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Dive into the research topics where Udo Kraushaar is active.

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Featured researches published by Udo Kraushaar.


Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2011

Cardiotoxicity testing using pluripotent stem cell-derived human cardiomyocytes and state-of-the-art bioanalytics: a review.

Carl-Fredrik Mandenius; Daniella Steel; Fozia Noor; Thomas D. Meyer; Elmar Heinzle; Julia Asp; Sarina Arain; Udo Kraushaar; Susanne Bremer; Reiner Class; Peter Sartipy

In this article, recent progress in cardiotoxicity testing based on the use of immortalized cell lines or human embryonic stem cell (hESC) derived cardiomyocytes in combination with state‐of‐the‐art bioanalytical methods and sensors is reviewed. The focus is on hESC‐derived cells and their refinement into competent testing cells, but the access and utility of other relevant cell types are also discussed. Recent developments in sensor techniques and bioanalytical approaches for measuring critical cardiotoxicity parameters are highlighted, together with aspects of data evaluation and validation. Finally, recommendations for further research are given. Copyright


Expert Opinion on Drug Safety | 2012

Cardiac safety pharmacology: from human ether-a-gogo related gene channel block towards induced pluripotent stem cell based disease models.

Udo Kraushaar; Thomas D. Meyer; Dietmar Hess; Lior Gepstein; Stefan R. Braam; Elke Guenther

Introduction: The field of cardiac safety pharmacology has been experiencing exciting changes over the recent years. Drug induced arrhythmia of the torsade des pointes types has been the reason for the denial of approval of novel drug candidates. The aim of cardiac safety pharmacology is to detect undesirable pharmacodynamic drug effects within and above the therapeutic range. A special focus is on the identification of potential arrhythmogenic effects within the drug discovery chain. Areas covered: Here, the authors discuss the relevance of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell derived cardiomyocytes for safety pharmacology. The technology of obtaining functional cardiomyocytes from somatic cells of healthy donors and patients with inherited diseases is the basis for diverse disease models in multi-level safety pharmacology screening. The reader will gain an overview of stem cell based technologies in cardiac safety pharmacology in cardiac and disease modeling by iPS cell derived cardiomyocytes from patients with an inherited cardiac syndrome. Expert opinion: iPS cell derived cardiomyocytes – especially from patients with increased risk of cardiac arrhythmia – are on the verge of offering new options for drug testing. More reliable assays can be expected to predict the arrhythmogenic risk of drug candidates in humans. However, this technology is still new and extensive validation studies are due.


Journal of Burn Care & Research | 2011

TRPV channel expression in human skin and possible role in thermally induced cell death.

Christine Radtke; Nektarios Sinis; Michael Sauter; Sabrina Jahn; Udo Kraushaar; Elke Guenther; H. Peter Rodemann; Hans-Oliver Rennekampff

Cell death via necrosis and apoptosis is a hallmark of deep dermal to full-thickness cutaneous burn injuries. Keratinocytes might act as thermosensory cells that transmit information regarding ambient temperature via heat-gated transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) ion channels. The aim of this study was to investigate the distribution of TRPV1, 2, 3, and 4 in uninjured and thermally burned skin. The authors investigated warmth-evoked currents in keratinocytes and cell kinetics of thermally injured keratinocytes in culture with agonists and antagonists of TRPV channels. Specimens of uninjured normal skin and discarded tissue of thermally injured skin were stained for TRPV1, 2, 3, and 4. Cultured primary human keratinocytes were heated for 5 minutes at the following temperatures: 37°C (control), 42°C, and 60°C and thereafter cultured for 24 or 48 hours at 37°C. Thermally stressed cells were treated with TRPV antagonists capsazepine or ruthenium red, and cell viability capacity was determined. TRPV1, TRPV2, TRPV3, and TRPV4 immunoreactivity was differentially identified on basal and suprabasal keratinocytes of healthy human skin. Patch clamp analysis showed a functional response of human keratinocytes at temperatures >40°C. Cell death of keratinocytes after heating at 42°C was reduced by 15 and 5% with ruthenium red and by 20 and 30% by capsazepine at 24 and 48 hours, respectively. Cell death after treatment at 60°C was significantly reduced at 24 hours with capsazepine (22%) or ruthenium red (18%) but only minimally affected after 48 hours postinjury. Interaction with TRPV channels on keratinocytes may offer a new strategy to counteract cell death after thermal injury.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Isolation, expansion and transplantation of postnatal murine progenitor cells of the enteric nervous system.

Heike Monika Dettmann; Ying Zhang; Nadine Wronna; Udo Kraushaar; Elke Guenther; Roland Mohr; Peter H. Neckel; Andreas F. Mack; Joerg Fuchs; Lothar Just; Florian Obermayr

Neural stem or progenitor cells have been proposed to restore gastrointestinal function in patients suffering from congenital or acquired defects of the enteric nervous system. Various, mainly embryonic cell sources have been identified for this purpose. However, immunological and ethical issues make a postnatal cell based therapy desirable. We therefore evaluated and quantified the potential of progenitor cells of the postnatal murine enteric nervous system to give rise to neurons and glial cells in vitro. Electrophysiological analysis and BrdU uptake studies provided direct evidence that generated neurons derive from expanded cells in vitro. Transplantation of isolated and expanded postnatal progenitor cells into the distal colon of adult mice demonstrated cell survival for 12 weeks (end of study). Implanted cells migrated within the gut wall and differentiated into neurons and glial cells, both of which were shown to derive from proliferated cells by BrdU uptake. This study indicates that progenitor cells isolated from the postnatal enteric nervous system might have the potential to serve as a source for a cell based therapy for neurogastrointestinal motility disorders. However, further studies are necessary to provide evidence that the generated cells are capable to positively influence the motility of the diseased gastrointestinal tract.


Current Urology Reports | 2013

Cell-Based Therapy for the Deficient Urinary Sphincter

Melanie L. Hart; Katharina M. H. Neumayer; Martin Vaegler; Lisa Daum; Bastian Amend; Karl D. Sievert; Simone Di Giovanni; Udo Kraushaar; Elke Guenther; A. Stenzl; Wilhelm K. Aicher

When sterile culture techniques of mammalian cells first became state of the art, there was tremendous anticipation that such cells could be eventually applied for therapeutic purposes. The discovery of adult human stem or progenitor cells further motivated scientists to pursue research in cell-based therapies. Although evidence from animal studies suggests that application of cells yields measurable benefits, in urology and many other disciplines, progenitor-cell-based therapies are not yet routinely clinically available. Stress urinary incontinence (SUI) is a condition affecting a large number of patients. The etiology of SUI includes, but is not limited to, degeneration of the urinary sphincter muscle tissue and loss of innervation, as well as anatomical and biomechanical causes. Therefore, different regimens were developed to treat SUI. However, at present, a curative functional treatment is not at hand. A progenitor-cell-based therapy that can tackle the etiology of incontinence, rather than the consequences, is a promising strategy. Therefore, several research teams have intensified their efforts to develop such a therapy for incontinence. Here, we introduce candidate stem and progenitor cells suitable for SUI treatment, show how the functional homogeneity and state of maturity of differentiated cells crucial for proper tissue integration can be assessed electrophysiologically prior to their clinical application, and discuss the trophic potential of adult mesenchymal stromal (or stem) cells in regeneration of neuronal function.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Smooth Muscle-Like Cells Generated from Human Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Display Marker Gene Expression and Electrophysiological Competence Comparable to Bladder Smooth Muscle Cells

Juliane Brun; Katrin Lutz; Katharina M. H. Neumayer; Gerd Klein; Tanja Seeger; Tatiana Uynuk-Ool; Katharina Wörgötter; Sandra Schmid; Udo Kraushaar; Elke Guenther; Bernd Rolauffs; Wilhelm K. Aicher; Melanie L. Hart

The use of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) differentiated toward a smooth muscle cell (SMC) phenotype may provide an alternative for investigators interested in regenerating urinary tract organs such as the bladder where autologous smooth muscle cells cannot be used or are unavailable. In this study we measured the effects of good manufacturing practice (GMP)-compliant expansion followed by myogenic differentiation of human MSCs on the expression of a range of contractile (from early to late) myogenic markers in relation to the electrophysiological parameters to assess the functional role of the differentiated MSCs and found that differentiation of MSCs associated with electrophysiological competence comparable to bladder SMCs. Within 1–2 weeks of myogenic differentiation, differentiating MSCs significantly expressed alpha smooth muscle actin (αSMA; ACTA2), transgelin (TAGLN), calponin (CNN1), and smooth muscle myosin heavy chain (SM-MHC; MYH11) according to qRT-PCR and/or immunofluorescence and Western blot. Voltage-gated Na+ current levels also increased within the same time period following myogenic differentiation. In contrast to undifferentiated MSCs, differentiated MSCs and bladder SMCs exhibited elevated cytosolic Ca2+ transients in response to K+-induced depolarization and contracted in response to K+ indicating functional maturation of differentiated MSCs. Depolarization was suppressed by Cd2+, an inhibitor of voltage-gated Ca2+-channels. The expression of Na+-channels was pharmacologically identified as the Nav1.4 subtype, while the K+ and Ca2+ ion channels were identified by gene expression of KCNMA1, CACNA1C and CACNA1H which encode for the large conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel BKCa channels, Cav1.2 L-type Ca2+ channels and Cav3.2 T-type Ca2+ channels, respectively. This protocol may be used to differentiate adult MSCs into smooth muscle-like cells with an intermediate-to-late SMC contractile phenotype exhibiting voltage-gated ion channel activity comparable to bladder SMCs which may be important for urological regenerative medicine applications.


Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology | 2010

Cardiac slices as a predictive tool for arrhythmogenic potential of drugs and chemicals.

Thomas D. Meyer; Katharina Stuerz; Elke Guenther; Mitsuhiro Edamura; Udo Kraushaar

Importance of the field: Cardiac arrhythmia represents one of the primary safety pharmacological concerns in drug development. The most prominent example is drug induced ventricular tachycardia of the Torsade des Pointes type. The mechanism how this type of arrhythmia develops is a complex multi-cellular phenomenon. It can only be insufficiently reflected by cellular or molecular assays. However, organ models – such as Langendorff hearts – or in vivo experiments are expensive and time consuming and not suitable for assays requiring an increased throughput. Areas covered in this review: Here, we describe and review an assay bridging the gap between cardiomyocyte based assays and organ based systems – cardiac slices. This assay is reviewed in direct comparison with established safety pharmacological assays. What the reader will gain: While slices have played an important role in brain research for > 2 decades, cardiac slices are experiencing a renaissance due to the novel challenges in safety pharmacology just in the last few years. Cardiac slices can be cultured and recorded over several days. It is possible to access electrophysiological data with a high number of electrodes – up to 256 electrodes – embedded in the surface of a microelectrode array. Take home message: Cardiac slices close the gap between cellular and organ based assays in cardiac safety pharmacology. The tissue properties of a functional cardiac syncytium are more accurately reflected by a slice rather than a single cell.


Stem cell reports | 2017

Steps toward Maturation of Embryonic Stem Cell-Derived Cardiomyocytes by Defined Physical Signals

Nian Shen; Anne Knopf; Claas Westendorf; Udo Kraushaar; Julia Riedl; Hannah Bauer; Simone Pöschel; Shannon Lee Layland; Monika Holeiter; Stefan Knolle; Eva Brauchle; Ali Nsair; Svenja Hinderer; Katja Schenke-Layland

Summary Cardiovascular disease remains a leading cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide. Embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (ESC-CMs) may offer significant advances in creating in vitro cardiac tissues for disease modeling, drug testing, and elucidating developmental processes; however, the induction of ESCs to a more adult-like CM phenotype remains challenging. In this study, we developed a bioreactor system to employ pulsatile flow (1.48 mL/min), cyclic strain (5%), and extended culture time to improve the maturation of murine and human ESC-CMs. Dynamically-cultured ESC-CMs showed an increased expression of cardiac-associated proteins and genes, cardiac ion channel genes, as well as increased SERCA activity and a Raman fingerprint with the presence of maturation-associated peaks similar to primary CMs. We present a bioreactor platform that can serve as a foundation for the development of human-based cardiac in vitro models to verify drug candidates, and facilitates the study of cardiovascular development and disease.


Toxicological Sciences | 2018

Cross-Site Reliability of Human Induced Pluripotent stem cell-derived Cardiomyocyte Based Safety Assays Using Microelectrode Arrays: Results from a Blinded CiPA Pilot Study

Daniel Millard; Qianyu Dang; Hong Shi; Xiaou Zhang; Chris Strock; Udo Kraushaar; Haoyu Zeng; Paul Levesque; Hua-Rong Lu; Jean-Michel Guillon; Joseph C. Wu; Yingxin Li; Greg Luerman; Blake D. Anson; Liang Guo; Mike Clements; Yama A. Abassi; James D. Ross; Jennifer Pierson; Gary A. Gintant

Abstract Recent in vitro cardiac safety studies demonstrate the ability of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) to detect electrophysiologic effects of drugs. However, variability contributed by unique approaches, procedures, cell lines, and reagents across laboratories makes comparisons of results difficult, leading to uncertainty about the role of hiPSC-CMs in defining proarrhythmic risk in drug discovery and regulatory submissions. A blinded pilot study was conducted to evaluate the electrophysiologic effects of 8 well-characterized drugs on 4 cardiomyocyte lines using a standardized protocol across 3 microelectrode array platforms (18 individual studies). Drugs were selected to define assay sensitivity of prominent repolarizing currents (E-4031 for IKr, JNJ303 for IKs) and depolarizing currents (nifedipine for ICaL, mexiletine for INa) as well as drugs affecting multichannel block (flecainide, moxifloxacin, quinidine, and ranolazine). Inclusion criteria for final analysis was based on demonstrated sensitivity to IKr block (20% prolongation with E-4031) and L-type calcium current block (20% shortening with nifedipine). Despite differences in baseline characteristics across cardiomyocyte lines, multiple sites, and instrument platforms, 10 of 18 studies demonstrated adequate sensitivity to IKr block with E-4031 and ICaL block with nifedipine for inclusion in the final analysis. Concentration-dependent effects on repolarization were observed with this qualified data set consistent with known ionic mechanisms of single and multichannel blocking drugs. hiPSC-CMs can detect repolarization effects elicited by single and multichannel blocking drugs after defining pharmacologic sensitivity to IKr and ICaL block, supporting further validation efforts using hiPSC-CMs for cardiac safety studies.


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2016

Influence of field potential duration on spontaneous beating rate of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes: Implications for data analysis and test system selection

Georg Rast; Udo Kraushaar; Sandra Buckenmaier; Carina Ittrich; Brian Guth

INTRODUCTION Field potential duration in human pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived cardiomyocytes is discussed as parameter for the assessment of drug-induced delayed repolarization. In spontaneously beating hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes field potential duration varies depending on beating rate but beating rate can also be influenced by field potential duration. This interdependence is not fully understood and therefore mandates careful data analysis and cautious interpretation of the results. METHODS We analysed data from several types of hiPSC-derived cardiomyocytes and, for comparison, primary embryonic chick cardiomyocytes using reference compounds to study the relationship between spontaneous rate and field potential duration. Based on such data we developed a method based on a regression model of drug-induced changes in the inter-beat interval versus changes in the field potential duration to distinguish primary rate from repolarisation effects. RESULTS We demonstrate the application of this approach with reference and research compounds. Cells from different sources differed with regard to the direct or indirect effects of reference compounds on spontaneous beating. All cell types showed an adaptation of field potential duration upon rate changes induced by reference compounds, however, the adaptation of the spontaneous rate after compound-induced changes in field potential duration varied considerably between cell types. DISCUSSION As shown by comparison with data from guinea pig papillary muscle, an ex vivo model with a fixed stimulation rate, this approach is more appropriate than the application of correction algorithms routinely used for in vivo data since such algorithms do not account for a dependence of rate on field potential duration.

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Thomas Meyer

University of Cape Town

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Gisela Drews

University of Tübingen

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