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Dive into the research topics where Melanie Börries is active.

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Featured researches published by Melanie Börries.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

S100A1: a regulator of myocardial contractility.

Patrick Most; Philipp Ehlermann; Sven T. Pleger; Michael Reppel; Melanie Börries; Ferraydoon Niroomand; Burkert Pieske; Paul M. L. Janssen; Thomas Eschenhagen; Peter Karczewski; Godfrey L. Smith; Walter J. Koch; Hugo A. Katus; Andrew Remppis

S100A1, a Ca2+ binding protein of the EF-hand type, is preferentially expressed in myocardial tissue and has been found to colocalize with the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) and the contractile filaments in cardiac tissue. Because S100A1 is known to modulate SR Ca2+ handling in skeletal muscle, we sought to investigate the specific role of S100A1 in the regulation of myocardial contractility. To address this issue, we investigated contractile properties of adult cardiomyocytes as well as of engineered heart tissue after S100A1 adenoviral gene transfer. S100A1 gene transfer resulted in a significant increase of unloaded shortening and isometric contraction in isolated cardiomyocytes and engineered heart tissues, respectively. Analysis of intracellular Ca2+ cycling in S100A1-overexpressing cardiomyocytes revealed a significant increase in cytosolic Ca2+ transients, whereas in functional studies on saponin-permeabilized adult cardiomyocytes, the addition of S100A1 protein significantly enhanced SR Ca2+ uptake. Moreover, in Triton-skinned ventricular trabeculae, S100A1 protein significantly decreased myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity ([EC50%]) and Ca2+ cooperativity, whereas maximal isometric force remained unchanged. Our data suggest that S100A1 effects are cAMP independent because cellular cAMP levels and protein kinase A-dependent phosphorylation of phospholamban were not altered, and carbachol failed to suppress S100A1 actions. These results show that S100A1 overexpression enhances cardiac contractile performance and establish the concept of S100A1 as a regulator of myocardial contractility. S100A1 thus improves cardiac contractile performance both by regulating SR Ca2+ handling and myofibrillar Ca2+ responsiveness.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2002

The small EF-hand Ca2+ binding protein S100A1 increases contractility and Ca2+ cycling in rat cardiac myocytes.

Andrew Remppis; Patrick Most; Eva Löffler; Philipp Ehlermann; Sven T. Pleger; Melanie Börries; Michael Reppel; Joachim Fischer; Walter J. Koch; Godfrey L. Smith; Hugo A. Katus

Abstract S100A1 is an interesting Ca2+ binding protein with respect to muscle physiology as it is preferentially expressed in cardiac muscle and colocalizes with the sarcolemmal and the sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes as well as with the sarcomere. It is therefore conceivable that S100A1 may play a specific role in the regulation of cardiac Ca2+ homeostasis and contractility. We therefore investigated the impact of adenoviral S100A1 overexpression on fractional shortening (FS%) and systolic Ca2+ transients in adult rat cardiomyocytes as well as of S100A1 protein on SERCA activity in skinned cell preparation. In our setting S100A1 gene transfer increased FS% by 55 %, systolic Ca2+ amplitudes by 62 %, while S100A1 protein increased SERCA activity by 28 %. Importantly, the gain in systolic Ca2+ supply was not only seen on basal conditions but also with isoproterenol-stimulated Ca2+ cycling. Thus, S100A1 enhances cardiac contractility by increasing intracellular Ca2+ fluxes at least in part due to a modulation of SERCA. Since earlier observations demonstrated S100A1 protein levels to be increased in compensatory hypertrophy and significantly downregulated in end stage heart failure, these functional data suggest that S100A1 is a novel determinant of cardiac function whose expression levels are causally related to the prevailing contractile state of the heart.


PLOS ONE | 2017

The use of urinary proteomics in the assessment of suitability of mouse models for ageing

Esther Nkuipou-Kenfack; Joost P. Schanstra; Seerat Bajwa; Martin Pejchinovski; Claire Vinel; Cédric Dray; Philippe Valet; Jean-Loup Bascands; Antonia Vlahou; Thomas Koeck; Melanie Börries; Hauke Busch; Wibke Bechtel-Walz; Tobias B. Huber; Karl Lenhard Rudolph; Andreas Pich; Harald Mischak; Petra Zürbig

Ageing is a complex process characterised by a systemic and progressive deterioration of biological functions. As ageing is associated with an increased prevalence of age-related chronic disorders, understanding its underlying molecular mechanisms can pave the way for therapeutic interventions and managing complications. Animal models such as mice are commonly used in ageing research as they have a shorter lifespan in comparison to humans and are also genetically close to humans. To assess the translatability of mouse ageing to human ageing, the urinary proteome in 89 wild-type (C57BL/6) mice aged between 8–96 weeks was investigated using capillary electrophoresis coupled to mass spectrometry (CE-MS). Using age as a continuous variable, 295 peptides significantly correlated with age in mice were identified. To investigate the relevance of using mouse models in human ageing studies, a comparison was performed with a previous correlation analysis using 1227 healthy subjects. In mice and humans, a decrease in urinary excretion of fibrillar collagens and an increase of uromodulin fragments was observed with advanced age. Of the 295 peptides correlating with age, 49 had a strong homology to the respective human age-related peptides. These ortholog peptides including several collagen (N = 44) and uromodulin (N = 5) fragments were used to generate an ageing classifier that was able to discriminate the age among both wild-type mice and healthy subjects. Additionally, the ageing classifier depicted that telomerase knock-out mice were older than their chronological age. Hence, with a focus on ortholog urinary peptides mouse ageing can be translated to human ageing.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2018

Microenvironment-Derived Regulation of HIF Signaling Drives Transcriptional Heterogeneity in Glioblastoma Multiforme

Dieter Henrik Heiland; Annette Gaebelein; Melanie Börries; Jakob Wörner; Nils Pompe; Pamela Franco; Sabrina Heynckes; Mark Bartholomae; Darren Ó. hAilín; Maria Stella Carro; Marco Prinz; Stefan Weber; Irina Mader; Daniel Delev; Oliver Schnell

The evolving and highly heterogeneous nature of malignant brain tumors underlies their limited response to therapy and poor prognosis. In addition to genetic alterations, highly dynamic processes, such as transcriptional and metabolic reprogramming, play an important role in the development of tumor heterogeneity. The current study reports an adaptive mechanism in which the metabolic environment of malignant glioma drives transcriptional reprogramming. Multiregional analysis of a glioblastoma patient biopsy revealed a metabolic landscape marked by varying stages of hypoxia and creatine enrichment. Creatine treatment and metabolism was further shown to promote a synergistic effect through upregulation of the glycine cleavage system and chemical regulation of prolyl-hydroxylase domain. Consequently, creatine maintained a reduction of reactive oxygen species and change of the α-ketoglutarate/succinate ratio, leading to an inhibition of HIF signaling in primary tumor cell lines. These effects shifted the transcriptional pattern toward a proneural subtype and reduced the rate of cell migration and invasion in vitro. Implications: Transcriptional subclasses of glioblastoma multiforme are heterogeneously distributed within the same tumor. This study uncovered a regulatory function of the tumor microenvironment by metabolism-driven transcriptional reprogramming in infiltrating glioma cells. Mol Cancer Res; 16(4); 655–68. ©2018 AACR.


Oncotarget | 2017

Targeting of apoptotic pathways by SMAC or BH3 mimetics distinctly sensitizes paclitaxel-resistant triple negative breast cancer cells

Effrosini Panayotopoulou; Anna-Katharina Müller; Melanie Börries; Hauke Busch; Guohong Hu; Sima Lev

Standard chemotherapy is the only systemic treatment for triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), and despite the good initial response, resistance remains a major therapeutic obstacle. Here, we employed a High-Throughput Screen to identify targeted therapies that overcome chemoresistance in TNBC. We applied short-term paclitaxel treatment and screened 320 small-molecule inhibitors of known targets to identify drugs that preferentially and efficiently target paclitaxel-treated TNBC cells. Among these compounds the SMAC mimetics (BV6, Birinapant) and BH3-mimetics (ABT-737/263) were recognized as potent targeted therapy for multiple paclitaxel-residual TNBC cell lines. However, acquired paclitaxel resistance through repeated paclitaxel pulses result in desensitization to BV6, but not to ABT-263, suggesting that short- and long-term paclitaxel resistance are mediated by distinct mechanisms. Gene expression profiling of paclitaxel-residual, -resistant and naïve MDA-MB-231 cells demonstrated that paclitaxel-residual, as opposed to -resistant cells, were characterized by an apoptotic signature, with downregulation of anti-apoptotic genes (BCL2, BIRC5), induction of apoptosis inducers (IL24, PDCD4), and enrichment of TNFα/NF-κB pathway, including upregulation of TNFSF15, coupled with cell-cycle arrest. BIRC5 and FOXM1 downregulation and IL24 induction was also evident in breast cancer patient datasets following taxane treatment. Exposure of naïve or paclitaxel-resistant cells to supernatants of paclitaxel-residual cells sensitized them to BV6, and treatment with TNFα enhanced BV6 potency, suggesting that sensitization to BV6 is mediated, at least partially, by secreted factor(s). Our results suggest that administration of SMAC or BH3 mimetics following short-term paclitaxel treatment could be an effective therapeutic strategy for TNBC, while only BH3-mimetics could effectively overcome long-term paclitaxel resistance.


Archive | 2017

Analysis of dynamic gene expression responses to altered gravity in the wildtype and auxin efflux carrier mutants of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana

Klaus Palme; Franck Anicet Ditengou; Patrick Metzger; Hania Lasok; Dorothee Aubry; Xugang Li; Thomas Haser; Hui Wang; Oliver Schüler; Lars Krause; Mark Görög; Sonja Brungs; Ruth Hemmersbach; Melanie Börries; Hauke Busch


Neuro-oncology | 2017

METB-12. METABOLIC RE-PROGRAMING MEDIATES BIDIRECTIONAL SHIFT BETWEEN TRANSCRIPTIONAL SUBCLASSES AND DRIVES TUMOR HETEROGENEITY

Dieter Henrik Heiland; Annette Gaebelein; Melanie Börries; Jakob Wörner; Maria Stella Carro; Stefan Weber; Irina Mader; Oliver Schnell


Experimental Hematology | 2017

Ras-pathway mutation patterns define epigenetic subclasses in juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia

Daniel B. Lipka; Tania Witte; Reka Toth; Jing Yang; Manuel Wiesenfarth; Peter Nöllke; Alexandra Fischer; David Brocks; Zuguang Gu; Jeongbin Park; Brigitte Strahm; Marcin W. Wlodarski; Ayami Yoshimi; Rainer Claus; Michael Lübbert; Hauke Busch; Melanie Börries; Albert Catala; Christoph Plass


Circulation Research | 2014

Abstract 115: S100A6 Regulates Endothelial Cell Cycle Progression via Modulation of the STAT1 Signaling Pathway

Carolin Lerchenmüller; Julian Heissenberg; Karsten Peppel; Hugo A. Katus; Hauke Busch; Melanie Börries; Patrick Most

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Irina Mader

University of Freiburg

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