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Dive into the research topics where Thomas Dudler is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas Dudler.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Targeting of mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 confers protection from myocardial and gastrointestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury

Wilhelm J. Schwaeble; Nicholas Lynch; James E. Clark; Michael Marber; Nilesh J. Samani; Youssif M. Ali; Thomas Dudler; Brian Parent; Karl Lhotta; Russell Wallis; Conrad A. Farrar; Steven H. Sacks; Haekyung Lee; Ming Zhang; Daisuke Iwaki; Minoru Takahashi; Teizo Fujita; Clark E. Tedford; Cordula M. Stover

Complement research experienced a renaissance with the discovery of a third activation route, the lectin pathway. We developed a unique model of total lectin pathway deficiency, a mouse strain lacking mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 (MASP-2), and analyzed the role of MASP-2 in two models of postischemic reperfusion injury (IRI). In a model of transient myocardial IRI, MASP-2–deficient mice had significantly smaller infarct volumes than their wild-type littermates. Mice deficient in the downstream complement component C4 were not protected, suggesting the existence of a previously undescribed lectin pathway-dependent C4-bypass. Lectin pathway-mediated activation of C3 in the absence of C4 was demonstrated in vitro and shown to require MASP-2, C2, and MASP-1/3. MASP-2 deficiency also protects mice from gastrointestinal IRI, as do mAb-based inhibitors of MASP-2. The therapeutic effects of MASP-2 inhibition in this experimental model suggest the utility of anti–MASP-2 antibody therapy in reperfusion injury and other lectin pathway-mediated disorders.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

The lectin pathway of complement activation is a critical component of the innate immune response to pneumococcal infection.

Youssif M. Ali; Nicholas J. Lynch; Kashif S. Haleem; Teizo Fujita; Yuichi Endo; Søren Hansen; Uffe Holmskov; Kazue Takahashi; Gregory L. Stahl; Thomas Dudler; Umakhanth Venkatraman Girija; Russell Wallis; Aras Kadioglu; Cordula M. Stover; Peter W. Andrew; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble

The complement system plays a key role in host defense against pneumococcal infection. Three different pathways, the classical, alternative and lectin pathways, mediate complement activation. While there is limited information available on the roles of the classical and the alternative activation pathways of complement in fighting streptococcal infection, little is known about the role of the lectin pathway, mainly due to the lack of appropriate experimental models of lectin pathway deficiency. We have recently established a mouse strain deficient of the lectin pathway effector enzyme mannan-binding lectin associated serine protease-2 (MASP-2) and shown that this mouse strain is unable to form the lectin pathway specific C3 and C5 convertases. Here we report that MASP-2 deficient mice (which can still activate complement via the classical pathway and the alternative pathway) are highly susceptible to pneumococcal infection and fail to opsonize Streptococcus pneumoniae in the none-immune host. This defect in complement opsonisation severely compromises pathogen clearance in the lectin pathway deficient host. Using sera from mice and humans with defined complement deficiencies, we demonstrate that mouse ficolin A, human L-ficolin, and collectin 11 in both species, but not mannan-binding lectin (MBL), are the pattern recognition molecules that drive lectin pathway activation on the surface of S. pneumoniae. We further show that pneumococcal opsonisation via the lectin pathway can proceed in the absence of C4. This study corroborates the essential function of MASP-2 in the lectin pathway and highlights the importance of MBL-independent lectin pathway activation in the host defense against pneumococci.


The FASEB Journal | 2017

Lectin pathway effector enzyme mannan-binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 can activate native complement C3 in absence of C4 and/or C2.

Sadam Yaseen; Gregory A. Demopulos; Thomas Dudler; Munehisa Yabuki; Christi L. Wood; W. Jason Cummings; Larry W. Tjoelker; Teizo Fujita; Steven H. Sacks; Peter Garred; Peter W. Andrew; Robert B. Sim; Peter J. Lachmann; Russell Wallis; Nicholas J. Lynch; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble

All 3 activation pathways of complement—the classic pathway (CP), the alternative pathway, and the lectin pathway (LP)— converge into a common central event: the cleavage and activation of the abundant third complement component, C3, via formation of C3‐activating enzymes (C3 convertases). The fourth complement component, C4, and the second component, C2, are indispensable constituents of the C3 convertase complex, C4bC2a, which is formed by both the CP and the LP. Whereas in the absence of C4, CP can no longer activate C3, LP retains a residual but physiologically critical capacity to convert native C3 into its activation fragments, C3a and C3b. This residual C4 and/or C2 bypass route is dependent on LP‐specific mannan‐binding lectin‐associated serine protease‐2. By using various serum sources with defined complement deficiencies, we demonstrate that, under physiologic conditions LP‐specific C4 and/or C2 bypass activation of C3 is mediated by direct cleavage of native C3 by mannan‐binding lectin‐associated serine protease‐2 bound to LP‐activation complexes captured on ligand‐coated surfaces.—Yaseen, S., Demopulos, G., Dudler, T., Yabuki, M., Wood, C. L., Cummings, W. J., Tjoelker, L. W., Fujita, T., Sacks, S., Garred, P., Andrew, P., Sim, R. B., Lachmann, P. J., Wallis, R., Lynch, N., Schwaeble, W. J. Lectin pathway effector enzyme mannan‐binding lectin‐associated serine protease‐2 can activate native complement C3 in absence of C4 and/or C2. FASEB J. 31, 2210–2219 (2017). www.fasebj.org


Archive | 2010

Methods for treating disseminated intravascular coagulation by inhibiting masp-2 dependent complement activation

Hans-Wilhelm Schwaeble; Thomas Dudler; Clark E. Tedford; James B. Parent; Gregory A. Demopulos


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2016

Mannan binding lectin-associated serine protease-2 (MASP-2) critically contributes to post-ischemic brain injury independent of MASP-1

Franca Orsini; Elvina Chrysanthou; Thomas Dudler; W. Jason Cummings; Minoru Takahashi; Teizo Fujita; Gregory A. Demopulos; Maria Grazia De Simoni; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble


Archive | 2013

Compositions and methods of inhibiting masp-1 and/or masp-2 and/or masp-3 for the treatment of various diseases and disorders

Hans-Wilhelm Schwaeble; Gregory A. Demopulos; Thomas Dudler; Patrick Gray


Archive | 2012

Compositions for inhibiting MASP-2 dependent complement activation

Thomas Dudler; Wayne R. Gombotz; James B. Parent; Clark E. Tedford; Anita Kavlie; Urs Beat Hagemann; Herald Reiersen; Sergej Michailovic Kiprijanov


Archive | 2018

Compositions and methods of inhibiting masp-3 for the treatment of various diseases and disorders

Jason W. Cummings; Gregory A. Demopulos; Thomas Dudler; Hans-Wilhelm Schwaeble; Larry W. Tjoelker; Christi L. Wood; Munehisa Yabuki


Open heart | 2017

Cardioprotection by an anti MASP-2 antibody in a in vivo murine model of infarction

James E. Clark; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble; Michael Marber; Thomas Dudler


Archive | 2017

Methods for Inhibiting Angiogenesis in a Subject in Need Thereof

Gregory A. Demopulos; Hans-Wilhelm Schwaeble; Thomas Dudler; Larry Tjoelker

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Teizo Fujita

Fukushima Medical University

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