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Dive into the research topics where Oliver Speer is active.

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Featured researches published by Oliver Speer.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Inhibition of the Mitochondrial Permeability Transition by Creatine Kinase Substrates REQUIREMENT FOR MICROCOMPARTMENTATION

Max Dolder; Bernd Walzel; Oliver Speer; Uwe Schlattner; Theo Wallimann

Mitochondria from transgenic mice, expressing enzymatically active mitochondrial creatine kinase in liver, were analyzed for opening of the permeability transition pore in the absence and presence of creatine kinase substrates but with no external adenine nucleotides added. In mitochondria from these transgenic mice, cyclosporin A-inhibited pore opening was delayed by creatine or cyclocreatine but not by β-guanidinopropionic acid. This observation correlated with the ability of these substrates to stimulate state 3 respiration in the presence of extramitochondrial ATP. The dependence of transition pore opening on calcium and magnesium concentration was studied in the presence and absence of creatine. If mitochondrial creatine kinase activity decreased (i.e. by omitting magnesium from the medium), protection of permeability transition pore opening by creatine or cyclocreatine was no longer seen. Likewise, when creatine kinase was added externally to liver mitochondria from wild-type mice that do not express mitochondrial creatine kinase in liver, no protective effect on pore opening by creatine and its analog was observed. All these findings indicate that mitochondrial creatine kinase activity located within the intermembrane and intercristae space, in conjunction with its tight functional coupling to oxidative phosphorylation, via the adenine nucleotide translocase, can modulate mitochondrial permeability transition in the presence of creatine. These results are of relevance for the design of creatine analogs for cell protection as potential adjuvant therapeutic tools against neurodegenerative diseases.


BJA: British Journal of Anaesthesia | 2012

Comparison of thromboelastometry (ROTEM®) with standard plasmatic coagulation testing in paediatric surgery

Thorsten Haas; Nelly Spielmann; Jacqueline Mauch; Caveh Madjdpour; Oliver Speer; Markus Schmugge; Markus Weiss

BACKGROUND Thromboelastometry (ROTEM(®)) might be useful to detect intraoperative coagulation disorders early in major paediatric surgery. This observational trial compares this technique to standard coagulation tests. METHODS Intraoperative blood sampling was obtained in children undergoing elective major surgery. At each time point, standard coagulation tests [activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT), prothrombin time (PT), and fibrinogen level] and ROTEM(®) analyses (InTEM, ExTEM, and FibTEM) were performed simultaneously by trained hospital laboratory staff. RESULTS A total of 288 blood samples from 50 subjects were analysed. While there was a poor correlation between PT and aPTT to ExTEM clotting time (CT) and InTEM CT, respectively, a good correlation was detected between PT and aPTT to clot formation time, and a very good correlation between fibrinogen level and FibTEM assay (r=0.882, P<0.001). Notably, 64% of PT and 94% of aPTT measurements were outside the reference range, while impaired CT was observed in 13% and 6.3%, respectively. Standard coagulation test results were available after a median of 53 min [inter-quartile range (IQR): 45-63 min], whereas 10 min values of ROTEM(®) results were available online after 23 min (IQR: 21-24 min). CONCLUSIONS PT and aPTT cannot be interchangeably used with ROTEM(®) CT. Based on the results of ROTEM(®), recommended thresholds for PT and aPTT might overestimate the need for coagulation therapy. A good correlation was found between the fibrinogen level and the FibTEM assay. In addition, ROTEM(®) offered faster turnaround times.


Biochemical Journal | 2005

Octameric mitochondrial creatine kinase induces and stabilizes contact sites between the inner and outer membrane

Oliver Speer; Nils Bäck; Tanja Buerklen; Dieter Brdiczka; Alan P. Koretsky; Theo Wallimann; Ove Eriksson

We have investigated the role of the protein ubiquitous mitochondrial creatine kinase (uMtCK) in the formation and stabilization of inner and outer membrane contact sites. Using liver mitochondria isolated from transgenic mice, which, unlike control animals, express uMtCK in the liver, we found that the enzyme was associated with the mitochondrial membranes and, in addition, was located in membrane-coated matrix inclusions. In mitochondria isolated from uMtCK transgenic mice, the number of contact sites increased 3-fold compared with that observed in control mitochondria. Furthermore, uMtCK-containing mitochondria were more resistant to detergent-induced lysis than wild-type mitochondria. We conclude that octameric uMtCK induces the formation of mitochondrial contact sites, leading to membrane cross-linking and to an increased stability of the mitochondrial membrane architecture.


The Journal of Physiology | 2002

Human, rat and chicken small intestinal Na+‐Cl−‐creatine transporter: functional, molecular characterization and localization

María J. Peral; M. García-Delgado; M.L. Calonge; J.M. Durán; M.C de la Horra; Theo Wallimann; Oliver Speer; Ilundain A

In spite of all the fascinating properties of oral creatine supplementation, the mechanism(s) mediating its intestinal absorption has(have) not been investigated. The purpose of this study was to characterize intestinal creatine transport. [14C]Creatine uptake was measured in chicken enterocytes and rat ileum, and expression of the creatine transporter CRT was examined in human, rat and chicken small intestine by reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction, Northern blot, in situ hybridization, immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Results show that enterocytes accumulate creatine against its concentration gradient. This accumulation was electrogenic, Na+‐ and Cl−‐dependent, with a probable stoichiometry of 2 Na+: 1 Cl−: 1 creatine, and inhibited by ouabain and iodoacetic acid. The kinetic study revealed a Km for creatine of 29 μm. [14C]Creatine uptake was efficiently antagonized by non‐labelled creatine, guanidinopropionic acid and cyclocreatine. More distant structural analogues of creatine, such as GABA, choline, glycine, β‐alanine, taurine and betaine, had no effect on intestinal creatine uptake, indicating a high substrate specificity of the creatine transporter. Consistent with these functional data, messenger RNA for CRT was detected only in the cells lining the intestinal villus. The sequences of partial clones, and of the full‐length cDNA clone, isolated from human and rat small intestine were identical to previously cloned CRT cDNAs. Immunological analysis revealed that CRT protein was mainly associated with the apical membrane of the enterocytes. This study reports for the first time that mammalian and avian enterocytes express CRT along the villus, where it mediates high‐affinity, Na+‐ and Cl−‐dependent, apical creatine uptake.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

The Nucleoside Diphosphate Kinase D (NM23-H4) Binds the Inner Mitochondrial Membrane with High Affinity to Cardiolipin and Couples Nucleotide Transfer with Respiration

Malgorzata Tokarska-Schlattner; Mathieu Boissan; Annie Munier; Caroline Borot; Christiane Mailleau; Oliver Speer; Uwe Schlattner; Marie-Lise Lacombe

Nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK/Nm23), responsible for intracellular di- and triphosphonucleoside homeostasis, plays multiple roles in cellular energetics, signaling, proliferation, differentiation and tumor invasion. The only human NDPK with a mitochondrial targeting sequence is NDPK-D, the NME4 gene product, which is a peripheral protein of mitochondrial membranes. Subfractionation of rat liver and HEK 293 cell mitochondria revealed that NDPK-D is essentially bound to the inner membrane. Surface plasmon resonance analysis of the interaction using recombinant NDPK-D and model liposomes showed that NDPK-D interacts electrostatically with anionic phospholipids, with highest affinity observed for cardiolipin. Mutation of the central arginine (Arg-90) in a surface-exposed basic RRK motif unique to NDPK-D strongly reduced interaction with anionic phospholipids. Due to its symmetrical hexameric structure, NDPK-D was able to cross-link anionic phospholipid-containing liposomes, suggesting that NDPK-D could promote intermembrane contacts. Latency assays with isolated mitochondria and antibody binding to mitoplasts indicated a dual orientation for NDPK-D. In HeLa cells, stable expression of wild type but not of the R90D mutant led to membrane-bound enzyme in vivo. Respiration was significantly stimulated by the NDPK substrate TDP in mitochondria containing wild-type NDPK-D, but not in those expressing the R90D mutant, which is catalytically equally active. This indicates local ADP regeneration in the mitochondrial intermembrane space and a tight functional coupling of NDPK-D with oxidative phosphorylation that depends on its membrane-bound state.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2002

REDUCED CREATINE KINASE ACTIVITY IN TRANSGENIC AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS MICE

Silke Wendt; Alpaslan Dedeoglu; Oliver Speer; Theo Wallimann; M. Flint Beal; Ole A. Andreassen

Creatine (Cr), the substrate of the creatine kinase (CK) isoenzymes, was shown to be neuroprotective in several models of neurodegeneration, including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). In order to investigate the mechanism of this beneficial effect, we determined CK activities and mitochondrial respiration rates in tissues from G93A transgenic mice, which overexpress a mutant form of human superoxide dismutase associated with familial ALS (FALS). While respiration rates of mitochondria from G93A transgenic or wild-type control mice isolated from spinal cord showed no difference, a significant and dramatic loss of CK activity could be detected in these tissues. In homogenates from spinal cord of G93A transgenic mice, CK activity decreased to 49% and in mitochondrial fractions to 67% compared to CK activities in wild-type control mice. Feeding the G93A transgenic mice with 2% Cr, the same tissues showed no statistically significant increase of CK activity compared to regular fed G93A transgenic mice. Experiments with isolated mitochondria, however, showed that Cr and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) protected mitochondrial CK activity against peroxynitrite-induced inactivation, which may play a role in tissue damage in neurodegeneration. Our data provide evidence for oxidative damage to the CK system in ALS, which may contribute to impaired energy metabolism and neurodegeneration.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

Ammonium alters creatine transport and synthesis in a 3D culture of developing brain cells, resulting in secondary cerebral creatine deficiency.

Olivier Braissant; Laurène Cagnon; Florianne Monnet-Tschudi; Oliver Speer; Theo Wallimann; Paul Honegger; Hugues Henry

Hyperammonemic disorders in pediatric patients lead to poorly understood irreversible effects on the developing brain that may be life‐threatening. We showed previously that some of these NH4+‐induced irreversible effects might be due to impairment of axonal growth that can be protected under ammonium exposure by creatine co‐treatment. The aim of the present work was thus to analyse how the genes of arginine:glycine amidinotransferase (AGAT) and guanidinoacetate methyltransferase (GAMT), allowing creatine synthesis, as well as of the creatine transporter SLC6A8, allowing creatine uptake into cells, are regulated in rat brain cells under NH4+ exposure. Reaggregated brain cell three‐dimensional cultures exposed to NH4Cl were used as an experimental model of hyperammonemia in the developing central nervous system (CNS). We show here that NH4+ exposure differentially alters AGAT, GAMT and SLC6A8 regulation, in terms of both gene expression and protein activity, in a cell type‐specific manner. In particular, we demonstrate that NH4+ exposure decreases both creatine and its synthesis intermediate, guanidinoacetate, in brain cells, probably through the inhibition of AGAT enzymatic activity. Our work also suggests that oligodendrocytes are major actors in the brain in terms of creatine synthesis, trafficking and uptake, which might be affected by hyperammonemia. Finally, we show that NH4+ exposure induces SLC6A8 in astrocytes. This suggests that hyperammonemia increases blood–brain barrier permeability for creatine. This is normally limited due to the absence of SLC6A8 from the astrocyte feet lining microcapillary endothelial cells, and thus creatine supplementation may protect the developing CNS of hyperammonemic patients.


PLOS ONE | 2011

MicroRNA-96 Directly Inhibits γ-Globin Expression in Human Erythropoiesis

Imane Azzouzi; Hansjoerg Moest; Jeannine Winkler; Jean-Claude Fauchère; André P. Gerber; Bernd Wollscheid; Markus Stoffel; Markus Schmugge; Oliver Speer

Fetal hemoglobin, HbF (α2γ2), is the main hemoglobin synthesized up to birth, but it subsequently declines and adult hemoglobin, HbA (α2β2), becomes predominant. Several studies have indicated that expression of the HbF subunit γ-globin might be regulated post-transcriptionally. This could be confered by ∼22-nucleotide long microRNAs that associate with argonaute proteins to specifically target γ-globin mRNAs and inhibit protein expression. Indeed, applying immunopurifications, we found that γ-globin mRNA was associated with argonaute 2 isolated from reticulocytes that contain low levels of HbF (<1%), whereas association was significantly lower in reticulocytes with high levels of HbF (90%). Comparing microRNA expression in reticulocytes from cord blood and adult blood, we identified several miRNAs that were preferentially expressed in adults, among them miRNA-96. The overexpression of microRNA-96 in human ex vivo erythropoiesis decreased γ-globin expression by 50%, whereas the knock-down of endogenous microRNA-96 increased γ-globin expression by 20%. Moreover, luciferase reporter assays showed that microRNA-96 negatively regulates expression of γ-globin in HEK293 cells, which depends on a seedless but highly complementary target site located within the coding sequence of γ-globin. Based on these results we conclude that microRNA-96 directly suppresses γ-globin expression and thus contributes to HbF regulation.


Scandinavian Journal of Clinical & Laboratory Investigation | 2012

Reproducibility of thrombelastometry (ROTEM®): Point-of-care versus hospital laboratory performance

Thorsten Haas; Nelly Spielmann; Jacqueline Mauch; Oliver Speer; Markus Schmugge; Markus Weiss

Abstract Thrombelastometry (ROTEM®) has gained wide acceptance in detecting and tailoring acquired hemostatic changes in adults and children. We investigated in this observational trial whether the reproducibility of this point-of-care testing was influenced by performance at the bedside or in the hospital laboratory. In addition, difference in time of performance between both measurements was compared. Perioperative blood samples obtained during major pediatric surgery were run in duplicate on two different ROTEM® devices located in the OR and in the hospital laboratory. The Bland-Altman test was used to compare differences of both measurements. ROTEM® measurements of 90 blood samples obtained from 24 children showed no overall clinically meaningful differences, whether they were performed bedside or in the hospital laboratory. Minor differences were found for the InTEM clot formation time (CFT) showing a mean bias of 10.79 seconds. Time saving was 11 minutes (8–16 minutes) if ROTEM® measurements were performed bedside (p < 0.001). In conclusion, there were minimal effects on ROTEM® measurements irrespective of whether they were performed in the hospital laboratory or at the bedside by a single trained staff member, while the latter saved valuable time.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

LACTB is a filament-forming protein localized in mitochondria

Zydrune Polianskyte; Nina Peitsaro; Arvydas Dapkunas; Julius Liobikas; Rabah Soliymani; Maciej Lalowski; Oliver Speer; Jani Seitsonen; Sarah J. Butcher; Grazia M. Cereghetti; Matts D. Linder; Michael Merckel; James Thompson; Ove Eriksson

LACTB is a mammalian active-site serine protein that has evolved from a bacterial penicillin-binding protein. Penicillin-binding proteins are involved in the metabolism of peptidoglycan, the major bacterial cell wall constituent, implying that LACTB has been endowed with novel biochemical properties during eukaryote evolution. Here we demonstrate that LACTB is localized in the mitochondrial intermembrane space, where it is polymerized into stable filaments with a length extending more than a hundred nanometers. We infer that LACTB, through polymerization, promotes intramitochondrial membrane organization and micro-compartmentalization. These findings have implications for our understanding of mitochondrial evolution and function.

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Markus Schmugge

Boston Children's Hospital

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Sabine Kroiss

Boston Children's Hospital

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Imane Azzouzi

Boston Children's Hospital

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Jeannine Winkler

Boston Children's Hospital

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Margaret L. Rand

Boston Children's Hospital

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Manuela Albisetti

Boston Children's Hospital

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