Maria Buchberger
Medical University of Vienna
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Featured researches published by Maria Buchberger.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2010
Michael Mildner; Jiang Jin; Leopold Eckhart; Sanja Kezic; Florian Gruber; Caterina Barresi; Caroline Stremnitzer; Maria Buchberger; Veronika Mlitz; Claudia Ballaun; Barbara Sterniczky; Dagmar Födinger; Erwin Tschachler
Loss-of-function mutations in the filaggrin gene are associated with ichthyosis vulgaris and atopic dermatitis. To investigate the impact of filaggrin deficiency on the skin barrier, filaggrin expression was knocked down by small interfering RNA (siRNA) technology in an organotypic skin model in vitro. Three different siRNAs each efficiently suppressed the expression of profilaggrin and the formation of mature filaggrin. Electron microscopy revealed that keratohyalin granules were reduced in number and size and lamellar body formation was disturbed. Expression of keratinocyte differentiation markers and the composition of lipids appeared normal in filaggrin-deficient models. The absence of filaggrin did not render keratins 1, 2, and 10 more susceptible to extraction by urea, arguing against a defect in aggregation. Despite grossly normal stratum corneum morphology, filaggrin-deficient skin models showed a disturbed diffusion barrier function in a dye penetration assay. Moreover, lack of filaggrin led to a reduction in the concentration of urocanic acid, and sensitized the organotypic skin to UVB-induced apoptosis. This study thus demonstrates that knockdown of filaggrin expression in an organotypic skin model reproduces epidermal alterations caused by filaggrin mutations in vivo. In addition, our results challenge the role of filaggrin in intermediate filament aggregation and establish a link between filaggrin and endogenous UVB protection.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Leopold Eckhart; Luisa Dalla Valle; Karin Jaeger; Claudia Ballaun; Sandra Szabo; Alessia Nardi; Maria Buchberger; Marcela Hermann; Lorenzo Alibardi; Erwin Tschachler
The appearance of hair is one of the main evolutionary innovations in the amniote lineage leading to mammals. The main components of mammalian hair are cysteine-rich type I and type II keratins, also known as hard α-keratins or “hair keratins.” To determine the evolutionary history of these important structural proteins, we compared the genomic loci of the human hair keratin genes with the homologous loci of the chicken and of the green anole lizard Anolis carolinenis. The genome of the chicken contained one type II hair keratin-like gene, and the lizard genome contained two type I and four type II hair keratin-like genes. Orthology of the latter genes and mammalian hair keratins was supported by gene locus synteny, conserved exon–intron organization, and amino acid sequence similarity of the encoded proteins. The lizard hair keratin-like genes were expressed most strongly in the digits, indicating a role in claw formation. In addition, we identified a novel group of reptilian cysteine-rich type I keratins that lack homologues in mammals. Our data show that cysteine-rich α-keratins are not restricted to mammals and suggest that the evolution of mammalian hair involved the co-option of pre-existing structural proteins.
FEBS Letters | 2004
Heinz Fischer; Martin Stichenwirth; Michael Dockal; Minoo Ghannadan; Maria Buchberger; Juergen Bach; Andreas Kapetanopoulos; Wim Declercq; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
Caspase‐14, a cysteine protease with restricted tissue distribution, is highly expressed in differentiated epidermal keratinocytes. Here, we extracted soluble proteins from stratum corneum (SC) of human epidermis and demonstrate that the extract cleaves tetrapeptide caspase substrates. The activity decreased to below 10% when caspase‐14 was removed by immunodepletion showing that caspase‐14 is the predominant caspase in SC. In contrast to normal SC, where caspase‐14 was present exclusively in its processed form, incompletely matured SC of parakeratotic skin from psoriasis and seborrheic dermatitis contained both procaspase‐14 and caspase‐14 subunits. Fractionation of extract from parakeratotic SC revealed that the peak caspase activity coeluted with processed caspase‐14 but not with procaspase‐14. Our results suggest that during regular terminal keratinocyte differentiation, endogenous procaspase‐14 is converted to caspase‐14 subunits that are catalytically active in the outermost layers of normal human skin.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2014
Veronika Mlitz; Bettina Strasser; Karin Jaeger; Marcela Hermann; Minoo Ghannadan; Maria Buchberger; Lorenzo Alibardi; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
S100 fused-type proteins (SFTPs) such as filaggrin, trichohyalin, and cornulin are differentially expressed in cornifying keratinocytes of the epidermis and various skin appendages. To determine evolutionarily conserved, and thus presumably important, features of SFTPs, we characterized nonmammalian SFTPs and compared their amino acid sequences and expression patterns with those of mammalian SFTPs. We identified an ortholog of cornulin and a previously unknown SFTP, termed scaffoldin, in reptiles and birds, whereas filaggrin was confined to mammals. In contrast to mammalian SFTPs, both cornulin and scaffoldin of the chicken are expressed in the embryonic periderm. However, scaffoldin resembles mammalian trichohyalin with regard to its expression in the filiform papillae of the tongue and in the epithelium underneath the forming tips of the claws. Furthermore, scaffoldin is expressed in the epithelial sheath around growing feathers, reminiscent of trichohyalin expression in the inner root sheath of hair. The results of this study show that SFTP-positive epithelia function as scaffolds for the growth of diverse skin appendages such as claws, nails, hair, and feathers, indicating a common evolutionary origin.
Journal of Dermatological Science | 2013
Heidemarie Rossiter; Ulrich König; Caterina Barresi; Maria Buchberger; Minoo Ghannadan; Cheng-Feng Zhang; Veronika Mlitz; Ramona Gmeiner; Supawadee Sukseree; Dagmar Födinger; Leopold Eckhart; Erwin Tschachler
BACKGROUND Cornification of keratinocytes involves the degradation of intracellular constituents which has led to the hypothesis that autophagy plays a role in this process. Mice, in which essential autophagy-related genes such as Atg7 are deleted systemically, die after birth and have not been characterized for potential epidermal defects. OBJECTIVE This study tested whether autophagy is essential for epidermal barrier formation and function. METHODS Atg7 was inactivated in epidermal keratinocytes by the Cre-loxP system under the control of the keratin K14 promoter (Atg7Δepi mice). Autophagic activity was detected using the GFP-microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 (GFP-LC3) reporter construct and Western blot analysis of LC3. Epidermal morphology was examined by histological and ultrastructural analyses, and barrier functions were assessed by dye diffusion and water loss assays. RESULTS Suprabasal epidermal cells of normal mice contained GFP-LC3-labeled autophagosomes and epidermal lysates of these mice showed an excess of lipidated over non-lipidated LC3. These features of active autophagy were efficiently suppressed in Atg7Δepi epidermis. Atg7Δepi mice survived the perinatal period and were apparently healthy. Histologically, their epidermis was inconspicuous and ultrastructural analysis revealed no significant defect in cornification. There was however, an increase in the thickness of corneocytes in the back skin of mutant mice. Nevertheless, resistance to dye penetration into the skin and transepidermal water loss were normal in Atg7Δepi mice. CONCLUSION This study demonstrates that autophagy is constitutively active in the epidermis but not essential for the barrier function of the skin.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2011
Heinz Fischer; Sandra Szabo; Jennifer Scherz; Karin Jaeger; Heidemarie Rossiter; Maria Buchberger; Minoo Ghannadan; Marcela Hermann; Hans-Christian Theussl; Desmond J. Tobin; Erwin F. Wagner; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
Degradation of nuclear DNA is a hallmark of programmed cell death. Epidermal keratinocytes die in the course of cornification to function as the dead building blocks of the cornified layer of the epidermis, nails, and hair. Here, we investigated the mechanism and physiological function of DNA degradation during cornification in vivo. Targeted deletion of the keratinocyte-specific endonuclease DNase1-like 2 (DNase1L2) in the mouse resulted in the aberrant retention of DNA in hair and nails, as well as in epithelia of the tongue and the esophagus. In contrast to our previous studies in human keratinocytes, ablation of DNase1L2 did not compromise the cornified layer of the epidermis. Quantitative PCRs showed that the amount of nuclear DNA was dramatically increased in both hair and nails, and that mitochondrial DNA was increased in the nails of DNase1L2-deficient mice. The presence of nuclear DNA disturbed the normal arrangement of structural proteins in hair corneocytes and caused a significant decrease in the resistance of hair to mechanical stress. These data identify DNase1L2 as an essential and specific regulator of programmed cell death in skin appendages, and demonstrate that the breakdown of nuclear DNA is crucial for establishing the full mechanical stability of hair.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2013
Supawadee Sukseree; Heidemarie Rossiter; Michael Mildner; Johannes Pammer; Maria Buchberger; Florian Gruber; Ramida Watanapokasin; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
Autophagy contributes to the homeostasis of many tissues, yet its role in epithelia is incompletely understood. A recent report proposed that Atg5-dependent autophagy in thymic epithelial cells is essential for their function in the negative selection of self-reactive T-cells and, thus, for the suppression of tissue inflammation. Here we crossed mice carrying floxed alleles of the Atg5 gene with mice expressing the Cre recombinase under the control of the keratin K5 promoter to suppress autophagy in all K5-positive epithelia. The efficiency of autophagy abrogation was confirmed by immunoanalyses of LC3, which was converted to the autophagy-associated LC3-II form in normal but not Atg5-deficient cells, and of p62, which accumulated in Atg5-deficient cells. Mice carrying the epithelium-specific deletion of Atg5 showed normal weight gain, absence of tissue inflammation, and a normal morphology of the thymic epithelium. By contrast, autophagy-deficient epithelial cells of the preputial gland showed aberrant eosinophilic staining in histology and premature degradation of nuclear DNA during terminal differentiation. Taken together, the results of this study suggest that autophagy is dispensable for the suppression of autoimmunity by thymic epithelial cells but essential for normal differentiation of the preputial gland in mice.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2017
Heinz Fischer; Judith Fumicz; Heidemarie Rossiter; Markus Napirei; Maria Buchberger; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
Sebaceous glands produce sebum via holocrine secretion, a largely uncharacterized mode of programmed cell death that contributes to the homeostasis and barrier function of the skin. To determine the mechanism of DNA degradation during sebocyte cell death, we have inactivated candidate DNA-degrading enzymes by targeted gene deletions in mice. DNase1 and DNase1-like 2 were dispensable for nuclear DNA degradation in sebocytes. By contrast, epithelial cell-specific deletion of lysosomal DNase2 blocked DNA degradation in these cells. DNA breakdown during sebocyte differentiation coincided with the loss of LAMP1 and was accelerated by the abrogation of autophagy, the central cellular program of lysosome-dependent catabolism. Suppression of DNA degradation by the deletion of DNase2 resulted in aberrantly increased concentrations of residual DNA and decreased amounts of the DNA metabolite uric acid in secreted sebum. These results define holocrine secretion as a DNase2-mediated form of programmed cell death and suggest that autophagy-dependent metabolism, DNA degradation, and the molecular composition of sebum are mechanistically linked.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2014
Heinz Fischer; Lutz Langbein; Julia Reichelt; Silke Praetzel-Wunder; Maria Buchberger; Minoo Ghannadan; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
Keratin K2 is one of the most abundant structural proteins of the epidermis; however, its biological significance has remained elusive. Here we show that suprabasal type II keratins, K1 and K2, are expressed in a mutually exclusive manner at different body sites of the mouse, with K2 being confined to the ear, sole, and tail skin. Deletion of K2 caused acanthosis and hyperkeratosis of the ear and the tail epidermis, corneocyte fragility, increased transepidermal water loss, and local inflammation in the ear skin. The loss of K2 was partially compensated by upregulation of K1 expression. However, a significant portion of K2-deficient suprabasal keratinocytes lacked a regular cytoskeleton and developed massive aggregates of the type I keratin, K10. Aggregate formation, but not hyperkeratosis, was suppressed by the deletion of both K2 and K10, whereas deletion of K10 alone caused clumping of K2 in ear skin. Taken together, this study demonstrates that K2 is a necessary and sufficient binding partner of K10 at distinct body sites of the mouse and that unbalanced expression of these keratins results in aggregate formation.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008
Claudia Ballaun; Susanne Karner; Paul Mrass; Michael Mildner; Maria Buchberger; Jürgen Bach; Jozef Ban; Hanna Harant; Erwin Tschachler; Leopold Eckhart
Caspase-14, a protease involved in skin barrier formation, is specifically expressed in epidermal keratinocytes (KCs). Here, we mapped three start sites of transcription of the human caspase-14 gene and analyzed the upstream chromosomal region for promoter activity. Reporter gene assays identified a core promoter region proximal to the first exon and a distal regulatory region which differentially suppressed promoter activity in KC and other cells. Sequence elements in the proximal promoter were bound by the transcription factors AP-1 (JunB, c-Jun, JunD, Fra-1 and Fra-2) and NFkappaB (p50 and RelB). Our data reveal the basic organization of the human caspase-14 promoter and suggest an important role of AP-1 and NFkappaB in the transcriptional control of caspase-14.