Publications by authors named "Rita Schmitz"

Disregulated Wnt/beta-catenin signaling has been linked to various human diseases, including cancers. Inhibitors of oncogenic Wnt signaling are likely to have a therapeutic effect in cancers. LRP5 and LRP6 are closely related membrane coreceptors for Wnt proteins.

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The chemokine receptor CCR7 and its ligands CCL19 and CCL21 play an important role in lymphocyte homing and have also been associated with inflammatory, allergic and lung disorders. Cloning of the cynomolgus monkey genes encoding CCR7, CCL19 and CCL21 revealed 93-97% sequence identity of the deduced proteins with their respective human homologs. In chemotaxis assays, B300-19 cells transfected with the cynomolgus (c) CCR7 receptor migrated in response to cCCL19 and cCCL21 in a dose-dependent manner with EC(50) values of 324+/-188nM and 247+/-29nM, respectively.

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Background: Topoisomerase II poisons are in clinical use as anti-cancer therapy for decades and work by stabilizing the enzyme-induced DNA breaks. In contrast, catalytic inhibitors block the enzyme before DNA scission. Although several catalytic inhibitors of topoisomerase II have been described, preclinical concepts for exploiting their anti-proliferative activity based on molecular characteristics of the tumor cell have only recently started to emerge.

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As exemplified by three cases, we show that the addition of a small molecular weight inhibitor to the culture of Baculovirus-infected insect cells can dramatically improve the expression of a recombinant kinase. The expression of the tyrosine kinase KDR was sevenfold higher and mainly in a soluble form, when the KDR inhibitor PTK/ZK was added to the culture at the time of Baculovirus infection. The expression of the catalytic domain of the serine/threonine kinase PKCtheta, which is otherwise not possible with the Baculovirus expression system, was expressed mainly soluble at 120mg/L by the addition of the PKC inhibitor BIM XI to the culture of Baculovirus-infected insect cells.

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The efficient preparation of recombinant proteins at the lab-scale level is essential for drug discovery, in particular for structural biology, protein interaction studies and drug screening. The Baculovirus insect-cell expression system is one of the most widely applied and highly successful systems for production of recombinant functional proteins. However, the use of eukaryotic cells as host organisms and the multi-step protocol required for the generation of sufficient virus and protein has limited its adaptation to industrialized high-throughput operation.

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