Ulrike Litzenburger
German Cancer Research Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ulrike Litzenburger.
Nature | 2011
Christiane A. Opitz; Ulrike Litzenburger; Felix Sahm; Martina Ott; Isabel Tritschler; Saskia Trump; Theresa Schumacher; Leonie Jestaedt; Dieter Schrenk; Michael Weller; Manfred Jugold; Gilles J. Guillemin; Christine L. Miller; Christian Lutz; Bernhard Radlwimmer; Irina Lehmann; Andreas von Deimling; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
Activation of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) by environmental xenobiotic toxic chemicals, for instance 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (dioxin), has been implicated in a variety of cellular processes such as embryogenesis, transformation, tumorigenesis and inflammation. But the identity of an endogenous ligand activating the AHR under physiological conditions in the absence of environmental toxic chemicals is still unknown. Here we identify the tryptophan (Trp) catabolite kynurenine (Kyn) as an endogenous ligand of the human AHR that is constitutively generated by human tumour cells via tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase (TDO), a liver- and neuron-derived Trp-degrading enzyme not yet implicated in cancer biology. TDO-derived Kyn suppresses antitumour immune responses and promotes tumour-cell survival and motility through the AHR in an autocrine/paracrine fashion. The TDO–AHR pathway is active in human brain tumours and is associated with malignant progression and poor survival. Because Kyn is produced during cancer progression and inflammation in the local microenvironment in amounts sufficient for activating the human AHR, these results provide evidence for a previously unidentified pathophysiological function of the AHR with profound implications for cancer and immune biology.
Nature | 2015
Jason D. Buenrostro; Beijing Wu; Ulrike Litzenburger; Dave Ruff; Michael L. Gonzales; Michael Snyder; Howard Y. Chang; William J. Greenleaf
Cell-to-cell variation is a universal feature of life that affects a wide range of biological phenomena, from developmental plasticity to tumour heterogeneity. Although recent advances have improved our ability to document cellular phenotypic variation, the fundamental mechanisms that generate variability from identical DNA sequences remain elusive. Here we reveal the landscape and principles of mammalian DNA regulatory variation by developing a robust method for mapping the accessible genome of individual cells by assay for transposase-accessible chromatin using sequencing (ATAC-seq) integrated into a programmable microfluidics platform. Single-cell ATAC-seq (scATAC-seq) maps from hundreds of single cells in aggregate closely resemble accessibility profiles from tens of millions of cells and provide insights into cell-to-cell variation. Accessibility variance is systematically associated with specific trans-factors and cis-elements, and we discover combinations of trans-factors associated with either induction or suppression of cell-to-cell variability. We further identify sets of trans-factors associated with cell-type-specific accessibility variance across eight cell types. Targeted perturbations of cell cycle or transcription factor signalling evoke stimulus-specific changes in this observed variability. The pattern of accessibility variation in cis across the genome recapitulates chromosome compartments de novo, linking single-cell accessibility variation to three-dimensional genome organization. Single-cell analysis of DNA accessibility provides new insight into cellular variation of the ‘regulome’.
Stem Cells | 2009
Christiane A. Opitz; Ulrike Litzenburger; Christian Lutz; Tobias V. Lanz; Isabel Tritschler; Alexandra Köppel; Eva Tolosa; Maik Hoberg; Jan Anderl; Wilhelm K. Aicher; Michael Weller; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) display unique suppressive properties on T‐cell immunity, thus representing an attractive vehicle for the treatment of conditions associated with harmful T‐cell responses such as organ‐specific autoimmunity and graft‐versus‐host disease. Toll‐like receptors (TLR) are primarily expressed on antigen‐presenting cells and recognize conserved pathogen‐derived components. Ligation of TLR activates multiple innate and adaptive immune response pathways to eliminate and protect against invading pathogens. In this work, we show that TLR expressed on human bone marrow‐derived MSC enhanced the immunosuppressive phenotype of MSC. Immunosuppression mediated by TLR was dependent on the production of immunosuppressive kynurenines by the tryptophan‐degrading enzyme indoleamine‐2,3‐dioxygenase‐1 (IDO1). Induction of IDO1 by TLR involved an autocrine interferon (IFN)‐β signaling loop, which was dependent on protein kinase R (PKR), but independent of IFN‐γ. These data define a new role for TLR in MSC immunobiology, which is to augment the immunosuppressive properties of MSC in the absence of IFN‐γ rather than inducing proinflammatory immune response pathways. PKR and IFN‐β play a central, previously unidentified role in orchestrating the production of immunosuppressive kynurenines by MSC. STEM CELLS 2009;27:909–919
PLOS ONE | 2011
Christiane A. Opitz; Ulrike Litzenburger; Uta Opitz; Felix Sahm; Katharina Ochs; Christian Lutz; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
1-methyl-D-tryptophan (1-D-MT) is currently being used in clinical trials in patients with relapsed or refractory solid tumors with the aim of inhibiting indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO)-mediated tumor immune escape. IDO is expressed in tumors and tumor-draining lymph nodes and degrades tryptophan (trp) to create an immunsuppressive micromilieu both by depleting trp and by accumulating immunosuppressive metabolites of the kynurenine (kyn) pathway. Here we show that proliferation of alloreactive T-cells cocultured with IDO1-positive human cancer cells paradoxically was inhibited by 1-D-MT. Surprisingly incubation with 1-D-MT increased kyn production of human cancer cells. Cell-free assays revealed that 1-D-MT did not alter IDO1 enzymatic activity. Instead, 1-D-MT induced IDO1 mRNA and protein expression through pathways involving p38 MAPK and JNK signalling. Treatment of cancer patients with 1-D-MT has transcriptional effects that may promote rather than suppress anti-tumor immune escape by increasing IDO1 in the cancer cells. These off-target effects should be carefully analyzed in the ongoing clinical trials with 1-D-MT.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Tobias V. Lanz; Simon Becker; Matthias Osswald; Stefan Bittner; Michael K. Schuhmann; Christiane A. Opitz; Sadanand Gaikwad; Benedikt Wiestler; Ulrike Litzenburger; Felix Sahm; Martina Ott; Simeon Iwantscheff; Carl Grabitz; Michel Mittelbronn; Andreas von Deimling; Frank Winkler; Sven G. Meuth; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
Disruption of the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is a hallmark of acute inflammatory lesions in multiple sclerosis (MS) and its animal model experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. This disruption may precede and facilitate the infiltration of encephalitogenic T cells. The signaling events that lead to this BBB disruption are incompletely understood but appear to involve dysregulation of tight-junction proteins such as claudins. Pharmacological interventions aiming at stabilizing the BBB in MS might have therapeutic potential. Here, we show that the orally available small molecule LY-317615, a synthetic bisindolylmaleimide and inhibitor of protein kinase Cβ, which is clinically under investigation for the treatment of cancer, suppresses the transmigration of activated T cells through an inflamed endothelial cell barrier, where it leads to the induction of the tight-junction molecules zona occludens-1, claudin 3, and claudin 5 and other pathways critically involved in transendothelial leukocyte migration. Treatment of mice with ongoing experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis with LY-317615 ameliorates inflammation, demyelination, axonal damage, and clinical symptoms. Although LY-317615 dose-dependently suppresses T-cell proliferation and cytokine production independent of antigen specificity, its therapeutic effect is abrogated in a mouse model requiring pertussis toxin. This abrogation indicates that the anti-inflammatory and clinical efficacy is mainly mediated by stabilization of the BBB, thus suppressing the transmigration of encephalitogenic T cells. Collectively, our data suggest the involvement of endothelial protein kinase Cβ in stabilizing the BBB in autoimmune neuroinflammation and imply a therapeutic potential of BBB-targeting agents such as LY-317615 as therapeutic approaches for MS.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Martina Ott; Ulrike Litzenburger; Felix Sahm; Katharina J. Rauschenbach; Ruxandra Tudoran; Christian Hartmann; Victor E. Marquez; Andreas von Deimling; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) is the catalytic subunit of the Polycomb-repressive complex 2 (PRC2) that epigenetically silences gene transcription through histone H3 lysine trimethylation (H3K27me3). EZH2 has been implicated in stem cell maintenance and is overexpressed in hematological and solid malignancie`s including malignant glioma. EZH2 is thought to promote tumor progression by silencing tumor suppressor genes. Hence pharmacological disruption of the PRC2 is an attractive therapeutic strategy for cancer treatment. Here we show that EZH2 is expressed in human glioma and correlates with malignancy. Silencing of EZH2 reduced glioma cell proliferation and invasiveness. While we did not observe induction of cell cycle-associated tumor suppressor genes by silencing or pharmacological inhibition of EZH2, microarray analyses demonstrated a strong transcriptional reduction of the AXL receptor kinase. Neither histone nor DNA methylation appeared to be involved in the positive regulation of AXL by EZH2. Silencing AXL mimicked the antiinvasive effects of EZH2 knockdown. Finally, AXL expression is found in human gliomas with high EZH2 expression. Collectively these data suggest that EZH2 drives glioma invasiveness via transcriptional control of AXL independent of histone or DNA methylation.
Nature Methods | 2016
Xingqi Chen; Will Draper; Jason D. Buenrostro; Ulrike Litzenburger; Seung Woo Cho; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Ava C. Carter; Rajarshi P Ghosh; Alexandra East-Seletsky; Jennifer A. Doudna; William J. Greenleaf; Jan Liphardt; Howard Y. Chang
Spatial organization of the genome plays a central role in gene expression, DNA replication, and repair. But current epigenomic approaches largely map DNA regulatory elements outside of the native context of the nucleus. Here we report assay of transposase-accessible chromatin with visualization (ATAC-see), a transposase-mediated imaging technology that employs direct imaging of the accessible genome in situ, cell sorting, and deep sequencing to reveal the identity of the imaged elements. ATAC-see revealed the cell-type-specific spatial organization of the accessible genome and the coordinated process of neutrophil chromatin extrusion, termed NETosis. Integration of ATAC-see with flow cytometry enables automated quantitation and prospective cell isolation as a function of chromatin accessibility, and it reveals a cell-cycle dependence of chromatin accessibility that is especially dynamic in G1 phase. The integration of imaging and epigenomics provides a general and scalable approach for deciphering the spatiotemporal architecture of gene control.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 2011
Anne Hertenstein; Theresa Schumacher; Ulrike Litzenburger; Christiane A. Opitz; Christine S. Falk; Tito Serafini; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
3,4-dimethoxycinnamonyl-anthranilic acid (tranilast) is an orally available anti-allergic drug with structural and functional homologies to immunosuppressive catabolites of the essential amino acid tryptophan and broad anti-inflammatory properties. It has recently been shown to be effective in animal models of multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis, two autoimmune diseases that are mediated by auto-aggressive Th1-polarized CD4+ T lymphocytes. Here we demonstrate potent suppressive effects of tranilast on the function of naïve human CD4+ T cells. Tranilast inhibited inhibits activation and proliferation of purified CD4+ T cells stimulated through the T cell receptor with an EC50 of less than 10 μM, a concentration that is well below plasma levels achieved after oral administration of approved doses of 200-600 mg in humans. The antiproliferative effects were less potent on naïve CD8+ T cells. Suppression of CD4+ and CD8+ T cell proliferation was associated with an inhibition of T cell activation. Cytokine analyses of naïve CD4+ T cells revealed that tranilast interferes with the production of cyto- and chemokines driven by signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1), notably chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligands (CXCL) 9 and 10. Tranilast limited STAT1 phosphorylation in activated T cells and supplementation of CXCL9 or CXCL10 reversed the anti-proliferative effects of tranilast. These data imply CXCL9 and CXCL10 as novel therapeutic targets of tranilast in Th1-mediated autoimmune diseases and identify phospho-STAT1 and its target chemokines CXCL9 and CXCL10 as potential markers for monitoring the bioactivity of tranilast in humans.
Glia | 2015
Martina Ott; Ulrike Litzenburger; Katharina J. Rauschenbach; Lukas Bunse; Katharina Ochs; Felix Sahm; Stefan Pusch; Christiane A. Opitz; Jonas Blaes; Andreas von Deimling; Wolfgang Wick; Michael Platten
Tryptophan catabolism is increasingly recognized as a key and druggable molecular mechanism active in cancer, immune, and glioneural cells and involved in the modulation of antitumor immunity, autoimmunity and glioneural function. In addition to the pivotal rate limiting enzyme indoleamine‐2,3‐dioxygenase, expression of tryptophan‐2,3‐dioxygenase (TDO) has recently been described as an alternative pathway responsible for constitutive tryptophan degradation in malignant gliomas and other types of cancer. In addition, TDO has been implicated as a key regulator of neurotoxicity involved in neurodegenerative diseases and ageing. The pathways regulating TDO expression, however, are largely unknown. Here, a siRNA‐based transcription factor profiling in human glioblastoma cells revealed that the expression of human TDO is suppressed by endogenous glucocorticoid signaling. Similarly, treatment of glioblastoma cells with the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone led to a reduction of TDO expression and activity in vitro and in vivo. TDO inhibition was dependent on the immunophilin FKBP52, whose FK1 domain physically interacted with the glucocorticoid receptor as demonstrated by bimolecular fluorescence complementation and in situ proximity ligation assays. Accordingly, gene expression profile analyses revealed negative correlation of FKBP52 and TDO in glial and neural tumors and in normal brain. Knockdown of FKBP52 and treatment with the FK‐binding immunosuppressant FK506 enhanced TDO expression and activity in glioblastoma cells. In summary, we identify a novel steroid‐responsive FKBP52‐dependent pathway suppressing the expression and activity of TDO, a central and rate‐limiting enzyme in tryptophan metabolism, in human gliomas. GLIA 2015;63:78–90
Genome Biology | 2017
Ulrike Litzenburger; Jason D. Buenrostro; Beijing Wu; Nathan C. Sheffield; Arwa Kathiria; William J. Greenleaf; Howard Y. Chang
BackgroundCell-to-cell heterogeneity is a major driver of cancer evolution, progression, and emergence of drug resistance. Epigenomic variation at the single-cell level can rapidly create cancer heterogeneity but is difficult to detect and assess functionally.ResultsWe develop a strategy to bridge the gap between measurement and function in single-cell epigenomics. Using single-cell chromatin accessibility and RNA-seq data in K562 leukemic cells, we identify the cell surface marker CD24 as co-varying with chromatin accessibility changes linked to GATA transcription factors in single cells. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting of CD24 high versus low cells prospectively isolated GATA1 and GATA2 high versus low cells. GATA high versus low cells express differential gene regulatory networks, differential sensitivity to the drug imatinib mesylate, and differential self-renewal capacity. Lineage tracing experiments show that GATA/CD24hi cells have the capability to rapidly reconstitute the heterogeneity within the entire starting population, suggesting that GATA expression levels drive a phenotypically relevant source of epigenomic plasticity.ConclusionSingle-cell chromatin accessibility can guide prospective characterization of cancer heterogeneity. Epigenomic subpopulations in cancer impact drug sensitivity and the clonal dynamics of cancer evolution.