Michael Kullmann
Innsbruck Medical University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michael Kullmann.
The EMBO Journal | 1994
Stefanie Heck; Michael Kullmann; Andreas Gast; Helmut Ponta; Hans J. Rahmsdorf; Peter Herrlich; Andrew C. B. Cato
Steroid receptors activate and repress genes. An important class of genes that they repress is controlled by the transcription factor AP‐1. The activity of AP‐1 is inhibited by the receptor, a mechanism exploited for the therapy of various forms of pathological hyperproliferation in humans. We show here by point mutations in the DNA binding domain and by the choice of steroid ligands that repression of AP‐1 activity and transactivation functions of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) are separable entities. While DNA binding and activation of glucocorticoid‐regulated promoters require GR dimerization, we present data that suggest that repression is a function of GR monomers.
Cell | 2007
Matthias Grimmler; Yuefeng Wang; Thomas Mund; Zoran Cilenšek; Eva-Maria Keidel; M. Brett Waddell; Heidelinde Jäkel; Michael Kullmann; Richard W. Kriwacki; Ludger Hengst
p27Kip1 controls cell proliferation by binding to and regulating the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks). Here we show that Cdk inhibition and p27 stability are regulated through direct phosphorylation by tyrosine kinases. A conserved tyrosine residue (Y88) in the Cdk-binding domain of p27 can be phosphorylated by the Src-family kinase Lyn and the oncogene product BCR-ABL. Y88 phosphorylation does not prevent p27 binding to cyclin A/Cdk2. Instead, it causes phosphorylated Y88 and the entire inhibitory 3(10)-helix of p27 to be ejected from the Cdk2 active site, thus restoring partial Cdk activity. Importantly, this allows Y88-phosphorylated p27 to be efficiently phosphorylated on threonine 187 by Cdk2 which in turn promotes its SCF-Skp2-dependent degradation. This direct link between transforming tyrosine kinases and p27 may provide an explanation for Cdk kinase activities observed in p27 complexes and for premature p27 elimination in cells that have been transformed by activated tyrosine kinases.
The EMBO Journal | 1997
Stefanie Heck; Klaus Bender; Michael Kullmann; Martin Göttlicher; Peter Herrlich; Andrew C. B. Cato
IκBα is an inhibitor protein that prevents nuclear transport and activation of the transcription factor NF‐κB. In acute inflammation, NF‐κB is activated and increases the expression of several pro‐inflammatory cytokine and chemokine genes. Glucocorticoids counteract this process. It has been proposed that the glucocorticoid‐dependent inhibition of NF‐κB activity is mediated by increased synthesis of IκBα which should then sequester NF‐κB in an inactive cytoplasmic form. Here, we show by the use of a mutant glucocorticoid receptor and steroidal ligands that hormone‐induced IκBα synthesis and inhibition of NF‐κB activity are separable biochemical processes. A dimerization‐defective glucocorticoid receptor mutant that does not enhance the IκBα level is still able to repress NF‐κB activity. Conversely, glucocorticoid analogues competent in enhancing IκBα synthesis do not repress NF‐κB activity. These results demonstrate that increased synthesis of IκBα is neither required nor sufficient for the hormone‐mediated downmodulation of NF‐κB activity.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Michael Kullmann; Jean Schneikert; Jurgen Moll; Stefanie Heck; Matthias Zeiner; Ulrich Gehring; Andrew C. B. Cato
RAP46 was first identified by its ability to bind the glucocorticoid receptor. It has since been reported to bind several cellular proteins, including the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2, but the biological significance of these interactions is unknown. Here we show that RAP46 binds the hinge region of the glucocorticoid receptor and inhibits DNA binding and transactivation by the receptor. We further show that overexpression of RAP46 in mouse thymoma S49.1 cells inhibits glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis. Conversely, glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis and transactivation were enhanced after treating S49.1 cells with the immunosuppressant rapamycin, which down-regulates cellular levels of BAG-1, the mouse homolog of RAP46. The effect of rapamycin can, however, be overcome by overexpression of RAP46. These results together identify RAP46 as a protein that controls glucocorticoid-induced apoptosis through its negative regulatory action on the transactivation property of the glucocorticoid receptor.
The EMBO Journal | 1997
Stefanie Heck; Klaus Bender; Michael Kullmann; Martin Göttlicher; Peter Herrlich; Andrew C. B. Cato
IκBα is an inhibitor protein that prevents nuclear transport and activation of the transcription factor NF‐κB. In acute inflammation, NF‐κB is activated and increases the expression of several pro‐inflammatory cytokine and chemokine genes. Glucocorticoids counteract this process. It has been proposed that the glucocorticoid‐dependent inhibition of NF‐κB activity is mediated by increased synthesis of IκBα which should then sequester NF‐κB in an inactive cytoplasmic form. Here, we show by the use of a mutant glucocorticoid receptor and steroidal ligands that hormone‐induced IκBα synthesis and inhibition of NF‐κB activity are separable biochemical processes. A dimerization‐defective glucocorticoid receptor mutant that does not enhance the IκBα level is still able to repress NF‐κB activity. Conversely, glucocorticoid analogues competent in enhancing IκBα synthesis do not repress NF‐κB activity. These results demonstrate that increased synthesis of IκBα is neither required nor sufficient for the hormone‐mediated downmodulation of NF‐κB activity.
Steroids | 1996
Martin Göttlicher; Stefanie Heck; Vassilis Doucas; Erik Wade; Michael Kullmann; Andrew C. B. Cato; Ronald M. Evans; Peter Herrlich
Glucocorticoid hormones convert the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) from an inactive cytosolic complex to a nuclear form that regulates transcription. Binding of GR to palindromic DNA-recognition sites (hormone response elements) leads to activated target gene transcription. GR also exerts negative actions on transcription, e.g., by interfering with the function of several other transcription factors such as AP-1, NK-kappa B, CREB, and Oct-1. Physical interactions of GR with AP-1 subunits are readily detectable but do not seem sufficient since nonrepressing GR mutants still interact in vitro, so that specific conformational changes and/or interactions with additional partner proteins may be required for negative action. In an attempt to find such partner proteins, we defined regions of c-Jun and GR essential for mutual interference and used in those a yeast two-hybrid screen for interacting proteins. Repeatedly we isolated overlapping cDNA sequences of one protein interaction with both c-Jun and GR. This protein does not interact with c-Fos or a non-repressing GR mutant and expressed in mammalian cells does not substantially affect AP-1 or GR activity. Interestingly, however, the protein rescues yeast cells from the toxic effects of the GR fragment used for screening. The protein represents the human homologue of the yeast E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme, Ubc9; its specific interactions with both GR and c-Jun, but not mutant GR, suggest that it may exert physiologic regulatory functions.
The EMBO Journal | 1997
Stefanie Heck; Klaus Bender; Michael Kullmann; Martin Göttlicher; Peter Herrlich; Andrew C. B. Cato
IκBα is an inhibitor protein that prevents nuclear transport and activation of the transcription factor NF‐κB. In acute inflammation, NF‐κB is activated and increases the expression of several pro‐inflammatory cytokine and chemokine genes. Glucocorticoids counteract this process. It has been proposed that the glucocorticoid‐dependent inhibition of NF‐κB activity is mediated by increased synthesis of IκBα which should then sequester NF‐κB in an inactive cytoplasmic form. Here, we show by the use of a mutant glucocorticoid receptor and steroidal ligands that hormone‐induced IκBα synthesis and inhibition of NF‐κB activity are separable biochemical processes. A dimerization‐defective glucocorticoid receptor mutant that does not enhance the IκBα level is still able to repress NF‐κB activity. Conversely, glucocorticoid analogues competent in enhancing IκBα synthesis do not repress NF‐κB activity. These results demonstrate that increased synthesis of IκBα is neither required nor sufficient for the hormone‐mediated downmodulation of NF‐κB activity.
Cell Cycle | 2013
Michael Kullmann; Claudia Grubbauer; Katrin Goetsch; Heidelinde Jäkel; Silvio R. Podmirseg; Alexander Trockenbacher; Christian Ploner; Andrew C. B. Cato; Carsten Weiss; Reinhard Kofler; Ludger Hengst
Glucocorticoid therapy is an important treatment modality of hematological malignancies, especially T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL). Glucocorticoids are known to induce a cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in T-lymphoma cells. We could demonstrate that the cell cycle arrest induced by the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone (Dex) clearly precedes apoptosis in human CEM T-ALL and murine S49.1 T-lymphoma cells. Cyclin D3 is strongly downregulated, whereas the CDK inhibitor p27Kip1 (p27) is strongly upregulated in response to dexamethasone in these cells. RNAi-mediated knockdown of p27 as well as overexpression of its negative regulator Skp2 revealed the critical function of p27 in the Dex-induced G1 arrest of CEM cells. Our studies indicate that several mechanisms contribute to the increase of p27 protein in our T-lymphoma cell lines. We found a significant upregulation of p27 mRNA in S49.1 and CEM cells. In addition, Dex treatment activated the mouse p27 promotor in reporter gene experiments, indicating a transcriptional regulation. However, the relatively moderate induction of p27 mRNA levels by Dex did not explain the strong increase of p27 protein in CEM and S49.1 cells. We found clear evidence for a posttranslational mechanism responsible for the robust increase in p27 protein. Dex treatment of S49.1 and CEM cells increases the half-life of p27 protein, which indicates that decreased protein degradation is the primary mechanism of p27 induction by glucocorticoids. Interestingly, we found that Dex treatment decreased the protein and mRNA levels of the negative regulator of p27 protein and E3 ubiquitin ligase subunit Skp2. We conclude that the cell cycle inhibitor p27 and its negative regulator Skp2 are key players in the glucocorticoid-induced growth suppression of T-lymphoma cells and should be considered as potential drug targets to improve therapies of T-cell malignancies.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2018
Martina Roilo; Michael Kullmann; Ludger Hengst
Abstract The CDK inhibitor p27Kip1 plays a central role in controlling cell proliferation and cell-cycle exit. p27Kip1 protein levels oscillate during cell-cycle progression and are regulated by mitogen or anti-proliferative signaling. The abundance of the protein is frequently determined by post-transcriptional mechanisms including ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis and translational control. Here, we report that the cold-inducible RNA-binding protein (CIRP) selectively binds to the 5′ untranslated region of the p27Kip1 mRNA. CIRP is induced, modified and relocalized in response to various stress stimuli and can regulate cell survival and cell proliferation particularly during stress. Binding of CIRP to the 5′UTR of the p27Kip1 mRNA significantly enhanced reporter translation. In cells exposed to mild hypothermia, the induction of CIRP correlated with increased translation of a p27Kip1 5′UTR reporter and with the accumulation of p27Kip1 protein. shRNA-mediated CIRP knockdown could prevent the induction of translation. We found that p27Kip1 is central for the decreased proliferation at lower temperature, since p27Kip1 KO mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) hardly increased their doubling time in hypothermic conditions, whereas wild-type MEFs significantly delayed proliferation in response to cold stress. This suggests that the CIRP-dependent p27Kip1 upregulation during mild hypothermia contributes to the cold shock-induced inhibition of cell proliferation.
Oncotarget | 2015
Jonathan Vosper; Alessia Masuccio; Michael Kullmann; Christian Ploner; Stephan Geley; Ludger Hengst