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Dive into the research topics where Sylvia Kaden is active.

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Featured researches published by Sylvia Kaden.


Nature | 2008

Vascular normalization in Rgs5-deficient tumours promotes immune destruction

Juliana Hamzah; Manfred Jugold; Fabian Kiessling; Paul Rigby; Mitali Manzur; Hugo H. Marti; Tamer Rabie; Sylvia Kaden; Hermann Josef Gröne; Günter J. Hämmerling; Bernd Arnold; Ruth Ganss

The vasculature of solid tumours is morphologically aberrant and characterized by dilated and fragile vessels, intensive vessel sprouting and loss of hierarchical architecture. Constant vessel remodelling leads to spontaneous haemorrhages and increased interstitial fluid pressure in the tumour environment. Tumour-related angiogenesis supports tumour growth and is also a major obstacle for successful immune therapy as it prevents migration of immune effector cells into established tumour parenchyma. The molecular mechanisms for these angiogenic alterations are largely unknown. Here we identify regulator of G-protein signalling 5 (Rgs5) as a master gene responsible for the abnormal tumour vascular morphology in mice. Loss of Rgs5 results in pericyte maturation, vascular normalization and consequent marked reductions in tumour hypoxia and vessel leakiness. These vascular and intratumoral changes enhance influx of immune effector cells into tumour parenchyma and markedly prolong survival of tumour-bearing mice. This is the first demonstration, to our knowledge, of reduced tumour angiogenesis and improved immune therapeutic outcome on loss of a vascular gene function and establishes a previously unrecognized role of G-protein signalling in tumour angiogenesis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Kidney dendritic cell activation is required for progression of renal disease in a mouse model of glomerular injury

Felix Heymann; Catherine Meyer-Schwesinger; Emma E. Hamilton-Williams; Linda Hammerich; Ulf Panzer; Sylvia Kaden; Susan E. Quaggin; Jürgen Floege; Hermann Josef Gröne; Christian Kurts

The progression of kidney disease to renal failure correlates with infiltration of mononuclear immune cells into the tubulointerstitium. These infiltrates contain macrophages, DCs, and T cells, but the role of each cell type in disease progression is unclear. To investigate the underlying immune mechanisms, we generated transgenic mice that selectively expressed the model antigens ovalbumin and hen egg lysozyme in glomerular podocytes (NOH mice). Coinjection of ovalbumin-specific transgenic CD8+ CTLs and CD4+ Th cells into NOH mice resulted in periglomerular mononuclear infiltrates and inflammation of parietal epithelial cells, similar to lesions frequently observed in human chronic glomerulonephritis. Repetitive T cell injections aggravated infiltration and caused progression to structural and functional kidney damage after 4 weeks. Mechanistic analysis revealed that DCs in renal lymph nodes constitutively cross-presented ovalbumin and activated CTLs. These CTLs released further ovalbumin for CTL activation in the lymph nodes and for simultaneous presentation to Th cells by distinct DC subsets residing in the kidney tubulointerstitium. Crosstalk between tubulointerstitial DCs and Th cells resulted in intrarenal cytokine and chemokine production and in recruitment of more CTLs, monocyte-derived DCs, and macrophages. The importance of DCs was established by the fact that DC depletion rapidly resolved established kidney immunopathology. These findings demonstrate that glomerular antigen-specific CTLs and Th cells can jointly induce renal immunopathology and identify kidney DCs as a mechanistic link between glomerular injury and the progression of kidney disease.


Cell Metabolism | 2008

Iron Regulatory Proteins Are Essential for Intestinal Function and Control Key Iron Absorption Molecules in the Duodenum

Bruno Galy; Dunja Ferring-Appel; Sylvia Kaden; Hermann Josef Gröne; Matthias W. Hentze

Iron regulatory proteins (IRPs) orchestrate the posttranscriptional regulation of critical iron metabolism proteins at the cellular level. Redundancy between IRP1 and IRP2 associated with embryonic lethality of doubly IRP-deficient mice has precluded the study of IRP function in vivo. Here we use Cre/Lox technology to generate viable organisms lacking IRP expression in a single tissue, the intestine. Mice lacking intestinal IRP expression develop intestinal malabsorption and dehydration postnatally and die within 4 weeks of birth. We demonstrate that IRPs control the expression of divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) mRNA and protein, a limiting intestinal iron importer. IRPs are also shown to be critically important to secure physiological levels of the basolateral iron exporter ferroportin. IRPs are thus essential for intestinal function and organismal survival and coordinate the synthesis of key iron metabolism proteins in the duodenum.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Integrity and barrier function of the epidermis critically depend on glucosylceramide synthesis.

Richard Jennemann; Roger Sandhoff; Lutz Langbein; Sylvia Kaden; Ulrike Rothermel; Hichem Gallala; Konrad Sandhoff; Herbert Wiegandt; Hermann Josef Gröne

Ceramides are vital components of the water barrier in mammalian skin. Epidermis-specific, a major ceramide portion contains ω-hydroxy very long chain fatty acids (C30–C36). These ω-hydroxy ceramides (Cers) are found in the extracellular lamellae of the stratum corneum either as linoleic acyl esters or protein bound. Glucosylceramide is the major glycosphingolipid of the epidermis. Synthesized from ceramide and UDP-glucose, it is thought to be itself an intracellular precursor and carrier for extracellular ω-hydroxy ceramides. To investigate whether GlcCer is an obligatory intermediate in ceramide metabolism to maintain epidermal barrier function, a mouse with an epidermis-specific glucosylceramide synthase (Ugcg) deficiency has been generated. Four days after birth animals devoid of GlcCer synthesis in keratinocytes showed a pronounced desquamation of the stratum corneum and extreme transepidermal water loss leading to death. The stratum corneum appeared as a thick unstructured mass. Lamellar bodies of the stratum granulosum did not display the usual ordered inner structure and were often irregularly arranged. Although the total amount of epidermal protein-bound ceramides remained unchanged, epidermal-free ω-hydroxy ceramides increased 4-fold and ω-hydroxy sphingomyelins, almost not detectable in wild type epidermis, emerged in quantities comparable with lost GlcCer. We conclude that the transient formation of GlcCer is vital for a regular arrangement of lipids and proteins in lamellar bodies and for the maintenance of the epidermal barrier.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Histone deacetylase 10 promotes autophagy-mediated cell survival

Ina Oehme; Jan Peter Linke; Barbara C. Böck; Till Milde; Marco Lodrini; Bettina Hartenstein; Inga Wiegand; Christian Eckert; Wilfried Roth; Marcel Kool; Sylvia Kaden; Hermann Josef Gröne; Jh Schulte; Sven Lindner; Anne Hamacher-Brady; Nathan R. Brady; Hedwig E. Deubzer; Olaf Witt

Significance Resistance to chemotherapy is one of the major challenges in oncology. Neuroblastoma is the most common extracranial solid tumor in childhood, and the successful response of high-risk patients to chemotherapy remains poor. Our work showed that the so far poorly studied histone deacetylase (HDAC)10 promotes autophagy-mediated cell survival and signals poor outcome in independent high-risk patient cohorts. Inhibition of HDAC10 sensitized tumor cells for cytotoxic drug treatment. These results offer HDAC10 as a potential biomarker for treatment response of high-risk tumors and open new avenues for developing selective treatment strategies to bypass drug resistance of these tumors. Tumor cells activate autophagy in response to chemotherapy-induced DNA damage as a survival program to cope with metabolic stress. Here, we provide in vitro and in vivo evidence that histone deacetylase (HDAC)10 promotes autophagy-mediated survival in neuroblastoma cells. We show that both knockdown and inhibition of HDAC10 effectively disrupted autophagy associated with sensitization to cytotoxic drug treatment in a panel of highly malignant V-MYC myelocytomatosis viral-related oncogene, neuroblastoma derived-amplified neuroblastoma cell lines, in contrast to nontransformed cells. HDAC10 depletion in neuroblastoma cells interrupted autophagic flux and induced accumulation of autophagosomes, lysosomes, and a prominent substrate of the autophagic degradation pathway, p62/sequestosome 1. Enforced HDAC10 expression protected neuroblastoma cells against doxorubicin treatment through interaction with heat shock protein 70 family proteins, causing their deacetylation. Conversely, heat shock protein 70/heat shock cognate 70 was acetylated in HDAC10-depleted cells. HDAC10 expression levels in high-risk neuroblastomas correlated with autophagy in gene-set analysis and predicted treatment success in patients with advanced stage 4 neuroblastomas. Our results demonstrate that HDAC10 protects cancer cells from cytotoxic agents by mediating autophagy and identify this HDAC isozyme as a druggable regulator of advanced-stage tumor cell survival. Moreover, these results propose a promising way to considerably improve treatment response in the neuroblastoma patient subgroup with the poorest outcome.


Cell Metabolism | 2010

Iron Regulatory Proteins Secure Mitochondrial Iron Sufficiency and Function

Bruno Galy; Dunja Ferring-Appel; Sven W. Sauer; Sylvia Kaden; Said Lyoumi; Hervé Puy; Stefan Kölker; Hermann Josef Gröne; Matthias W. Hentze

Mitochondria supply cells with ATP, heme, and iron sulfur clusters (ISC), and mitochondrial energy metabolism involves both heme- and ISC-dependent enzymes. Here, we show that mitochondrial iron supply and function require iron regulatory proteins (IRP), cytosolic RNA-binding proteins that control mRNA translation and stability. Mice lacking both IRP1 and IRP2 in their hepatocytes suffer from mitochondrial iron deficiency and dysfunction associated with alterations of the ISC and heme biosynthetic pathways, leading to liver failure and death. These results uncover a major role of the IRPs in cell biology: to ensure adequate iron supply to the mitochondrion for proper function of this critical organelle.


Nature Genetics | 2006

Iron homeostasis in the brain: complete iron regulatory protein 2 deficiency without symptomatic neurodegeneration in the mouse

Bruno Galy; Sabine M. Hölter; Thomas Klopstock; Dunja Ferring; Lore Becker; Sylvia Kaden; Wolfgang Wurst; Hermann Josef Gröne; Matthias W. Hentze

Iron homeostasis in the brain: complete iron regulatory protein 2 deficiency without symptomatic neurodegeneration in the mouse


Journal of Virology | 2009

E7 Oncoprotein of Novel Human Papillomavirus Type 108 Lacking the E6 Gene Induces Dysplasia in Organotypic Keratinocyte Cultures

Rui Jorge Nobre; Elsa Herráez-Hernández; Jian Wei Fei; Lutz Langbein; Sylvia Kaden; Hermann Josef Gröne; Ethel Michele De Villiers

ABSTRACT The genome organization of the novel human papillomavirus type 108 (HPV108), isolated from a low-grade cervical lesion, deviates from those of other HPVs in lacking an E6 gene. The three related HPV types HPV103, HPV108, and HPV101 were isolated from cervicovaginal cells taken from normal genital mucosa (HPV103) and low-grade (HPV108) and high-grade cervical (HPV101) intraepithelial neoplasia (Z. Chen, M. Schiffman, R. Herrero, R. DeSalle, and R. D. Burk, Virology 360:447-453, 2007, and this report). Their unusual genome organization, against the background of considerable phylogenetic distance from the other HPV types usually associated with lesions of the genital tract, prompted us to investigate whether HPV108 E7 per se is sufficient to induce the above-mentioned clinical lesions. Expression of HPV108 E7 in organotypic keratinocyte cultures increases proliferation and apoptosis, focal nuclear polymorphism, and polychromasia. This is associated with irregular intra- and extracellular lipid accumulation and loss of the epithelial barrier. These alterations are linked to HPV108 E7 binding to pRb and inducing its decrease, an increase in PCNA expression, and BrdU incorporation, as well as increased p53 and p21CIP1 protein levels. A delay in keratin K10 expression, increased expression of keratins K14 and K16, and loss of the corneal proteins involucrin and loricrin have also been noted. These modifications are suggestive of infection by a high-risk papillomavirus.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Neuronal Expression of Glucosylceramide Synthase in Central Nervous System Regulates Body Weight and Energy Homeostasis

Viola Nordström; Monja Willershäuser; Silke Herzer; Jan Rozman; Oliver von Bohlen und Halbach; Sascha Meldner; Ulrike Rothermel; Sylvia Kaden; Fabian C. Roth; Clemens Waldeck; Norbert Gretz; Martin Hrabě de Angelis; Andreas Draguhn; Martin Klingenspor; Hermann Josef Gröne; Richard Jennemann

Body weight and energy homeostasis are regulated by leptin receptor interactions with gangliosides, a class of plasma membrane lipids, in forebrain neurons of mice.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2011

Glucocorticoid Activity during Lung Maturation Is Essential in Mesenchymal and Less in Alveolar Epithelial Cells

Daniel Habermehl; Jan Rodriguez Parkitna; Sylvia Kaden; Britta Brügger; Felix Wieland; Hermann Josef Gröne; Günther Schütz

Corticosteroid treatment is an established therapy for preterm infants, and germline inactivation of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) gene in the mouse leads to respiratory failure and postnatal lethality. Although glucocorticoids have been thought to critically act in epithelial cells inducing the functional maturation of the lung, inactivation of the GR gene exclusively in the epithelium of the developing murine lung did not impair survival. In contrast, mice lacking GR specifically in mesenchyme-derived cells displayed a phenotype strongly reminiscent of GR knockout animals and died immediately after birth. Detailed analysis of gene expression allows the conclusion that GR acts in cells of the fibroblast lineage controlling their proliferation rate and the composition of the extracellular matrix.

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Hermann Josef Gröne

German Cancer Research Center

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Richard Jennemann

German Cancer Research Center

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Roger Sandhoff

German Cancer Research Center

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Ulrike Rothermel

German Cancer Research Center

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Günther Schütz

German Cancer Research Center

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Herbert Wiegandt

German Cancer Research Center

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Shijun Wang

German Cancer Research Center

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Viola Nordström

German Cancer Research Center

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Bruno Galy

European Bioinformatics Institute

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