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Featured researches published by Volker Brinkmann.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Netting neutrophils in autoimmune small-vessel vasculitis.

Kai Kessenbrock; Markus Krumbholz; Ulf Schönermarck; Walter Back; Wolfgang Gross; Zena Werb; Hermann-Josef Gröne; Volker Brinkmann; Dieter E. Jenne

Small-vessel vasculitis (SVV) is a chronic autoinflammatory condition linked to antineutrophil cytoplasm autoantibodies (ANCAs). Here we show that chromatin fibers, so-called neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), are released by ANCA-stimulated neutrophils and contain the targeted autoantigens proteinase-3 (PR3) and myeloperoxidase (MPO). Deposition of NETs in inflamed kidneys and circulating MPO-DNA complexes suggest that NET formation triggers vasculitis and promotes the autoimmune response against neutrophil components in individuals with SVV.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Neutrophil Extracellular Traps Contain Calprotectin, a Cytosolic Protein Complex Involved in Host Defense against Candida albicans

Constantin F. Urban; David Ermert; Monika Schmid; Ulrike Abu-Abed; Christian Goosmann; Wolfgang Nacken; Volker Brinkmann; Peter R. Jungblut; Arturo Zychlinsky

Neutrophils are the first line of defense at the site of an infection. They encounter and kill microbes intracellularly upon phagocytosis or extracellularly by degranulation of antimicrobial proteins and the release of Neutrophil Extracellular Traps (NETs). NETs were shown to ensnare and kill microbes. However, their complete protein composition and the antimicrobial mechanism are not well understood. Using a proteomic approach, we identified 24 NET-associated proteins. Quantitative analysis of these proteins and high resolution electron microscopy showed that NETs consist of modified nucleosomes and a stringent selection of other proteins. In contrast to previous results, we found several NET proteins that are cytoplasmic in unstimulated neutrophils. We demonstrated that of those proteins, the antimicrobial heterodimer calprotectin is released in NETs as the major antifungal component. Absence of calprotectin in NETs resulted in complete loss of antifungal activity in vitro. Analysis of three different Candida albicans in vivo infection models indicated that NET formation is a hitherto unrecognized route of calprotectin release. By comparing wild-type and calprotectin-deficient animals we found that calprotectin is crucial for the clearance of infection. Taken together, the present investigations confirmed the antifungal activity of calprotectin in vitro and, moreover, demonstrated that it contributes to effective host defense against C. albicans in vivo. We showed for the first time that a proportion of calprotectin is bound to NETs in vitro and in vivo.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Monocytes, neutrophils, and platelets cooperate to initiate and propagate venous thrombosis in mice in vivo

Marie-Luise von Brühl; Konstantin Stark; Alexander Steinhart; Sue Chandraratne; Ildiko Konrad; Michael Lorenz; Alexander G. Khandoga; Anca Tirniceriu; Raffaele Coletti; Maria Köllnberger; Robert A. Byrne; Iina Laitinen; Axel Walch; Alexander Brill; Susanne Pfeiler; Davit Manukyan; Siegmund Braun; Philipp Lange; Julia Riegger; Jerry Ware; Annekathrin Eckart; Selgai Haidari; Martina Rudelius; Christian Schulz; Katrin Echtler; Volker Brinkmann; Markus Schwaiger; Klaus T. Preissner; Denisa D. Wagner; Nigel Mackman

Deep vein thrombosis initiation is mediated by cross talk between monocytes, neutrophils, and platelets.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Impairment of neutrophil extracellular trap degradation is associated with lupus nephritis

Abdul Hakkim; Barbara G. Fürnrohr; Kerstin Amann; Britta Laube; Ulrike Abu Abed; Volker Brinkmann; Martin J. Herrmann; Reinhard E. Voll; Arturo Zychlinsky

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease in which patients develop autoantibodies to DNA, histones, and often to neutrophil proteins. These form immune complexes that are pathogenic and may cause lupus nephritis. In SLE patients, infections can initiate flares and are a major cause of mortality. Neutrophils respond to infections and release extracellular traps (NETs), which are antimicrobial and are made of DNA, histones, and neutrophil proteins. The timely removal of NETs may be crucial for tissue homeostasis to avoid presentation of self-antigens. We tested the hypothesis that SLE patients cannot clear NETs, contributing to the pathogenesis of lupus nephritis. Here we show that serum endonuclease DNase1 is essential for disassembly of NETs. Interestingly, a subset of SLE patients’ sera degraded NETs poorly. Two mechanisms caused this impaired NET degradation: (i) the presence of DNase1 inhibitors or (ii) anti-NET antibodies prevented DNase1 access to NETs. Impairment of DNase1 function and failure to dismantle NETs correlated with kidney involvement. Hence, identification of SLE patients who cannot dismantle NETs might be a useful indicator of renal involvement. Moreover, NETs might represent a therapeutic target in SLE.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2007

Beneficial suicide: why neutrophils die to make NETs

Volker Brinkmann; Arturo Zychlinsky

Neutrophils are one of the main types of effector cell in the innate immune system and were first shown to effectively kill microorganisms by phagocytosis more than 100 years ago. Recently, however, it has been found that stimulated neutrophils can also produce extracellular structures called neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) that capture and kill microorganisms. This Progress article gives an overview of the structure, function and generation of NETs, and their role in infections.


Cellular Microbiology | 2006

Neutrophil extracellular traps capture and kill Candida albicans yeast and hyphal forms

Constantin F. Urban; Ulrike Reichard; Volker Brinkmann; Arturo Zychlinsky

Neutrophils phagocytose and kill microbes upon phagolysosomal fusion. Recently we found that activated neutrophils form extracellular fibres that consist of granule proteins and chromatin. These neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) degrade virulence factors and kill Gram positive and negative bacteria. Here we show for the first time that Candida albicans, a eukaryotic pathogen, induces NET‐formation and is susceptible to NET‐mediated killing. C. albicans is the predominant aetiologic agent of fungal infections in humans, particularly in immunocompromised hosts. One major virulence trait of C. albicans is its ability to reversibly switch from singular budding cells to filamentous hyphae. We demonstrate that NETs kill both yeast‐form and hyphal cells, and that granule components mediate fungal killing. Taken together our data indicate that neutrophils trap and kill ascomycetous yeasts by forming NETs.


Nature Medicine | 2010

Reciprocal coupling of coagulation and innate immunity via neutrophil serine proteases

Steffen Massberg; Lenka Grahl; Marie-Luise von Bruehl; Davit Manukyan; Susanne Pfeiler; Christian Goosmann; Volker Brinkmann; Michael Lorenz; Kiril Bidzhekov; Avinash Khandagale; Ildiko Konrad; Elisabeth Kennerknecht; Katja Reges; Stefan Holdenrieder; Siegmund Braun; Christoph Reinhardt; Michael Spannagl; Klaus T. Preissner; Bernd Engelmann

Blood neutrophils provide the first line of defense against pathogens but have also been implicated in thrombotic processes. This dual function of neutrophils could reflect an evolutionarily conserved association between blood coagulation and antimicrobial defense, although the molecular determinants and in vivo significance of this association remain unclear. Here we show that major microbicidal effectors of neutrophils, the serine proteases neutrophil elastase and cathepsin G, together with externalized nucleosomes, promote coagulation and intravascular thrombus growth in vivo. The serine proteases and extracellular nucleosomes enhance tissue factor– and factor XII–dependent coagulation in a process involving local proteolysis of the coagulation suppressor tissue factor pathway inhibitor. During systemic infection, activation of coagulation fosters compartmentalization of bacteria in liver microvessels and reduces bacterial invasion into tissue. In the absence of a pathogen challenge, neutrophil-derived serine proteases and nucleosomes can contribute to large-vessel thrombosis, the main trigger of myocardial infarction and stroke. The ability of coagulation to suppress pathogen dissemination indicates that microvessel thrombosis represents a physiological tool of host defense.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2012

Neutrophil extracellular traps: Is immunity the second function of chromatin?

Volker Brinkmann; Arturo Zychlinsky

Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) are made of processed chromatin bound to granular and selected cytoplasmic proteins. NETs are released by white blood cells called neutrophils, maybe as a last resort, to control microbial infections. This release of chromatin is the result of a unique form of cell death, dubbed “NETosis.” Here we review our understanding of how NETs are made, their function in infections and as danger signals, and their emerging importance in autoimmunity and coagulation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

Increased vaccine efficacy against tuberculosis of recombinant Mycobacterium bovis bacille Calmette-Guérin mutants that secrete listeriolysin

Leander Grode; Peter Seiler; Sven Baumann; Jürgen Hess; Volker Brinkmann; Ali Nasser Eddine; Peggy Mann; Christian Goosmann; Silke Bandermann; Debbie A. Smith; Gregory J. Bancroft; Jean-Marc Reyrat; Dick van Soolingen; Bärbel Raupach; Stefan H. E. Kaufmann

The tuberculosis vaccine Mycobacterium bovis bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) was equipped with the membrane-perforating listeriolysin (Hly) of Listeria monocytogenes, which was shown to improve protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Following aerosol challenge, the Hly-secreting recombinant BCG (hly+ rBCG) vaccine was shown to protect significantly better against aerosol infection with M. tuberculosis than did the parental BCG strain. The isogenic, urease C-deficient hly+ rBCG (DeltaureC hly+ rBCG) vaccine, providing an intraphagosomal pH closer to the acidic pH optimum for Hly activity, exhibited still higher vaccine efficacy than parental BCG. DeltaureC hly+ rBCG also induced profound protection against a member of the M. tuberculosis Beijing/W genotype family while parental BCG failed to do so consistently. Hly not only promoted antigen translocation into the cytoplasm but also apoptosis of infected macrophages. We concluded that superior vaccine efficacy of DeltaureC hly+ rBCG as compared with parental BCG is primarily based on improved cross-priming, which causes enhanced T cell-mediated immunity.


Cellular Microbiology | 2000

Translocation of the Helicobacter pylori CagA protein in gastric epithelial cells by a type IV secretion apparatus

Steffen Backert; Elke Ziska; Volker Brinkmann; Ursula Zimny-Arndt; Alain Fauconnier; Peter R. Jungblut; Michael Naumann; Thomas F. Meyer

Helicobacter pylori is one of the most common bacterial pathogens, infecting about 50% of the world population. The presence of a pathogenicity island (PAI) in H. pylori has been associated with gastric disease. We present evidence that the H. pylori protein encoded by the cytotoxin‐associated gene A (cagA) is translocated and phosphorylated in infected epithelial cells. Two‐dimensional gel electrophoresis (2‐DE) of proteins isolated from infected AGS cells revealed H. pylori strain‐specific and time‐dependent tyrosine phosphorylation and dephosphorylation of several 125–135 kDa and 75–80 kDa proteins. Immunoblotting studies, matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI‐MS), cell fractionation and confocal microscopy demonstrated that one of the 125–135 kDa proteins represents the H. pylori CagA protein, which is translocated into the host cell membrane and the cytoplasm. Translocation of CagA was dependent on functional cagA gene and virulence (vir) genes of a type IV secretion apparatus composed of virB4, virB7, virB10, virB11 and virD4 encoded in the cag PAI of H. pylori. Our findings support the view that H. pylori actively translocates virulence determinants, including CagA, which could be involved in the development of a variety of gastric disease.

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