2A/2B, 45%; PAX5, 43%; BTG1, 18%; EBF1, 13%; ETV6, 5%; RB, 14%. In univariate analyses, the presence of CDKN2A/2B deletions had a negative impact on all endpoints: overall survival (P = .023), disease-free survival (P = .012), and remission duration (P = .036). The negative predictive value of CDKN2A/2B deletions was retained in multivariable analysis along with other factors such as timing of TKI therapy, intensity of conditioning, achieving remission after induction phase 1 and BTG1 deletions. We therefore conclude that acquired genomic CDKN2A/2B deletions identify a subgroup of Ph+ ALL patients, who have an inferior prognosis despite aSCT in CR1. Their poor outcome was attributable primarily to a high relapse rate after aSCT.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2017
Johann-Christoph Jann; Daniel Nowak; Florian Nolte; Stephanie Fey; Verena Nowak; Julia Obländer; Jovita Pressler; Iris Palme; Christina Xanthopoulos; Alice Fabarius; Uwe Platzbecker; Aristoteles Giagounidis; Katharina Götze; Anne Letsch; Detlef Haase; Richard F. Schlenk; Gesine Bug; Michael Lübbert; Arnold Ganser; Ulrich Germing; Claudia Haferlach; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Maximilian Mossner
Background Cytogenetic aberrations such as deletion of chromosome 5q (del(5q)) represent key elements in routine clinical diagnostics of haematological malignancies. Currently established methods such as metaphase cytogenetics, FISH or array-based approaches have limitations due to their dependency on viable cells, high costs or semi-quantitative nature. Importantly, they cannot be used on low abundance DNA. We therefore aimed to establish a robust and quantitative technique that overcomes these shortcomings. Methods For precise determination of del(5q) cell fractions, we developed an inexpensive multiplex-PCR assay requiring only nanograms of DNA that simultaneously measures allelic imbalances of 12 independent short tandem repeat markers. Results Application of this method to n=1142 samples from n=260 individuals revealed strong intermarker concordance (R²=0.77–0.97) and reproducibility (mean SD: 1.7%). Notably, the assay showed accurate quantification via standard curve assessment (R²>0.99) and high concordance with paired FISH measurements (R²=0.92) even with subnanogram amounts of DNA. Moreover, cytogenetic response was reliably confirmed in del(5q) patients with myelodysplastic syndromes treated with lenalidomide. While the assay demonstrated good diagnostic accuracy in receiver operating characteristic analysis (area under the curve: 0.97), we further observed robust correlation between bone marrow and peripheral blood samples (R²=0.79), suggesting its potential suitability for less-invasive clonal monitoring. Conclusions In conclusion, we present an adaptable tool for quantification of chromosomal aberrations, particularly in problematic samples, which should be easily applicable to further tumour entities.
Onkologie | 2016
Maximilian Mossner; Johann-Christoph Jann; Janina Wittig; Florian Nolte; Stephanie Fey; Nowak; Julia Obländer; Jovita Pressler; Iris Palme; Christina Xanthopoulos; Tobias Boch; Georgia Metzgeroth; Henning Röhl; Stephanie H. Witt; Helene Dukal; Corinna Klein; Steffen Schmitt; P. Geiß; Uwe Platzbecker; E. Bulycheva; Alice Fabarius; Helmut Blum; Torsten J Schulze; Manja Meggendorfer; Claudia Haferlach; Andreas Trumpp; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Hind Medyouf; Daniel Nowak
T cell stimulation with different cytokines results in distinct phenotypes and cytotoxic activity of CD19-specific CART cells
Blood | 2016
Maximilian Mossner; Johann Christoph Jann; Janina Wittig; Florian Nolte; Stephanie Fey; Verena Nowak; Julia Obländer; Jovita Pressler; Iris Palme; Christina Xanthopoulos; Tobias Boch; Georgia Metzgeroth; Henning Röhl; Stephanie H. Witt; Helene Dukal; Corinna Klein; Steffen Schmitt; Patrick Gelß; Uwe Platzbecker; Ekaterina Balaian; Alice Fabarius; Helmut Blum; Torsten J Schulze; Manja Meggendorfer; Claudia Haferlach; Andreas Trumpp; Wolf K. Hofmann; Hind Medyouf; Daniel Nowak
Blood | 2014
Maximilian Mossner; Alexandra Stöhr; Florian Nolte; Johann-Christoph Jann; Stephanie Fey; Verena Nowak; Julia Obländer; Jovita Pressler; Claudia D. Baldus; Torsten J Schulze; Martin Neumann; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Daniel Nowak
Blood | 2014
Evi launiger-Lörsch; Thomas Luft; Stephanie Fey; Julia Obländer; Susanne Brendel; Jovita Pressler; Johann-Christoph Jann; Claudia Kunz; Anthony D. Ho; Harald Fricke; Maximilian Mossner; Georgia Metzgeroth; Daniel Nowak; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Florian Nolte
Blood | 2013
Heike Pfeifer; Katharina Raum; Sandra Markovic; Stephanie Fey; Julia Obländer; Verena Nowak; Wunderle Lydia; Fabian Lang; Dieter Hoelzer; Wolf-Karsten Hofmann; Nicola Goekbuget; Oliver G. Ottmann