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Dive into the research topics where Teja W. Groemer is active.

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Featured researches published by Teja W. Groemer.


Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry | 2010

Functional Inhibitors of Acid Sphingomyelinase (FIASMAs): a novel pharmacological group of drugs with broad clinical applications.

Johannes Kornhuber; Philipp Tripal; Martin Reichel; Christiane Mühle; Cosima Rhein; Markus Muehlbacher; Teja W. Groemer; Erich Gulbins

Acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) is an important lipid-metabolizing enzyme cleaving sphingomyelin to ceramide, mainly within lysosomes. Acid ceramidase (AC) further degrades ceramide to sphingosine which can then be phosphorylated to sphingosine-1-phosphate. Ceramide and its metabolite sphingosine-1-phosphate have been shown to antagonistically regulate apoptosis, cellular differentiation, proliferation and cell migration. Inhibitors of ASM or AC therefore hold promise for a number of new clinical therapies, e.g. for Alzheimer’s disease and major depression on the one hand and cancer on the other. Inhibitors of ASM have been known for a long time. Cationic amphiphilic substances induce the detachment of ASM protein from inner lysosomal membranes with its consecutive inactivation, thereby working as functional inhibitors of ASM. We recently experimentally identified a large number of hitherto unknown functional inhibitors of ASM and determined specific physicochemical properties of such cationic amphiphilic substances that functionally inhibit ASM. We propose the acronym “FIASMA” (Functional Inhibitor of Acid SphingoMyelinAse) for members of this large group of compounds with a broad range of new clinical indications. FIASMAs differ markedly with respect to molecular structure and current clinical indication. Most of the available FIASMAs are licensed for medical use in humans, are minimally toxic and may therefore be applied for disease states associated with increased activity of ASM.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Acid sphingomyelinase–ceramide system mediates effects of antidepressant drugs

Erich Gulbins; Monica Palmada; Martin Reichel; Anja Lüth; Christoph Böhmer; Davide Amato; Christian P. Müller; Carsten H. Tischbirek; Teja W. Groemer; Ghazaleh Tabatabai; Katrin Anne Becker; Philipp Tripal; Sven Staedtler; Teresa F. Ackermann; Johannes van Brederode; Christian Alzheimer; Michael Weller; Undine E. Lang; Burkhard Kleuser; Heike Grassmé; Johannes Kornhuber

Major depression is a highly prevalent severe mood disorder that is treated with antidepressants. The molecular targets of antidepressants require definition. We investigated the role of the acid sphingomyelinase (Asm)-ceramide system as a target for antidepressants. Therapeutic concentrations of the antidepressants amitriptyline and fluoxetine reduced Asm activity and ceramide concentrations in the hippocampus, increased neuronal proliferation, maturation and survival and improved behavior in mouse models of stress-induced depression. Genetic Asm deficiency abrogated these effects. Mice overexpressing Asm, heterozygous for acid ceramidase, treated with blockers of ceramide metabolism or directly injected with C16 ceramide in the hippocampus had higher ceramide concentrations and lower rates of neuronal proliferation, maturation and survival compared with controls and showed depression-like behavior even in the absence of stress. The decrease of ceramide abundance achieved by antidepressant-mediated inhibition of Asm normalized these effects. Lowering ceramide abundance may thus be a central goal for the future development of antidepressants.


Nature Neuroscience | 2007

Synaptic vesicles recycling spontaneously and during activity belong to the same vesicle pool

Teja W. Groemer; Jürgen Klingauf

Recently, it has been claimed that vesicles recycling spontaneously and during activity belong to different pools. Here we simultaneously measured, using spectrally separable styryl dyes, the release kinetics of vesicles recycled spontaneously or upon stimulation and the effects of the v-ATPase blocker folimycin on the frequency of miniature postsynaptic currents in rat hippocampal neurons. Our results provide evidence as to the identities of the vesicle pools recycling at rest and during stimulation.


Biological Psychiatry | 2004

Amyloid β peptides in cerebrospinal fluid as profiled with surface enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry: evidence of novel biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease

Piotr Lewczuk; Hermann Esselmann; Teja W. Groemer; Mirko Bibl; Juan Manuel Maler; Petra Steinacker; Markus Otto; Johannes Kornhuber; Jens Wiltfang

Abstract Background The advent of new therapeutic avenues for Alzheimers disease (AD) calls for an improved early and differential diagnosis. Methods With surface enhanced laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (SELDI-TOF MS), cerebrospinal fluid from patients with AD ( n = 10) and nondemented control subjects ( n = 9) was studied. Results Molecular mass signals were observed corresponding to three novel amyloid beta (Aβ) peptides that have not previously been described, in addition to those previously known, with molecular masses of 4525.1 d, 4846.8 d, and 7755.8 d. The signal-to-noise ratios (S/NR) of Aβ(4525.1) and Aβ(7758.8+2H) were significantly decreased in AD [Aβ(4525.1): median 2.2 and 4.3 in AD and control subjects, respectively, p p p p R = .67, p Conclusions We report evidence of three novel amyloid β peptides that might play an important role in the diagnosis and pathophysiology of Alzheimers disease.


Nature Methods | 2012

Aptamers as potential tools for super-resolution microscopy

Felipe Opazo; Matthew Levy; Michelle Byrom; Christina Schäfer; Claudia Geisler; Teja W. Groemer; Andrew D. Ellington; Silvio O. Rizzoli

(a) The TfnR aptamer c2, the EGFR aptamer E07 and their respective control aptamers (random sequences) were incubated at 37°C with human A431 cells as described in Supplementary Methods. Similarly, HeLa cells stably transfected with a human PSMA construct were incubated with the PSMA A9 aptamer or its random control. The pairs of images (control and aptamer) are equally scaled to allow a direct visual comparison. The insets in the control images correspond to the same images, scaled to a level where autofluorescence can be visualized. Scale bar, 10 μm. (b) Colocalization of the different aptamers with endosomal labels. We co-incubated the cells (same as above) with aptamers against TfnR (c2) or PSMA (A9) and Alexa488-transferrin (Invitrogen), since the latter constitutes an ideal marker for early endosomes.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Identification of Novel Functional Inhibitors of Acid Sphingomyelinase

Johannes Kornhuber; Markus Muehlbacher; Stefan Trapp; Stefanie Pechmann; Astrid Friedl; Martin Reichel; Christiane Mühle; Lothar Terfloth; Teja W. Groemer; Gudrun M. Spitzer; Klaus R. Liedl; Erich Gulbins; Philipp Tripal

We describe a hitherto unknown feature for 27 small drug-like molecules, namely functional inhibition of acid sphingomyelinase (ASM). These entities named FIASMAs (Functional Inhibitors of Acid SphingoMyelinAse), therefore, can be potentially used to treat diseases associated with enhanced activity of ASM, such as Alzheimers disease, major depression, radiation- and chemotherapy-induced apoptosis and endotoxic shock syndrome. Residual activity of ASM measured in the presence of 10 µM drug concentration shows a bimodal distribution; thus the tested drugs can be classified into two groups with lower and higher inhibitory activity. All FIASMAs share distinct physicochemical properties in showing lipophilic and weakly basic properties. Hierarchical clustering of Tanimoto coefficients revealed that FIASMAs occur among drugs of various chemical scaffolds. Moreover, FIASMAs more frequently violate Lipinskis Rule-of-Five than compounds without effect on ASM. Inhibition of ASM appears to be associated with good permeability across the blood-brain barrier. In the present investigation, we developed a novel structure-property-activity relationship by using a random forest-based binary classification learner. Virtual screening revealed that only six out of 768 (0.78%) compounds of natural products functionally inhibit ASM, whereas this inhibitory activity occurs in 135 out of 2028 (6.66%) drugs licensed for medical use in humans.


Nature Neuroscience | 2010

The same synaptic vesicles drive active and spontaneous release

Benjamin G. Wilhelm; Teja W. Groemer; Silvio O. Rizzoli

Synaptic vesicles release neurotransmitter both actively (on stimulation) and spontaneously (at rest). It has been assumed that identical vesicles use both modes of release; however, recent evidence has challenged this view. Using several assays (FM dye imaging, pHluorin imaging and antibody-labeling of synaptotagmin) in neuromuscular preparations from Drosophila, frog and mouse, as well as rat cultured neurons, we found that the same vesicles participate in active and spontaneous release.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Amyloid Precursor Protein Is Trafficked and Secreted via Synaptic Vesicles

Teja W. Groemer; Cora Thiel; Matthew Holt; Dietmar Riedel; Yunfeng Hua; Jana Hüve; Benjamin G. Wilhelm; Jürgen Klingauf

A large body of evidence has implicated amyloid precursor protein (APP) and its proteolytic derivatives as key players in the physiological context of neuronal synaptogenesis and synapse maintenance, as well as in the pathology of Alzheimers Disease (AD). Although APP processing and release are known to occur in response to neuronal stimulation, the exact mechanism by which APP reaches the neuronal surface is unclear. We now demonstrate that a small but relevant number of synaptic vesicles contain APP, which can be released during neuronal activity, and most likely represent the major exocytic pathway of APP. This novel finding leads us to propose a revised model of presynaptic APP trafficking that reconciles existing knowledge on APP with our present understanding of vesicular release and recycling.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Gene dosage dependent rescue of HSP neurite defects in SPG4 patients' neurons

Steven Havlicek; Zacharias Kohl; Himanshu K. Mishra; Iryna Prots; Esther Eberhardt; Naime Denguir; Holger Wend; Sonja Plötz; Leah Boyer; Maria C. Marchetto; Stefan Aigner; Heinrich Sticht; Teja W. Groemer; Ute Hehr; Angelika Lampert; Ursula Schlötzer-Schrehardt; Jürgen Winkler; Fred H. Gage; Beate Winner

The hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are a heterogeneous group of motorneuron diseases characterized by progressive spasticity and paresis of the lower limbs. Mutations in Spastic Gait 4 (SPG4), encoding spastin, are the most frequent cause of HSP. To understand how mutations in SPG4 affect human neurons, we generated human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) from fibroblasts of two patients carrying a c.1684C>T nonsense mutation and from two controls. These SPG4 and control hiPSCs were able to differentiate into neurons and glia at comparable efficiency. All known spastin isoforms were reduced in SPG4 neuronal cells. The complexity of SPG4 neurites was decreased, which was paralleled by an imbalance of axonal transport with less retrograde movement. Prominent neurite swellings with disrupted microtubules were present in SPG4 neurons at an ultrastructural level. While some of these swellings contain acetylated and detyrosinated tubulin, these tubulin modifications were unchanged in total cell lysates of SPG4 neurons. Upregulation of another microtubule-severing protein, p60 katanin, may partially compensate for microtubuli dynamics in SPG4 neurons. Overexpression of the M1 or M87 spastin isoforms restored neurite length, branching, numbers of primary neurites and reduced swellings in SPG4 neuronal cells. We conclude that neurite complexity and maintenance in HSP patient-derived neurons are critically sensitive to spastin gene dosage. Our data show that elevation of single spastin isoform levels is sufficient to restore neurite complexity and reduce neurite swellings in patient cells. Furthermore, our human model offers an ideal platform for pharmacological screenings with the goal to restore physiological spastin levels in SPG4 patients.


European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | 2009

The role of ceramide in major depressive disorder

Johannes Kornhuber; Martin Reichel; Philipp Tripal; Teja W. Groemer; Andreas Wolfram Henkel; Christiane Mühle; Erich Gulbins

Major depression is a severe mood disorder with a lifetime prevalence of more than 10%. The pharmacokinetic hypothesis claims that a slow accumulation of antidepressant drugs by acid trapping mainly into lysosomes is responsible for the therapeutic latency and that a lysosomal target mediates the antidepressant effects. The lysosomal lipid metabolizing enzyme acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) cleaves sphingomyelin into ceramide and phosphorylcholine. In a pilot study, the activity of this enzyme was increased in peripheral blood cells of patients with major depressive disorder (MDD), making the ASM an interesting molecular target of antidepressant drugs. Indeed, several antidepressant drugs functionally inhibit ASM. The ASM/ceramide pathway might be a missing link unifying independent findings in neurobiology and the treatment of MDD such as therapeutic latency, oxidative stress, immune activation and increased risk of cardiovascular disease.

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Johannes Kornhuber

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Oliver Welzel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Andreas Wolfram Henkel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Armin Stroebel

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Carsten H. Tischbirek

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Jasmin Jung

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Philipp Tripal

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Christian Alzheimer

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Erich Gulbins

University of Duisburg-Essen

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