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Featured researches published by Werner Stegmann.


Breast Cancer Research | 2008

Breast cancer proteomics reveals correlation between estrogen receptor status and differential phosphorylation of PGRMC1.

Hans Neubauer; Susan E. Clare; Wojciech Wozny; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Werner Stegmann; Ulrich Vogel; Karl Sotlar; Diethelm Wallwiener; Raffael Kurek; Tanja Fehm; Michael A. Cahill

IntroductionBreast tumors lacking the estrogen receptor-α (ER-α) have increased incidence of resistance to therapy and poorer clinical prognosis.MethodsWhole tissue sections from 16 cryopreserved breast cancer tumors that were either positive or negative for the ER (eight ER positive and eight ER negative) were differentially analyzed by multiplex imaging of two-dimensional PAGE gels using 54 cm isoelectric focusing. Differentially detected spots of Progesterone Receptor Membrane Component 1 (PGRMC1) were shown to differ in phosphorylation status by differential two dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of phosphatase-treated tumor proteins. Site directed mutagenesis was used to create putative phosphorylation site point mutants in PGRMC1. Stable transfectants of these mutants in MCF7 cells were assayed for their survival after oxidative stress, and for AKT kinase phosphorylation. Immune fluorescence using anti-PGRMC1 monoclonal antibody 5G7 was performed on breast cancer tissue microarrays.ResultsProteins significantly differentially abundant between estrogen receptor negative and estrogen receptor positive tumors at the 0.1% level were consistent with published profiles, suggesting an altered keratin pool, and increased inflammation and wound responses in estrogen receptor negative tumors. Two of three spots of PGRMC1 were more abundant in estrogen receptor negative tumors. Phosphatase treatment of breast tumor proteins indicated that the PGRMC1 isoforms differed in their phosphorylation status. Simultaneous mutation of PGRMC1 serine-56 and serine-181 fully abrogated the sensitivity of stably transfected MCF7 breast cancer cells to peroxide-induced cell death. Immune fluorescence revealed that PGRMC1 was primarily expressed in ER-negative basal epithelial cells of mammary ductules. Even in advanced tumors, high levels of ER or PGRMC1 were almost mutually exclusive in individual cells. In five out of five examined ductal in situ breast cancers of comedo type, PGRMC1 was expressed in glucose transporter 1 negative or positive poorly oxygenated cells surrounding the necrotic core, surrounded by a more distal halo of ER-positive cells.ConclusionsPGRMC1 phosphorylation may be involved in the clinical differences that underpin breast tumors of differing ER status.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2006

Comparative profiling of the mammalian mitochondrial proteome: multiple aconitase-2 isoforms including N-formylkynurenine modifications as part of a protein biomarker signature for reactive oxidative species.

Christian Hunzinger; Wojciech Wozny; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Werner Stegmann; Helmut Zengerling; Rainer Schoepf; Karlfried Groebe; Michael A. Cahill; Heinz D. Osiewacz; Nora Jägemann; Monika Bloch; Norbert A. Dencher; Frank Krause; André Schrattenholz

The activity of mitochondria induces, as a byproduct, a variety of post-translational modifications in associated proteins, which have functional downstream consequences for processes such as apoptosis, autophagy, and plasticity; e.g., reactive oxygen species (ROS), which induce N-formyl-kynurenine from oxidized tryptophans in certain mitochondrial proteins which are localized in close spatial proximity to their source. This type of fast molecular changes has profound influence on cell death and survival with implications in a number of pathologies. The quantitative and differential analysis of bovine heart mitochondria by four 2D-PAGE methods, including 2D-PAGE with high-resolution IEF as first dimension, revealed that due to limited resolution, those methods employing blue native-, tricine-urea-, and 16-BAC-PAGE as the first dimension are less applicable for the differential quantitative analysis of redundant protein spots which might give insight into post-translational modifications that are relevant in age- and stress-related changes. Moreover, 2D-PAGE with high resolution IEF was able to resolve a surprisingly large number of membrane proteins from mitochondrial preparations. For aconitase-2, an enzyme playing an important role in mitochondrial aging, a more thorough molecular analysis of all separable isoforms was performed, leading to the identification of two particular N-formylkynurenine modifications. Next to protein redundancy, native protein-protein interactions, with the potential of relating certain post-translational modification patterns to distinct oligomeric states, e.g., oxidative phosphorylation super complexes, might provide novel and (patho-) physiologically relevant information. Among proteins identified, 14 new proteins (GenBank entries), previously not associated with mitochondria, were found.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Immunoproteomic Identification and Serological Responses to Novel Chlamydia pneumoniae Antigens That Are Associated with Persistent C. pneumoniae Infections

Sebastian Bunk; Iuliana Susnea; Jan Rupp; James T. Summersgill; Matthias Maass; Werner Stegmann; André Schrattenholz; Albrecht Wendel; Michael Przybylski; Corinna Hermann

The controversial discussion about the role of Chlamydia pneumoniae in atherosclerosis cannot be solved without a reliable diagnosis that allows discrimination between past and persistent infections. Using a proteomic approach and immunoblotting with human sera, we identified 31 major C. pneumoniae Ags originating from 27 different C. pneumoniae proteins. More than half of the proteins represent Chlamydia Ags not described previously. Using a comparative analysis of spot reactivity Pmp6, OMP2, GroEL, DnaK, RpoA, EF-Tu, as well as CpB0704 and CpB0837, were found to be immunodominant. The comparison of Ab-response patterns of sera from subjects with and without evidence for persisting C. pneumoniae, determined by multiple PCR analysis of PBMC and vasculatory samples, resulted in differential reactivity for 12 proteins, which is not reflected by reactivity of the sera in the microimmunofluorescence test, the current gold standard for serodiagnosis. Although reactivity of sera from PCR-positive donors was increased toward RpoA, MOMP, YscC, Pmp10, PorB, Pmp21, GroEL, and Cpaf, the reactivity toward YscL, Rho, LCrE, and CpB0837 was decreased, reflecting the altered protein expression of persisting C. pneumoniae in vitro. Our data provide the first evidence of a unique Ab-response pattern associated with persistent C. pneumoniae infections, which is a prerequisite for the serological determination of persistently infected patients.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Protein biomarkers for in vitro testing of embryotoxicity.

Karlfried Groebe; Hayess K; Klemm-Manns M; Gerhard P. Schwall; Wozny W; Steemans M; Peters Ak; Sastri C; Jaeckel P; Werner Stegmann; Helmut Zengerling; Schopf R; Slobodan Poznanovic; Stummann Tc; Seiler A; Spielmann H; André Schrattenholz

There are new challenges for hazard and risk assessment in the chemical industry with regard to REACH legislation in Europe and related activities in the U.S. and Japan, which require the development of novel in vitro models for the molecular characterization of drug- or chemical-related effects replacing conventional animal testing. In the frame of a European FP6 project on reproductive toxicology ( www.reprotect.eu ), we prepared protein samples from mouse embryonic stem cells differentiated into contracting cardiomyocytes according to the validated embryonic stem cell test (EST) protocol, which had been exposed to toxic substances selected by an expert committee from different in vivo categories of embryotoxicity. Lysates were used to carry out the following investigations: (i) identify optimal dose range conditions in the EST that are suitable for (ii) performing a differential quantitative proteomic study of underlying molecular pathways, (iii) define classes of substances with similar proteomic response patterns, (iv) relate these classes to the traditional in vivo categories of embryotoxicity with (v) the final goal to identify novel surrogate protein biomarker candidates for embryo toxicity. We found two distinct classes of toxic substances (Dinoseb, Ochratoxin-A, and Nitrofen vs β-aminoproprionitril, Metoclopramide, Doxylamine succinate, and d-penicillamine) with clear pathway-related differences in their proteomic patterns. Most notably, different responses to cluster 1 and cluster 2 substances were observed for Heat shock protein β-1, Ras-GTPase-activating protein SH3-domain binding protein, Ran binding protein 5, and Calreticulin, Dihydropyrimidinase-like 2 (Ulip2 protein). On the other hand, Heat shock protein 8 and Fscn1 protein were down-regulated by all compounds from both clusters.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2008

A connection between the mitochondrial permeability transition pore, autophagy, and cerebral amyloidogenesis.

Soskić; Klemm M; Proikas-Cezanne T; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Werner Stegmann; Karlfried Groebe; Helmut Zengerling; Schoepf R; Burnet M; André Schrattenholz

In a drug reprofiling attempt, we explored novel neuroprotective properties of 4-azasteroids by synthesizing chemical affinity tags capturing adenine nucleotide translocator-1, as a potential target. Dutasteride inhibits the mitochondrial transition pore and induces an increase of autophagosomal structures in human cell lines. In vivo, a surprising reduction of the beta-amyloid plaque load in a model for cerebral amyloidosis appears to connect release of neurotoxic peptides, mitochondrial apoptosis and autophagy.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2005

Differential and quantitative molecular analysis of ischemia complexity reduction by isotopic labeling of proteins using a neural embryonic stem cell model

André Schrattenholz; Wojciech Wozny; Martina Klemm; Klaus Schroer; Werner Stegmann; Michael A. Cahill

The analysis of rapid changes of protein expression in living systems in response to insults requires rigorous methods of complexity reduction. To control dynamic pattern of hundreds or even thousands of protein isoforms, we applied a novel method of differential molecular analysis to a cellular model which is suited to study ischemia. Neural derivatives of murine embryonic stem cells were exposed to chemical ischemia. The model was used to obtain starting material for a quantitative differential proteomics analysis. Fractionation of phosphoproteins from these samples and subsequent identification by mass spectrometry of differential proteins provide proof of principle of how novel molecular analytical tools provide new insight into the network of neuroprotective molecular events during specific situations of neuronal stress and related pharmaceutical intervention. Our results indicate a particular role of an isoform of the acidic calcium-independent phospholipase A2 in this type of insult.


Breast Cancer Research | 2009

Breast cancer proteomics reveals correlation between estrogen receptor status and differential phosphorylation of PGRMC1 (vol 10, pg R85, 2008)

Hans Neubauer; Susan E. Clare; Wojciech Wozny; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Werner Stegmann; Ulrich Vogel; Karl Sotlar; Diethelm Wallwiener; Raffael Kurek; Tanja Fehm; Michael A. Cahill

Proteins significantly differentially abundant between estrogen receptor negative and estrogen receptor positive tumors at the 0.1% level were consistent with published profiles, suggesting an altered keratin pool, and increased inflammation and wound responses in estrogen receptor negative tumors. Two of three spots of PGRMC1 were more abundant in estrogen receptor negative tumors. Phosphatase treatment of breast tumor proteins indicated that the PGRMC1 isoforms differed in their phosphorylation status. Simultaneous mutation of PGRMC1 serine-56 and serine-180 fully abrogated the sensitivity of stably transfected MCF7 breast cancer cells to peroxide-induced cell death. Immune fluorescence revealed that PGRMC1 was primarily expressed in ERnegative basal epithelial cells of mammary ductules. Even in advanced tumors, high levels of ER or PGRMC1 were almost mutually exclusive in individual cells. In five out of five examined ductal in situ breast cancers of comedo type, PGRMC1 was expressed in glucose transporter 1 negative or positive poorly oxygenated cells surrounding the necrotic core, surrounded by a more distal halo of ER-positive cells. References 1. Neubauer N, Clare SE, Wonzy W, Schwall GP, Poznanovic S, Stegmann W, Vogel U, Sotlar K, Wallwiener D, Kurek R, Fehm T, Cahill MA: Breast cancer proteomics reveals correlation between estrogen receptor status and differential phosphorylation of PGRMC1. Breast Cancer Research 2008, 10:R85. Correction Correction: Breast cancer proteomics reveals correlation between estrogen receptor status and differential phosphorylation of PGRMC1 Hans Neubauer1, Susan E Clare1,2, Wojciech Wozny3, Gerhard P Schwall3, Slobodan Poznanovic3, Werner Stegmann3, Ulrich Vogel4, Karl Sotlar4,5, Diethelm Wallwiener1, Raffael Kurek1,6, Tanja Fehm1 and Michael A Cahill3,7


Experimental Gerontology | 2007

Differential proteomic profiling of mitochondria from Podospora anserina, rat and human reveals distinct patterns of age-related oxidative changes.

Karlfried Groebe; Frank Krause; Birgit Kunstmann; Hermann Unterluggauer; Nicole H. Reifschneider; Christian Q. Scheckhuber; Charturvedala Sastri; Werner Stegmann; Wojciech Wozny; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Norbert A. Dencher; Pidder Jansen-Dürr; Heinz D. Osiewacz; André Schrattenholz


Proteomics | 2007

Differential radioactive quantification of protein abundance ratios between benign and malignant prostate tissues: cancer association of annexin A3.

Wojciech Wozny; Klaus Schroer; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Werner Stegmann; Klaus Dietz; Hermann Rogatsch; Georg Schaefer; Heidi Huebl; Helmut Klocker; André Schrattenholz; Michael A. Cahill


Electrophoresis | 2006

Breast cancer proteomics by laser capture microdissection, sample pooling, 54-cm IPG IEF, and differential iodine radioisotope detection.

Hans Neubauer; Susan E. Clare; Raffael Kurek; Tanja Fehm; Diethelm Wallwiener; Karl Sotlar; Alfred Nordheim; Wojciech Wozny; Gerhard P. Schwall; Slobodan Poznanovic; Chaturvedula Sastri; Christian Hunzinger; Werner Stegmann; André Schrattenholz; Michael A. Cahill

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