Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nadine Löschmann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nadine Löschmann.


Cell Death and Disease | 2011

Adaptation of cancer cells from different entities to the MDM2 inhibitor nutlin-3 results in the emergence of p53-mutated multi-drug-resistant cancer cells

Martin Michaelis; Florian Rothweiler; Susanne Barth; Jindrich Cinatl; M. van Rikxoort; Nadine Löschmann; Yvonne Voges; Rainer Breitling; A von Deimling; Franz Rödel; K Weber; Boris Fehse; E Mack; Thorsten Stiewe; Hans Wilhelm Doerr; Daniel Speidel

Six p53 wild-type cancer cell lines from infrequently p53-mutated entities (neuroblastoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, and melanoma) were continuously exposed to increasing concentrations of the murine double minute 2 inhibitor nutlin-3, resulting in the emergence of nutlin-3-resistant, p53-mutated sublines displaying a multi-drug resistance phenotype. Only 2 out of 28 sublines adapted to various cytotoxic drugs harboured p53 mutations. Nutlin-3-adapted UKF-NB-3 cells (UKF-NB-3rNutlin10 μM, harbouring a G245C mutation) were also radiation resistant. Analysis of UKF-NB-3 and UKF-NB-3rNutlin10 μM cells by RNA interference experiments and lentiviral transduction of wild-type p53 into p53-mutated UKF-NB-3rNutlin10 μM cells revealed that the loss of p53 function contributes to the multi-drug resistance of UKF-NB-3rNutlin10 μM cells. Bioinformatics PANTHER pathway analysis based on microarray measurements of mRNA abundance indicated a substantial overlap in the signalling pathways differentially regulated between UKF-NB-3rNutlin10 μM and UKF-NB-3 and between UKF-NB-3 and its cisplatin-, doxorubicin-, or vincristine-resistant sublines. Repeated nutlin-3 adaptation of neuroblastoma cells resulted in sublines harbouring various p53 mutations with high frequency. A p53 wild-type single cell-derived UKF-NB-3 clone was adapted to nutlin-3 in independent experiments. Eight out of ten resulting sublines were p53-mutated harbouring six different p53 mutations. This indicates that nutlin-3 induces de novo p53 mutations not initially present in the original cell population. Therefore, nutlin-3-treated cancer patients should be carefully monitored for the emergence of p53-mutated, multi-drug-resistant cells.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Identification of flubendazole as potential anti-neuroblastoma compound in a large cell line screen.

Martin Michaelis; Bishr Agha; Florian Rothweiler; Nadine Löschmann; Yvonne Voges; Michel Mittelbronn; Tatjana Starzetz; Patrick N. Harter; Behnaz Ahangarian Abhari; Simone Fulda; Frank Westermann; Kristoffer Riecken; Silvia Spek; Klaus Langer; Michael Wiese; Wilhelm G. Dirks; Richard Zehner; Jaroslav Cinatl; Mark N. Wass; Jindrich Cinatl

Flubendazole was shown to exert anti-leukaemia and anti-myeloma activity through inhibition of microtubule function. Here, flubendazole was tested for its effects on the viability of in total 461 cancer cell lines. Neuroblastoma was identified as highly flubendazole-sensitive cancer entity in a screen of 321 cell lines from 26 cancer entities. Flubendazole also reduced the viability of five primary neuroblastoma samples in nanomolar concentrations thought to be achievable in humans and inhibited vessel formation and neuroblastoma tumour growth in the chick chorioallantoic membrane assay. Resistance acquisition is a major problem in high-risk neuroblastoma. 119 cell lines from a panel of 140 neuroblastoma cell lines with acquired resistance to various anti-cancer drugs were sensitive to flubendazole in nanomolar concentrations. Tubulin-binding agent-resistant cell lines displayed the highest flubendazole IC50 and IC90 values but differences between drug classes did not reach statistical significance. Flubendazole induced p53-mediated apoptosis. The siRNA-mediated depletion of the p53 targets p21, BAX, or PUMA reduced the neuroblastoma cell sensitivity to flubendazole with PUMA depletion resulting in the most pronounced effects. The MDM2 inhibitor and p53 activator nutlin-3 increased flubendazole efficacy while RNAi-mediated p53-depletion reduced its activity. In conclusion, flubendazole represents a potential treatment option for neuroblastoma including therapy-refractory cells.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2011

The multi-targeted kinase inhibitor sorafenib inhibits human cytomegalovirus replication

Martin Michaelis; Christina Paulus; Nadine Löschmann; Stephanie Dauth; Elisabeth Stange; Hans Wilhelm Doerr; Michael Nevels; Jindrich Cinatl

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is a major pathogen in immunocompromised individuals. Here, non-toxic concentrations of the anti-cancer kinase inhibitor sorafenib were shown to inhibit replication of different HCMV strains (including a ganciclovir-resistant strain) in different cell types. In contrast to established anti-HCMV drugs, sorafenib inhibited HCMV major immediate early promoter activity and HCMV immediate early antigen (IEA) expression. Sorafenib is known to inhibit Raf. Comparison of sorafenib with the MEK inhibitor U0126 suggested that sorafenib inhibits HCMV IEA expression through inhibition of Raf but independently of signaling through the Raf downstream kinase MEK 1/2. In concordance, siRNA-mediated depletion of Raf but not of MEK-reduced IEA expression. In conclusion, sorafenib diminished HCMV replication in clinically relevant concentrations and inhibited HCMV IEA expression, a pathophysiologically relevant event that is not affected by established anti-HCMV drugs. Moreover, we demonstrated for the first time that Raf activation is involved in HCMV IEA expression.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Aurora kinases as targets in drug-resistant neuroblastoma cells

Martin Michaelis; Florian Selt; Florian Rothweiler; Nadine Löschmann; Benedikt Nüsse; Wilhelm G. Dirks; Richard Zehner; Jindrich Cinatl

Aurora kinase inhibitors displayed activity in pre-clinical neuroblastoma models. Here, we studied the effects of the pan-aurora kinase inhibitor tozasertib (VX680, MK-0457) and the aurora kinase inhibitor alisertib (MLN8237) that shows some specificity for aurora kinase A over aurora kinase B in a panel of neuroblastoma cell lines with acquired drug resistance. Both compounds displayed anti-neuroblastoma activity in the nanomolar range. The anti-neuroblastoma mechanism included inhibition of aurora kinase signalling as indicated by decreased phosphorylation of the aurora kinase substrate histone H3, cell cycle inhibition in G2/M phase, and induction of apoptosis. The activity of alisertib but not of tozasertib was affected by ABCB1 expression. Aurora kinase inhibitors induced a p53 response and their activity was enhanced in combination with the MDM2 inhibitor and p53 activator nutlin-3 in p53 wild-type cells. In conclusion, aurora kinases are potential drug targets in therapy-refractory neuroblastoma, in particular for the vast majority of p53 wild-type cases.


Cell Death and Disease | 2012

Human neuroblastoma cells with acquired resistance to the p53 activator RITA retain functional p53 and sensitivity to other p53 activating agents.

Martin Michaelis; Florian Rothweiler; B. Agha; Susanne Barth; Yvonne Voges; Nadine Löschmann; A von Deimling; Rainer Breitling; H. Wilhelm Doerr; Franz Rödel; Daniel Speidel; J. Cinatl

Adaptation of wild-type p53 expressing UKF-NB-3 cancer cells to the murine double minute 2 inhibitor nutlin-3 causes de novo p53 mutations at high frequency (13/20) and multi-drug resistance. Here, we show that the same cells respond very differently when adapted to RITA, a drug that, like nutlin-3, also disrupts the p53/Mdm2 interaction. All of the 11 UKF-NB-3 sub-lines adapted to RITA that we established retained functional wild-type p53 although RITA induced a substantial p53 response. Moreover, all RITA-adapted cell lines remained sensitive to nutlin-3, whereas only five out of 10 nutlin-3-adapted cell lines retained their sensitivity to RITA. In addition, repeated adaptation of the RITA-adapted sub-line UKF-NB-3rRITA10 μM to nutlin-3 resulted in p53 mutations. The RITA-adapted UKF-NB-3 sub-lines displayed no or less pronounced resistance to vincristine, cisplatin, and irradiation than nutlin-3-adapted UKF-NB-3 sub-lines. Furthermore, adaptation to RITA was associated with fewer changes at the expression level of antiapoptotic factors than observed with adaptation to nutlin-3. Transcriptomic analyses indicated the RITA-adapted sub-lines to be more similar at the gene expression level to the parental UKF-NB-3 cells than nutlin-3-adapted UKF-NB-3 sub-lines, which correlates with the observed chemotherapy and irradiation sensitivity phenotypes. In conclusion, RITA-adapted cells retain functional p53, remain sensitive to nutlin-3, and display a less pronounced resistance phenotype than nutlin-3-adapted cells.


Oncotarget | 2016

ABCB1 as predominant resistance mechanism in cells with acquired SNS-032 resistance

Nadine Löschmann; Martin Michaelis; Florian Rothweiler; Yvonne Voges; Barbora Balónová; Barry A. Blight; Jindrich Cinatl

The CDK inhibitor SNS-032 had previously exerted promising anti-neuroblastoma activity via CDK7 and 9 inhibition. ABCB1 expression was identified as major determinant of SNS-032 resistance. Here, we investigated the role of ABCB1 in acquired SNS-032 resistance. In contrast to ABCB1-expressing UKF-NB-3 sub-lines resistant to other ABCB1 substrates, SNS-032-adapted UKF-NB-3 (UKF-NB-3rSNS- 032300nM) cells remained sensitive to the non-ABCB1 substrate cisplatin and were completely re-sensitized to cytotoxic ABCB1 substrates by ABCB1 inhibition. Moreover, UKF-NB-3rSNS-032300nM cells remained similarly sensitive to CDK7 and 9 inhibition as UKF-NB-3 cells. In contrast, SHEPrSNS-0322000nM, the SNS-032-resistant sub-line of the neuroblastoma cell line SHEP, displayed low level SNS-032 resistance also when ABCB1 was inhibited. This discrepancy may be explained by the higher SNS-032 concentrations that were used to establish SHEPrSNS-0322000nM cells, since SHEP cells intrinsically express ABCB1 and are less sensitive to SNS-032 (IC50 912 nM) than UKF-NB-3 cells (IC50 153 nM). In conclusion, we show that ABCB1 expression represents the primary (sometimes exclusive) resistance mechanism in neuroblastoma cells with acquired resistance to SNS-032. Thus, ABCB1 inhibitors may increase the SNS-032 efficacy in ABCB1-expressing cells and prolong or avoid resistance formation.


Translational Oncology | 2013

Testing of SNS-032 in a Panel of Human Neuroblastoma Cell Lines with Acquired Resistance to a Broad Range of Drugs

Nadine Löschmann; Martin Michaelis; Florian Rothweiler; Richard Zehner; Jaroslav Cinatl; Yvonne Voges; Mohsen Sharifi; Kristoffer Riecken; Jochen Meyer; Andreas von Deimling; Iduna Fichtner; Taravat Ghafourian; Frank Westermann; Jindrich Cinatl


Oncotarget | 2015

Enzastaurin inhibits ABCB1-mediated drug efflux independently of effects on protein kinase C signalling and the cellular p53 status

Martin Michaelis; Florian Rothweiler; Nadine Löschmann; Mohsen Sharifi; Taravat Ghafourian; Jindrich Cinatl


European Journal of Cancer | 2016

Flubendazole as potential anti-neuroblastoma therapy option

Martin Michaelis; B. Agha; R. Florian; Nadine Löschmann; Y. Voges; Frank Westermann; Mark N. Wass; J. Cinatl


Archive | 2013

Testing of SNS-032 in a Panel of Human Neuroblastoma Cell Lines with Acquired Resistance

Nadine Löschmann; Martin Michaelis; Florian Rothweiler; Richard Zehner; Jaroslav Cinatl; Yvonne Voges; Mohsen Sharifi; Jochen Meyer; Andreas von Deimling; Iduna Fichtner; Taravat Ghafourian; Frank Westermann; Jindrich Cinatl

Collaboration


Dive into the Nadine Löschmann's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Florian Rothweiler

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jindrich Cinatl

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yvonne Voges

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank Westermann

German Cancer Research Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard Zehner

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jaroslav Cinatl

Goethe University Frankfurt

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mohsen Sharifi

Medway School of Pharmacy

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andreas von Deimling

German Cancer Research Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge