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Dive into the research topics where Ludwig Wilkens is active.

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Featured researches published by Ludwig Wilkens.


Leukemia | 2004

Clinical, morphological, cytogenetic, and prognostic features of patients with myelodysplastic syndromes and del(5q) including band q31

Aristoteles Giagounidis; Ulrich Germing; S Haase; Barbara Hildebrandt; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Claudia Schoch; Ludwig Wilkens; M Heinsch; H Willems; M. Aivado; Carlo Aul

We analyzed data of 76 consecutive patients with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) and isolated del(5q) (n=66) or del(5q) plus one additional chromosomal abnormality (n=10) included in our MDS database over the last 26 years. The median age of our patient population was 66.8 years. The male to female ratio was 1:1.7. In all, 14 patients (18%) had advanced MDS with an increased medullary blast count. A total of 17 patients (22%) had significant dysplasia in the nonmegakaryocytic cell lines. Nearly half of the study population showed erythroid hypoplasia in the bone marrow. The projected median survival of patients with isolated del(5q) is 146 months for a median follow-up of 67 months. Patients with an increased medullary blast count and those with an additional chromosomal abnormality have a significantly shorter overall survival (24 and 45 months, respectively) than patients with isolated del(5q). We did not find survival differences for different cytogenetic breakpoints, nor did the amount of dysplasia have an impact on survival in our population. In total, 29 patients have died. Deaths occurred primarily due to transformation into acute leukemia, infection, or cardiac failure. Our data support the current definition of a separate entity of MDS with del(5q) that has been suggested by the World Health Organization.


Oncogene | 2003

Frequent epigenetic inactivation of the RASSF1A gene in hepatocellular carcinoma

Undraga Schagdarsurengin; Ludwig Wilkens; Doris Steinemann; Peer Flemming; Hans Kreipe; Gerd P. Pfeifer; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Reinhard Dammann

Aberrant promoter methylation is a fundamental mechanism of inactivation of tumor suppressor genes in cancer. The Ras association domain family 1A gene (RASSF1A) is frequently epigenetically silenced in several types of human solid tumors. In this study, we have investigated the expression and methylation status of the RASSF1A gene in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). In two HCC cell lines (HepG2 and Hep3B) RASSF1A was inactivated and treatment of these cell lines with a DNA methylation inhibitor reactivated the transcription of RASSF1A. The methylation status of the RASSF1A promoter region was analysed in 26 primary liver tissues including HCC, hepatocellular adenoma (HCA), liver fibrosis, hepatocirrhosis. Out of 15, 14 (93%) HCC were methylated at the RASSF1A CpG island and hypermethylation was independent of hepatitis virus infection. RASSF1A was also methylated in two out of two fibrosis and in three (75%) out of four cirrhosis; the latter carries an increased risk of developing HCC. Additionally, we analysed the methylation status of p16INK4a and other cancer-related genes in the same liver tumors. Aberrant methylation in the HCC samples was detected in 71% of samples for p16, 25% for TIMP3, 17% for PTEN, 13% for CDH1, and 7% for RARβ2. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that RASSF1A and p16INK4a inactivation by methylation are frequent events in hepatocellular carcinoma, but not in HCA, which is in contrast to HCC without cirrhosis, viral hepatitis, storage diseases, or genetic background. Therefore, this study gives additional evidence against a progression of adenoma to carcinoma in the liver. Thus, RASSF1A hypermethylation could be useful as a marker of malignancy and to distinguish between the distinct forms of highly differentiated liver neoplasm.


Modern Pathology | 2007

Predominance of the basal type and HER-2/neu type in brain metastasis from breast cancer

Jochen Gaedcke; Frank Traub; Simone Milde; Ludwig Wilkens; Alexandru Stan; Helmut Ostertag; Mathias Christgen; Reinhard von Wasielewski; Hans Kreipe

Although breast cancer is the second most common cause of central nervous system (CNS) metastases with a notable increase of incidence, only few studies on brain-metastasizing breast cancer are available. In this immunohistochemical and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) study, metastases to the CNS (n=85) and primary breast cancers, with known involvement of the CNS (n=44) including paired primary and metastasized tumours (n=23), were investigated retrospectively for the expression of oestrogen- (ER) and progesterone- (PR) hormone receptors, Her-2/neu, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), Ki-67, and cytokeratins (CKs) 5/14. The majority of brain metastases were steroid hormone receptor negative (ER 66%, PR 82%) corresponding to the findings in primary tumours with known involvement of the CNS (68% ER-negative, 75% PR-negative). The frequency of HER-2/neu-overexpressing or -amplified cancers was increased in both groups (34 and 32%, respectively). EGFR expression was more frequent in metastases (41%) than in primary tumours (16%). The proportions of cases with a basal phenotype were 26 and 30%, respectively. In paired primary tumours and metastases to the CNS, constancy of Her-2/neu status was observed in 87% of cases with only one sample turning Her-2/neu-negative and two samples acquiring overexpression/amplification in brain metastases. In contrast, steroid hormone receptors exhibited more frequently a loss of expression (17%) than a gain (9%) with 74% revealing a constant phenotype. We conclude that brain-metastasizing breast cancer belongs predominantly to the basal type or Her-2/neu type. Primary and metastatic tumours differ from each other only in a minority of cases, leading rather to a loss of steroid hormone receptors and to a gain of EGFR and Her-2/neu.


Gastroenterology | 2012

Histone deacetylases activate hepatocyte growth factor signaling by repressing microRNA-449 in hepatocellular carcinoma cells.

Reena Buurman; Engin Gürlevik; Vera Schäffer; Marlies Eilers; Maria Sandbothe; Hans Kreipe; Ludwig Wilkens; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Florian Kühnel; Britta Skawran

BACKGROUND & AIMS Histone deacetylation regulates chromatin remodeling and transcriptional down-regulation of specific genomic regions; it is altered in many types of cancer cells. We searched for microRNAs (miRs) that are affected by histone deacetylation and investigated the effects in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells. METHODS HCC cell lines (HepG2, HLE, HLF, and Huh7) and immortalized liver cell lines (THLE-2 and THLE-3) were incubated with the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A. Differentially expressed messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and miRs were identified by expression profiling. Small interfering RNAs were used to reduce levels of histone deacetylases (HDAC)1-3, and HCC cell lines were transfected with miR-449. We evaluated growth of xenograft tumors from modified cells in nude mice. Cells were analyzed by immunoblot and luciferase reporter assays. We analyzed HCC samples from 23 patients. RESULTS HDAC1-3 were up-regulated in HCC samples from patients. In cell lines, inhibition of HDAC significantly increased levels of hsa-miR-449a. c-MET mRNA, which encodes the receptor tyrosine kinase for hepatocyte growth factor, is a target of miR-449. Incubation of HCC cells with trichostatin A or transfection with miR-449 reduced expression of c-MET and phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1 and 2 (downstream effectors of c-MET), increased apoptosis, and reduced proliferation. Huh-7 cells transfected with miR-449 formed tumors more slowly in mice than cells expressing control miRs. HCC samples from patients had lower levels of miR-449 and higher levels of c-MET than human reference. CONCLUSIONS In HCC cells, up-regulation of HDAC1-3 reduces expression of miR-449. miR-449 binds c-MET mRNA to reduce its levels, promoting apoptosis and reducing proliferation of liver cells. Expression of miR-449 slows growth of HCC xenograft tumors in mice; this miR might function as a tumor suppressor.


Hepatology | 2007

Telomere shortening and inactivation of cell cycle checkpoints characterize human hepatocarcinogenesis

Ruben R. Plentz; Young Nyun Park; André Lechel; Haeryoung Kim; Friederike Nellessen; Britta Heike Langkopf; Ludwig Wilkens; Annarita Destro; Barbara Fiamengo; Michael P. Manns; Massimo Roncalli; Karl Lenhard Rudolph

Telomere shortening and inactivation of cell cycle checkpoints characterize carcinogenesis. Whether these molecular features coincide at specific stages of human hepatocarcinogenesis is unknown. The preneoplasia–carcinoma sequence of human HCC is not well defined. Small cell changes (SCC) and large cell changes (LCC) are potential precursor lesions. We analyzed hepatocellular telomere length, the prevalence of DNA damage, and the expression of p21 and p16 in biopsy specimens of patients with chronic liver disease (n = 27) that showed different precursor lesions and/or HCC: liver cirrhosis (n = 25), LCC (n = 26), SCC (n = 13), and HCC (n = 13). The study shows a decrease in telomere length in nondysplastic cirrhotic liver compared with normal liver and a further significant shortening of telomeres in LCC, SCC, and HCC. HCC had the shortest telomeres, followed by SCC and LCC. Hepatocytes showed an increased p21 labeling index (p21‐LI) at the cirrhosis stage, which remained elevated in most LCC. In contrast, most SCC and HCC showed a strongly reduced p21‐LI. Similarly, p16 was strongly expressed in LCC but reduced in SCC and not detectable in HCC. γH2AX‐DNA‐damage‐foci were not detected in LCC but were present in SCC and more frequently in HCC. These data indicate that LCC and SCC represent clonal expansions of hepatocytes with shortened telomeres. Conclusion: The inactivation of cell cycle checkpoints coincides with further telomere shortening and an accumulation of DNA damage in SCC and HCC, suggesting that SCC represent more advanced precursor lesions compared with LCC. (HEPATOLOGY 2007;45:968–976.)


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 1997

Tyramine Amplification Technique in Routine Immunohistochemistry

Reinhard von Wasielewski; Michael Mengel; Suzanne Gignac; Ludwig Wilkens; Martin Werner; Axel Georgii

Signal amplification in immunohistochemistry via binding of biotinylated tyramine to proteins near the site of peroxidase-labeled antibodies is a promising new technique, but studies investigating a wide range of markers are lacking. The tyramine amplification technique (TAT) was investigated on 85 antibodies using a simple and fast protocol, and TAT results were compared to those obtained with conventional immunohistochemistry. Using TAT, most of the markers could be 5- to 50-fold further diluted and still showed identical staining results compared with standard stainings (maximal 500-fold). However, the variable reactivity of the different markers with TAT underlines the need for individual testing of every antibody to determine the optimal dilution. Some antibodies against cell adhesion molecules could be demonstrated for the first time in archival, formalin-fixed tissue sections. TAT, if carefully evaluated, offers a revolutionary improvement for modern immunostaining, either to increase sensitivity or primary antibody dilutions (cost reduction). From a methodological point of view, immunohistochemistry has not reached its limits by far and TAT is an important progressive step in this developmental process. (J Histochem Cytochem 45:1455–1459, 1997)


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 1994

Effects of antigen retrieval by microwave heating in formalin-fixed tissue sections on a broad panel of antibodies

R. von Wasielewski; Martin Werner; Martina Nolte; Ludwig Wilkens; A. Georgii

Formaldehyde fixation of biopsy specimens for routine purposes has often been held responsible for the poor reproducibility of immunohistochemical studies. Recently, antigen retrieval (AGR) using microwave irradiation was described as a potential tool to enhance immunostaining. A comparison of conventional staining and staining after microwave heating was performed for 52 markers, using tissues fixed in formaldehyde for 24 h, 1 to 6 weeks and 3 years respectively, as well as consultant case material. After adequate duration of fixation (24 h), only a few markers (17%) showed better results after AGR, but this percentage was increased to 50% when tissues were fixed for longer periods. Maximal enhancement was obtained in the group of consultant cases (58% of tested markers demonstrated better staining results), in which the period of fixation and tissue processing was unknown. To achieve reliable enhancement with AGR, continuous heating (100° C) should not be shorter than 20 min. In conclusion, AGR may become the most important tool to simplify and equalize immunohistochemical techniques, if critically evaluated.


American Journal of Pathology | 2005

Human cord blood stem cells generate human cytokeratin 18-negative hepatocyte-like cells in injured mouse liver

Amar Deep Sharma; Tobias Cantz; Rudolf Richter; Klaus Eckert; Reinhard Henschler; Ludwig Wilkens; Andrea Jochheim-Richter; Lubomir Arseniev; Michael Ott

Differentiation of adult bone marrow (BM) cells into nonhematopoietic cells is a rare phenomenon. Several reports, however, suggest that human umbilical cord blood (hUCB)-derived cells give rise to hepatocytes after transplantation into nonobese diabetic-severe combined immunodeficient (NOD-SCID) mice. Therefore, we analyzed the hepatic differentiation potential of hUCB cells and compared the frequency of newly formed hepatocyte-like cells in the livers of recipient NOD-SCID mice after transplantation of hUCB versus murine BM cells. Mononuclear cell preparations of hUCB cells or murine BM from enhanced green fluorescent protein transgenic or wild-type mice were transplanted into sublethally irradiated NOD-SCID mice. Liver regeneration was induced by carbon tetrachloride injury with and without subsequent hepatocyte growth factor treatment. By immunohistochemistry and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, we detected clusters of hepatocyte-like cells in the livers of hUCB-transplanted mice. These cells expressed human albumin and Hep Par 1 but mouse CK18, suggesting the formation of chimeric hepatocyte-like cells. Native fluorescence microscopy and double immunofluorescence failed to detect single hepatocytes derived from transplanted enhanced green fluorescent protein-transgenic mouse BM. Fluorescent in situ hybridization rarely revealed donor-derived hepatocyte-like cells after cross-gender mouse BM transplantation. Thus, hUCB cells have differentiation capabilities different from murine BM cells after transplantation into NOD-SCID mice, demonstrating the importance of further testing before hUCB cells can be used therapeutically.


EMBO Reports | 2005

The cellular level of telomere dysfunction determines induction of senescence or apoptosis in vivo

André Lechel; Ande Satyanarayana; Zhenyu Ju; Ruben R. Plentz; Sonja Schaetzlein; Cornelia Rudolph; Ludwig Wilkens; Stephanie U Wiemann; Gabriele Saretzki; Nisar P. Malek; Michael P. Manns; Jan Buer; K. Lenhard Rudolph

Telomere dysfunction induces two types of cellular response: cellular senescence and apoptosis. We analysed the extent to which the cellular level of telomere dysfunction and p53 gene status affect these cellular responses in mouse liver using the experimental system of TRF2 inhibition by a dominant‐negative version of the protein (TRF2ΔBΔM). We show that the level of telomere dysfunction correlates with the level of TRF2ΔBΔM protein expression resulting in chromosomal fusions, aberrant mitotic figures and aneuploidy of liver cells. These alterations provoked p53‐independent apoptosis, but a strictly p53‐dependent senescence response in distinct populations of mouse liver cells depending on the cellular level of TRF2ΔBΔM expression. Apoptosis was associated with higher expression of TRF2ΔBΔM, whereas cellular senescence was associated with low levels of TRF2ΔBΔM expression. Our data provide experimental evidence that induction of senescence or apoptosis in vivo depends on the cellular level of telomere dysfunction and differentially on p53 gene function.


Leukemia | 2008

Marrow fibrosis predicts early fatal marrow failure in patients with myelodysplastic syndromes

G. Buesche; H Teoman; W Wilczak; Arnold Ganser; Hartmut Hecker; Ludwig Wilkens; Gudrun Göhring; Brigitte Schlegelberger; Oliver Bock; A. Georgii; Hans Kreipe

Marrow fibrosis (MF) has rarely been studied in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). There are no data on occurrence and significance of MF in the context of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of disease. In total, 349 bone marrow biopsies from 200 patients with primary MDS were examined for MF and its prognostic relevance. MF correlated with multilineage dysplasia, more severe thrombopenia, higher probability of a clonal karyotype abnormality, and higher percentages of blasts in the peripheral blood (P<0.002). Its frequency varied markedly between different MDS types ranging from 0 (RARS) to 16% (RCMD, RAEB, P<0.007). Two patients with MF showed a Janus kinase-2 mutation (V617F). Patients with MF suffered from marrow failure significantly earlier with shortening of the survival time down to 0.5 (RAEB-1/-2), and 1–2 (RCMD, RA) years in median (P<0.00005). The prognostic relevance of MF was independent of the International Prognostic Scoring System and the classification of disease. Conclusion: The risk of MF Differs markedly between various subtypes of MDS. MF indicates an aggressive course with a significantly faster progression to fatal marrow failure and should therefore be considered in diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of disease.

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Hans Kreipe

Hannover Medical School

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