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Dive into the research topics where Raimund Wagener is active.

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Featured researches published by Raimund Wagener.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Complexes of Matrilin-1 and Biglycan or Decorin Connect Collagen VI Microfibrils to Both Collagen II and Aggrecan

Charlotte Wiberg; Andreas R. Klatt; Raimund Wagener; Mats Paulsson; John F. Bateman; Dick Heinegård; Matthias Mörgelin

Native supramolecular assemblies containing collagen VI microfibrils and associated extracellular matrix proteins were isolated from Swarm rat chondrosarcoma tissue. Their composition and spatial organization were characterized by electron microscopy and immunological detection of molecular constituents. The small leucine-rich repeat (LRR) proteoglycans biglycan and decorin were bound to the N-terminal region of collagen VI. Chondroadherin, another member of the LRR family, was identified both at the N and C termini of collagen VI. Matrilin-1, -3, and -4 were found in complexes with biglycan or decorin at the N terminus. The interactions between collagen VI, biglycan, decorin, and matrilin-1 were studied in detail and revealed a biglycan/matrilin-1 or decorin/matrilin-1 complex acting as a linkage between collagen VI microfibrils and aggrecan or alternatively collagen II. The complexes between matrilin-1 and biglycan or decorin were also reconstituted in vitro. Colocalization of collagen VI and the different ligands in the pericellular matrix of cultured chondrosarcoma cells supported the physiological relevance of the observed interactions in matrix assembly.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Collagen XXVIII, a Novel von Willebrand Factor A Domain-containing Protein with Many Imperfections in the Collagenous Domain

Guido Veit; Birgit Kobbe; Douglas R. Keene; Mats Paulsson; Manuel Koch; Raimund Wagener

Here we describe a novel collagen belonging to the class of von Willebrand factor A (VWA) domain-containing proteins. This novel protein was identified by screening the EST data base and was subsequently recombinantly expressed and characterized as an authentic tissue component. The COL28A1 gene on human chromosome 7p21.3 and on mouse chromosome 6A1 encodes a novel protein that structurally resembles the beaded filament-forming collagens. The collagenous domain contains several very short interruptions arranged in a repeat pattern. As shown for other novel minor collagens, the expression of collagen XXVIII protein in mouse is very restricted. In addition to small amounts in skin and calvaria, the major signals were in dorsal root ganglia and peripheral nerves. By immunoelectron microscopy, collagen XXVIII was detected in the sciatic nerve, at the basement membrane of certain Schwann cells surrounding the nerve fibers. Even though the protein is present in the adult sciatic nerve, collagen XXVIII mRNA was only detected in sciatic nerve of newborn mice, indicating that the protein persists for an extended period after synthesis.


Matrix Biology | 1999

The matrilins: a novel family of oligomeric extracellular matrix proteins.

Ferenc Deák; Raimund Wagener; Ibolya Kiss; Mats Paulsson

The matrilin family at present has four members that all share a structure made up of von Willebrand factor A domains, epidermal growth factor-like domains and a coiled coil alpha-helical module. The first member of the family, matrilin-1 (previously called cartilage matrix protein or CMP), is expressed mainly in cartilage. Matrilin-3 has a similar tissue distribution, while matrilin-2 and -4 occur in a wide variety of extracellular matrices. Matrilin-1 is associated with cartilage proteoglycans as well as being a component of both collagen-dependent and collagen-independent fibrils and on the basis of the related structures other matrilins may play similar roles. The matrilin genes are strictly and differently regulated and their expression may serve as markers for cellular differentiation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Three Novel Collagen VI Chains with High Homology to the α3 Chain

Sudheer Kumar Gara; Paolo Grumati; Anna Urciuolo; Paolo Bonaldo; Birgit Kobbe; Manuel Koch; Mats Paulsson; Raimund Wagener

Here we describe three novel collagen VI chains, α4, α5, and α6. The corresponding genes are arranged in tandem on mouse chromosome 9. The new chains structurally resemble the collagen VI α3 chain. Each chain consists of seven von Willebrand factor A domains followed by a collagenous domain, two C-terminal von Willebrand factor A domains, and a unique domain. In addition, the collagen VI α4 chain carries a Kunitz domain at the C terminus, whereas the collagen VI α5 chain contains an additional von Willebrand factor A domain and a unique domain. The size of the collagenous domains and the position of the structurally important cysteine residues within these domains are identical between the collagen VI α3, α4, α5, and α6 chains. In mouse, the new chains are found in or close to basement membranes. Collagen VI α1 chain-deficient mice lack expression of the new collagen VI chains implicating that the new chains may substitute for the α3 chain, probably forming α1α2α4, α1α2α5, or α1α2α6 heterotrimers. Due to a large scale pericentric inversion, the human COL6A4 gene on chromosome 3 was broken into two pieces and became a non-processed pseudogene. Recently COL6A5 was linked to atopic dermatitis and designated COL29A1. The identification of novel collagen VI chains carries implications for the etiology of atopic dermatitis as well as Bethlem myopathy and Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Molecular Structure and Tissue Distribution of Matrilin-3, a Filament-forming Extracellular Matrix Protein Expressed during Skeletal Development

Andreas R. Klatt; D P Nitsche; Birgit Kobbe; Matthias Mörgelin; Mats Paulsson; Raimund Wagener

Matrilin-3 is a recently identified member of the superfamily of proteins containing von Willebrand factor A-like domains and is able to form hetero-oligomers with matrilin-1 (cartilage matrix protein) via a C-terminal coiled-coil domain. Full-length matrilin-3 and a fragment lacking the assembly domain were expressed in 293-EBNA cells, purified, and subjected to biochemical characterization. Recombinantly expressed full-length matrilin-3 occurs as monomers, dimers, trimers, and tetramers, as detected by electron microscopy and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, whereas matrilin-3, purified from fetal calf cartilage, forms homotetramers as well as hetero-oligomers of variable stoichiometry with matrilin-1. In the matrix formed by cultured chondrosarcoma cells, matrilin-3 is found in a filamentous, collagen-dependent network connecting cells and in a collagen-independent pericellular network. Affinity-purified antibodies detect matrilin-3 expression in a variety of mouse cartilaginous tissues, such as sternum, articular, and epiphyseal cartilage, and in the cartilage anlage of developing bones. It is found both inside the lacunae and in the interterritorial matrix of the resting, proliferating, hypertrophic, and calcified cartilage zones, whereas the expression is lower in the superficial articular cartilage. In trachea and in costal cartilage of adult mice, an expression was seen in the perichondrium. Furthermore, matrilin-3 is found in bone, and its expression is, therefore, not restricted to chondroblasts and chondrocytes.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Altered Integration of Matrilin-3 into Cartilage Extracellular Matrix in the Absence of Collagen IX

Bastian Budde; Katrin Blumbach; Joni Ylostalo; Frank Zaucke; Harald W. A. Ehlen; Raimund Wagener; Leena Ala-Kokko; Mats Paulsson; Peter Bruckner; Susanne Grässel

ABSTRACT The matrilins are a family of four noncollagenous oligomeric extracellular matrix proteins with a modular structure. Matrilins can act as adapters which bridge different macromolecular networks. We therefore investigated the effect of collagen IX deficiency on matrilin-3 integration into cartilage tissues. Mice harboring a deleted Col9a1 gene lack synthesis of a functional protein and produce cartilage fibrils completely devoid of collagen IX. Newborn collagen IX knockout mice exhibited significantly decreased matrilin-3 and cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) signals, particularly in the cartilage primordium of vertebral bodies and ribs. In the absence of collagen IX, a substantial amount of matrilin-3 is released into the medium of cultured chondrocytes instead of being integrated into the cell layer as in wild-type and COMP-deficient cells. Gene expression of matrilin-3 is not affected in the absence of collagen IX, but protein extraction from cartilage is greatly facilitated. Matrilin-3 interacts with collagen IX-containing cartilage fibrils, while fibrils from collagen IX knockout mice lack matrilin-3, and COMP-deficient fibrils exhibit an intermediate integration. In summary, the integration of matrilin-3 into cartilage fibrils occurs both by a direct interaction with collagen IX and indirectly with COMP serving as an adapter. Matrilin-3 can be considered as an interface component, capable of interconnecting macromolecular networks and mediating interactions between cartilage fibrils and the extrafibrillar matrix.


FEBS Letters | 2005

The matrilins – adaptor proteins in the extracellular matrix

Raimund Wagener; Harald W. A. Ehlen; Ya-Ping Ko; Birgit Kobbe; Henning H. Mann; Gerhard Sengle; Mats Paulsson

The matrilins form a four‐member family of modular, multisubunit matrix proteins, which are expressed in cartilage but also in many other forms of extracellular matrix. They participate in the formation of fibrillar or filamentous structures and are often associated with collagens. It appears that they mediate interactions between collagen‐containing fibrils and other matrix constituents, such as aggrecan. This adaptor function may be modulated by physiological proteolysis that causes the loss of single subunits and thereby a decrease in binding avidity. Attempts to study matrilin function by gene inactivation in mouse have been frustrating and so far not yielded pronounced phenotypes, presumably because of the extensive redundancy within the family allowing compensation by one family member for another. However, mutations in matrilin‐3 in humans cause different forms of chondrodysplasias and perhaps also hand osteoarthritis. As loss of matrilin‐3 is not critical in mouse, these phenotypes are likely to be caused by dominant negative effects.


FEBS Letters | 1997

Primary structure of matrilin-3, a new member of a family of extracellular matrix proteins related to cartilage matrix protein (matrilin-1) and von Willebrand factor

Raimund Wagener; Birgit Kobbe; Mats Paulsson

A mouse cDNA encoding for matrilin‐3, the third member of the novel matrilin family of extracellular matrix proteins, was cloned. The protein precursor of 481 amino acids consists of a putative signal peptide, a short positively charged sequence, a single vWFA‐like domain followed by four epidermal growth factor‐like modules and a potential coiled‐coil α‐helical oligomerization domain at the C‐terminus. It is the smallest member of the matrilin family with a predicted M r of the mature protein of 48 902. The primary structure of a C‐terminal portion of 310 amino acids of the human matrilin‐3 was determined and showed a sequence identity to the mouse matrilin‐3 of 84.8%. Northern blot hybridization of mouse matrilin‐3 mRNA showed a 2.9 kb mRNA expressed in sternum, femur and trachea and indicates a cartilage‐specific expression.


Immunity | 2015

Interleukin-4 Receptor α Signaling in Myeloid Cells Controls Collagen Fibril Assembly in Skin Repair

Johanna A. Knipper; Sebastian Willenborg; Jürgen Brinckmann; Wilhelm Bloch; Tobias Maaß; Raimund Wagener; Thomas Krieg; Tara E. Sutherland; Ariel Munitz; Marc E. Rothenberg; Anja Niehoff; Rebecca Richardson; Matthias Hammerschmidt; Judith E. Allen; Sabine A. Eming

Activation of the immune response during injury is a critical early event that determines whether the outcome of tissue restoration is regeneration or replacement of the damaged tissue with a scar. The mechanisms by which immune signals control these fundamentally different regenerative pathways are largely unknown. We have demonstrated that, during skin repair in mice, interleukin-4 receptor α (IL-4Rα)-dependent macrophage activation controlled collagen fibril assembly and that this process was important for effective repair while having adverse pro-fibrotic effects. We identified Relm-α as one important player in the pathway from IL-4Rα signaling in macrophages to the induction of lysyl hydroxylase 2 (LH2), an enzyme that directs persistent pro-fibrotic collagen cross-links, in fibroblasts. Notably, Relm-β induced LH2 in human fibroblasts, and expression of both factors was increased in lipodermatosclerosis, a condition of excessive human skin fibrosis. Collectively, our findings provide mechanistic insights into the link between type 2 immunity and initiation of pro-fibrotic pathways.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2011

The matrilins: modulators of extracellular matrix assembly.

Andreas R. Klatt; Ann-Kathrin A. Becker; Cristian Dan Neacsu; Mats Paulsson; Raimund Wagener

The matrilins form a family of oligomeric extracellular adaptor proteins that are most strongly expressed in cartilage but also present in many other extracellular matrices. Matrilins bind to different types of collagen fibrils, to other noncollagenous proteins and to aggrecan. They thereby support matrix assembly by connecting fibrillar components and mediating interactions between these and the aggrecan gel. The binding avidity of a matrilin can be varied by alternative splicing, proteolytic processing and formation of homo- and heterooligomers. Such changes in matrilin structure may lead to a modulation of extracellular matrix assembly. Some matrilins bind weakly to α1β1 integrin and cell surface proteoglycans, but even though matrilins play a role in mechanotransduction and matrilin-3 activates the expression of osteoarthritis-associated genes the physiological relevance of matrilin-cell interactions is unclear. Matrilin knockout mice do not display pronounced phenotypes, which points to a redundancy within the protein family or with functionally related proteins. In man, dominant mutations in the von Willebrand factor A like domain of matrilin-3 lead to a protein retention in the endoplasmic reticulum that causes multiple epiphyseal dysplasia by initiating a cell stress response. In contrast, a mutation in an EGF domain of matrilin-3 that is associated with hand osteoarthritis and disc degeneration does not interfere with secretion but instead with extracellular assembly of matrix structures. In this review we summarize such information on matrilin structure and function that we believe is important for the understanding of extracellular matrix assembly and for deciphering pathophysiological mechanisms in diseases causing skeletal malformations or cartilage degeneration.

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Douglas R. Keene

Shriners Hospitals for Children

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