Markus J. Harder
University of Ulm
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Featured researches published by Markus J. Harder.
Blood | 2017
Markus J. Harder; Nadine Kuhn; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Britta Höchsmann; Inge von Zabern; Christof Weinstock; Thomas Simmet; Daniel Ricklin; John D. Lambris; Arne Skerra; Markus Anliker; Christoph Q. Schmidt
Eculizumab inhibits the terminal, lytic pathway of complement by blocking the activation of the complement protein C5 and shows remarkable clinical benefits in certain complement-mediated diseases. However, several reports suggest that activation of C5 is not always completely suppressed in patients even under excess of eculizumab over C5, indicating that residual C5 activity may derogate the drugs therapeutic benefit under certain conditions. By using eculizumab and the tick-derived C5 inhibitor coversin, we determined conditions ex vivo in which C5 inhibition is incomplete. The degree of such residual lytic activity depended on the strength of the complement activator and the resulting surface density of the complement activation product C3b, which autoamplifies via the alternative pathway (AP) amplification loop. We show that at high C3b densities required for binding and activation of C5, both inhibitors reduce but do not abolish this interaction. The decrease of C5 binding to C3b clusters in the presence of C5 inhibitors correlated with the levels of residual hemolysis. However, by employing different C5 inhibitors simultaneously, residual hemolytic activity could be abolished. The importance of AP-produced C3b clusters for C5 activation in the presence of eculizumab was corroborated by the finding that residual hemolysis after forceful activation of the classical pathway could be reduced by blocking the AP. By providing insights into C5 activation and inhibition, our study delivers the rationale for the clinically observed phenomenon of residual terminal pathway activity under eculizumab treatment with important implications for anti-C5 therapy in general.
Journal of Immunology | 2016
Markus J. Harder; Markus Anliker; Britta Höchsmann; Thomas Simmet; Markus Huber-Lang; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Daniel Ricklin; John D. Lambris; Paul N. Barlow; Christoph Q. Schmidt
The serum proteins factor H (FH), consisting of 20 complement control protein modules (CCPs), and its splice product FH-like protein 1 (FHL-1; consisting of CCPs 1–7) are major regulators of the alternative pathway (AP) of complement activation. The engineered version of FH, miniFH, contains only the N- and C-terminal portions of FH linked by an optimized peptide and shows ∼10-fold higher ex vivo potency. We explored the hypothesis that regulatory potency is enhanced by unmasking of a ligand-binding site in the C-terminal CCPs 19–20 that is cryptic in full-length native FH. Therefore, we produced an FH variant lacking the central domains 10–15 (FHΔ10–15). To explore how avidity affects regulatory strength, we generated a duplicated version of miniFH, termed midiFH. We compared activities of FHΔ10–15 and midiFH to miniFH, FH, and FHL-1. Relative to FH, FHΔ10–15 exhibited an altered binding profile toward C3 activation products and a 5-fold-enhanced complement regulation on a paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria patient’s erythrocytes. Contrary to dogma, FHL-1 and FH exhibited equal regulatory activity, suggesting that the role of FHL-1 in AP regulation has been underestimated. Unexpectedly, a substantially increased avidity for complement opsonins, as seen in midiFH, did not potentiate the inhibitory potential on host cells. In conclusion, comparisons of engineered and native FH-based regulators have identified features that determine high AP regulatory activity on host cells. Unrestricted availability of FH CCPs 19–20 and an optimal spatial orientation between the N- and C-terminal FH regions are key.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Nicholas T. Y. Lim; Markus J. Harder; Alexander T. Kennedy; Clara S. Lin; Christopher Weir; Alan F. Cowman; Melissa J. Call; Christoph Q. Schmidt; Wai-Hong Tham
Background: PfRh4 binds complement receptor 1 to mediate malaria parasite entry into red blood cells. Results: Monoclonal antibodies and inhibitors either block or enhance PfRh4 interaction with complement receptor 1. Conclusion: Identification was made of critical regions and residues within PfRh4 and CR1 that mediate successful P. falciparum entry. Significance: Understanding functional regions within PfRh4 will aid in design of vaccine subunits. Plasmodium falciparum parasites must invade red blood cells to survive within humans. Entry into red blood cells is governed by interactions between parasite adhesins and red blood cell receptors. Previously we identified that P. falciparum reticulocyte binding protein-like homologue 4 (PfRh4) binds to complement receptor 1 (CR1) to mediate entry of malaria parasites into human red blood cells. In this report we characterize a collection of anti-PfRh4 monoclonal antibodies and CR1 protein fragments that modulate the interaction between PfRh4 and CR1. We identify an anti-PfRh4 monoclonal that blocks PfRh4-CR1 interaction in vitro, inhibits PfRh4 binding to red blood cells, and as a result abolishes the PfRh4-CR1 invasion pathway in P. falciparum. Epitope mapping of anti-PfRh4 monoclonal antibodies identified distinct functional regions within PfRh4 involved in modulating its interaction with CR1. Furthermore, we designed a set of protein fragments based on extensive mutagenesis analyses of the PfRh4 binding site on CR1 and determined their interaction affinities using surface plasmon resonance. These CR1 protein fragments bind tightly to PfRh4 and also function as soluble inhibitors to block PfRh4 binding to red blood cells and to inhibit the PfRh4-CR1 invasion pathway. Our findings can aid future efforts in designing specific single epitope antibodies to block P. falciparum invasion via complement receptor 1.
Transfusion | 2018
Markus Anliker; Christoph Q. Schmidt; Markus J. Harder; Georgi Ganchev; Inge von Zabern; Britta Höchsmann; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Christof Weinstock
Therapeutic intervention strategies in complement‐mediated hemolytic diseases are still inappropriate, and lethal events cannot be reliably prevented. As an in vitro model of intravascular hemolysis, a sensitive flow cytometric assay was designed using red blood cells (RBCs) of patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) as target cells. Complement activation by human allo‐ and autoantibodies directed against RBC antigens and the effect of different complement inhibitors were studied.
Glycobiology | 2018
Christoph Q. Schmidt; Agnes L. Hipgrave Ederveen; Markus J. Harder; Manfred Wuhrer; Thilo Stehle; Bärbel S. Blaum
Abstract Complement factor H (FH), an elongated and substantially glycosylated 20-domain protein, is a soluble regulator of the complement alternative pathway (AP). It contains several glycan binding sites which mediate recognition of α2-3-linked sialic acid (FH domain 20) and glycosaminoglycans (domains 6–8 and 19–20). FH also binds the complement C3-activation product C3b, a powerful opsonin and focal point for the formation of C3-convertases of the AP feedback loop. In freely circulating FH the C3b binding site in domains 19–20 is occluded, a phenomenon that is not fully understood and could be mediated by an intramolecular interaction between FH’s intrinsic sialylated glycosylation and its own sialic acid binding site. In order to assess this possibility, we characterized FH’s sialylation with respect to glycosidic linkage type and searched for further potential, not yet characterized sialic acid binding sites in FH and its seven-domain spanning splice variant and fellow complement regulator FH like-1 (FHL-1). We also probed FH binding to the sialic acid variant Neu5Gc which is not expressed in humans but on heterologous erythrocytes that restrict the human AP and in FH transgenic mice. We find that FH contains mostly α2-6-linked sialic acid, making an intramolecular interaction with its α2-3-sialic acid specific binding site and an associated self-lock mechanism unlikely, substantiate that there is only a single sialic acid binding site in FH and none in FHL-1, and demonstrate direct binding of FH to the nonhuman sialic acid Neu5Gc, supporting the use of FH transgenic mouse models for studies of complement-related diseases.
Immunobiology | 2016
Christoph Q. Schmidt; Markus J. Harder; Eva-Maria Nichols; Mario Hebecker; Markus Anliker; Britta Höchsmann; Thomas Simmet; Ádám I. Csincsi; Barbara Uzonyi; Isabel Y. Pappworth; Daniel Ricklin; John D. Lambris; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Mihály Józsi; Kevin J. Marchbank
Immunobiology | 2016
Markus J. Harder; Nadine Kuhn; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Britta Höchsmann; Inge von Zabern; Thomas Simmet; Daniel Ricklin; John D. Lambris; Arne Skerra; Markus Anliker; Christoph Q. Schmidt
Molecular Immunology | 2018
Markus J. Harder; Britta Höchsmann; Markus Anliker; Thomas Simmet; Hubert Schrezenmeier; Christoph Q. Schmidt
Molecular Immunology | 2018
Arthur Dopler; Leonie Guntau; Markus J. Harder; Annette Palmer; Thomas Simmet; Markus Huber-Lang; Christoph Q. Schmidt
Molecular Immunology | 2017
Christoph Q. Schmidt; Markus J. Harder; Bärbel S. Blaum; Thomas Simmet; Markus Anliker; Hubert Schrezenmeier