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Dive into the research topics where Mårten C.G. Winge is active.

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Featured researches published by Mårten C.G. Winge.


JCI insight | 2016

Safety and efficacy of the JAK inhibitor tofacitinib citrate in patients with alopecia areata

Milène Kennedy Crispin; Justin M. Ko; Brittany G. Craiglow; Shufeng Li; Gautam Shankar; Jennifer Urban; J.C. Chen; Jane E. Cerise; Ali Jabbari; Mårten C.G. Winge; M. Peter Marinkovich; Angela M. Christiano; Anthony E. Oro; Brett A. King

BACKGROUND Alopecia areata (AA) is an autoimmune disease characterized by hair loss mediated by CD8+ T cells. There are no reliably effective therapies for AA. Based on recent developments in the understanding of the pathomechanism of AA, JAK inhibitors appear to be a therapeutic option; however, their efficacy for the treatment of AA has not been systematically examined. METHODS This was a 2-center, open-label, single-arm trial using the pan-JAK inhibitor, tofacitinib citrate, for AA with >50% scalp hair loss, alopecia totalis (AT), and alopecia universalis (AU). Tofacitinib (5 mg) was given twice daily for 3 months. Endpoints included regrowth of scalp hair, as assessed by the severity of alopecia tool (SALT), duration of hair growth after completion of therapy, and disease transcriptome. RESULTS Of 66 subjects treated, 32% experienced 50% or greater improvement in SALT score. AA and ophiasis subtypes were more responsive than AT and AU subtypes. Shorter duration of disease and histological peribulbar inflammation on pretreatment scalp biopsies were associated with improvement in SALT score. Drug cessation resulted in disease relapse in 8.5 weeks. Adverse events were limited to grade I and II infections. An AA responsiveness to JAK/STAT inhibitors score was developed to segregate responders and nonresponders, and the previously developed AA disease activity index score tracked response to treatment. CONCLUSIONS At the dose and duration studied, tofacitinib is a safe and effective treatment for severe AA, though it does not result in a durable response. Transcriptome changes reveal unexpected molecular complexity within the disease. TRIAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02197455 and NCT02312882. FUNDING This work was supported by the US Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases National Institutes of Health grant R01 AR47223 and U01 AR67173, the National Psoriasis Foundation, the Swedish Society of Medicine, the Fernström Foundation, the Locks of Love Foundation, the National Alopecia Areata Foundation, and the Ranjini and Ajay Poddar Resource Fund for Dermatologic Diseases Research.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

RAC1 activation drives pathologic interactions between the epidermis and immune cells

Mårten C.G. Winge; Bungo Ohyama; Clara N. Dey; Lisa M. Boxer; Wei Li; Nazanin Ehsani-Chimeh; Allison Truong; Diane Wu; April W. Armstrong; Teruhiko Makino; Matthew G. Davidson; Daniela Starcevic; Andreas Kislat; Ngon T. Nguyen; Takashi Hashimoto; Bernard Homey; Paul A. Khavari; Maria Bradley; Elizabeth A. Waterman; M. Peter Marinkovich

Interactions between the epidermis and the immune system govern epidermal tissue homeostasis. These epidermis-immune interactions are altered in the inflammatory disease psoriasis; however, the pathways that underlie this aberrant immune response are not well understood. Here, we determined that Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1 (RAC1) is a key mediator of epidermal dysfunction. RAC1 activation was consistently elevated in psoriatic epidermis and primary psoriatic human keratinocytes (PHKCs) exposed to psoriasis-related stimuli, but not in skin from patients with basal or squamous cell carcinoma. Expression of a constitutively active form of RAC1 (RACV12) in mice resulted in the development of lesions similar to those of human psoriasis that required the presence of an intact immune system. RAC1V12-expressing mice and human psoriatic skin showed similar RAC1-dependent signaling as well as transcriptional overlap of differentially expressed epidermal and immune pathways. Coculture of PHKCs with immunocytes resulted in the upregulation of RAC1-dependent proinflammatory cytokines, an effect that was reproduced by overexpressing RAC1 in normal human keratinocytes. In keratinocytes, modulating RAC1 activity altered differentiation, proliferation, and inflammatory pathways, including STAT3, NFκB, and zinc finger protein 750 (ZNF750). Finally, RAC1 inhibition in xenografts composed of human PHKCs and immunocytes abolished psoriasiform hyperplasia and inflammation in vivo. These studies implicate RAC1 as a potential therapeutic target for psoriasis and as a key orchestrator of pathologic epidermis-immune interactions.


Cell Transplantation | 2016

Optogenetic Stimulation of Neural Grafts Enhances Neurotransmission and Downregulates the Inflammatory Response in Experimental Stroke Model.

Marcel M. Daadi; Jill Q. Klausner; Bryce T. Bajar; Inbal Goshen; Christopher Lee-Messer; Soo Yeun Lee; Mårten C.G. Winge; Charu Ramakrishnan; Maisie Lo; Guohua Sun; Karl Deisseroth; Gary K. Steinberg

Compelling evidence suggests that transplantation of neural stem cells (NSCs) from multiple sources ameliorates motor deficits after stroke. However, it is currently unknown to what extent the electrophysiological activity of grafted NSC progeny participates in the improvement of motor deficits and whether excitatory phenotypes of the grafted cells are beneficial or deleterious to sensorimotor performances. To address this question, we used optogenetic tools to drive the excitatory outputs of the grafted NSCs and assess the impact on local circuitry and sensorimotor performance. We genetically engineered NSCs to express the Channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2), a light-gated cation channel that evokes neuronal depolarization and initiation of action potentials with precise temporal control to light stimulation. To test the function of these cells in a stroke model, rats were subjected to an ischemic stroke and grafted with ChR2-NSCs. The grafted NSCs identified with a human-specific nuclear marker survived in the peri-infarct tissue and coexpressed the ChR2 transgene with the neuronal markers TuJ1 and NeuN. Gene expression analysis in stimulated versus vehicle-treated animals showed a differential upregulation of transcripts involved in neurotransmission, neuronal differentiation, regeneration, axonal guidance, and synaptic plasticity. Interestingly, genes involved in the inflammatory response were significantly downregulated. Behavioral analysis demonstrated that chronic optogenetic stimulation of the ChR2-NSCs enhanced forelimb use on the stroke-affected side and motor activity in an open field test. Together these data suggest that excitatory stimulation of grafted NSCs elicits beneficial effects in experimental stroke model through cell replacement and non-cell replacement, anti-inflammatory/neurotrophic effects.


JCI insight | 2018

Chronic skin inflammation accelerates macrophage cholesterol crystal formation and atherosclerosis

Yvonne Baumer; Qimin Ng; Gregory E. Sanda; Amit K. Dey; Heather L. Teague; Alexander V. Sorokin; Pradeep K. Dagur; Joanna Silverman; Charlotte L. Harrington; Justin Rodante; Shawn Rose; Nevin J. Varghese; Agastya Belur; Aditya Goyal; Joel M. Gelfand; Danielle A. Springer; Christopher K.E. Bleck; Crystal L. Thomas; Zu-Xi Yu; Mårten C.G. Winge; Howard S. Kruth; M. Peter Marinkovich; Aditya A. Joshi; Martin P. Playford; Nehal N. Mehta

Inflammation is critical to atherogenesis. Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease that accelerates atherosclerosis in humans and provides a compelling model to understand potential pathways linking these diseases. A murine model capturing the vascular and metabolic diseases in psoriasis would accelerate our understanding and provide a platform to test emerging therapies. We aimed to characterize a new murine model of skin inflammation (Rac1V12) from a cardiovascular standpoint to identify novel atherosclerotic signaling pathways modulated in chronic skin inflammation. The RacV12 psoriasis mouse resembled the human disease state, including presence of systemic inflammation, dyslipidemia, and cardiometabolic dysfunction. Psoriasis macrophages had a proatherosclerotic phenotype with increased lipid uptake and foam cell formation, and also showed a 6-fold increase in cholesterol crystal formation. We generated a triple-genetic K14-RacV12-/+/Srb1-/-/ApoER61H/H mouse and confirmed psoriasis accelerates atherogenesis (~7-fold increase). Finally, we noted a 60% reduction in superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) expression in human psoriasis macrophages. When SOD2 activity was restored in macrophages, their proatherogenic phenotype reversed. We demonstrate that the K14-RacV12 murine model captures the cardiometabolic dysfunction and accelerates vascular disease observed in chronic inflammation and that skin inflammation induces a proatherosclerotic macrophage phenotype with impaired SOD2 function, which associated with accelerated atherogenesis.


Archive | 2014

Prevalence of Filaggrin Gene Mutations: An Evolutionary Perspective

Mårten C.G. Winge; Maria Bradley

The prevalence of filaggrin gene (FLG) mutations varies between different populations. The initial association studies revealed that FLG mutations were causative of ichthyosis vulgaris and strongly associated with atopic dermatitis (AD) in patients of Irish, Scottish, and Danish descent. However, early prevalence data from additional populations indicated that subjects from a North African population lacked the most common FLG mutations (R501X, 2282del4) found in the European populations and were rare or absent in Asian populations. Since then, a high prevalence of FLG loss-of-function variants in the general population and a strong association to disease have been detected. All associated variants have in common that they are either nonsense or frameshift in a coding exon, leading to a loss of filaggrin expression. A high prevalence of FLG mutations is evident in Northern Europe, North America, and parts of Asia. However, the prevalence and association to AD and IV seem low in populations studied from Mediterranean or African countries; also, the prevalence of FLG mutations seems to be lower in Americans of African compared to people of European descent. The prevalence in many other populations, such as those in South America or Oceania, remains to be elucidated. Interestingly, although FLG mutations are prevalent and associated with disease in several Asian populations, the specific loss-of-function variants within the FLG gene vary from those prevalent in Europe and North America. Altogether, FLG displays a remarkable variation in both the type of loss-of-function variants and mutation prevalence between different global populations. Seemingly, there is a north-south gradient of association of those studied to date. The explanation for and significance of these variations may involve an evolutionary role of carrying FLG mutations and will be further discussed.


Small GTPases | 2017

Epidermal activation of the small GTPase Rac1 in psoriasis pathogenesis

Mårten C.G. Winge; M. Peter Marinkovich

ABSTRACT The small GTPase Ras-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1 (RAC1) plays a central role in skin homeostasis, including barrier function, wound healing and inflammatory responses. Psoriasis is a common skin disease characterized by deregulation of these functions, and affected skin exhibit keratinocyte hyperproliferation, inflammation and immune cell infiltration. Although psoriasis is often triggered by environmental stimulus, there is a strong genetic association with genes expressed in both immune cells and keratinocytes, of which several are linked to Rac1 signaling. Rac1 is highly active in human psoriatic lesional skin and keratinocytes, and keratinocyte-specific overexpression of an activated mutant of Rac1, Rac1V12, in a transgenic mouse model closely mimics the presentation of human psoriasis. Both Rac1 activation in keratinocytes and immune derived stimulus are required to drive psoriasiform signaling in transgenic mouse and human xenograft models of psoriasis. Therefore, understanding how increased Rac1 activation in psoriatic epidermis is regulated is central to understanding how the abnormal crosstalk between keratinocytes and immune cells is maintained.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2017

ITK and RLK Inhibitor PRN694 Improves Skin Disease in Two Mouse Models of Psoriasis

Jessica M. Fuhriman; Mårten C.G. Winge; Helena Haberstock-Debic; Jens Oliver Funk; J. Michael Bradshaw; M. Peter Marinkovich


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2018

947 Targeting pathogenic interactions between Rac1 and NCK1 in psoriasis

Mårten C.G. Winge; M. Nasrallah; J.M. Fuhriman; M. Ramanathan; A. Azameera; Ngon T. Nguyen; Mohammed Inayathullah; Jayakumar Rajadas; P. Khavari; A.J. Butte; M. Marinkovich


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2017

700 ITK and RLK inhibitor improves skin disease in a psoriatic mouse model

J.M. Fuhriman; Mårten C.G. Winge; Helena Haberstock-Debic; J. Oliver Funk; Michael Bradshaw; M. Marinkovich


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2017

811 Attenuated netrin-1 receptor mediated regulation of tiam1 is required for rac1 mutant melanoma progression

Mårten C.G. Winge; Joanna Kovalski; Ngon T. Nguyen; D. Wu; A. Zehnder; Paul A. Khavari; M. Marinkovich

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A.J. Butte

University of California

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