10 results on '"Fillies M"'
Search Results
2. Das Wahlverhalten in der Krankenhausverpflegung
- Author
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Fillies, M, additional and Heick, V, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. High sensitivity and clonal stability of the genomic fusion as single marker for response monitoring in ETV6-RUNX1-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- Author
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Hoffmann, J., Krumbholz, M., Gutierrez, H.P., Fillies, M., Szymansky, A., Bleckmann, K., Stadt, U. Zur, Kohler, R., Kuiper, R.P., Horstmann, M., Stackelberg, A. von, Eckert, C., Metzler, M., Hoffmann, J., Krumbholz, M., Gutierrez, H.P., Fillies, M., Szymansky, A., Bleckmann, K., Stadt, U. Zur, Kohler, R., Kuiper, R.P., Horstmann, M., Stackelberg, A. von, Eckert, C., and Metzler, M.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND: Assessment of minimal residual disease (MRD) is an integral component for response monitoring and treatment stratification in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). We aimed to evaluate the genomic ETV6-RUNX1 fusion sites as a single marker for MRD quantification. PROCEDURE: In a representative, uniformly treated cohort of pediatric relapsed ALL patients (n = 52), ETV6-RUNX1 fusion sites were compared to the current gold standard, immunoglobulin/T-cell receptor (Ig/TCR) gene rearrangements. RESULTS: Primer/probe sets designed to ETV6-RUNX1 fusions achieved significantly more frequent a sensitivity and a quantitative range of at least 10(-4) compared to the gold standard with 100% and 73% versus 76% and 47%, respectively. The breakpoint sequence was identical at diagnosis and relapse in all tested cases. There was a high degree of concordance between quantitative MRD results assessed using ETV6-RUNX1 and the highest Ig/TCR marker (Spearman's 0.899, P < .01) with differences >(1/2) log-step in only 6% of patients. A high proportion of ETV6-RUNX1-positive ALL relapses (40%) in our cohort showed a poor response to induction treatment at relapse, and therefore had an indication for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, demonstrating the need of accurate identification of this subgroup. CONCLUSIONS: ETV6-RUNX1 fusion sites are highly sensitive and reliable MRD markers. Our data confirm that they are unaffected by clonal evolution and selection during front-line and second-line chemotherapy in contrast to Ig/TCR rearrangements, which require several markers per patient to compensate for the observed loss of target clones. In future studies, the genomic ETV6-RUNX1 fusion can be used as single MRD marker.
- Published
- 2019
4. 4D Visualization of replication foci in mammalian cells corresponding to individual replicons
- Author
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Chagin, V. O., primary, Casas-Delucchi, C. S., additional, Reinhart, M., additional, Schermelleh, L., additional, Markaki, Y., additional, Maiser, A., additional, Bolius, J. J., additional, Bensimon, A., additional, Fillies, M., additional, Domaing, P., additional, Rozanov, Y. M., additional, Leonhardt, H., additional, and Cardoso, M. C., additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Advanced Minimal Residual Disease Monitoring for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia with Multiplex Mediator Probe PCR.
- Author
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Kipf E, Schlenker F, Borst N, Fillies M, Kirschner-Schwabe R, Zengerle R, Eckert C, von Stetten F, and Lehnert M
- Subjects
- Humans, Multiplex Polymerase Chain Reaction, Neoplasm, Residual diagnosis, Neoplasm, Residual genetics, Prospective Studies, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma diagnosis, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma genetics
- Abstract
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most frequent malignancy in childhood. Minimal residual disease (MRD) monitoring is an important prognostic factor for ALL treatment response and patient stratification. MRD monitoring uses personalized real-time PCR to measure the amount of cancer cells among normal cells. Due to clonal tumor evolution or secondary rearrangement processes, MRD markers can disappear during treatment, leading to false-negative MRD results and wrong decision-making in personalized treatments. Therefore, monitoring of multiple MRD markers per patient is required. For the first time, the authors present personalized multiplex mediator probe PCR (MP PCR) for MRD monitoring in ALL. These assays can precisely quantify more MRD markers in less sample material. Therefore, clinical outcomes will be less affected by clonal tumor evolution. Personalized duplex MP PCR assays were developed for different genomic MRD markers, including immunoglobulin/T-cell receptor gene rearrangements, gene fusions, and gene deletions. One duplex assay was successfully applied in a prospective patient case and compared with hydrolysis probes. Moreover, the authors increased the multiplex level from duplex to 4-plex and still met the EuroMRD requirements for reliable quantification. In addition, the authors' MRD-MP design guidelines and multiplex workflow facilitate and accelerate MP PCR assay development. This helps the standardization of personal diagnostics., (Copyright © 2022 Association for Molecular Pathology and American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The MRD disk: automated minimal residual disease monitoring by highly sensitive centrifugal microfluidic multiplex qPCR.
- Author
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Juelg P, Kipf E, Specht M, Fillies M, Eckert C, Paust N, Zengerle R, Lehnert M, and Hutzenlaub T
- Subjects
- Humans, Neoplasm, Residual, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Reproducibility of Results, Microfluidics, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma diagnosis, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma genetics
- Abstract
We present a proof-of-principle study on automated, highly sensitive and multiplexed qPCR quantification by centrifugal microfluidics. The MRD disk can be used for standardisation of repetitive, longitudinal assays with high requirements on reproducibility and sensitivity, such as cancer monitoring. In contrast to high-throughput qPCR automation by bulky and expensive robotic workstations we employ a small centrifugal microfluidic instrument, addressing the need of low- to mid-throughput applications. As a potential application we demonstrate automated minimum residual disease (MRD) monitoring of prognostic markers in patients with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL). The disk-workflow covers all aspects of clinical gold standard MRD quantification: generation of standard curves, specificity controls, no template controls and quantification of the ALL patient sample. We integrated a highly sensitive, colorimetric 2-plex analysis of MRD targets, as well as a 2-plex analysis of reference genes, both in parallel and in a single LabDisk cartridge. For this purpose, a systematic procedure for crosstalk- and signal-to-noise-optimisation is introduced, providing a guideline for efficient multiplex readout inside microfluidic platforms. The qPCR standard curves (n = 12/12) generated on-disk reach clinically required linearity (R2 = 98.1% to R2 = 99.8%). In three consecutive MRD disk runs with an ALL patient sample containing the two representative MRD targets VH3D3D5JH3 and VkIkde, we observe high accordance between the on-disk quantifications (48 ± 6 copies/reaction and 69 ± 6 copies/reaction) and the expected concentrations (57 copies/reaction for both targets). In comparison to the clinical gold standard of manually pipetted, singleplex assays, the MRD disk yields comparable limit of quantification (1 × 10-4) in n = 6/6 analyses (vs. n = 4/4 in gold standard) and a limit of detection (1 × 10-5) in n = 6/6 analysis (vs. n = 2/4 in gold standard). The automation reduces the risk of manual liquid handling errors, making the MRD disk an attractive solution to assure reproducibility in moderate-throughput, longitudinal gene quantification applications.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. High sensitivity and clonal stability of the genomic fusion as single marker for response monitoring in ETV6-RUNX1-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
- Author
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Hoffmann J, Krumbholz M, Gutiérrez HP, Fillies M, Szymansky A, Bleckmann K, Zur Stadt U, Köhler R, Kuiper RP, Horstmann M, von Stackelberg A, Eckert C, and Metzler M
- Subjects
- Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Neoplasm, Residual genetics, Neoplasm, Residual therapy, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma genetics, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma therapy, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Biomarkers, Tumor genetics, Clonal Evolution, Core Binding Factor Alpha 2 Subunit genetics, Genomics methods, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation, Neoplasm, Residual pathology, Oncogene Proteins, Fusion genetics, Precursor Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma pathology
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of minimal residual disease (MRD) is an integral component for response monitoring and treatment stratification in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). We aimed to evaluate the genomic ETV6-RUNX1 fusion sites as a single marker for MRD quantification., Procedure: In a representative, uniformly treated cohort of pediatric relapsed ALL patients (n = 52), ETV6-RUNX1 fusion sites were compared to the current gold standard, immunoglobulin/T-cell receptor (Ig/TCR) gene rearrangements., Results: Primer/probe sets designed to ETV6-RUNX1 fusions achieved significantly more frequent a sensitivity and a quantitative range of at least 10
-4 compared to the gold standard with 100% and 73% versus 76% and 47%, respectively. The breakpoint sequence was identical at diagnosis and relapse in all tested cases. There was a high degree of concordance between quantitative MRD results assessed using ETV6-RUNX1 and the highest Ig/TCR marker (Spearman's 0.899, P < .01) with differences >½ log-step in only 6% of patients. A high proportion of ETV6-RUNX1-positive ALL relapses (40%) in our cohort showed a poor response to induction treatment at relapse, and therefore had an indication for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, demonstrating the need of accurate identification of this subgroup., Conclusions: ETV6-RUNX1 fusion sites are highly sensitive and reliable MRD markers. Our data confirm that they are unaffected by clonal evolution and selection during front-line and second-line chemotherapy in contrast to Ig/TCR rearrangements, which require several markers per patient to compensate for the observed loss of target clones. In future studies, the genomic ETV6-RUNX1 fusion can be used as single MRD marker., (© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Cell-permeable nanobodies for targeted immunolabelling and antigen manipulation in living cells.
- Author
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Herce HD, Schumacher D, Schneider AFL, Ludwig AK, Mann FA, Fillies M, Kasper MA, Reinke S, Krause E, Leonhardt H, Cardoso MC, and Hackenberger CPR
- Subjects
- 3T3 Cells, Animals, Antigens immunology, Antigens metabolism, Biological Transport, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Nucleolus metabolism, Cell-Penetrating Peptides chemical synthesis, Drug Carriers chemical synthesis, Green Fluorescent Proteins immunology, Green Fluorescent Proteins metabolism, Humans, Methyl-CpG-Binding Protein 2 pharmacokinetics, Mice, Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen metabolism, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-mdm2 metabolism, Single-Domain Antibodies chemistry, Single-Domain Antibodies immunology, Tumor Suppressor Protein p53 metabolism, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cell-Penetrating Peptides chemistry, Drug Carriers chemistry, Single-Domain Antibodies metabolism
- Abstract
Functional antibody delivery in living cells would enable the labelling and manipulation of intracellular antigens, which constitutes a long-thought goal in cell biology and medicine. Here we present a modular strategy to create functional cell-permeable nanobodies capable of targeted labelling and manipulation of intracellular antigens in living cells. The cell-permeable nanobodies are formed by the site-specific attachment of intracellularly stable (or cleavable) cyclic arginine-rich cell-penetrating peptides to camelid-derived single-chain VHH antibody fragments. We used this strategy for the non-endocytic delivery of two recombinant nanobodies into living cells, which enabled the relocalization of the polymerase clamp PCNA (proliferating cell nuclear antigen) and tumour suppressor p53 to the nucleolus, and thereby allowed the detection of protein-protein interactions that involve these two proteins in living cells. Furthermore, cell-permeable nanobodies permitted the co-transport of therapeutically relevant proteins, such as Mecp2, into the cells. This technology constitutes a major step in the labelling, delivery and targeted manipulation of intracellular antigens. Ultimately, this approach opens the door towards immunostaining in living cells and the expansion of immunotherapies to intracellular antigen targets.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A novel cell permeable DNA replication and repair marker.
- Author
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Herce HD, Rajan M, Lättig-Tünnemann G, Fillies M, and Cardoso MC
- Subjects
- 3T3 Cells, Animals, Cell Cycle genetics, Cell-Penetrating Peptides chemistry, Cell-Penetrating Peptides genetics, Cell-Penetrating Peptides metabolism, Cricetinae, HIV-1 chemistry, HeLa Cells, Humans, Mice, Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen chemistry, Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen metabolism, Protein Binding, Protein Conformation, tat Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus chemistry, tat Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus metabolism, DNA Repair genetics, DNA Replication genetics, Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen genetics, tat Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus genetics
- Abstract
Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA) is a key protein in DNA replication and repair. The dynamics of replication and repair in live cells is usually studied introducing translational fusions of PCNA. To obviate the need for transfection and bypass the problem of difficult to transfect and/or short lived cells, we have now developed a cell permeable replication and/or repair marker. The design of this marker has three essential molecular components: (1) an optimized artificial PCNA binding peptide; (2) a cell-penetrating peptide, derived from the HIV-1 Trans Activator of Transcription (TAT); (3) an in vivo cleavable linker, linking the two peptides. The resulting construct was taken up by human, hamster and mouse cells within minutes of addition to the media. Inside the cells, the cargo separated from the vector peptide and bound PCNA effectively. Both replication and repair sites could be directly labeled in live cells making it the first in vivo cell permeable peptide marker for these two fundamental cellular processes. Concurrently, we also introduced a quick peptide based PCNA staining method as an alternative to PCNA antibodies for immunofluorescence applications. In summary, we present here a versatile tool to instantaneously label repair and replication processes in fixed and live cells.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. CPT1alpha over-expression increases long-chain fatty acid oxidation and reduces cell viability with incremental palmitic acid concentration in 293T cells.
- Author
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Jambor de Sousa UL, Koss MD, Fillies M, Gahl A, Scheeder MR, Cardoso MC, Leonhardt H, Geary N, Langhans W, and Leonhardt M
- Subjects
- Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase genetics, Cell Line, Cell Survival physiology, Gene Expression Regulation physiology, Humans, Lipid Peroxidation physiology, Oxidation-Reduction, Recombinant Proteins metabolism, Carnitine O-Palmitoyltransferase metabolism, Fatty Acids metabolism, Kidney cytology, Kidney metabolism, Palmitic Acid metabolism
- Abstract
To test the cellular response to an increased fatty acid oxidation, we generated a vector for an inducible expression of the rate-limiting enzyme carnitine palmitoyl-transferase 1alpha (CPT1alpha). Human embryonic 293T kidney cells were transiently transfected and expression of the CPT1alpha transgene in the tet-on vector was activated with doxycycline. Fatty acid oxidation was measured by determining the conversion of supplemented, synthetic cis-10-heptadecenoic acid (C17:1n-7) to C15:ln-7. CPT1alpha over-expression increased mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid oxidation about 6-fold. Addition of palmitic acid (PA) decreased viability of CPT1alpha over-expressing cells in a concentration-dependent manner. Both, PA and CPT1alpha over-expression increased cell death. Interestingly, PA reduced total cell number only in cells over-expressing CPT1alpha, suggesting an effect on cell proliferation that requires PA translocation across the mitochondrial inner membrane. This inducible expression system should be well suited to study the roles of CPT1 and fatty acid oxidation in lipotoxicity and metabolism in vivo.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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