Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Valentin Schatz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Valentin Schatz.


Cell Metabolism | 2015

Cutaneous Na+ Storage Strengthens the Antimicrobial Barrier Function of the Skin and Boosts Macrophage-Driven Host Defense

Jonathan Jantsch; Valentin Schatz; Diana Friedrich; Agnes Schröder; Christoph W. Kopp; Isabel Siegert; Andreas Maronna; David Wendelborn; Peter Linz; Katrina J. Binger; Matthias Gebhardt; Matthias Heinig; Patrick Neubert; Fabian Fischer; Stefan Teufel; Jean-Pierre David; Clemens Neufert; Alexander Cavallaro; Natalia Rakova; Christoph Küper; Franz-Xaver Beck; Wolfgang Neuhofer; Dominik N. Müller; Gerold Schuler; Michael Uder; Christian Bogdan; Friedrich C. Luft; Jens Titze

Immune cells regulate a hypertonic microenvironment in the skin; however, the biological advantage of increased skin Na(+) concentrations is unknown. We found that Na(+) accumulated at the site of bacterial skin infections in humans and in mice. We used the protozoan parasite Leishmania major as a model of skin-prone macrophage infection to test the hypothesis that skin-Na(+) storage facilitates antimicrobial host defense. Activation of macrophages in the presence of high NaCl concentrations modified epigenetic markers and enhanced p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38/MAPK)-dependent nuclear factor of activated T cells 5 (NFAT5) activation. This high-salt response resulted in elevated type-2 nitric oxide synthase (Nos2)-dependent NO production and improved Leishmania major control. Finally, we found that increasing Na(+) content in the skin by a high-salt diet boosted activation of macrophages in a Nfat5-dependent manner and promoted cutaneous antimicrobial defense. We suggest that the hypertonic microenvironment could serve as a barrier to infection.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2015

High salt reduces the activation of IL-4- and IL-13-stimulated macrophages

Katrina J. Binger; Matthias Gebhardt; Matthias Heinig; Carola Rintisch; Agnes Schroeder; Wolfgang Neuhofer; Karl F. Hilgers; Arndt Manzel; Christian Schwartz; Markus Kleinewietfeld; Jakob Voelkl; Valentin Schatz; Ralf A. Linker; Florian Lang; David Voehringer; Mark D. Wright; Norbert Hubner; Ralf Dechend; Jonathan Jantsch; Jens Titze; Dominik N. Müller

A high intake of dietary salt (NaCl) has been implicated in the development of hypertension, chronic inflammation, and autoimmune diseases. We have recently shown that salt has a proinflammatory effect and boosts the activation of Th17 cells and the activation of classical, LPS-induced macrophages (M1). Here, we examined how the activation of alternative (M2) macrophages is affected by salt. In stark contrast to Th17 cells and M1 macrophages, high salt blunted the alternative activation of BM-derived mouse macrophages stimulated with IL-4 and IL-13, M(IL-4+IL-13) macrophages. Salt-induced reduction of M(IL-4+IL-13) activation was not associated with increased polarization toward a proinflammatory M1 phenotype. In vitro, high salt decreased the ability of M(IL-4+IL-13) macrophages to suppress effector T cell proliferation. Moreover, mice fed a high salt diet exhibited reduced M2 activation following chitin injection and delayed wound healing compared with control animals. We further identified a high salt-induced reduction in glycolysis and mitochondrial metabolic output, coupled with blunted AKT and mTOR signaling, which indicates a mechanism by which NaCl inhibits full M2 macrophage activation. Collectively, this study provides evidence that high salt reduces noninflammatory innate immune cell activation and may thus lead to an overall imbalance in immune homeostasis.


Nature | 2017

Salt-responsive gut commensal modulates TH17 axis and disease

Nicola Wilck; Mariana Matus; Sean M. Kearney; Scott W. Olesen; Kristoffer Forslund; Hendrik Bartolomaeus; Stefanie Haase; Anja Mähler; András Balogh; Lajos Markó; Olga Vvedenskaya; Friedrich H. Kleiner; Dmitry Tsvetkov; Lars Klug; Paul Igor Costea; Shinichi Sunagawa; Lisa M. Maier; Natalia Rakova; Valentin Schatz; Patrick Neubert; Christian Frätzer; Alexander Krannich; Maik Gollasch; Diana A. Grohme; Beatriz F. Côrte-Real; Roman G. Gerlach; Marijana Basic; Athanasios Typas; Chuan Wu; Jens Titze

A Western lifestyle with high salt consumption can lead to hypertension and cardiovascular disease. High salt may additionally drive autoimmunity by inducing T helper 17 (TH17) cells, which can also contribute to hypertension. Induction of TH17 cells depends on gut microbiota; however, the effect of salt on the gut microbiome is unknown. Here we show that high salt intake affects the gut microbiome in mice, particularly by depleting Lactobacillus murinus. Consequently, treatment of mice with L. murinus prevented salt-induced aggravation of actively induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and salt-sensitive hypertension by modulating TH17 cells. In line with these findings, a moderate high-salt challenge in a pilot study in humans reduced intestinal survival of Lactobacillus spp., increased TH17 cells and increased blood pressure. Our results connect high salt intake to the gut–immune axis and highlight the gut microbiome as a potential therapeutic target to counteract salt-sensitive conditions.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2014

Hypoxia in Leishmania major Skin Lesions Impairs the NO-Dependent Leishmanicidal Activity of Macrophages

Alexander Mahnke; Robert J. Meier; Valentin Schatz; Julian Hofmann; Kirstin Castiglione; Ulrike Schleicher; Otto S. Wolfbeis; Christian Bogdan; Jonathan Jantsch

Cure of infections with Leishmania major is critically dependent on the ability of macrophages to induce the type 2 nitic oxide (NO) synthase (NOS2) that produces high levels of NO in the presence of ample oxygen. Therefore, we analyzed the oxygen levels found in leishmanial skin lesions and their effect on the NOS2-dependent leishmanicidal activity of macrophages (MΦ). When L. major skin lesions of self-healing C57BL/6 mice reached their maximum size, the infected tissue displayed low oxygen levels (pO2∼21 Torr). MΦ activated under these oxygen tensions failed to produce sufficient amounts of NO to clear L. major. Nos2-deficient and hypoxic wild-type macrophages displayed a similar phenotype. Killing was restored when MΦ were reoxygenated or exposed to a NO donor. The resolution of the lesion in C57BL/6 mice was paralleled by an increase of lesional pO2. When mice were kept under normobaric hypoxia, this caused a persistent suppression of the lesional pO2 and a concurrent increase of the parasite load. In Nos2-deficient mice, there was no effect of atmospheric hypoxia. Low oxygen levels found at leishmanial skin lesions impaired the NOS2-dependent leishmanicidal activity of MΦ. Hence, tissue oxygenation represents an underestimated local milieu factor that participates in the persistence of Leishmania.


Cell Reports | 2015

Ferritin-Mediated Iron Sequestration Stabilizes Hypoxia-Inducible Factor-1α upon LPS Activation in the Presence of Ample Oxygen

Isabel Siegert; Johannes Schödel; Manfred Nairz; Valentin Schatz; Katja Dettmer; Christopher Dick; Joanna Kalucka; Kristin Franke; Martin Ehrenschwender; Gunnar Schley; Angelika Beneke; Jörg Sutter; Matthias Moll; Claus Hellerbrand; Ben Wielockx; Dörthe M. Katschinski; Roland Lang; Bruno Galy; Matthias W. Hentze; Peppi Koivunen; Peter J. Oefner; Christian Bogdan; Günter Weiss; Carsten Willam; Jonathan Jantsch

Both hypoxic and inflammatory conditions activate transcription factors such as hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α and nuclear factor (NF)-κB, which play a crucial role in adaptive responses to these challenges. In dendritic cells (DC), lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced HIF1α accumulation requires NF-κB signaling and promotes inflammatory DC function. The mechanisms that drive LPS-induced HIF1α accumulation under normoxia are unclear. Here, we demonstrate that LPS inhibits prolyl hydroxylase domain enzyme (PHD) activity and thereby blocks HIF1α degradation. Of note, LPS-induced PHD inhibition was neither due to cosubstrate depletion (oxygen or α-ketoglutarate) nor due to increased levels of reactive oxygen species, fumarate, and succinate. Instead, LPS inhibited PHD activity through NF-κB-mediated induction of the iron storage protein ferritin and subsequent decrease of intracellular available iron, a critical cofactor of PHD. Thus, hypoxia and LPS both induce HIF1α accumulation via PHD inhibition but deploy distinct molecular mechanisms (lack of cosubstrate oxygen versus deprivation of co-factor iron).


Methods and Applications in Fluorescence | 2013

Ratiometric luminescence 2D in vivo imaging and monitoring of mouse skin oxygenation

Julian Hofmann; Robert J. Meier; Alexander Mahnke; Valentin Schatz; Florian Brackmann; Regina Trollmann; Christian Bogdan; Gregor Liebsch; Xu-dong Wang; Otto S. Wolfbeis; Jonathan Jantsch

Tissue oxygenation plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of various diseases, but non-invasive, robust and user-friendly methods for its measurement in vivo still need to be established. Here, we are presenting an in vivo oxygen-detection system that uses ratiometric luminescence imaging (RLI) as a readout scheme to determine the skin oxygen tension of mouse hind footpads via side-by-side comparison with more established techniques including luminescence-lifetime imaging using planar sensor films and the polarographic electrode as the gold standard. We also demonstrate that this technology allows the detection of changes in mouse skin tissue oxygenation induced by subjecting mice to systemic hypoxia. The data demonstrate oxygen imaging based on RLI to be a most useful tool for reliably and easily analyzing and monitoring skin tissue oxygenation in vivo. This technology will advance our understanding of local regulation of skin tissue oxygenation in various disease conditions.


Cellular Microbiology | 2015

Low-oxygen tensions found in Salmonella-infected gut tissue boost Salmonella replication in macrophages by impairing antimicrobial activity and augmenting Salmonella virulence

Jonas Jennewein; Jasmin Matuszak; Steffi Walter; Boas Felmy; Kathrin Gendera; Valentin Schatz; Monika Nowottny; Gregor Liebsch; Michael Hensel; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt; Roman G. Gerlach; Jonathan Jantsch

In Salmonella infection, the Salmonella pathogenicity island‐2 (SPI‐2)‐encoded type three secretion system (T3SS2) is of key importance for systemic disease and survival in host cells. For instance, in the streptomycin‐pretreated mouse model SPI‐2‐dependent Salmonella replication in lamina propria CD11c−CXCR1− monocytic phagocytes/macrophages (MΦ) is required for the development of colitis. In addition, containment of intracellular Salmonella in the gut critically depends on the antimicrobial effects of the phagocyte NADPH oxidase (PHOX), and possibly type 2 nitric oxide synthase (NOS2). For both antimicrobial enzyme complexes, oxygen is an essential substrate. However, the amount of available oxygen upon enteroinvasive Salmonella infection in the gut tissue and its impact on Salmonella–MΦ interactions was unknown. Therefore, we measured the gut tissue oxygen levels in a model of Salmonella enterocolitis using luminescence two‐dimensional in vivo oxygen imaging. We found that gut tissue oxygen levels dropped from ∼78 Torr (∼11% O2) to values of ∼16 Torr (∼2% O2) during infection. Because in vivo virulence of Salmonella depends on the Salmonella survival in MΦ, Salmonella–MΦ interaction was analysed under such low oxygen values. These experiments revealed an increased intracellular replication and survival of wild‐type and t3ss2 non‐expressing Salmonella. These findings were paralleled by blunted nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and reduced Salmonella ROS perception. In addition, hypoxia enhanced SPI‐2 transcription and translocation of SPI‐2‐encoded virulence protein. Neither pharmacological blockade of PHOX and NOS2 nor impairment of T3SS2 virulence function alone mimicked the effect of hypoxia on Salmonella replication under normoxic conditions. However, if t3ss2 non‐expressing Salmonella were used, hypoxia did not further enhance Salmonella recovery in a PHOX and NOS2‐deficient situation. Hence, these data suggest that hypoxia‐induced impairment of antimicrobial activity and Salmonella virulence cooperate to allow for enhanced Salmonella replication in MΦ.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2017

Elementary immunology: Na(+) as a regulator of immunity.

Valentin Schatz; Patrick Neubert; Agnes Schröder; Katrina J. Binger; Matthias Gebhard; Dominik N. Müller; Friedrich C. Luft; Jens Titze; Jonathan Jantsch

The skin can serve as an interstitial Na+ reservoir. Local tissue Na+ accumulation increases with age, inflammation and infection. This increased local Na+ availability favors pro-inflammatory immune cell function and dampens their anti-inflammatory capacity. In this review, we summarize available data on how NaCl affects various immune cells. We particularly focus on how salt promotes pro-inflammatory macrophage and T cell function and simultaneously curtails their regulatory and anti-inflammatory potential. Overall, these findings demonstrate that local Na+ availability is a promising novel regulator of immunity. Hence, the modulation of tissue Na+ levels bears broad therapeutic potential: increasing local Na+ availability may help in treating infections, while lowering tissue Na+ levels may be used to treat, for example, autoimmune and cardiovascular diseases.


Journal of Immunology | 2016

Myeloid Cell–Derived HIF-1α Promotes Control of Leishmania major

Valentin Schatz; Yannic Strüssmann; Alexander Mahnke; Gunnar Schley; Maximilian J. Waldner; Uwe Ritter; Jens Wild; Carsten Willam; Nathalie Dehne; Bernhard Brüne; Jennifer M. McNiff; Oscar R. Colegio; Christian Bogdan; Jonathan Jantsch

Hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α), which accumulates in mammalian host organisms during infection, supports the defense against microbial pathogens. However, whether and to what extent HIF-1α expressed by myeloid cells contributes to the innate immune response against Leishmania major parasites is unknown. We observed that Leishmania-infected humans and L. major–infected C57BL/6 mice exhibited substantial amounts of HIF-1α in acute cutaneous lesions. In vitro, HIF-1α was required for leishmanicidal activity and high-level NO production by IFN-γ/LPS-activated macrophages. Mice deficient for HIF-1α in their myeloid cell compartment had a more severe clinical course of infection and increased parasite burden in the skin lesions compared with wild-type controls. These findings were paralleled by reduced expression of type 2 NO synthase by lesional CD11b+ cells. Together, these data illustrate that HIF-1α is required for optimal innate leishmanicidal immune responses and, thereby, contributes to the cure of cutaneous leishmaniasis.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

Electroporation of siRNA into Mouse Bone Marrow-Derived Macrophages and Dendritic Cells

Isabel Siegert; Valentin Schatz; Alexander T. Prechtel; Alexander Steinkasserer; Christian Bogdan; Jonathan Jantsch

Dendritic cells (DC) and macrophages (MΦ) play a pivotal role in antimicrobial defense, in the regulation of immune responses, and in maintaining tissue homeostasis. The analysis of DC and MΦ function relies on primary cells albeit these cells are known to be difficult to transfect. This makes the use of small interfering RNA (siRNA) for targeted manipulation of gene expression by RNA interference difficult. In the following chapter, we provide a detailed protocol for the successful transfer of siRNA via electroporation into a defined population of mouse bone marrow-derived MΦ or DC that does not cause toxicity to the myeloid cells or nonspecific alterations of their biological functions. Factors that influence the transfection and knockdown rate will be highlighted.

Collaboration


Dive into the Valentin Schatz's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christian Bogdan

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alexander Mahnke

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dominik N. Müller

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Isabel Siegert

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Agnes Schröder

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carsten Willam

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge