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Dive into the research topics where Rashim Pal Singh is active.

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Featured researches published by Rashim Pal Singh.


Blood | 2013

HIF-1α is a protective factor in conditional PHD2-deficient mice suffering from severe HIF-2α–induced excessive erythropoiesis

Kristin Franke; Joanna Kalucka; Soulafa Mamlouk; Rashim Pal Singh; Antje Muschter; Alexander Weidemann; Vasuprada Iyengar; Steffen Jahn; Kathrin Wieczorek; Kathrin Geiger; Michael H. Muders; Alex M. Sykes; David M. Poitz; Tatsiana Ripich; Teresa Otto; S. Bergmann; Georg Breier; Gustavo Baretton; Guo-Hua Fong; David R. Greaves; Stefan R. Bornstein; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Joachim Fandrey; Max Gassmann; Ben Wielockx

Erythropoiesis must be tightly balanced to guarantee adequate oxygen delivery to all tissues in the body. This process relies predominantly on the hormone erythropoietin (EPO) and its transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor (HIF). Accumulating evidence suggests that oxygen-sensitive prolyl hydroxylases (PHDs) are important regulators of this entire system. Here, we describe a novel mouse line with conditional PHD2 inactivation (cKO P2) in renal EPO producing cells, neurons, and astrocytes that displayed excessive erythrocytosis because of severe overproduction of EPO, exclusively driven by HIF-2α. In contrast, HIF-1α served as a protective factor, ensuring survival of cKO P2 mice with HCT values up to 86%. Using different genetic approaches, we show that simultaneous inactivation of PHD2 and HIF-1α resulted in a drastic PHD3 reduction with consequent overexpression of HIF-2α-related genes, neurodegeneration, and lethality. Taken together, our results demonstrate for the first time that conditional loss of PHD2 in mice leads to HIF-2α-dependent erythrocytosis, whereas HIF-1α protects these mice, providing a platform for developing new treatments of EPO-related disorders, such as anemia.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2013

Loss of epithelial hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl hydroxylase 2 accelerates skin wound healing in mice.

Joanna Kalucka; Andreas Ettinger; Kristin Franke; Soulafa Mamlouk; Rashim Pal Singh; Katja Farhat; Antje Muschter; Susanne Olbrich; Georg Breier; Dörthe M. Katschinski; Wieland B. Huttner; Alexander Weidemann; Ben Wielockx

ABSTRACT Skin wound healing in mammals is a complex, multicellular process that depends on the precise supply of oxygen. Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) prolyl hydroxylase 2 (PHD2) serves as a crucial oxygen sensor and may therefore play an important role during reepithelialization. Hence, this study was aimed at understanding the role of PHD2 in cutaneous wound healing using different lines of conditionally deficient mice specifically lacking PHD2 in inflammatory, vascular, or epidermal cells. Interestingly, PHD2 deficiency only in keratinocytes and not in myeloid or endothelial cells was found to lead to faster wound closure, which involved enhanced migration of the hyperproliferating epithelium. We demonstrate that this effect relies on the unique expression of β3-integrin in the keratinocytes around the tip of the migrating tongue in an HIF1α-dependent manner. Furthermore, we show enhanced proliferation of these cells in the stratum basale, which is directly related to their attenuated transforming growth factor β signaling. Thus, loss of the central oxygen sensor PHD2 in keratinocytes stimulates wound closure by prompting skin epithelial cells to migrate and proliferate. Inhibition of PHD2 could therefore offer novel therapeutic opportunities for the local treatment of cutaneous wounds.


International Journal of Cancer | 2014

Loss of prolyl hydroxylase-2 in myeloid cells and T-lymphocytes impairs tumor development

Soulafa Mamlouk; Joanna Kalucka; Rashim Pal Singh; Kristin Franke; Antje Muschter; Anika Langer; Christiane Jakob; Max Gassmann; Gustavo Baretton; Ben Wielockx

The tumor microenvironment plays a pivotal role during cancer development and progression. The balance between suppressive and cytotoxic responses of the tumor immune microenvironment has been shown to have a direct effect on the final outcome in various human and experimental tumors. Recently, we demonstrated that the oxygen sensor HIF‐prolyl hydroxylase‐2 (PHD2) plays a detrimental role in tumor cells, stimulating systemic growth and metastasis in mice. In our current study, we show that the conditional ablation of PHD2 in the hematopoietic system also leads to reduced tumor volume, intriguingly generated by an imbalance between enhanced cell death and improved proliferation of tumor cells. This effect seems to rely on the overall downregulation of protumoral as well as antitumoral cytokines. Using different genetic approaches, we were able to confine this complex phenotype to the crosstalk of PHD2‐deficient myeloid cells and T‐lymphocytes. Taken together, our findings reveal a multifaceted role for PHD2 in several hematopoietic lineages during tumor development and might have important implications for the development of tumor therapies in the future.


Blood | 2013

HIF prolyl hydroxylase 2 (PHD2) is a critical regulator of hematopoietic stem cell maintenance during steady-state and stress

Rashim Pal Singh; Kristin Franke; Joanna Kalucka; Soulafa Mamlouk; Antje Muschter; Agnieszka Gembarska; Tatyana Grinenko; Carsten Willam; Ronald Naumann; Konstantinos Anastassiadis; A. Francis Stewart; Stefan R. Bornstein; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Georg Breier; Claudia Waskow; Ben Wielockx

Hypoxia is a prominent feature in the maintenance of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) quiescence and multipotency. Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF) prolyl hydroxylase domain proteins (PHDs) serve as oxygen sensors and may therefore regulate this system. Here, we describe a mouse line with conditional loss of HIF prolyl hydroxylase 2 (PHD2) in very early hematopoietic precursors that results in self-renewal of multipotent progenitors under steady-state conditions in a HIF1α- and SMAD7-dependent manner. Competitive bone marrow (BM) transplantations show decreased peripheral and central chimerism of PHD2-deficient cells but not of the most primitive progenitors. Conversely, in whole BM transfer, PHD2-deficient HSCs replenish the entire hematopoietic system and display an enhanced self-renewal capacity reliant on HIF1α. Taken together, our results demonstrate that loss of PHD2 controls the maintenance of the HSC compartment under physiological conditions and causes the outcompetition of PHD2-deficient hematopoietic cells by their wild-type counterparts during stress while promoting the self-renewal of very early hematopoietic progenitors.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2016

Increased EPO Levels Are Associated With Bone Loss in Mice Lacking PHD2 in EPO-Producing Cells.

Martina Rauner; Kristin Franke; Marta Murray; Rashim Pal Singh; Sahar Hiram-Bab; Uwe Platzbecker; Max Gassmann; Merav Socolovsky; Drorit Neumann; Yankel Gabet; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Lorenz C. Hofbauer; Ben Wielockx

The main oxygen sensor hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) prolyl hydroxylase 2 (PHD2) is a critical regulator of tissue homeostasis during erythropoiesis, hematopoietic stem cell maintenance, and wound healing. Recent studies point toward a role for the PHD2‐erythropoietin (EPO) axis in the modulation of bone remodeling, even though the studies produced conflicting results. Here, we used a number of mouse strains deficient of PHD2 in different cell types to address the role of PHD2 and its downstream targets HIF‐1α and HIF‐2α in bone remodeling. Mice deficient for PHD2 in several cell lineages, including EPO‐producing cells, osteoblasts, and hematopoietic cells (CD68:cre‐PHD2f/f) displayed a severe reduction of bone density at the distal femur as well as the vertebral body due to impaired bone formation but not bone resorption. Importantly, using osteoblast‐specific (Osx:cre‐PHD2f/f) and osteoclast‐specific PHD2 knock‐out mice (Vav:cre‐ PHD2f/f), we show that this effect is independent of the loss of PHD2 in osteoblast and osteoclasts. Using different in vivo and in vitro approaches, we show here that this bone phenotype, including the suppression of bone formation, is directly linked to the stabilization of the α‐subunit of HIF‐2, and possibly to the subsequent moderate induction of serum EPO, which directly influenced the differentiation and mineralization of osteoblast progenitors resulting in lower bone density. Taken together, our data identify the PHD2:HIF‐2α:EPO axis as a so far unknown regulator of osteohematology by controlling bone homeostasis. Further, these data suggest that patients treated with PHD inhibitors or EPO should be monitored with respect to their bone status.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Secreted protein Del-1 regulates myelopoiesis in the hematopoietic stem cell niche

Ioannis Mitroulis; Lan-Sun Chen; Rashim Pal Singh; Ioannis Kourtzelis; Matina Economopoulou; Tetsuhiro Kajikawa; Maria Troullinaki; Athanasios Ziogas; Klara Ruppova; Kavita B. Hosur; Tomoki Maekawa; Baomei Wang; Pallavi Subramanian; Torsten Tonn; Panayotis Verginis; Malte von Bonin; Manja Wobus; Martin Bornhäuser; Tatyana Grinenko; Marianna Di Scala; Andrés Hidalgo; Ben Wielockx; George Hajishengallis; Triantafyllos Chavakis

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) remain mostly quiescent under steady-state conditions but switch to a proliferative state following hematopoietic stress, e.g., bone marrow (BM) injury, transplantation, or systemic infection and inflammation. The homeostatic balance between quiescence, self-renewal, and differentiation of HSCs is strongly dependent on their interactions with cells that constitute a specialized microanatomical environment in the BM known as the HSC niche. Here, we identified the secreted extracellular matrix protein Del-1 as a component and regulator of the HSC niche. Specifically, we found that Del-1 was expressed by several cellular components of the HSC niche, including arteriolar endothelial cells, CXCL12-abundant reticular (CAR) cells, and cells of the osteoblastic lineage. Del-1 promoted critical functions of the HSC niche, as it regulated long-term HSC (LT-HSC) proliferation and differentiation toward the myeloid lineage. Del-1 deficiency in mice resulted in reduced LT-HSC proliferation and infringed preferentially upon myelopoiesis under both steady-state and stressful conditions, such as hematopoietic cell transplantation and G-CSF- or inflammation-induced stress myelopoiesis. Del-1-induced HSC proliferation and myeloid lineage commitment were mediated by β3 integrin on hematopoietic progenitors. This hitherto unknown Del-1 function in the HSC niche represents a juxtacrine homeostatic adaptation of the hematopoietic system in stress myelopoiesis.


Stem cell reports | 2018

Hematopoietic Stem Cells but Not Multipotent Progenitors Drive Erythropoiesis during Chronic Erythroid Stress in EPO Transgenic Mice

Rashim Pal Singh; Tatyana Grinenko; Beáta Ramasz; Kristin Franke; Mathias Lesche; Andreas Dahl; Max Gassmann; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Ian Henry; Ben Wielockx

Summary The hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) compartment consists of a small pool of cells capable of replenishing all blood cells. Although it is established that the hematopoietic system is assembled as a hierarchical organization under steady-state conditions, emerging evidence suggests that distinct differentiation pathways may exist in response to acute stress. However, it remains unclear how different hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell subpopulations behave under sustained chronic stress. Here, by using adult transgenic mice overexpressing erythropoietin (EPO; Tg6) and a combination of in vivo, in vitro, and deep-sequencing approaches, we found that HSCs respond differentially to chronic erythroid stress compared with their closely related multipotent progenitors (MPPs). Specifically, HSCs exhibit a vastly committed erythroid progenitor profile with enhanced cell division, while MPPs display erythroid and myeloid cell signatures and an accumulation of uncommitted cells. Thus, our results identify HSCs as master regulators of chronic stress erythropoiesis, potentially circumventing the hierarchical differentiation-detour.


High Altitude Medicine & Biology | 2012

Hypoxia-mediated regulation of stem cell fate.

Rashim Pal Singh; Kristin Franke; Ben Wielockx


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2018

Endothelial Cell–Specific Overexpression of Del-1 Drives Expansion of Haematopoietic Progenitor Cells in the Bone Marrow

Lan-Sun Chen; Ioannis Kourtzelis; Rashim Pal Singh; Sylvia Grossklaus; Ben Wielockx; George Hajishengallis; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Ioannis Mitroulis


Archive | 2017

RED CELLS, IRON, AND ERYTHROPOIESIS HIF-1is a protective factor in conditional PHD2-deficient mice suffering from severe HIF-2-induced excessive erythropoiesis

Kristin Franke; Joanna Kalucka; Soulafa Mamlouk; Rashim Pal Singh; Antje Muschter; Alexander Weidemann; Vasuprada Iyengar; Steffen Jahn; Kathrin Wieczorek; Kathrin Geiger; Michael H. Muders; Alex M. Sykes; David M. Poitz; Tatsiana Ripich; Teresa Otto; S. Bergmann; Georg Breier; Gustavo Baretton; Guo-Hua Fong; David R. Greaves; Stefan R. Bornstein; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Joachim Fandrey; Max Gassmann; Ben Wielockx

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Ben Wielockx

Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals

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Triantafyllos Chavakis

Dresden University of Technology

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Joanna Kalucka

Dresden University of Technology

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Georg Breier

Dresden University of Technology

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Tatyana Grinenko

Dresden University of Technology

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Max Gassmann

Cayetano Heredia University

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Gustavo Baretton

Dresden University of Technology

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