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Dive into the research topics where Manfred Blessing is active.

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Featured researches published by Manfred Blessing.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

Cutting Edge: TGF-β Signaling Is Required for the In Vivo Expansion and Immunosuppressive Capacity of Regulatory CD4+CD25+ T Cells

Samuel Huber; Christoph Schramm; Hans A. Lehr; Amrit Mann; Steffen Schmitt; Christoph Becker; Martina Protschka; Peter R. Galle; Markus F. Neurath; Manfred Blessing

Data regarding the role of TGF-β for the in vivo function of regulatory CD4+CD25+ T cells (Treg) are controversial. A transgenic mouse model with impaired TGF-β signaling specifically in T cells was used to assess the role of endogenous TGF-β for the in vivo function of CD4+CD25+ Treg in a murine model of colitis induced by dextran sulfate. Transfer of wild-type, but not transgenic CD4+CD25+ Treg was found to suppress colitis in wild-type mice. In addition, by transferring CFSE-labeled CD4+CD25+ Treg we could demonstrate that endogenous TGF-β promotes the expansion of CD4+CD25+ Treg in vivo. Transgenic mice themselves developed reduced numbers of peripheral CD4+CD25+ Treg and were more susceptible to the induction of colitis, which could be prevented by the transfer of wild-type Treg. These data indicate that TGF-β signaling in CD4+CD25+ Treg is required for their in vivo expansion and suppressive capacity.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

IL-13 Induces Disease-Promoting Type 2 Cytokines, Alternatively Activated Macrophages and Allergic Inflammation during Pulmonary Infection of Mice with Cryptococcus neoformans

Uwe Müller; Werner Stenzel; Gabriele Köhler; Christoph Werner; Tobias Polte; Gesine Hansen; Nicole Schütze; Reinhard K. Straubinger; Manfred Blessing; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Frank Brombacher; Gottfried Alber

In the murine model of Cryptococcus neoformans infection Th1 (IL-12/IFN-γ) and Th17 (IL-23/IL-17) responses are associated with protection, whereas an IL-4-dependent Th2 response exacerbates disease. To investigate the role of the Th2 cytokine IL-13 during pulmonary infection with C. neoformans, IL-13-overexpressing transgenic (IL-13Tg+), IL-13-deficient (IL-13−/−), and wild-type (WT) mice were infected intranasally. Susceptibility to C. neoformans infection was found when IL-13 was induced in WT mice or overproduced in IL-13Tg+ mice. Infected IL-13Tg+ mice had a reduced survival time and higher pulmonary fungal load as compared with WT mice. In contrast, infected IL-13−/− mice were resistant and 89% of these mice survived the entire period of the experiment. Ag-specific production of IL-13 by susceptible WT and IL-13Tg+ mice was associated with a significant type 2 cytokine shift but only minor changes in IFN-γ production. Consistent with enhanced type 2 cytokine production, high levels of serum IgE and low ratios of serum IgG2a/IgG1 were detected in susceptible WT and IL-13Tg+ mice. Interestingly, expression of IL-13 by susceptible WT and IL-13Tg+ mice was associated with reduced IL-17 production. IL-13 was found to induce formation of alternatively activated macrophages expressing arginase-1, macrophage mannose receptor (CD206), and YM1. In addition, IL-13 production led to lung eosinophilia, goblet cell metaplasia and elevated mucus production, and enhanced airway hyperreactivity. This indicates that IL-13 contributes to fatal allergic inflammation during C. neoformans infection.


American Journal of Pathology | 2009

IL-4/IL-13-Dependent Alternative Activation of Macrophages but Not Microglial Cells Is Associated with Uncontrolled Cerebral Cryptococcosis

Werner Stenzel; Uwe Müller; Gabriele Köhler; Frank L. Heppner; Manfred Blessing; Andrew N. J. McKenzie; Frank Brombacher; Gottfried Alber

Both interleukin (IL)-4- and IL-13-dependent Th2-mediated immune mechanisms exacerbate murine Cryptococcus neoformans-induced bronchopulmonary disease. To study the roles of IL-4 and IL-13 in cerebral cryptococcosis, IL-4 receptor alpha-deficient (IL-4Ralpha(-/-)), IL-4-deficient (IL-4(-/-)), IL-13-deficient (IL-13(-/-)), IL-13 transgenic (IL-13(T/+)), and wild-type mice were infected intranasally. IL-13(T/+) mice displayed a higher fungal brain burden than wild-type mice, whereas the brain burdens of IL-4Ralpha(-/-), IL-4(-/-), and IL-13(-/-) mice were significantly lower as compared with wild-type mice. On infection, 68% of wild-type mice and 88% of IL-13-overexpressing IL-13(T/+) mice developed significant cerebral lesions. In contrast, only a few IL-4Ralpha(-/-), IL-4(-/-), and IL-13(-/-) mice had small lesions in their brains. Furthermore, IL-13(T/+) mice harbored large pseudocystic lesions in the central nervous system parenchyma, bordered by voluminous foamy alternatively activated macrophages (aaMphs) that contained intracellular cryptococci, without significant microglial activation. In wild-type mice, aaMphs tightly bordered pseudocystic lesions as well, and these mice, in addition, showed microglial cell activation. Interestingly, in resistant IL-4(-/-), IL-13(-/-), and IL-4Ralpha(-/-) mice, no aaMphs were discernible. Microglial cells of all mouse genotypes neither internalized cryptococci nor expressed markers of alternative activation, although they displayed similar IL-4Ralpha expression levels as macrophages. These data provide the first evidence of the development of aaMphs in a central nervous system infectious disease model, pointing to distinct roles of macrophages versus microglial cells in the central nervous system immune response against C. neoformans.


PLOS ONE | 2008

P38 MAP Kinase Signaling Is Required for the Conversion of CD4+CD25− T Cells into iTreg

Samuel Huber; Jörg Schrader; Gerhard Fritz; Katrin Presser; Steffen Schmitt; Ari Waisman; Stefan Lüth; Manfred Blessing; Johannes Herkel; Christoph Schramm

CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells (Treg) are important mediators of immune tolerance. A subset of Treg can be generated in the periphery by TGF-beta dependent conversion of conventional CD4+CD25− T cells into induced Treg (iTreg). In chronic viral infection or malignancy, such induced iTreg, which limit the depletion of aberrant or infected cells, may be of pathogenic relevance. To identify potential targets for therapeutic intervention, we investigated the TGF-beta signaling in Treg. In contrast to conventional CD4+ T cells, Treg exhibited marked activation of the p38 MAP kinase pathway. Inhibition of p38 MAP kinase activity prevented the TGF-beta-dependent conversion of CD4+CD25− T cells into Foxp3+ iTreg in vitro. Of note, the suppressive capacity of nTreg was not affected by inhibiting p38 MAP kinase. Our findings indicate that signaling via p38 MAP kinase seems to be important for the peripheral generation of iTreg; p38 MAP kinase could thus be a therapeutic target to enhance immunity to chronic viral infection or cancer.


Gene | 2008

Spontaneous hepatic fibrosis in transgenic mice overexpressing PDGF-A

Florian Thieringer; Thorsten Maass; P. Czochra; Borut Klopcic; Ilka Conrad; Diana Friebe; Peter Schirmacher; Ansgar W. Lohse; Manfred Blessing; Peter R. Galle; Andreas Teufel; Stephan Kanzler

Platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) plays a central role in repair mechanisms after acute and chronic tissue damage. To further evaluate the role of PDGF-A in liver fibrogenesis in vivo, we generated transgenic mice with hepatocyte-specific overexpression of PDGF-A using the CRP-gene promoter. Transgenic but not wildtype mice showed expression of PDGF-A mRNA in the liver. Hepatic PDGF-A overexpression was accompanied by a significant increase in hepatic procollagen III mRNA expression as well as TGF-beta1 expression. Liver histology showed increased deposition of extracellular matrix in transgenic but not in wildtype mice. PDGF-A-transgenic mice showed positive sinusoidal staining for alpha-SMA indicating an activation of hepatic stellate cells. Since the profibrogenic effect of PDGF-A was accompanied by increased TGF-beta1 protein concentration in the liver of transgenic mice, it can be postulated that PDGF-A upregulates expression of TGF-beta1 which is a strong activator of hepatic stellate cells. Thus, these results point towards a fibrosis induction by PDGF-A via the TGF-beta1 signalling pathway. In conclusion, expression and functional analysis of PDGF-A in the liver of transgenic mice suggest a relevant profibrogenic role of PDGF-A via TGF-beta1 induction. Counteracting PDGF-A may therefore be one of the effects of tyrosine kinase inhibitors which showed protective effects in animal models of liver fibrosis.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2008

A Gene-Dosage Effect for Interleukin-4 Receptor α-Chain Expression Has an Impact on Th2-Mediated Allergic Inflammation during Bronchopulmonary Mycosis

Uwe Müller; Werner Stenzel; Gabriele Köhler; Tobias Polte; Manfred Blessing; Amrit Mann; Daniel Piehler; Frank Brombacher; Gottfried Alber

Interleukin (IL)-4 and IL-13 are key factors in the pathogenesis of bronchopulmonary mycosis induced in mice by infection with Cryptococcus neoformans. Both cytokines use the IL-4 receptor alpha-chain (IL-4Ralpha). In this study, we investigated the role played by IL-4Ralpha expression in susceptibility to pulmonary C. neoformans infection. IL-4Ralpha(-/-) mice were extremely resistant. To characterize the effect of IL-4Ralpha expression level on disease outcome, we generated IL-4Ralpha(+/-) first-generation (F1) mice. IL-4Ralpha(+/-) mice showed intermediate levels of IL-4Ralpha expression, in contrast to higher levels in wild-type mice and no expression in IL-4Ralpha(-/-) mice, indicating biallelic expression of the gene for IL-4Ralpha (Il4ra). Concomitant with intermediate IL-4Ralpha expression, F1 mice showed intermediate susceptibility associated with altered Th2/Th17 cytokine production, decreased immunoglobulin E levels, and reduced allergic inflammation. This indicates a gene-dosage effect of IL-4Ralpha expression on susceptibility to bronchopulmonary mycosis. These data provide the basis for novel therapies antagonizing IL-4Ralpha in Th2-related pulmonary infection and possibly also in asthma.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Overexpression of TGF-ß1 in macrophages reduces and stabilizes atherosclerotic plaques in ApoE-deficient mice.

Kurt Reifenberg; Fei Cheng; Carolin Orning; Jeanine Crain; Ines Küpper; Elena Wiese; Martina Protschka; Manfred Blessing; Karl J. Lackner; Michael Torzewski

Although macrophages represent the hallmark of both human and murine atherosclerotic lesions and have been shown to express TGF-ß1 (transforming growth factor β1) and its receptors, it has so far not been experimentally addressed whether the pleiotropic cytokine TGF-ß1 may influence atherogenesis by a macrophage specific mechanism. We developed transgenic mice with macrophage specific TGF-ß1 overexpression, crossed the transgenics to the atherosclerotic ApoE (apolipoprotein E) knock-out strain and quantitatively analyzed both atherosclerotic lesion development and composition of the resulting double mutants. Compared with control ApoE−/− mice, animals with macrophage specific TGF-ß1 overexpression developed significantly less atherosclerosis after 24 weeks on the WTD (Western type diet) as indicated by aortic plaque area en face (p<0.05). Reduced atherosclerotic lesion development was associated with significantly less macrophages (p<0.05 after both 8 and 24 weeks on the WTD), significantly more smooth muscle cells (SMCs; p<0.01 after 24 weeks on the WTD), significantly more collagen (p<0.01 and p<0.05 after 16 and 24 weeks on the WTD, respectively) without significant differences of inner aortic arch intima thickness or the number of total macrophages in the mice pointing to a plaque stabilizing effect of macrophage-specific TGF-ß1 overexpression. Our data shows that macrophage specific TGF-ß1 overexpression reduces and stabilizes atherosclerotic plaques in ApoE-deficient mice.


PLOS ONE | 2010

The Vinculin-ΔIn20/21 Mouse: Characteristics of a Constitutive, Actin-Binding Deficient Splice Variant of Vinculin

Susanna Marg; Ulrike Winkler; Marcello Sestu; Mirko Himmel; Madeleine Schönherr; Janina Bär; Amrit Mann; Markus Moser; Claudia T. Mierke; Klemens Rottner; Manfred Blessing; Johannes Hirrlinger; Wolfgang H. Ziegler

Background The cytoskeletal adaptor protein vinculin plays a fundamental role in cell contact regulation and affects central aspects of cell motility, which are essential to both embryonal development and tissue homeostasis. Functional regulation of this evolutionarily conserved and ubiquitously expressed protein is dominated by a high-affinity, autoinhibitory head-to-tail interaction that spatially restricts ligand interactions to cell adhesion sites and, furthermore, limits the residency time of vinculin at these sites. To date, no mutants of the vinculin protein have been characterized in animal models. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, we investigate vinculin-ΔEx20, a splice variant of the protein lacking the 68 amino acids encoded by exon 20 of the vinculin gene VCL. Vinculin-ΔEx20 was found to be expressed alongside with wild type protein in a knock-in mouse model with a deletion of introns 20 and 21 (VCL-ΔIn20/21 allele) and shows defective head-to-tail interaction. Homozygous VCL-ΔIn20/21 embryos die around embryonal day E12.5 showing cranial neural tube defects and exencephaly. In mouse embryonic fibroblasts and upon ectopic expression, vinculin-ΔEx20 reveals characteristics of constitutive head binding activity. Interestingly, the impact of vinculin-ΔEx20 on cell contact induction and stabilization, a hallmark of the vinculin head domain, is only moderate, thus allowing invasion and motility of cells in three-dimensional collagen matrices. Lacking both F-actin interaction sites of the tail, the vinculin-ΔEx20 variant unveils vinculins dynamic binding to cell adhesions independent of a cytoskeletal association, and thus differs from head-to-tail binding deficient mutants such as vinculin-T12, in which activated F-actin binding locks the protein variant to cell contact sites. Conclusions/Significance Vinculin-ΔEx20 is an active variant supporting adhesion site stabilization without an enhanced mechanical coupling. Its presence in a transgenic animal reveals the potential of splice variants in the vinculin gene to alter vinculin function in vivo. Correct control of vinculin is necessary for embryonic development.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Transgenic Mice for a Tamoxifen-Induced, Conditional Expression of the Cre Recombinase in Osteoclasts

Maria Arantzazu Sanchez-Fernandez; Silvia Sbacchi; Miguel Correa-Tapia; Ronald Naumann; Jennifer Klemm; Pierre Chambon; Samiya Al-Robaiy; Manfred Blessing; Bernard Hoflack

Background Studies on osteoclasts, the bone resorbing cells, have remained limited due to the lack of transgenic mice allowing the conditional knockout of genes in osteoclasts at any time during development or adulthood. Methodology/Principal Finding We report here on the generation of transgenic mice which specifically express a tamoxifen-inducible Cre recombinase in osteoclasts. These mice, generated on C57BL/6 and FVB background, express a fusion Cre recombinase-ERT2 protein whose expression is driven by the promoter of cathepsin K (CtsK), a gene highly expressed in osteoclasts. We tested the cellular specificity of Cre activity in CtsKCreERT2 strains by breeding with Rosa26LacZ reporter mice. PCR and histological analyses of the CtsKCreERT2LacZ positive adult mice and E17.5 embryos show that Cre activity is restricted largely to bone tissue. In vitro, primary osteoclasts derived from the bone marrow of CtsKCreERT2+/−LacZ+/− adult mice show a Cre-dependent β-galactosidase activity after tamoxifen stimulation. Conclusions/Significance We have generated transgenic lines that enable the tamoxifen-induced, conditional deletion of loxP-flanked genes in osteoclasts, thus circumventing embryonic and postnatal gene lethality and avoiding gene deletion in other cell types. Such CtsKCreERT2 mice provide a convenient tool to study in vivo the different facets of osteoclast function in bone physiology during different developmental stages and adulthood of mice.


PLOS ONE | 2013

T Cell-Specific Overexpression of TGFß1 Fails to Influence Atherosclerosis in ApoE-Deficient Mice

Kurt Reifenberg; Fei Cheng; Laura Twardowski; Ines Küpper; Elena Wiese; Franziska Bollmann; Hartmut Kleinert; Manfred Blessing; Karl J. Lackner; Michael Torzewski

Clinical data have indicated a negative correlation between plasma TGFß1 concentrations and the extent of atherosclerosis and have thus led to the hypothesis that the pleiotropic cytokine may have anti-atherogenic properties. T-cells are currently discussed to significantly participate in atherogenesis, but the precise role of adaptive immunity in atherogenesis remains to be elucidated. TGFß1 is known to strongly modulate the function of T-cells, however, inhibition of TGFß1 signalling in T-cells of atherosclerosis-prone knock-out mice failed to unequivocally clarify the role of the cytokine for the development of atherosclerosis. In the present study, we thus tried to specify the role of TGFß1 in atherogenesis by using the murine CD2-TGFß1 transgenic strain which represents a well characterized model of T-cell specific TGFß1 overexpression. The CD2-TGFß1 transgenic mice were crossed to ApoE knock-out mice and quantity and quality of atherosclerosis regarding number of macrophages, smooth muscle cells, CD3 positive T-cells and collagen was analyzed in CD2-TGFß1 ApoE double mutants as well as non-transgenic ApoE controls on both normal and atherogenic diet of a duration of 8, 16 or 24 weeks, respectively. In all experimental groups investigated, we failed to detect any influence of TGFß1 overexpression on disease. Total number of CD3-positive T-lymphocytes was not significantly different in atherosclerotic lesions of CD2-TGFß1 ApoE−/− females and isogenic ApoE−/− controls, even after 24 weeks on the atherogenic diet. The synopsis of these data and our previous study on TGFß1 overexpressing macrophages suggests that potential effects of TGFß1 on atherosclerosis are most probably mediated by macrophages rather than T-cells.

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Frank Brombacher

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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