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Dive into the research topics where Marc Brulport is active.

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Featured researches published by Marc Brulport.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Prediction and validation of cell alignment along microvessels as order principle to restore tissue architecture in liver regeneration

Stefan Hoehme; Marc Brulport; Alexander Bauer; Essam Bedawy; Wiebke Schormann; Matthias Hermes; Verena Puppe; Rolf Gebhardt; Sebastian Zellmer; Michael Schwarz; Ernesto Bockamp; Tobias Timmel; Jan G. Hengstler; Dirk Drasdo

Only little is known about how cells coordinately behave to establish functional tissue structure and restore microarchitecture during regeneration. Research in this field is hampered by a lack of techniques that allow quantification of tissue architecture and its development. To bridge this gap, we have established a procedure based on confocal laser scans, image processing, and three-dimensional tissue reconstruction, as well as quantitative mathematical modeling. As a proof of principle, we reconstructed and modeled liver regeneration in mice after damage by CCl4, a prototypical inducer of pericentral liver damage. We have chosen the regenerating liver as an example because of the tight link between liver architecture and function: the complex microarchitecture formed by hepatocytes and microvessels, i.e. sinusoids, ensures optimal exchange of metabolites between blood and hepatocytes. Our model captures all hepatocytes and sinusoids of a liver lobule during a 16 days regeneration process. The model unambiguously predicted a so-far unrecognized mechanism as essential for liver regeneration, whereby daughter hepatocytes align along the orientation of the closest sinusoid, a process which we named “hepatocyte-sinusoid alignment” (HSA). The simulated tissue architecture was only in agreement with the experimentally obtained data when HSA was included into the model and, moreover, no other likely mechanism could replace it. In order to experimentally validate the model of prediction of HSA, we analyzed the three-dimensional orientation of daughter hepatocytes in relation to the sinusoids. The results of this analysis clearly confirmed the model prediction. We believe our procedure is widely applicable in the systems biology of tissues.


Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology | 2005

Generation of human hepatocytes by stem cell technology: definition of the hepatocyte.

Jan G. Hengstler; Marc Brulport; Wiebke Schormann; Alexander Bauer; Matthias Hermes; Andreas K Nussler; Fred Fändrich; Maren Ruhnke; Hendrik Ungefroren; Louise Griffin; Ernesto Bockamp; Franz Oesch; Marc-Alexander von Mach

Since 1999, numerous articles have reported the generation of hepatocytes from different types of extrahepatic stem or precursor cells. This opens exciting new possibilities for pharmacology and toxicology, as well as for cell therapy. Hepatocyte marker expression, including albumin, cytokeratin 18, c-met, α-fetoprotein and cytochrome P450 3A4 and -2B6, has been observed after transplantation of different types of human stem cells into the liver of laboratory animals or in vitro after incubation with cytokines. These intriguing observations have prompted scientists to classify stem cell-derived cell populations as hepatocytes. However, this conclusion may be premature. It has been shown that factors of the liver microenvironment can induce expression of a limited number of hepatocyte marker genes in nonhepatic cell types. To conclude on the grounds of a limited number of markers that these cells are true hepatocytes is not indicated. In this case one should carefully evaluate crucial hepatocyte-defining enzymatic properties. The present article: i) reviews studies describing the fate of extrahepatic human stem and precursor cells in livers of laboratory animals, including the possibility of cell fusion; and ii) critically discusses the phenotype of stem cells after application of various differentiation protocols aimed at generating human hepatocytes. In addition, the necessary criteria needed for defining a true hepatocyte are suggested. Establishing the necessary properties for stem cell-derived hepatocytes is timely and reasonable, and thus avoids further misleading semantic confusion. Finally, it is essential to understand that the definition of a bona fide hepatocyte should not be limited to qualitative assays, such as reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry, but has to include a quantitative analysis of enzymatic activities, which allows direct comparison with primary hepatocytes. Although the stem cell-derived-hepatocyte does not yet exist there is a good chance that this aim may be achieved in the future.


Hepatology | 2007

Fate of extrahepatic human stem and precursor cells after transplantation into mouse livers

Marc Brulport; Wiebke Schormann; Alexander Bauer; Matthias Hermes; Carolin Elsner; Friedrich Jakob Hammersen; Walter Beerheide; Dimitry Spitkovsky; Wolfgang Härtig; Andreas K. Nussler; Lars Christian Horn; Jeanett Edelmann; Oliver Pelz-Ackermann; Jörg Petersen; Manja Kamprad; Marc A von Mach; Amelie Lupp; Henryk Zulewski; Jan G. Hengstler

In recent years, a large number of groups studied the fate of human stem cells in livers of immunodeficient animals. However, the interpretation of the results is quite controversial. We transplanted 4 different types of human extrahepatic precursor cells (derived from cord blood, monocytes, bone marrow, and pancreas) into livers of nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficiency mice. Human hepatocytes were used as positive controls. Tracking of the transplanted human cells could be achieved by in situ hybridization with alu probes. Cells with alu‐positive nuclei stained positive for human albumin and glycogen. Both markers were negative before transplantation. However, cells with alu‐positive nuclei did not show a hepatocyte‐like morphology and did not express cytochrome P450 3A4, and this suggests that these cells represent a mixed cell type possibly resulting from partial transdifferentiation. Using antibodies specific for human albumin, we also observed a second human albumin–positive cell type that could be clearly distinguished from the previously described cells by its hepatocyte‐like morphology. Surprisingly, these cells had a mouse and not a human nucleus which is explained by transdifferentiation of human cells. Although it has not yet been formally proven, we suggest horizontal gene transfer as a likely mechanism, especially because we observed small fragments of human nuclei in mouse cells that originated from deteriorating transplanted cells. Qualitatively similar results were obtained with all 4 human precursor cell types through different routes of administration with and without the induction of liver damage. Conclusion: We observed evidence not for transdifferentiation but instead for a complex situation including partial differentiation and possibly horizontal gene transfer. (HEPATOLOGY 2007.)


Clinical Cancer Research | 2010

ERBB2 induces an antiapoptotic expression pattern of Bcl-2 family members in node-negative breast cancer.

Ilka Brigitte Petry; Esther Fieber; Marcus Schmidt; Mathias Gehrmann; Susanne Gebhard; Matthias Hermes; Wiebke Schormann; Silvia Selinski; Evgenia Freis; Holger Schwender; Marc Brulport; Katja Ickstadt; Jörg Rahnenführer; Lindsey Maccoux; Jonathan West; H. Kölbl; Martin Schuler; Jan G. Hengstler

Purpose: Members of the Bcl-2 family act as master regulators of mitochondrial homeostasis and apoptosis. We analyzed whether ERBB2 influences the prognosis of breast cancer by influencing the proapoptotic versus antiapoptotic balance of Bcl-2 family members. Experimental Design: ERBB2-regulated Bcl-2 family members were identified by inducible expression of ERBB2 in MCF-7 breast cancer cells and by correlation analysis with ERBB2 expression in breast carcinomas. The prognostic relevance of ERBB2-regulated and all additional Bcl-2 family members was determined in 782 patients with untreated node-negative breast cancer. The biological relevance of ERBB2-induced inhibition of apoptosis was validated in a murine tumor model allowing conditional ERBB2 expression. Results: ERBB2 caused an antiapoptotic phenotype by upregulation of MCL-1, TEGT, BAG1, BNIP1, and BECN1 as well as downregulation of BAX, BMF, BNIPL, CLU, and BCL2L13. Upregulation of the antiapoptotic MCL-1 [P = 0.001, hazard ratio (HR) 1.5] and BNIP3 (P = 0.024; HR, 1.4) was associated with worse prognosis considering metastasis-free interval, whereas clusterin (P = 0.008; HR, 0.88) and the proapoptotic BCL2L13 (P = 0.019; HR, 0.45) were associated with better prognosis. This indicates that ERBB2 alters the expression of Bcl-2 family members in a way that leads to adverse prognosis. Analysis of apoptosis and tumor remission in a murine tumor model confirmed that the prototypic Bcl-2 family member Bcl-xL could partially substitute for ERBB2 to antagonize tumor remission. Conclusions: Our results support the concept that ERBB2 influences the expression of Bcl-2 family members to induce an antiapoptotic phenotype. Antagonization of antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family members might improve breast cancer therapy, whereby MCL-1 and BNIP3 represent promising targets. Clin Cancer Res; 16(2); 451–60


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2008

Tracking of human cells in mice.

Wiebke Schormann; Friedrich Jakob Hammersen; Marc Brulport; Matthias Hermes; Alexander Bauer; Claudia Rudolph; Markus Schug; Thomas Lehmann; Andreas K. Nussler; Hendrik Ungefroren; James Hutchinson; Fred Fändrich; Jörg Petersen; Karsten Wursthorn; Martin R. Burda; Oliver Brüstle; Kannan Krishnamurthi; Marc A von Mach; Jan G. Hengstler

Tracking and tracing of transplanted cells in mice is required in many fields of research. Examples are transplantation of stem cells into organs of mice to study their differentiation capacity and injection of tumor cells to examine metastatic behavior. In the present study we tested the lipid dye CM-DiI and red fluorescent nanoparticles Qdot655 for their applicability in tagging and tracing of human cells in mice. Labeling of different cell types, including MCF-7 human breast cancer cells, human cord blood derived cells, human NeoHep cells and human hepatopancreatic precursor cells, is technically easy and did not compromise further cell culture. After transplantation of CM-DiI or Qdot655 marked cells, red fluorescent structures could be detected already in unprocessed paraffin slices of the studied organs, namely liver, lung, pancreas, kidney, spleen and bone marrow. Next, we examined whether the red fluorescent structures represent the transplanted human cells. For this purpose, we established an in situ hybridization (ISH) technique that allows clear-cut differentiation between human and murine nuclei, based on simultaneous hybridization with human alu and mouse major satellite (mms) probes. We observed a high degree of coincidence between CM-DiI-marked cells and alu positive nuclei. However, also some mms positive cells contained CM-DiI, suggesting phagocytosis of the transplanted CM-DiI-marked cells. The degree of such CM-DiI-positive mouse cells depended on the cell type and route of administration. From a technical point of view it was important that CM-DiI-positive structures in paraffin slices remained fluorescent also after ISH. In contrast, Qdot655 positive structures faded during further staining procedures. In conclusion, marking of cells with CM-DiI or Qdot655 prior to transplantation facilitates recovery of human cells, since a high fraction of positive structures in the host’s tissue originate from the transplanted cells. However, CM-DiI or Qdot655 positive staining of individual cells in transplanted tissues is not sufficient to prove their human origin. Additional procedures, such as ISH with alu-probes, are essential, when characterizing individual cells.


Stem Cells | 2004

In Vitro Cultured Islet-Derived Progenitor Cells of Human Origin Express Human Albumin in Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Mouse Liver In Vivo

Marc-Alexander von Mach; Jan G. Hengstler; Marc Brulport; Michael Eberhardt; Wiebke Schormann; Matthias Hermes; Dirk Prawitt; Bernhard Zabel; Jens Grosche; Andreas Reichenbach; Beat Müller; L. S. Weilemann; Henryk Zulewski

Studies in rodents suggest the presence of a hepatopancreatic stem cell in adult pancreas that may give rise to liver cells in vivo. The aim of the present study was to determine the ability of human islet‐derived cells to adopt a hepatic phenotype in vivo. Cultured human islet‐derived progenitor cells that did not express albumin in vitro were stained with the red fluorescent dye PKH26 and injected into the liver of severe combined immunodeficiency mice. After 3 or 12 weeks, red fluorescent cells were detected in 11 of 15 livers and were mostly single cells that were well integrated into the liver tissue. Human albumin was found in 8 of 11 animals by immunohistochemistry, and human albumin mRNA was detected in 4 of 10 host livers. The mechanism underlying this phenomenon seems to be transdifferentiation, because human and mouse albumin were found to be expressed in distinct cells in the host liver.


Differentiation | 2009

A refined characterisation of the NeoHepatocyte phenotype necessitates a reappraisal of the transdifferentiation hypothesis

Paloma Riquelme; Judith Wundt; James A. Hutchinson; Marc Brulport; Yu Jun; Anna Sotnikova; Ulrich Girreser; Felix Braun; Felix Gövert; Bernat Soria; Andreas K. Nussler; Bernd Clement; Jan G. Hengstler; Fred Fändrich

Under certain culture conditions human peripheral blood monocytes may be induced to express phenotypic markers of non-haematopoietic lineages, including hepatocyte-defining traits. One such example, the NeoHepatocyte, was previously shown to express a broad panel of hepatocyte-like marker antigens and metabolic activities, both in vitro and following engraftment in the liver of immunodeficient mice. In this report, a refined description of NeoHepatocytes, with regard to their expression of xenobiotic-metabolising enzymes, morphology, hepatocyte marker expression and cell surface phenotype, is presented in comparison with human macrophages in defined states of activation. Contrary to prior assertions, it would seem more likely that NeoHepatocytes express particular hepatocyte-defining genes during a normal programme of macrophage differentiation rather than undergoing a process of transdifferentiation to become hepatocyte-like cells.


Gastroenterology | 2005

Differentiation of In Vitro–Modified Human Peripheral Blood Monocytes Into Hepatocyte–like and Pancreatic Islet-like Cells

Maren Ruhnke; Hendrik Ungefroren; Andreas K. Nussler; Franz Martín; Marc Brulport; Wiebke Schormann; Jan G. Hengstler; Wolfram Klapper; Karin Ulrichs; James Hutchinson; Bernat Soria; Reza Parwaresch; P. F. Heeckt; Bernd Kremer; Fred Fändrich


Journal of Hepatology | 2006

Present status and perspectives of cell-based therapies for liver diseases.

Andreas K. Nussler; Sarah König; Michael Ott; Etienne Sokal; B Christ; Wolfgang E. Thasler; Marc Brulport; Geredn Gabelein; Wiebke Schormann; Maren Schulze; Ewa Ellis; Matthias Kraemer; Frank Nocken; Wolfgang E. Fleig; Michael P. Manns; Steven C. Strom; Jan G. Hengstler


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

ErbB-3 Predicts Survival in Ovarian Cancer

Berno Tanner; Dirk Hasenclever; Katja Stern; Wiebke Schormann; Martin Bezler; Matthias Hermes; Marc Brulport; Alexander Bauer; Ilka B. Schiffer; Susanne Gebhard; Markus Schmidt; Eric Steiner; Jalid Sehouli; Jeanett Edelmann; Jürgen Läuter; Rüdiger Lessig; K. Krishnamurthi; Axel Ullrich; Jan G. Hengstler

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Henryk Zulewski

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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