Publications by authors named "Dominik Klumpp"

TRPM8 is a Ca-permeable nonselective cation channel belonging to the melastatin sub-group of the transient receptor potential (TRP) family. TRPM8 is aberrantly overexpressed in a variety of tumor entities including glioblastoma multiforme where it reportedly contributes to tumor invasion. The present study aimed to disclose further functions of TRPM8 in glioma biology in particular upon cell injury by ionizing radiation.

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Background: Radiotherapy (RT) is used to treat retinoblastoma (Rb), the most frequent ocular tumour in children. Besides eradicating the tumour, RT can cause severe side effects including secondary malignancies. This study aimed to define whether the radioprotector ortho-phospho-L-tyrosine (pTyr) prevents RT-induced side effects and affects local tumour control in a xenograft and a genetic orthotopic Rb mouse model.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates haptotaxis, the process where cells migrate towards gradients of proteins attached to a substrate, highlighting the mechanics behind it that are not well understood.
  • Researchers created controlled fibronectin dot patterns to analyze how various factors like dot size and concentration affect fibroblast movement, finding that specific conditions led to optimal cell migration towards areas of higher fibronectin density.
  • The findings revealed that cell movement depends on intracellular forces and interactions among proteins like RhoA, Cdc42, and aPKCζ, which play crucial roles in recognizing and responding to adhesive gradients during haptotaxis.
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K channels crosstalk with biochemical signaling cascades and regulate virtually all cellular processes by adjusting the intracellular K concentration, generating the membrane potential, mediating cell volume changes, contributing to Ca signaling, and directly interacting within molecular complexes with membrane receptors and downstream effectors. Tumor cells exhibit aberrant expression and activity patterns of K channels. The upregulation of highly "oncogenic" K channels such as the Ca-activated IK channel may drive the neoplastic transformation, malignant progression, metastasis, or therapy resistance of tumor cells.

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Messenger RNA data of lymphohematopoietic cancer lines suggest a correlation between expression of the cation channel TRPM2 and the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2. The latter is overexpressed in various tumor entities and mediates therapy resistance. Here, we analyzed the crosstalk between Bcl-2 and TRPM2 channels in T cell leukemia cells during oxidative stress as conferred by ionizing radiation (IR).

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Tumor cells can adapt to a hostile environment with reduced oxygen supply. The present study aimed to identify mechanisms that confer hypoxia resistance. Partially hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R)-resistant proximal tubular (PT) cells were selected by exposing PT cultures to repetitive cycles of H/R.

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Neoadjuvant, adjuvant or definitive fractionated radiation therapy are implemented in first line anti-cancer treatment regimens of many tumor entities. Ionizing radiation kills the tumor cells mainly by causing double strand breaks of their DNA through formation of intermediate radicals. Survival of the tumor cells depends on both, their capacity of oxidative defense and their efficacy of DNA repair.

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The standard treatment of many tumor entities comprises fractionated radiation therapy which applies ionizing radiation to the tumor-bearing target volume. Ionizing radiation causes double-strand breaks in the DNA backbone that result in cell death if the number of DNA double-strand breaks exceeds the DNA repair capacity of the tumor cell. Ionizing radiation reportedly does not only act on the DNA in the nucleus but also on the plasma membrane.

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Aberrant ion channel expression in the plasma membrane is characteristic for many tumor entities and has been attributed to neoplastic transformation, tumor progression, metastasis, and therapy resistance. The present study aimed to define the function of these "oncogenic" channels for radioresistance of leukemia cells. Chronic myeloid leukemia cells were irradiated (0-6 Gy X ray), ion channel expression and activity, Ca(2+)- and protein signaling, cell cycle progression, and cell survival were assessed by quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, patch-clamp recording, fura-2 Ca(2+)-imaging, immunoblotting, flow cytometry, and clonogenic survival assays, respectively.

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