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Dive into the research topics where Ralf Wimmer is active.

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Featured researches published by Ralf Wimmer.


Gut | 2008

Tauroursodeoxycholic acid exerts anticholestatic effects by a cooperative cPKC alpha-/PKA-dependent mechanism in rat liver.

Ralf Wimmer; Simon Hohenester; Thomas Pusl; Gerald Denk; Christian Rust; Ulrich Beuers

Objective: Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) exerts anticholestatic effects in part by protein kinase C (PKC)-dependent mechanisms. Its taurine conjugate, TUDCA, is a cPKCα agonist. We tested whether protein kinase A (PKA) might contribute to the anticholestatic action of TUDCA via cooperative cPKCα-/PKA-dependent mechanisms in taurolithocholic acid (TLCA)-induced cholestasis. Methods: In perfused rat liver, bile flow was determined gravimetrically, organic anion secretion spectrophotometrically, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release enzymatically, cAMP response-element binding protein (CREB) phosphorylation by immunoblotting, and cAMP by immunoassay. PKC/PKA inhibitors were tested radiochemically. In vitro phosphorylation of the conjugate export pump, Mrp2/Abcc2, was studied in rat hepatocytes and human Hep-G2 hepatoma cells. Results: In livers treated with TLCA (10 μmol/l)+TUDCA (25 μmol/l), combined inhibition of cPKC by the cPKC-selective inhibitor Gö6976 (100 nmol/l) or the non-selective PKC inhibitor staurosporine (10 nmol/l) and of PKA by H89 (100 nmol/l) reduced bile flow by 36% (p<0.05) and 48% (p<0.01), and secretion of the Mrp2/Abcc2 substrate, 2,4-dinitrophenyl-S-glutathione, by 31% (p<0.05) and 41% (p<0.01), respectively; bile flow was unaffected in control livers or livers treated with TUDCA only or TLCA+taurocholic acid. Inhibition of cPKC or PKA alone did not affect the anticholestatic action of TUDCA. Hepatic cAMP levels and CREB phosphorylation as readout of PKA activity were unaffected by the bile acids tested, suggesting a permissive effect of PKA for the anticholestatic action of TUDCA. Rat and human hepatocellular Mrp2 were phosphorylated by phorbol ester pretreatment and recombinant cPKCα, nPKCε, and PKA, respectively, in a staurosporine-sensitive manner. Conclusion: UDCA conjugates exert their anticholestatic action in bile acid-induced cholestasis in part via cooperative post-translational cPKCα-/PKA-dependent mechanisms. Hepatocellular Mrp2 may be one target of bile acid-induced kinase activation.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

Progressive stages of mitochondrial destruction caused by cell toxic bile salts

Sabine Schulz; Sabine Schmitt; Ralf Wimmer; Michaela Aichler; Sabine Eisenhofer; Josef Lichtmannegger; Carola Eberhagen; Renate Artmann; Ferenc Toókos; Axel Walch; Daniel Krappmann; Catherine Brenner; Christian Rust; Hans Zischka

The cell-toxic bile salt glycochenodeoxycholic acid (GCDCA) and taurochenodeoxycholic acid (TCDCA) are responsible for hepatocyte demise in cholestatic liver diseases, while tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA) is regarded hepatoprotective. We demonstrate the direct mitochondrio-toxicity of bile salts which deplete the mitochondrial membrane potential and induce the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT). The bile salt mediated mechanistic mode of destruction significantly differs from that of calcium, the prototype MPT inducer. Cell-toxic bile salts initially bind to the mitochondrial outer membrane. Subsequently, the structure of the inner boundary membrane disintegrates. And it is only thereafter that the MPT is induced. This progressive destruction occurs in a dose- and time-dependent way. We demonstrate that GCDCA and TCDCA, but not TUDCA, preferentially permeabilize liposomes containing the mitochondrial membrane protein ANT, a process resembling the MPT induction in whole mitochondria. This suggests that ANT is one decisive target for toxic bile salts. To our knowledge this is the first report unraveling the consecutive steps leading to mitochondrial destruction by cell-toxic bile salts.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Methanobactin reverses acute liver failure in a rat model of Wilson disease

Josef Lichtmannegger; Christin Leitzinger; Ralf Wimmer; Sabine Schmitt; Sabine Schulz; Yaschar Kabiri; Carola Eberhagen; Tamara Rieder; Dirk Janik; Frauke Neff; Beate K. Straub; Peter Schirmacher; Alan A. DiSpirito; Nathan L. Bandow; Bipin S. Baral; Andrew Flatley; Elisabeth Kremmer; Gerald Denk; Fp Reiter; Simon Hohenester; Friedericke Eckardt-Schupp; Norbert A. Dencher; Jerzy Adamski; Vanessa Sauer; Christoph Niemietz; Hartmut Schmidt; Uta Merle; Daniel Gotthardt; Guido Kroemer; Karl Heinz Weiss

In Wilson disease (WD), functional loss of ATPase copper-transporting β (ATP7B) impairs biliary copper excretion, leading to excessive copper accumulation in the liver and fulminant hepatitis. Current US Food and Drug Administration- and European Medicines Agency-approved pharmacological treatments usually fail to restore copper homeostasis in patients with WD who have progressed to acute liver failure, leaving liver transplantation as the only viable treatment option. Here, we investigated the therapeutic utility of methanobactin (MB), a peptide produced by Methylosinus trichosporium OB3b, which has an exceptionally high affinity for copper. We demonstrated that ATP7B-deficient rats recapitulate WD-associated phenotypes, including hepatic copper accumulation, liver damage, and mitochondrial impairment. Short-term treatment of these rats with MB efficiently reversed mitochondrial impairment and liver damage in the acute stages of liver copper accumulation compared with that seen in untreated ATP7B-deficient rats. This beneficial effect was associated with depletion of copper from hepatocyte mitochondria. Moreover, MB treatment prevented hepatocyte death, subsequent liver failure, and death in the rodent model. These results suggest that MB has potential as a therapeutic agent for the treatment of acute WD.


Hepatology | 2010

Conjugation is essential for the anticholestatic effect of NorUrsodeoxycholic acid in taurolithocholic acid–induced cholestasis in rat liver

Gerald Denk; Silvia Maitz; Ralf Wimmer; Christian Rust; Pietro Invernizzi; Sacha Ferdinandusse; Wim Kulik; Andrea Fuchsbichler; Peter Fickert; Michael Trauner; Alan F. Hofmann; Ulrich Beuers

NorUDCA (24‐norursodeoxycholic acid), the C23‐homolog of ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), showed remarkable therapeutic effects in cholestatic Mdr2 (Abcb4) (multidrug resistance protein 2/ATP‐binding cassette b4) knockout mice with sclerosing/fibrosing cholangitis. In contrast to UDCA, norUDCA is inefficiently conjugated in human and rodent liver, and conjugation has been discussed as a key step for the anticholestatic action of UDCA in cholestasis. We compared the choleretic, anticholestatic, and antiapoptotic properties of unconjugated and taurine‐conjugated UDCA (C24) and norUDCA (C23) in isolated perfused rat liver (IPRL) and in natrium/taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (Ntcp)‐transfected human hepatoma (HepG2) cells. Taurolithocholic acid (TLCA) was used to induce a predominantly hepatocellular cholestasis in IPRL. Bile flow was determined gravimetrically; bile acids determined by gas chromatography and liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry; the Mrp2 model substrate, 2,4‐dinitrophenyl‐S‐glutathione (GS‐DNP) was determined spectrophotometrically; and apoptosis was determined immunocytochemically. The choleretic effect of C23‐bile acids was comparable to their C24‐homologs in IPRL. In contrast, TnorUDCA, but not norUDCA antagonized the cholestatic effect of TLCA. Bile flow (percent of controls) was 8% with TLCA‐induced cholestasis, and unchanged by coinfusion of norUDCA (14%). However, it was increased by TnorUDCA (83%), UDCA (73%) and TUDCA (136%). Secretion of GS‐DNP was markedly reduced by TLCA (5%), unimproved by norUDCA (4%) or UDCA (17%), but was improved modestly by TnorUDCA (26%) or TUDCA (58%). No apoptosis was observed in IPRL exposed to low micromolar TLCA, but equivalent antiapoptotic effects of TUDCA and TnorUDCA were observed in Ntcp‐HepG2 cells exposed to TLCA. Conclusion: Conjugation is essential for the anticholestatic effect of norUDCA in a model of hepatocellular cholestasis. Combined therapy with UDCA and norUDCA may be superior to UDCA or norUDCA monotherapy in biliary disorders in which hepatocyte as well as cholangiocyte dysfunction contribute to disease progression. (HEPATOLOGY 2010;52:1758‐1768)


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Free fatty acids sensitize hepatocytes to bile acid-induced apoptosis

Thomas Pusl; Nadine Wild; Timo Vennegeerts; Ralf Wimmer; Burkhard Göke; Stephan Brand; Christian Rust

Delivery of free fatty acids to the liver in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) may render hepatocytes more vulnerable to glycochenodeoxycholic acid (GCDCA)-induced apoptosis. Fat overloading was induced in HepG2-Ntcp cells and primary rat hepatocytes by incubation with palmitic or oleic acid. Apoptosis was quantified by measuring caspase 3/7 activity and transcription of interleukin (IL) 8 and IL-22 by quantitative real-time PCR. Oleic acid (500 microM) alone did not induce apoptosis, while palmitic acid (500 microM) increased apoptosis 5-fold. GCDCA did not induce significant apoptosis at low micromolar concentrations (5-30 microM) in non-steatotic cells. However, at the same concentrations, GCDCA increased apoptosis 3-fold in oleic acid-pretreated HepG2-Ntcp cells and 3.5-fold in primary rat hepatocytes. Pretreatment with oleic acid increased GCDCA-induced gene transcription of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-8 and IL-22 5-fold and 19-fold, respectively. Thus, low levels of cholestasis normally not considered harmful could advance liver injury in patients with NAFLD.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Tauroursodeoxycholic acid reduces bile acid-induced apoptosis by modulation of AP-1.

Thomas Pusl; Timo Vennegeerts; Ralf Wimmer; Gerald Denk; Ulrich Beuers; Christian Rust

Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) is used in the therapy of cholestatic liver diseases. Apoptosis induced by toxic bile acids plays an important role in the pathogenesis of liver injury during cholestasis and appears to be mediated by the human transcription factor AP-1. We aimed to study if TUDCA can decrease taurolitholic acid (TLCA)-induced apoptosis by modulating AP-1. TLCA (20 microM) upregulated AP-1 proteins cFos (26-fold) and JunB (11-fold) as determined by quantitative real-time PCR in HepG2-Ntcp hepatoma cells. AP-1 transcriptional activity increased by 300% after exposure to TLCA. cFos and JunB expression as well as AP-1 transcriptional activity were unaffected by TUDCA (75 microM). However, TUDCA significantly decreased TLCA-induced upregulation of cFos and JunB. Furthermore, TUDCA inhibited TLCA-induced AP-1 transcriptional activity and reduced TLCA-induced apoptosis. These data suggest that reversal of bile acid-induced AP-1 activation may be relevant for the antiapoptotic effect of TUDCA in liver cells.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015

1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3 prevents activation of hepatic stellate cells in vitro and ameliorates inflammatory liver damage but not fibrosis in the Abcb4−/− model

Fp Reiter; Simon Hohenester; Jutta M. Nagel; Ralf Wimmer; Renate Artmann; Lena Wottke; Marie-Christine Makeschin; Doris Mayr; Christian Rust; Michael Trauner; Gerald Denk

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE OF THE STUDY Vitamin D3-deficiency is common in patients with chronic liver-disease and may promote disease progression. Vitamin D3-administration has thus been proposed as a therapeutic approach. Vitamin D3 has immunomodulatory effects and may modulate autoimmune liver-disease such as primary sclerosing cholangitis. Although various mechanisms of action have been proposed, experimental evidence is limited. Here we test the hypothesis that active 1,25-(OH)2-vitamin D3 inhibits activation of hepatic stellate cells (HSC) in vitro and modulates liver-injury in vivo. METHODS Proliferation and activation of primary murine HSC were assessed by BrdU- and PicoGreen(®)-assays, immunoblotting, immunofluorescence-microscopy, quantitative-PCR, and zymography following calcitriol-treatment. Wild-type and ATP-binding cassette transporter b4(-/-) (Abcb4(-/-))-mice received calcitriol for 4 weeks. Liver-damage, inflammation, and fibrosis were assessed by serum liver-tests, Sirius-red staining, quantitative-PCR, immunoblotting, immunohistochemistry and hydroxyproline quantification. RESULTS In vitro, calcitriol inhibited activation and proliferation of murine HSC as shown by reduced α-smooth muscle actin and platelet-derived growth factor-receptor-β-protein-levels, BrdU and PicoGreen®-assays. Furthermore, mRNA-levels and activity of matrix metalloproteinase 13 were profoundly increased. In vivo, calcitriol ameliorated inflammatory liver-injury reflected by reduced levels of alanine aminotransferase in Abcb4(-/-)-mice. In accordance, their livers had lower mRNA-levels of F4/80, tumor necrosis factor-receptor 1 and a lower count of portal CD11b positive cells. In contrast, no effect on overall fibrosis was observed. CONCLUSION Calcitriol inhibits activation and proliferation of HSCs in vitro. In Abcb4(-/-)-mice, administration of calcitriol ameliorates inflammatory liver-damage but has no effect on biliary fibrosis after 4 weeks of treatment.


Hepatology Research | 2014

Soluble intracellular adhesion molecule, M30 and M65 as serum markers of disease activity and prognosis in cholestatic liver diseases

Gerald Denk; Ahmed-Jawid Omary; Fp Reiter; Simon Hohenester; Ralf Wimmer; Stefan Holdenrieder; Christian Rust

Hepatic apoptosis is involved in the pathogenesis of immune‐mediated liver diseases such as autoimmune hepatitis (AIH), primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) and primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC). The aim of our study was to quantify distinct markers of apoptosis in sera of patients with AIH, PBC and PSC, and to evaluate correlation with markers of disease activity and prognosis.


Hepatology Research | 2008

Role of mitogen‐activated protein kinases in tauroursodeoxycholic acid‐induced bile formation in cholestatic rat liver

Gerald Denk; Simon Hohenester; Ralf Wimmer; Claudia Böhland; Christian Rust; Ulrich Beuers

Aim:  Ursodeoxycholic acid exerts anticholestatic effects in various cholestatic disorders and experimental models of cholestasis. Its taurine conjugate (TUDCA) stimulates bile salt secretion in isolated perfused rat livers (IPRL) under physiological, non‐cholestatic conditions, in part by mitogen‐activated protein kinase (MAPK)‐dependent mechanisms. The role of MAPK in the anticholestatic effect of TUDCA, however, is unclear. Therefore, we studied the role of MAPK in the anticholestatic effect of TUDCA in IPRL and isolated rat hepatocytes (IRH) in taurolithocholic acid (TLCA)‐induced cholestasis.


Mitochondrion | 2017

Mitochondrial adaptation in steatotic mice

Claudia Einer; Simon Hohenester; Ralf Wimmer; Lena Wottke; Renate Artmann; Sabine Schulz; Christian Gosmann; Alisha Simmons; Christin Leitzinger; Carola Eberhagen; Sabine Borchard; Sabine Schmitt; Stefanie M. Hauck; Christine von Toerne; Martin Jastroch; Ellen Walheim; Christian Rust; Alexander L. Gerbes; Bastian Popper; Doris Mayr; Max Schnurr; Angelika M. Vollmar; Gerald Denk; Hans Zischka

Western lifestyle-associated malnutrition causes steatosis that may progress to liver inflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction has been suggested as a key factor in promoting this disease. Here we have molecularly, biochemically and biophysically analyzed mitochondria from steatotic wild type and immune-compromised mice fed a Western diet (WD) - enriched in saturated fatty acids (SFAs). WD-mitochondria demonstrated lipidomic changes, a decreased mitochondrial ATP production capacity and a significant sensitivity to calcium. These changes preceded hepatocyte damage and were not associated with enhanced ROS production. Thus, WD-mitochondria do not promote steatohepatitis per se, but demonstrate bioenergetic deficits and increased sensitivity to stress signals.

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Christian Rust

Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

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Michael Trauner

Medical University of Vienna

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Peter Fickert

Medical University of Graz

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Max Schnurr

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich

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Martin Jastroch

Buck Institute for Research on Aging

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