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result(s) for
"Rebmann, Vera"
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Editorial: Novel reliable approaches for prediction and clinical decision-making in cancer
by
Rebmann, Vera
,
Zidi, Ines
,
Layeb, Safa Bhar
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Artificial Intelligence
,
cancer
2025
Although significant progress has been made in recent decades in understanding thedevelopment and progression of cancer, cancer remains one of the leading causes of death.Recent insights on immunobiological dysregulations involved in the development andprogression of cancer demonstrate the complexity and heterogeneity of cancer, which playcrucial role in the pharmacokinetic variability of cancer therapies. With regard to theprevalence of recurrence/metastases and prognosis, as well as the prediction of cancertreatment success, further investigations are urgently needed to establish cancer signaturesor treatment modalities that enable improved risk stratification and improved patientmanagement. This Research Topic focuses on studies that integrate new comprehensivesystemic, combinatorial, or complexed data that could be useful to develop personalizedtreatment regimens, to improve immunotherapies and clinical decision-making.
Journal Article
The Inner and Outer Qualities of Extracellular Vesicles for Translational Purposes in Breast Cancer
2018
Breast cancer (BC) is the second most common cause of cancer mortality of women worldwide. BC is a systemic disease with a highly heterogeneous course of disease. Therefore, prognostic and diagnostic biomarkers are required to improve the clinical risk management. Cancer-derived or cancer-associated extracellular vesicles (EVs) procured from the bloodstream of BC patients offer a novel platform for the qualitative and quantitative screening and establishment of biomarkers. Here, we focus on common aspects of EVs, on the function of BC-derived EVs and their translational potential considering the EV abundancy, intravesicular as well as outer membrane-anchored composition and current challenges of implementation in clinical practice.
Journal Article
Precipitation with polyethylene glycol followed by washing and pelleting by ultracentrifugation enriches extracellular vesicles from tissue culture supernatants in small and large scales
by
Giebel, Bernd
,
Ruesing, Johannes
,
Meyer, Helmut E.
in
Biomarkers
,
Body fluids
,
Brain research
2018
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) provide a complex means of intercellular signalling between cells at local and distant sites, both within and between different organs. According to their cell-type specific signatures, EVs can function as a novel class of biomarkers for a variety of diseases, and can be used as drug-delivery vehicles. Furthermore, EVs from certain cell types exert beneficial effects in regenerative medicine and for immune modulation. Several techniques are available to harvest EVs from various body fluids or cell culture supernatants. Classically, differential centrifugation, density gradient centrifugation, size-exclusion chromatography and immunocapturing-based methods are used to harvest EVs from EV-containing liquids. Owing to limitations in the scalability of any of these methods, we designed and optimised a polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based precipitation method to enrich EVs from cell culture supernatants. We demonstrate the reproducibility and scalability of this method and compared its efficacy with more classical EV-harvesting methods. We show that washing of the PEG pellet and the re-precipitation by ultracentrifugation remove a huge proportion of PEG co-precipitated molecules such as bovine serum albumine (BSA). However, supported by the results of the size exclusion chromatography, which revealed a higher purity in terms of particles per milligram protein of the obtained EV samples, PEG-prepared EV samples most likely still contain a certain percentage of other non-EV associated molecules. Since PEG-enriched EVs revealed the same therapeutic activity in an ischemic stroke model than corresponding cells, it is unlikely that such co-purified molecules negatively affect the functional properties of obtained EV samples. In summary, maybe not being the purification method of choice if molecular profiling of pure EV samples is intended, the optimised PEG protocol is a scalable and reproducible method, which can easily be adopted by laboratories equipped with an ultracentrifuge to enrich for functional active EVs.
Journal Article
Polymorphic Sites at the 3’ Untranslated Region of the HLA-G Gene Are Associated with Differential hla-g Soluble Levels in the Brazilian and French Population
by
Krawice-Radanne, Irene
,
Castelli, Erick C.
,
Rouas-Freiss, Nathalie
in
3' Untranslated Regions
,
Adult
,
Alleles
2013
HLA-G molecule has well-recognized tolerogenic properties, and the encoding gene shows lower frequency of polymorphism at the coding region but higher variability at regulatory 5' and 3' untranslated (3'UTR) regions. At least three 3'UTR polymorphic sites have been associated with HLA-G mRNA regulation, including the 14 base pair (14bp) Insertion/Deletion, +3142C-G and +3187A-G. We studied the association of polymorphic sites at 3'UTR (sequencing analysis, encompassing the 14bp Ins-Del/+3003T-C/+3010C-G/+3027C-A/+3035C-T/+3142C-G/+3187A-G/+3196C-G polymorphic sites) with plasma soluble HLA-G levels (sHLA-G, detected by ELISA) in 187 French and 153 Brazilian healthy individuals. Allele and genotype frequencies were closely similar in both populations; however, Brazilians showed a higher HLA-G 3'UTR haplotype diversity. Considering sHLA-G levels in both populations altogether, individuals presenting 14bp Del/Del showed higher levels compared to 14bpIns/Ins genotype (P <0.05); those presenting +3010C/G showed higher levels compared to the +3010C-C genotype (P< 0.05); those presenting +3027C-C showed higher levels than the +3027A-A genotype (P< 0.05); and those bearing +3035C-C showed higher levels compared to the +3035C-T (P < 0.01) and +3035T-T (P < 0.05) genotypes. The analyses of 3'UTR haplotypes showed that UTR-1 (DelTGCCCGC) was associated with higher expression of sHLA-G, whereas UTR-5 (InsTCCTGAC) and UTR-7 (InsTCATGAC) with lower expression and other UTRs (UTR-2/3/4/6) exhibited intermediate levels. Since the differential expression of HLA-G may be beneficial or harmful depending on the underlying condition, the identification of individuals genetically programmed to differentially express HLA-G may help on defining novel strategies to control the immune response against the underlying disorder.
Journal Article
Soluble HLA-G and HLA-G Bearing Extracellular Vesicles Affect ILT-2 Positive and ILT-2 Negative CD8 T Cells Complementary
by
LeMaoult, Joel
,
Hò, Gia-Gia T.
,
Rebmann, Vera
in
Antigens
,
Antigens, CD - genetics
,
Antigens, CD - metabolism
2020
Tumor immune escape is associated with both, the expression of immune checkpoint molecules on peripheral immune cells and soluble forms of the human leukocyte antigen-G (HLA-G) in the blood, which are consequently discussed as clinical biomarker for disease status and outcome of cancer patients. HLA-G preferentially interacts with the inhibitory receptor immunoglobulin-like transcript (ILT) receptor-2 in the blood and can be secreted as free soluble molecules (sHLA-G) or via extracellular vesicles (EV). To investigate the contribution of these two forms to the expression of checkpoint molecules in peripheral blood, we primed peripheral blood mononuclear cells with purified soluble sHLA-G1 protein, or EV preparations derived from SUM149 cells transfected with membrane-bound HLA-G1 or control vector prior to anti-CD3/CD28 T cell activation. Our study demonstrated that priming of PBMC with sHLA-G1 protein prior to 48 h activation resulted in enhanced frequencies of ILT-2 expressing CD8
T cells, and in an upregulation of immune checkpoint molecules CTLA-4, PD-1, TIM-3, and CD95 exclusively on ILT-2 positive CD8
T cells. In contrast, when PBMC were primed with EV (containing HLA-G1 or not) upregulation of CTLA-4, PD-1, TIM-3, and CD95 occurred exclusively on ILT-2 negative CD8
T cells. Taken together, our data suggest that priming with sHLA-G forms induces a pronounced immunosuppressive/exhausted phenotype and that priming with sHLA-G1 protein or EV derived from HLA-G1 positive or negative SUM149 cells affects CD8
T cells complementary by targeting either the ILT-2 positive or negative subpopulation, respectively, after T cell activation.
Journal Article
miRNA cargo within exosome-like vesicle transfer influences metastatic bone colonization
by
Bovy, Nicolas
,
Tabruyn, Sébastien
,
Luis-Ravelo, Diego
in
Adenocarcinoma
,
Adenocarcinoma - genetics
,
Adenocarcinoma - metabolism
2014
Bone metastasis represents one of the most deleterious clinical consequences arising in the context of many solid tumors. Severe osteolysis results from tumor cell colonization of the bone compartment, a process which entails reciprocal exchange of soluble signals between tumor cells and their osseous microenvironment. Recent evidence indicates that tumor-intrinsic miRNAs are pleiotropic regulators of gene expression. But they are also frequently released in exosome-like vesicles (ELV). Yet the functional relevance of the transference of tumor-derived ELV and their miRNA cargo to the extracellular milieu during osseous colonization is unknown.
Comparative transcriptomic profiling using an in vivo murine model of bone metastasis identified a repressed miRNA signature associated with high prometastatic activity. Forced expression of single miRNAs identified miR-192 that markedly appeased osseous metastasis in vivo, as shown by X-ray, bioluminescence imaging and microCT scans. Histological examination of metastatic lesions revealed impaired tumor-induced angiogenesis in vivo, an effect that was associated in vitro with decreased hallmarks of angiogenesis. Isolation and characterization of ELV by flow cytometry, Western blot analysis, transmission electron microscopy and nanoparticle tracking analysis revealed the ELV cargo enrichment in miR-192. Consistent with these findings, fluorescent labeled miR-192-enriched-ELV showed the in vitro transfer and release of miR-192 in target endothelial cells and abrogation of the angiogenic program by repression of proangiogenic IL-8, ICAM and CXCL1. Moreover, in vivo infusion of fluorescent labeled ELV efficiently targeted cells of the osseous compartment. Furthermore, treatment with miR-192 enriched ELV in a model of in vivo bone metastasis pre-conditioned osseous milieu and impaired tumor-induced angiogenesis, thereby reducing the metastatic burden and tumor colonization.
Changes in the miRNA-cargo content within ELV represent a novel mechanism heavily influencing bone metastatic colonization, which is most likely relevant in other target organs. Mechanistic mimicry of this phenomenon by synthetic nanoparticles could eventually emerge as a novel therapeutic approach.
•miRNAs are released by tumor cells in exosome-like vesicles (ELV) to the local milieu.•ELV are incorporated into endothelial cells where their miRNA-cargo is released.•Transferred cargo modulates their angiogenic program and bone metastatic colonization.•This novel mechanism could be relevant in other steps of the metastatic cascade.
Journal Article
HLA-G as a Tolerogenic Molecule in Transplantation and Pregnancy
by
Rebmann, Vera
,
Wagner, Bettina
,
da Silva Nardi, Fabiola
in
Female
,
Gene Expression Regulation
,
HLA-G Antigens - genetics
2014
HLA-G is a nonclassical HLA class I molecule. In allogeneic situations such as pregnancy or allograft transplantation, the expression of HLA-G has been related to a better acceptance of the fetus or the allograft. Thus, it seems that HLA-G is crucially involved in mechanisms shaping an allogeneic immune response into tolerance. In this contribution we focus on (i) how HLA-G is involved in transplantation and human reproduction, (ii) how HLA-G is regulated by genetic and microenvironmental factors, and (iii) how HLA-G can offer novel perspectives with respect to therapy.
Journal Article
Genetic variants of the HLA-G/LILRB1 ligand-receptor axis in donors or recipients are prognostic covariates for rejection after living kidney transplantation
by
Hölzenbein, Julian
,
Gruenen, Nina
,
Horn, Peter Alexander
in
3' Untranslated Regions
,
acute cellular rejection
,
Adult
2026
HLA-G is a non-classical HLA class I molecule that promotes transplant tolerance. It engages the inhibitory receptor LILRB1 on immune effector cells, suppressing cytotoxic responses and inflammation, while promoting tolerogenic and regulatory immune phenotypes. Polymorphisms in the
3' untranslated region (3'UTR) modulate HLA-G expression levels, and
promoter variants influence receptor expression. The combined effect on kidney transplant (KTx) rejection has not been systematically studied.
Living donor-recipient pairs undergoing KTx were genotyped for nine variants in the
3'UTR region and two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the
promoter (PROMO) regions. Haplotypes were arranged for both loci. Clinical endpoints were biopsy-proven T cell-mediated rejection (TCMR) within one year and antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) within five years post-transplant.
Donor positivity for
3'UTR-1 or UTR-2 or negative for UTR-3 haplotype were associated with a significantly higher risk of TCMR in both univariate or multivariate analyses. Recipients lacking the
-PROMO CG haplotype also had an increased TCMR risk. The combination of an
3'UTR-2 positive donor with a
-PROMO CG haplotype negative recipient was found to be an independent predictor of TCMR. In contrast, HLA-G 3'UTR variants were not associated with AMR, while the presence of the recipient
-PROMO CG haplotype emerged as an independent AMR risk factor.
Donor
3'UTR and recipient
-PROMO haplotypes define a functional immunogenetic axis that differentially influence TCMR and AMR. These results support the clinical potential of HLA-G/LILRB1 genetic profiling to improve donor selection in living KTx and to guide the development of novel rejection therapies.
Journal Article
Expansion of functional personalized cells with specific transgene combinations
2018
Fundamental research and drug development for personalized medicine necessitates cell cultures from defined genetic backgrounds. However, providing sufficient numbers of authentic cells from individuals poses a challenge. Here, we present a new strategy for rapid cell expansion that overcomes current limitations. Using a small gene library, we expanded primary cells from different tissues, donors, and species. Cell-type-specific regimens that allow the reproducible creation of cell lines were identified. In depth characterization of a series of endothelial and hepatocytic cell lines confirmed phenotypic stability and functionality. Applying this technology enables rapid, efficient, and reliable production of unlimited numbers of personalized cells. As such, these cell systems support mechanistic studies, epidemiological research, and tailored drug development.
Personalised medicine requires cell cultures from defined genetic backgrounds, but providing sufficient numbers of cells is a challenge. Here the authors develop gene cocktails to expand primary cells from a variety of different tissues and species, and show that expanded endothelial and hepatic cells retain properties of the differentiated phenotype.
Journal Article