Katrin Singer
University of Regensburg
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Featured researches published by Katrin Singer.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Kathrin Renner; Katrin Singer; Gudrun E. Koehl; Edward K. Geissler; Katrin Peter; Peter J. Siska; Marina Kreutz
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes and NK cells play an important role in eliminating malignant tumor cells and the number and activity of tumor-infiltrating T cells represent a good marker for tumor prognosis. Based on these findings, immunotherapy, e.g., checkpoint blockade, has received considerable attention during the last couple of years. However, for the majority of patients, immune control of their tumors is gray theory as malignant cells use effective mechanisms to outsmart the immune system. Increasing evidence suggests that changes in tumor metabolism not only ensure an effective energy supply and generation of building blocks for tumor growth but also contribute to inhibition of the antitumor response. Immunosuppression in the tumor microenvironment is often based on the mutual metabolic requirements of immune cells and tumor cells. Cytotoxic T and NK cell activation leads to an increased demand for glucose and amino acids, a well-known feature shown by tumor cells. These close metabolic interdependencies result in metabolic competition, limiting the proliferation, and effector functions of tumor-specific immune cells. Moreover, not only nutrient restriction but also tumor-driven shifts in metabolite abundance and accumulation of metabolic waste products (e.g., lactate) lead to local immunosuppression, thereby facilitating tumor progression and metastasis. In this review, we describe the metabolic interplay between immune cells and tumor cells and discuss tumor cell metabolism as a target structure for cancer therapy. Metabolic (re)education of tumor cells is not only an approach to kill tumor cells directly but could overcome metabolic immunosuppression in the tumor microenvironment and thereby facilitate immunotherapy.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Eva Gottfried; Sven A. Lang; Kathrin Renner; Anja K. Bosserhoff; Wolfram Gronwald; Michael Rehli; Sabine Einhell; Isabel Gedig; Katrin Singer; Anton Seilbeck; Andreas Mackensen; Oliver Grauer; Peter Hau; Katja Dettmer; Reinhard Andreesen; Peter J. Oefner; Marina Kreutz
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as diclofenac exhibit potent anticancer effects. Up to now these effects were mainly attributed to its classical role as COX-inhibitor. Here we show novel COX-independent effects of diclofenac. Diclofenac significantly diminished MYC expression and modulated glucose metabolism resulting in impaired melanoma, leukemia, and carcinoma cell line proliferation in vitro and reduced melanoma growth in vivo. In contrast, the non-selective COX inhibitor aspirin and the COX-2 specific inhibitor NS-398 had no effect on MYC expression and glucose metabolism. Diclofenac significantly decreased glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1), lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA), and monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1) gene expression in line with a decrease in glucose uptake and lactate secretion. A significant intracellular accumulation of lactate by diclofenac preceded the observed effect on gene expression, suggesting a direct inhibitory effect of diclofenac on lactate efflux. While intracellular lactate accumulation impairs cellular proliferation and gene expression, it does not inhibit MYC expression as evidenced by the lack of MYC regulation by the MCT inhibitor α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid. Finally, in a cell line with a tetracycline-regulated c-MYC gene, diclofenac decreased proliferation both in the presence and absence of c-MYC. Thus, diclofenac targets tumor cell proliferation via two mechanisms, that is inhibition of MYC and lactate transport. Based on these results, diclofenac holds potential as a clinically applicable MYC and glycolysis inhibitor supporting established tumor therapies.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015
Katrin Peter; Michael Rehli; Katrin Singer; Kathrin Renner-Sattler; Marina Kreutz
Lactic acid (LA) accumulates under inflammatory conditions, e.g. in wounds or tumors, and influences local immune cell functions. We previously noted inhibitory effects of LA on glycolysis and TNF secretion of human LPS-stimulated monocytes. Here, we globally analyze the influence of LA on gene expression during monocyte activation. To separate LA-specific from lactate- or pH-effects, monocytes were treated for one or four hours with LPS in the presence of physiological concentrations of LA, sodium lactate (NaL) or acidic pH. Analyses of global gene expression profiles revealed striking effects of LA during the early stimulation phase. Up-regulation of most LPS-induced genes was significantly delayed in the presence of LA, while this inhibitory effect was attenuated in acidified samples and not detected after incubation with NaL. LA targets included genes encoding for important monocyte effector proteins like cytokines (e.g. TNF and IL-23) or chemokines (e.g. CCL2 and CCL7). LA effects were validated for several targets by quantitative RT-PCR and/or ELISA. Further analysis of LPS-signaling pathways revealed that LA delayed the phosphorylation of protein kinase B (AKT) as well as the degradation of IκBα. Consistently, the LPS-induced nuclear accumulation of NFκB was also diminished in response to LA. These results indicate that the broad effect of LA on gene expression and function of human monocytes is at least partially caused by its interference with immediate signal transduction events after activation. This mechanism might contribute to monocyte suppression in the tumor environment.
European Journal of Immunology | 2015
Kathrin Renner; Anna-Lena Geiselhöringer; Matthias Fante; Christina Bruss; Stephanie Färber; Gabriele Schönhammer; Katrin Peter; Katrin Singer; Reinhard Andreesen; Petra Hoffmann; Peter J. Oefner; Wolfgang Herr; Marina Kreutz
The strong link between T‐cell metabolism and effector functions is well characterized in the murine system but hardly investigated in human T cells. Therefore, we analyzed glycolytic and mitochondrial activity in correlation to function in activated human CD4 and CD8 T cells. Glycolysis was barely detectable upon stimulation but accelerated beyond 24 h, whereas mitochondrial activity was elevated immediately in both T‐cell populations. Glucose deprivation or mitochondrial restriction reduced proliferation, had only a transient impact on “on‐blast formation” and no impact on viability, IFN‐γ, IL‐2, IL‐4, and IL‐10 production, whereas TNF was reduced. Similar results were obtained in bulk T cells and T‐cell subsets. Elevated respiration under glucose restriction demonstrated metabolic flexibility. Administration of the glycolytic inhibitor 2‐deoxy‐glucose suppressed both glycolysis and respiration and exerted a strong impact on cytokine production that persisted for IFN‐γ after removal of 2‐deoxy‐glucose. Taken together, glycolytic or mitochondrial restriction alone compromised proliferation of human T cells, but barely affected their effector functions. In contrast, effector functions were severely affected by 2‐deoxy‐glucose treatment.
OncoImmunology | 2016
Frederik Henrich; Katrin Singer; Kerstin Poller; Luise Bernhardt; Carolin D. Strobl; Katharina Limm; Axel P. Ritter; Eva Gottfried; Simon Völkl; Benedikt Jacobs; Katrin Peter; Dimitrios Mougiakakos; Katja Dettmer; Peter J. Oefner; Anja-Katrin Bosserhoff; Marina Kreutz; Michael Aigner; Andreas Mackensen
ABSTRACT The immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment represents one of the main obstacles for immunotherapy of cancer. The tumor milieu is among others shaped by tumor metabolites such as 5′-deoxy-5′-methylthioadenosine (MTA). Increased intratumoral MTA levels result from a lack of the MTA-catabolizing enzyme methylthioadenosine phosphorylase (MTAP) in tumor cells and are found in various tumor entities. Here, we demonstrate that MTA suppresses proliferation, activation, differentiation, and effector function of antigen-specific T cells without eliciting cell death. Conversely, if MTA is added to highly activated T cells, MTA exerts cytotoxic effects on T cells. We identified the Akt pathway, a critical signal pathway for T cell activation, as a target of MTA, while, for example, p38 remained unaffected. Next, we provide evidence that MTA exerts its immunosuppressive effects by interfering with protein methylation in T cells. To confirm the relevance of the suppressive effects of exogenously added MTA on human T cells, we used an MTAP-deficient tumor cell-line that was stably transfected with the MTAP-coding sequence. We observed that T cells stimulated with MTAP-transfected tumor cells revealed a higher proliferative capacity compared to T cells stimulated with Mock-transfected cells. In conclusion, our findings reveal a novel immune evasion strategy of human tumor cells that could be of interest for therapeutic targeting.
Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2018
Katrin Singer; Wan-Chen Cheng; Marina Kreutz; Ping-Chih Ho; Peter J. Siska
ABSTRACT The scientific knowledge about tumor metabolism has grown at a fascinating rate in recent decades. We now know that tumors are highly active both in their metabolism of available nutrients and in the secretion of metabolic by-products. However, cancer cells can modulate metabolic pathways and thus adapt to specific nutrients. Unlike tumor cells, immune cells are not subject to a ‘micro-evolution’ that would allow them to adapt to progressing tumors that continuously develop new mechanisms of immune escape. Consequently, immune cells are often irreversibly affected and may allow or even support cancer progression. The mechanisms of how tumors change immune cell function are not sufficiently explored. It is, however, clear that commonly shared features of tumor metabolism, such as local nutrient depletion or production of metabolic ‘waste’ can broadly affect immune cells and contribute to immune evasion. Moreover, immune cells utilize different metabolic programs based on their subtype and function, and these immunometabolic pathways can be modified in the tumor microenvironment. In this review and accompanying poster, we identify and describe the common mechanisms by which tumors metabolically affect the tumor-infiltrating cells of native and adaptive immunity, and discuss how these mechanisms may lead to novel therapeutic opportunities. Summary: This ‘At a Glance’ review and accompanying poster address how tumors can negatively affect immune cells through depletion of critical nutrients or through production of toxic metabolic products.
International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2016
Tobias Roider; Michael Katzfuß; Carina Matos; Katrin Singer; Kathrin Renner; Peter J. Oefner; Katja Dettmer-Wilde; Wolfgang Herr; Ernst Holler; Marina Kreutz; Katrin Peter
Antithymocyte globulin (ATG) is used in the prevention of graft-versus-host disease during allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. It is generally accepted that ATG mediates its immunosuppressive effect primarily via depletion of T cells. Here, we analyzed the impact of ATG-Fresenius (now Grafalon®) on human monocyte-derived dendritic cells (DC). ATG induced a semi-mature phenotype in DC with significantly reduced expression of CD14, increased expression of HLA-DR, and intermediate expression of CD54, CD80, CD83, and CD86. ATG-DC showed an increase in IL-10 secretion but no IL-12 production. In line with this tolerogenic phenotype, ATG caused a significant induction of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase expression and a concomitant increase in levels of tryptophan metabolites in the supernatants of DC. Further, ATG-DC did not induce the proliferation of allogeneic T cells in a mixed lymphocyte reaction but actively suppressed the T cell proliferation induced by mature DC. These data suggest that besides its well-known effect on T cells, ATG modulates the phenotype of DC in a tolerogenic way, which might constitute an essential part of its immunosuppressive action in vivo.
Cell Metabolism | 2016
Almut Brand; Katrin Singer; Gudrun E. Koehl; Marlene Kolitzus; Gabriele Schoenhammer; Annette Thiel; Carina Matos; Christina Bruss; Sebastian Klobuch; Katrin Peter; Michael Kastenberger; Christian Bogdan; Ulrike Schleicher; Andreas Mackensen; Evelyn Ullrich; Stefan Fichtner-Feigl; Rebecca Kesselring; Matthias Mack; Uwe Ritter; Maximilian Schmid; Christian U. Blank; Katja Dettmer; Peter J. Oefner; Petra Hoffmann; Stefan Walenta; Edward K. Geissler; Jacques Pouysségur; Andreas Villunger; André Steven; Barbara Seliger
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018
Maša Ždralević; Almut Brand; Lorenza Di Ianni; Katja Dettmer; Jörg Reinders; Katrin Singer; Katrin Peter; Annette Schnell; Christina Bruss; Sonja-Maria Decking; Gudrun E. Koehl; Blanca Felipe-Abrio; Jérôme Durivault; Pascale Bayer; Marie Evangelista; Thomas W. O'Brien; Peter J. Oefner; Kathrin Renner; Jacques Pouysségur; Marina Kreutz
Cancer Research | 2017
Carolin D. Strobl; Frederik Henrich; Katrin Singer; Katrin Peter; Marina Kreutz; Anita Kremer; Andreas Mackensen; Michael Aigner