TY - JOUR A1 - Proetel, Ulrike A1 - Pletsch, Nadine A1 - Lauseker, Michael A1 - Müller, Martin C. A1 - Hanfstein, Benjamin A1 - Krause, Stefan W. A1 - Kalmanti, Lida A1 - Schreiber, Annette A1 - Heim, Dominik A1 - Baerlocher, Gabriela M. A1 - Hofmann, Wolf-Karsten A1 - Lange, Elisabeth A1 - Einsele, Hermann A1 - Wernli, Martin A1 - Kremers, Stephan A1 - Schlag, Rudolf A1 - Müller, Lothar A1 - Hänel, Mathias A1 - Link, Hartmut A1 - Hertenstein, Bernd A1 - Pfirrmann, Markus A1 - Hochhaus, Andreas A1 - Hasford, Joerg A1 - Hehlmann, Rüdiger A1 - Saußele, Susanne T1 - Older patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (≥65 years) profit more from higher imatinib doses than younger patients: a subanalysis of the randomized CML-Study IV JF - Annals of Hematology N2 - The impact of imatinib dose on response rates and survival in older patients with chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase has not been studied well. We analyzed data from the German CML-Study IV, a randomized five-arm treatment optimization study in newly diagnosed BCR-ABL-positive chronic myeloid leukemia in chronic phase. Patients randomized to imatinib 400 mg/day (IM400) or imatinib 800 mg/day (IM800) and stratified according to age (≥65 years vs. <65 years) were compared regarding dose, response, adverse events, rates of progression, and survival. The full 800 mg dose was given after a 6-week run-in period with imatinib 400 mg/day. The dose could then be reduced according to tolerability. A total of 828 patients were randomized to IM400 or IM800. Seven hundred eighty-four patients were evaluable (IM400, 382; IM800, 402). One hundred ten patients (29 %) on IM400 and 83 (21 %) on IM800 were ≥65 years. The median dose per day was lower for patients ≥65 years on IM800, with the highest median dose in the first year (466 mg/day for patients ≥65 years vs. 630 mg/day for patients <65 years). Older patients on IM800 achieved major molecular remission and deep molecular remission as fast as younger patients, in contrast to standard dose imatinib with which older patients achieved remissions much later than younger patients. Grades 3 and 4 adverse events were similar in both age groups. Five-year relative survival for older patients was comparable to that of younger patients. We suggest that the optimal dose for older patients is higher than 400 mg/day. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00055874 KW - chronic myeloid leukemia KW - older patients KW - different imatinib dose regimens KW - early applied higher imatinib dosages Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121574 SN - 0939-5555 VL - 93 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Merget, Benjamin A1 - Koetschan, Christian A1 - Hackl, Thomas A1 - Förster, Frank A1 - Dandekar, Thomas A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Schultz, Jörg A1 - Wolf, Matthias T1 - The ITS2 Database JF - Journal of Visual Expression N2 - The internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) has been used as a phylogenetic marker for more than two decades. As ITS2 research mainly focused on the very variable ITS2 sequence, it confined this marker to low-level phylogenetics only. However, the combination of the ITS2 sequence and its highly conserved secondary structure improves the phylogenetic resolution1 and allows phylogenetic inference at multiple taxonomic ranks, including species delimitation. The ITS2 Database presents an exhaustive dataset of internal transcribed spacer 2 sequences from NCBI GenBank accurately reannotated. Following an annotation by profile Hidden Markov Models (HMMs), the secondary structure of each sequence is predicted. First, it is tested whether a minimum energy based fold (direct fold) results in a correct, four helix conformation. If this is not the case, the structure is predicted by homology modeling. In homology modeling, an already known secondary structure is transferred to another ITS2 sequence, whose secondary structure was not able to fold correctly in a direct fold. The ITS2 Database is not only a database for storage and retrieval of ITS2 sequence-structures. It also provides several tools to process your own ITS2 sequences, including annotation, structural prediction, motif detection and BLAST search on the combined sequence-structure information. Moreover, it integrates trimmed versions of 4SALE and ProfDistS for multiple sequence-structure alignment calculation and Neighbor Joining tree reconstruction. Together they form a coherent analysis pipeline from an initial set of sequences to a phylogeny based on sequence and secondary structure. In a nutshell, this workbench simplifies first phylogenetic analyses to only a few mouse-clicks, while additionally providing tools and data for comprehensive large-scale analyses. KW - homology modeling KW - molecular systematics KW - internal transcribed spacer 2 KW - alignment KW - genetics KW - secondary structure KW - ribosomal RNA KW - phylogenetic tree KW - phylogeny Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-124600 VL - 61 IS - e3806 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hennings, Johannes M. A1 - Kohli, Martin A. A1 - Czamara, Darina A1 - Giese, Maria A1 - Eckert, Anne A1 - Wolf, Christiane A1 - Heck, Angela A1 - Domschke, Katharina A1 - Arolt, Volker A1 - Baune, Bernhard T. A1 - Horstmann, Sonja A1 - Brückl, Tanja A1 - Klengel, Torsten A1 - Menke, Andreas A1 - Müller-Myhsok, Bertram A1 - Ising, Marcus A1 - Uhr, Manfred A1 - Lucae, Susanne T1 - Possible Associations of NTRK2 Polymorphisms with Antidepressant Treatment Outcome: Findings from an Extended Tag SNP Approach JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Background: Data from clinical studies and results from animal models suggest an involvement of the neurotrophin system in the pathology of depression and antidepressant treatment response. Genetic variations within the genes coding for the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its key receptor Trkb (NTRK2) may therefore influence the response to antidepressant treatment. Methods: We performed a single and multi-marker association study with antidepressant treatment outcome in 398 depressed Caucasian inpatients participating in the Munich Antidepressant Response Signature (MARS) project. Two Caucasian replication samples (N = 249 and N = 247) were investigated, resulting in a total number of 894 patients. 18 tagging SNPs in the BDNF gene region and 64 tagging SNPs in the NTRK2 gene region were genotyped in the discovery sample; 16 nominally associated SNPs were tested in two replication samples. Results: In the discovery analysis, 7 BDNF SNPs and 9 NTRK2 SNPs were nominally associated with treatment response. Three NTRK2 SNPs (rs10868223, rs1659412 and rs11140778) also showed associations in at least one replication sample and in the combined sample with the same direction of effects (\(P_{corr}\) = .018, \(P_{corr}\) = .015 and \(P_{corr}\) = .004, respectively). We observed an across-gene BDNF-NTRK2 SNP interaction for rs4923468 and rs1387926. No robust interaction of associated SNPs was found in an analysis of BDNF serum protein levels as a predictor for treatment outcome in a subset of 93 patients. Conclusions/Limitations: Although not all associations in the discovery analysis could be unambiguously replicated, the findings of the present study identified single nucleotide variations in the BDNF and NTRK2 genes that might be involved in antidepressant treatment outcome and that have not been previously reported in this context. These new variants need further validation in future association studies. KW - brain KW - bipolar disorder KW - mood disorder KW - treatment response KW - genome-wide association KW - major depressive disorder KW - neurotrophic factor gene KW - VAL66MET polymorphism KW - sequence variations KW - messenger RNA Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-130924 VL - 8 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hanfstein, Benjamin A1 - Lauseker, Michael A1 - Hehlmann, Rüdiger A1 - Saussele, Susanne A1 - Erben, Philipp A1 - Dietz, Christian A1 - Fabarius, Alice A1 - Proetel, Ulrike A1 - Schnittger, Susanne A1 - Haferlach, Claudia A1 - Krause, Stefan W. A1 - Schubert, Jörg A1 - Einsele, Hermann A1 - Hänel, Mathias A1 - Dengler, Jolanta A1 - Falge, Christiane A1 - Kanz, Lothar A1 - Neubauer, Andreas A1 - Kneba, Michael A1 - Stengelmann, Frank A1 - Pfreundschuh, Michael A1 - Waller, Cornelius F. A1 - Spiekerman, Karsten A1 - Baerlocher, Gabriela M. A1 - Pfirrmann, Markus A1 - Hasford, Joerg A1 - Hofmann, Wolf-Karsten A1 - Hochhaus, Andreas A1 - Müller, Martin C. T1 - Distinct characteristics of e13a2 versus e14a2 BCR-ABL1 driven chronic myeloid leukemia under first-line therapy with imatinib JF - Haematologica N2 - The vast majority of chronic myeloid leukemia patients express a BCR-ABL1 fusion gene mRNA encoding a 210 kDa tyrosine kinase which promotes leukemic transformation. A possible differential impact of the corresponding BCR-ABL1 transcript variants e13a2 ("b2a2") and e14a2 ("b3a2") on disease phenotype and outcome is still a subject of debate. A total of 1105 newly diagnosed imatinib-treated patients were analyzed according to transcript type at diagnosis (e13a2, n=451; e14a2, n=496; e13a2+e14a2, n=158). No differences regarding age, sex, or Euro risk score were observed. A significant difference was found between e13a2 and e14a2 when comparing white blood cells (88 vs. 65 x 10(9)/L, respectively; P<0.001) and platelets (296 vs. 430 x 109/L, respectively; P<0.001) at diagnosis, indicating a distinct disease phenotype. No significant difference was observed regarding other hematologic features, including spleen size and hematologic adverse events, during imatinib-based therapies. Cumulative molecular response was inferior in e13a2 patients (P=0.002 for major molecular response; P<0.001 for MR4). No difference was observed with regard to cytogenetic response and overall survival. In conclusion, e13a2 and e14a2 chronic myeloid leukemia seem to represent distinct biological entities. However, clinical outcome under imatinib treatment was comparable and no risk prediction can be made according to e13a2 versus e14a2 BCR-ABL1 transcript type at diagnosis. (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: 00055874) KW - chronic myelogenous leukemia KW - polymerase-chain-reaktion KW - hybrid messenger RNA KW - chronic phase KW - cytogenetic response KW - no correlation KW - ABL gene KW - transcripts KW - breakpoint KW - survival Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-115476 SN - 1592-8721 VL - 99 IS - 9 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Koetschan, Christian A1 - Kittelmann, Sandra A1 - Lu, Jingli A1 - Al-Halbouni, Djamila A1 - Jarvis, Graeme N. A1 - Müller, Tobias A1 - Wolf, Matthias A1 - Janssen, Peter H. T1 - Internal Transcribed Spacer 1 Secondary Structure Analysis Reveals a Common Core throughout the Anaerobic Fungi (Neocallimastigomycota) JF - PLOS ONE N2 - The internal transcribed spacer (ITS) is a popular barcode marker for fungi and in particular the ITS1 has been widely used for the anaerobic fungi (phylum Neocallimastigomycota). A good number of validated reference sequences of isolates as well as a large number of environmental sequences are available in public databases. Its highly variable nature predisposes the ITS1 for low level phylogenetics; however, it complicates the establishment of reproducible alignments and the reconstruction of stable phylogenetic trees at higher taxonomic levels (genus and above). Here, we overcame these problems by proposing a common core secondary structure of the ITS1 of the anaerobic fungi employing a Hidden Markov Model-based ITS1 sequence annotation and a helix-wise folding approach. We integrated the additional structural information into phylogenetic analyses and present for the first time an automated sequence-structure-based taxonomy of the ITS1 of the anaerobic fungi. The methodology developed is transferable to the ITS1 of other fungal groups, and the robust taxonomy will facilitate and improve high-throughput anaerobic fungal community structure analysis of samples from various environments. KW - profile distances KW - ITS2 KW - phylogenetic trees KW - RNA sequence KW - reconstruction KW - diversity KW - populations KW - tool KW - systematics KW - herbivores Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-117058 VL - 9 IS - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wolf, Matthias A1 - Chen, Shilin A1 - Song, Jingyuan A1 - Ankenbrand, Markus A1 - Müller, Tobias T1 - Compensatory Base Changes in ITS2 Secondary Structures Correlate with the Biological Species Concept Despite Intragenomic Variability in ITS2 Sequences – A Proof of Concept JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Compensatory base changes (CBCs) in internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) rDNA secondary structures correlate with Ernst Mayr’s biological species concept. This hypothesis also referred to as the CBC species concept recently was subjected to large-scale testing, indicating two distinct probabilities. (1) If there is a CBC then there are two different species with a probability of ~0.93. (2) If there is no CBC then there is the same species with a probability of ~0.76. In ITS2 research, however, the main problem is the multicopy nature of ITS2 sequences. Most recently, 454 pyrosequencing data have been used to characterize more than 5000 intragenomic variations of ITS2 regions from 178 plant species, demonstrating that mutation of ITS2 is frequent, with a mean of 35 variants per species, respectively per individual organism. In this study, using those 454 data, the CBC criterion is reconsidered in the light of intragenomic variability, a proof of concept, a necessary criterion, expecting no intragenomic CBCs in variant ITS2 copies. In accordance with the CBC species concept, we could demonstrate that the probability that there is no intragenomic CBC is ~0.99. KW - citrus KW - concerted evolution KW - DNA sequences KW - Genome evolution KW - Phylogenetics KW - plant evolution KW - sequence alignment KW - sequence databases Y1 - 2013 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-96450 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gratwohl, A A1 - Pfirrmann, M A1 - Zander, A A1 - Kröger, N A1 - Beelen, D A1 - Novotny, J A1 - Nerl, C A1 - Scheid, C A1 - Spiekermann, K A1 - Mayer, J A1 - Sayer, HG A1 - Falge, C A1 - Bunjes, D A1 - Döhner, H A1 - Ganser, A A1 - Schmidt-Wolf, I A1 - Schwerdtfeger, R A1 - Baurmann, H A1 - Kuse, R A1 - Schmitz, N A1 - Wehmeier, A A1 - Fischer, J Th A1 - Ho, AD A1 - Wilhelm, M A1 - Goebeler, M-E A1 - Lindemann, HW A1 - Bormann, M A1 - Hertenstein, B A1 - Schlimok, G A1 - Baerlocher, GM A1 - Aul, C A1 - Pfreundschuh, M A1 - Fabian, M A1 - Staib, P A1 - Edinger, M A1 - Schatz, M A1 - Fauser, A A1 - Arnold, R A1 - Kindler, T A1 - Wulf, G A1 - Rosselet, A A1 - Hellmann, A A1 - Schäfer, E A1 - Prümmer, O A1 - Schenk, M A1 - Hasford, J A1 - Heimpel, H A1 - Hossfeld, DK A1 - Kolb, H-J A1 - Büsche, G A1 - Haferlach, C A1 - Schnittger, S A1 - Müller, MC A1 - Reiter, A A1 - Berger, U A1 - Saußele, S A1 - Hochhaus, A A1 - Hehlmann, R T1 - Long-term outcome of patients with newly diagnosed chronic myeloid leukemia: a randomized comparison of stem cell transplantation with drug treatment JF - Leukemia N2 - Tyrosine kinase inhibitors represent today's treatment of choice in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) is regarded as salvage therapy. This prospective randomized CML-study IIIA recruited 669 patients with newly diagnosed CML between July 1997 and January 2004 from 143 centers. Of these, 427 patients were considered eligible for HSCT and were randomized by availability of a matched family donor between primary HSCT (group A; N=166 patients) and best available drug treatment (group B; N=261). Primary end point was long-term survival. Survival probabilities were not different between groups A and B (10-year survival: 0.76 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.69–0.82) vs 0.69 (95% CI: 0.61–0.76)), but influenced by disease and transplant risk. Patients with a low transplant risk showed superior survival compared with patients with high- (P<0.001) and non-high-risk disease (P=0.047) in group B; after entering blast crisis, survival was not different with or without HSCT. Significantly more patients in group A were in molecular remission (56% vs 39%; P = 0.005) and free of drug treatment (56% vs 6%; P<0.001). Differences in symptoms and Karnofsky score were not significant. In the era of tyrosine kinase inhibitors, HSCT remains a valid option when both disease and transplant risk are considered. KW - chronic myeloid leukemia KW - stem cell transplantation KW - drug treatment KW - CML KW - tyrosine kinase inhibitors KW - allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-150368 VL - 30 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wilde, Anne-Christin Beatrice A1 - Lieb, Charlotte A1 - Leicht, Elise A1 - Greverath, Lena Maria A1 - Steinhagen, Lara Marleen A1 - Wald de Chamorro, Nina A1 - Petersen, Jörg A1 - Hofmann, Wolf Peter A1 - Hinrichsen, Holger A1 - Heyne, Renate A1 - Berg, Thomas A1 - Naumann, Uwe A1 - Schwenzer, Jeannette A1 - Vermehren, Johannes A1 - Geier, Andreas A1 - Tacke, Frank A1 - Müller, Tobias T1 - Real-world clinical management of patients with primary biliary cholangitis — a retrospective multicenter study from Germany JF - Journal of Clinical Medicine N2 - Background: Clinical practice guidelines for patients with primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) have been recently revised and implemented for well-established response criteria to standard first-line ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) therapy at 12 months after treatment initiation for the early identification of high-risk patients with inadequate treatment responses who may require treatment modification. However, there are only very limited data concerning the real-world clinical management of patients with PBC in Germany. Objective: The aim of this retrospective multicenter study was to evaluate response rates to standard first-line UDCA therapy and subsequent Second-line treatment regimens in a large cohort of well-characterized patients with PBC from 10 independent hepatological referral centers in Germany prior to the introduction of obeticholic acid as a licensed second-line treatment option. Methods: Diagnostic confirmation of PBC, standard first-line UDCA treatment regimens and response rates at 12 months according to Paris-I, Paris-II, and Barcelona criteria, the follow-up cut-off alkaline phosphatase (ALP) ≤ 1.67 × upper limit of normal (ULN) and the normalization of bilirubin (bilirubin ≤ 1 × ULN) were retrospectively examined between June 1986 and March 2017. The management and hitherto applied second-line treatment regimens in patients with an inadequate response to UDCA and subsequent response rates at 12 months were also evaluated. Results: Overall, 480 PBC patients were included in this study. The median UDCA dosage was 13.2 mg UDCA/kg bodyweight (BW)/d. Adequate UDCA treatment response rates according to Paris-I, Paris-II, and Barcelona criteria were observed in 91, 71.3, and 61.3% of patients, respectively. In 83.8% of patients, ALP ≤ 1.67 × ULN were achieved. A total of 116 patients (24.2%) showed an inadequate response to UDCA according to at least one criterion. The diverse second-line treatment regimens applied led to significantly higher response rates according to Paris-II (35 vs. 60%, p = 0.005), Barcelona (13 vs. 34%, p = 0.0005), ALP ≤ 1.67 × ULN and bilirubin ≤ 1 × ULN (52.1 vs. 75%, p = 0.002). The addition of bezafibrates appeared to induce the strongest beneficial effect in this cohort (Paris II: 24 vs. 74%, p = 0.004; Barcelona: 50 vs. 84%, p = 0.046; ALP < 1.67 × ULN and bilirubin ≤ 1 × ULN: 33 vs. 86%, p = 0.001). Conclusion: Our large retrospective multicenter study confirms high response rates following UDCA first-line standard treatment in patients with PBC and highlights the need for close monitoring and early treatment modification in high-risk patients with an insufficient response to UDCA since early treatment modification significantly increases subsequent response rates of these patients. KW - primary biliary cholangitis KW - autoantibodies KW - ursodeoxycholic acid KW - treatment response KW - second line therapy Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-234003 SN - 2077-0383 VL - 10 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Saussele, Susanne A1 - Hehlmann, Ruediger A1 - Fabarius, Alice A1 - Jeromin, Sabine A1 - Proetel, Ulrike A1 - Rinaldetti, Sebastien A1 - Kohlbrenner, Katharina A1 - Einsele, Hermann A1 - Falge, Christine A1 - Kanz, Lothar A1 - Neubauer, Andreas A1 - Kneba, Michael A1 - Stegelmann, Frank A1 - Pfreundschuh, Michael A1 - Waller, Cornelius F. A1 - Oppliger Leibundgut, Elisabeth A1 - Heim, Dominik A1 - Krause, Stefan W. A1 - Hofmann, Wolf-Karsten A1 - Hasford, Joerg A1 - Pfirrmann, Markus A1 - Müller, Martin C. A1 - Hochhaus, Andreas A1 - Lauseker, Michael T1 - Defining therapy goals for major molecular remission in chronic myeloid leukemia: results of the randomized CML Study IV JF - Leukemia N2 - Major molecular remission (MMR) is an important therapy goal in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). So far, MMR is not a failure criterion according to ELN management recommendation leading to uncertainties when to change therapy in CML patients not reaching MMR after 12 months. At monthly landmarks, for different molecular remission status Hazard ratios (HR) were estimated for patients registered to CML study IV who were divided in a learning and a validation sample. The minimum HR for MMR was found at 2.5 years with 0.28 (compared to patients without remission). In the validation sample, a significant advantage for progression-free survival (PFS) for patients in MMR could be detected (p-value 0.007). The optimal time to predict PFS in patients with MMR could be validated in an independent sample at 2.5 years. With our model we provide a suggestion when to define lack of MMR as therapy failure and thus treatment change should be considered. The optimal response time for 1% BCR-ABL at about 12-15 months was confirmed and for deep molecular remission no specific time point was detected. Nevertheless, it was demonstrated that the earlier the MMR is achieved the higher is the chance to attain deep molecular response later. KW - Chronic myeloid leukaemia KW - Molecularly targeted therapy KW - Risk factors KW - Risk factors KW - Translational research Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-227528 VL - 32 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rinaldetti, Sébastien A1 - Pfirrmann, Markus A1 - Manz, Kirsi A1 - Guilhot, Joelle A1 - Dietz, Christian A1 - Panagiotidis, Panayiotidis A1 - Spiess, Birgit A1 - Seifarth, Wolfgang A1 - Fabarius, Alice A1 - Müller, Martin A1 - Pagoni, Maria A1 - Dimou, Maria A1 - Dengler, Jolanta A1 - Waller, Cornelius F. A1 - Brümmendorf, Tim H. A1 - Herbst, Regina A1 - Burchert, Andreas A1 - Janßen, Carsten A1 - Goebeler, Maria Elisabeth A1 - Jost, Philipp J. A1 - Hanzel, Stefan A1 - Schafhausen, Philippe A1 - Prange-Krex, Gabriele A1 - Illmer, Thomas A1 - Janzen, Viktor A1 - Klausmann, Martine A1 - Eckert, Robert A1 - Büschel, Gerd A1 - Kiani, Alexander A1 - Hofmann, Wolf-Karsten A1 - Mahon, François-Xavier A1 - Saussele, Susanne T1 - Effect of ABCG2, OCT1, and ABCB1 (MDR1) Gene Expression on Treatment-Free Remission in a EURO-SKI Subtrial JF - Clinical Lymphoma, Myeloma & Leukemia N2 - Within the EURO-SKI trial, 132 chronic phase CML patients discontinued imatinib treatment. RNA was isolated from peripheral blood in order to analyze the expression of MDR1, ABCG2 and OCT1. ABCG2 was predictive for treatment-free remission in Cox regression analysis. High transcript levels of the ABCG2 efflux transporter (>4.5 parts per thousand) were associated with a twofold higher risk of relapse. Introduction: Tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) can safely be discontinued in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) patients with sustained deep molecular response. ABCG2 (breast cancer resistance protein), OCT1 (organic cation transporter 1), and ABCB1 (multidrug resistance protein 1) gene products are known to play a crucial role in acquired pharmacogenetic TKI resistance. Their influence on treatment-free remission (TFR) has not yet been investigated. Materials and Methods: RNA was isolated on the last day of TKI intake from peripheral blood leukocytes of 132 chronic phase CML patients who discontinued TKI treatment within the European Stop Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor Study trial. Plasmid standards were designed including subgenic inserts of OCT1, ABCG2, and ABCB1 together with GUSB as reference gene. For expression analyses, quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction was used. Multiple Cox regression analysis was performed. In addition, gene expression cutoffs for patient risk stratification were investigated. Results: The TFR rate of 132 patients, 12 months after TKI discontinuation, was 54% (95% confidence interval [CI], 46%-62%). ABCG2 expression (parts per thousand) was retained as the only significant variable (P=.02; hazard ratio, 1.04; 95% CI, 1.01-1.07) in multiple Cox regression analysis. Only for the ABCG2 efflux transporter, a significant cutoff was found (P=.04). Patients with an ABCG2/GUSB transcript level >4.5 parts per thousand (n=93) showed a 12-month TFR rate of 47% (95% CI, 37%-57%), whereas patients with low ABCG2 expression (<= 4.5 parts per thousand; n=39) had a 12-month TFR rate of 72% (95% CI, 55%-82%). Conclusion: In this study, we investigated the effect of pharmacogenetics in the context of a CML treatment discontinuation trial. The transcript levels of the efflux transporter ABCG2 predicted TFR after TKI discontinuation. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. KW - ABCG2 KW - Biomarker KW - CML KW - Imatinib KW - Prediction Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-226281 VL - 18 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schulz, Herbert A1 - Ruppert, Ann-Kathrin A1 - Herms, Stefan A1 - Wolf, Christiane A1 - Mirza-Schreiber, Nazanin A1 - Stegle, Oliver A1 - Czamara, Darina A1 - Forstner, Andreas J. A1 - Sivalingam, Sugirthan A1 - Schoch, Susanne A1 - Moebus, Susanne A1 - Pütz, Benno A1 - Hillmer, Axel A1 - Fricker, Nadine A1 - Vatter, Hartmut A1 - Müller-Myhsok, Bertram A1 - Nöthen, Markus M. A1 - Becker, Albert J. A1 - Hoffmann, Per A1 - Sander, Thomas A1 - Cichon, Sven T1 - Genome-wide mapping of genetic determinants influencing DNA methylation and gene expression in human hippocampus JF - Nature Communications N2 - Emerging evidence emphasizes the strong impact of regulatory genomic elements in neurodevelopmental processes and the complex pathways of brain disorders. The present genome-wide quantitative trait loci analyses explore the \(cis\)-regulatory effects of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on DNA methylation (meQTL) and gene expression (eQTL) in 110 human hippocampal biopsies. We identify \(cis\)-meQTLs at 14,118 CpG methylation sites and \(cis\)-eQTLs for 302 3′-mRNA transcripts of 288 genes. Hippocampal \(cis\)-meQTL-CpGs are enriched in flanking regions of active promoters, CpG island shores, binding sites of the transcription factor CTCF and brain eQTLs. \(Cis\)-acting SNPs of hippocampal meQTLs and eQTLs significantly overlap schizophrenia-associated SNPs. Correlations of CpG methylation and RNA expression are found for 34 genes. Our comprehensive maps of \(cis\)-acting hippocampal meQTLs and eQTLs provide a link between disease-associated SNPs and the regulatory genome that will improve the functional interpretation of non-coding genetic variants in the molecular genetic dissection of brain disorders. KW - psychiatry KW - epigenetics in the nervous system KW - epigenomics KW - gene expression KW - neurological disorders Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-173168 VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Otto, C. A1 - Schmidt, S. A1 - Kastner, C. A1 - Denk, S. A1 - Kettler, J. A1 - Müller, N. A1 - Germer, C.T. A1 - Wolf, E. A1 - Gallant, P. A1 - Wiegering, A. T1 - Targeting bromodomain-containing protein 4 (BRD4) inhibits MYC expression in colorectal cancer cells JF - Neoplasia N2 - The transcriptional regulator BRD4 has been shown to be important for the expression of several oncogenes including MYC. Inhibiting of BRD4 has broad antiproliferative activity in different cancer cell types. The small molecule JQ1 blocks the interaction of BRD4 with acetylated histones leading to transcriptional modulation. Depleting BRD4 via engineered bifunctional small molecules named PROTACs (proteolysis targeting chimeras) represents the next-generation approach to JQ1-mediated BRD4 inhibition. PROTACs trigger BRD4 for proteasomale degradation by recruiting E3 ligases. The aim of this study was therefore to validate the importance of BRD4 as a relevant target in colorectal cancer (CRC) cells and to compare the efficacy of BRD4 inhibition with BRD4 degradation on downregulating MYC expression. JQ1 induced a downregulation of both MYC mRNA and MYC protein associated with an antiproliferative phenotype in CRC cells. dBET1 and MZ1 induced degradation of BRD4 followed by a reduction in MYC expression and CRC cell proliferation. In SW480 cells, where dBET1 failed, we found significantly lower levels of the E3 ligase cereblon, which is essential for dBET1-induced BRD4 degradation. To gain mechanistic insight into the unresponsiveness to dBET1, we generated dBET1-resistant LS174t cells and found a strong downregulation of cereblon protein. These findings suggest that inhibition of BRD4 by JQ1 and degradation of BRD4 by dBET1 and MZ1 are powerful tools for reducing MYC expression and CRC cell proliferation. In addition, downregulation of cereblon may be an important mechanism for developing dBET1 resistance, which can be evaded by incubating dBET1-resistant cells with JQ1 or MZ1. KW - Cancer Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-202451 VL - 21 IS - 11 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Anna A. A1 - Dolowschiak, Tamas A1 - Sellin, Mikael E. A1 - Felmy, Boas A1 - Verbree, Carolin A1 - Gadient, Sandra A1 - Westermann, Alexander J. A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - LeibundGut-Landmann, Salome A1 - Hardt, Wolf-Dietrich T1 - An NK Cell Perforin Response Elicited via IL-18 Controls Mucosal Inflammation Kinetics during Salmonella Gut Infection JF - PLoS Pathogens N2 - Salmonella Typhimurium (S.Tm) is a common cause of self-limiting diarrhea. The mucosal inflammation is thought to arise from a standoff between the pathogen's virulence factors and the host's mucosal innate immune defenses, particularly the mucosal NAIP/NLRC4 inflammasome. However, it had remained unclear how this switches the gut from homeostasis to inflammation. This was studied using the streptomycin mouse model. S.Tm infections in knockout mice, cytokine inhibition and –injection experiments revealed that caspase-1 (not -11) dependent IL-18 is pivotal for inducing acute inflammation. IL-18 boosted NK cell chemoattractants and enhanced the NK cells' migratory capacity, thus promoting mucosal accumulation of mature, activated NK cells. NK cell depletion and Prf\(^{-/-}\) ablation (but not granulocyte-depletion or T-cell deficiency) delayed tissue inflammation. Our data suggest an NK cell perforin response as one limiting factor in mounting gut mucosal inflammation. Thus, IL-18-elicited NK cell perforin responses seem to be critical for coordinating mucosal inflammation during early infection, when S.Tm strongly relies on virulence factors detectable by the inflammasome. This may have broad relevance for mucosal defense against microbial pathogens. KW - NK cells KW - Salmonella Typhimurium KW - mucosal inflammation KW - diarrhea Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-167429 VL - 12 IS - 6 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pinkawa, Michael A1 - Aebersold, Daniel M. A1 - Böhmer, Dirk A1 - Flentje, Michael A1 - Ghadjar, Pirus A1 - Schmidt-Hegemann, Nina-Sophie A1 - Höcht, Stefan A1 - Hölscher, Tobias A1 - Müller, Arndt-Christian A1 - Niehoff, Peter A1 - Sedlmayer, Felix A1 - Wolf, Frank A1 - Zamboglou, Constantinos A1 - Zips, Daniel A1 - Wiegel, Thomas T1 - Radiotherapy in nodal oligorecurrent prostate cancer JF - Strahlentherapie und Onkologie N2 - Objective The current article encompasses a literature review and recommendations for radiotherapy in nodal oligorecurrent prostate cancer. Materials and methods A literature review focused on studies comparing metastasis-directed stereotactic ablative radiotherapy (SABR) vs. external elective nodal radiotherapy (ENRT) and studies analyzing recurrence patterns after local nodal treatment was performed. The DEGRO Prostate Cancer Expert Panel discussed the results and developed treatment recommendations. Results Metastasis-directed radiotherapy results in high local control (often > 90% within a follow-up of 1–2 years) and can be used to improve progression-free survival or defer androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) according to prospective randomized phase II data. Distant progression after involved-node SABR only occurs within a few months in the majority of patients. ENRT improves metastases-free survival rates with increased toxicity in comparison to SABR according to retrospective comparative studies. The majority of nodal recurrences after initial local treatment of pelvic nodal metastasis are detected within the true pelvis and common iliac vessels. Conclusion ENRT with or without a boost should be preferred to SABR in pelvic nodal recurrences. In oligometastatic prostate cancer with distant (extrapelvic) nodal recurrences, SABR alone can be performed in selected cases. Application of additional systemic treatments should be based on current guidelines, with ADT as first-line treatment for hormone-sensitive prostate cancer. Only in carefully selected patients can radiotherapy be initially used without additional ADT outside of the current standard recommendations. Results of (randomized) prospective studies are needed for definitive recommendations. KW - prostate cancer KW - oligorecurrence KW - metastasis-directed therapy KW - radiation therapy KW - androgen deprivation therapy KW - stereotactic body radiotherapy KW - oligmometastases KW - lymph node metastases Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-307763 SN - 0179-7158 SN - 1439-099X VL - 197 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Trautz, Florian A1 - Franke, Heike A1 - Bohnert, Simone A1 - Hammer, Niels A1 - Müller, Wolf A1 - Stassart, Ruth A1 - Tse, Rexson A1 - Zwirner, Johann A1 - Dreßler, Jan A1 - Ondruschka, Benjamin T1 - Survival-time dependent increase in neuronal IL-6 and astroglial GFAP expression in fatally injured human brain tissue JF - Scientific Reports N2 - Knowledge on trauma survival time prior to death following a lethal traumatic brain injury (TBI) may be essential for legal purposes. Immunohistochemistry studies might allow to narrow down this survival interval. The biomarkers interleukin-6 (IL-6) and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) are well known in the clinical setting for their usability in TBI prediction. Here, both proteins were chosen in forensics to determine whether neuronal or glial expression in various brain regions may be associated with the cause of death and the survival time prior to death following TBI. IL-6 positive neurons, glial cells and GFAP positive astrocytes all concordantly increase with longer trauma survival time, with statistically significant changes being evident from three days post-TBI (p < 0.05) in the pericontusional zone, irrespective of its definite cortical localization. IL-6 staining in neurons increases significantly in the cerebellum after trauma, whereas increasing GFAP positivity is also detected in the cortex contralateral to the focal lesion. These systematic chronological changes in biomarkers of pericontusional neurons and glial cells allow for an estimation of trauma survival time. Higher numbers of IL-6 and GFAP-stained cells above threshold values in the pericontusional zone substantiate the existence of fatal traumatic changes in the brain with reasonable certainty. KW - cell death in the nervous system KW - diagnostic markers KW - outcomes research Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-229037 VL - 9 ER -