Rupert Hallmann

Rupert Hallmann
University of Münster | WWU · Institute of Physiological Chemistry and Pathobiochemistry

Prof. Dr. rer.nat.

About

68
Publications
6,283
Reads
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6,482
Citations
Citations since 2017
8 Research Items
1386 Citations
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250
2017201820192020202120222023050100150200250
Additional affiliations
June 2005 - present
University of Münster
Position
  • Professor
June 2002 - July 2005
Lund University
Position
  • Professor of Immunology
January 1996 - January 2001
University of Western Australia
Position
  • Professor
Description
  • sabbatical and courses in Developmental Biology

Publications

Publications (68)
Article
Full-text available
Monocyte differentiation to macrophages is triggered by migration across the endothelial barrier, which is constituted by both endothelial cells and their underlying basement membrane. We address here the role of the endothelial basement membrane laminins (laminins 411 and 511) in this monocyte to macrophage switch. Chimeric mice carrying CX3CR1-GF...
Article
The extracellular matrix is an integral component of the vasculature, contributing to both developmental processes and structural and functional homeostasis. We describe here the types of extracellular matrices that occur in different blood vessel types, ranging from capillaries to veins, venules and arteries, and focus on the endothelial basement...
Preprint
Full-text available
Monocyte extravasation is a trigger for differentiation to macrophages. Intravital imaging of CCL2-induced extravasation of CX3CR1-GFP immune cells in mice lacking integral endothelial basement membrane (BM) laminins, Lama4 -/- and Tek-cre::Lama5 -/- , revealed higher motility of CX3CR1-GFPlow inflammatory-monocytes at laminin 511 low sites. In vit...
Article
The neuropilin-1 (NRP1)-MET signaling axis regulates the motility of individual endothelial cells (ECs). It is unknown how this signaling pathway affects the endothelial barrier in coherent ECs forming a tight monolayer. We hypothesized that it is involved both in modulation of the endothelial barrier and in EC activation. To investigate the role o...
Article
Full-text available
Shear detection and mechanotransduction by arterial endothelium requires junctional complexes containing PECAM-1 and VE-cadherin, as well as firm anchorage to the underlying basement membrane. While considerable information is available for junctional complexes in these processes, gained largely from in vitro studies, little is known about the cont...
Article
Full-text available
Although chemokines are sufficient for chemotaxis of various cells, increasing evidence exists for their fine-tuning by selective proteolytic processing. Using a model of immune cell chemotaxis into the CNS (experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis [EAE]) that permits precise localization of immigrating leukocytes at the blood-brain barrier, we sh...
Article
Selectins are a family of adhesion receptors designed for efficient leukocyte tethering to the endothelium under shear. As a key property to resist premature bond disruption, selectin adhesiveness is enhanced by tensile forces that promote the conversion of a bent into an extended conformation of the N-terminal lectin and epidermal growth factor-li...
Article
Full-text available
Significance We describe a unique extracellular matrix (ECM) niche in the spleen, the marginal zone (MZ), that supports a specialized population of MZ B lymphocytes that respond rapidly to blood-borne antigens and are therefore crucial for the first line of immune defense. We show, for the first time, that both the novel 3D structure and the bioche...
Article
The extracellular matrix (ECM) exists in various biochemical and structural forms that can act either as a barrier to migrating leukocytes, in the case of basement membranes, or provide a physical scaffold supporting or guiding migration (interstitial matrix). This review focuses on basement membranes and our current knowledge of the way that leuko...
Article
Full-text available
Signaling through tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (TNFR1) controls bacterial infections and the induction of inflammatory Th1 cell-mediated autoimmune diseases. By dissecting Th1 cell-mediated delayed-type hypersensitivity responses (DTHRs) into single steps, we localized a central defect to the missing TNFR1 expression by endothelial cells (ECs)....
Article
Specific inhibition of the entry of encephalitogenic T lymphocytes into the central nervous system in multiple sclerosis would provide a means of inhibiting disease without compromising innate immune responses. We show here that targeting lymphocyte interactions with endothelial basement membrane laminins provides such a possibility. In mouse exper...
Article
When secreted from malignant cells, hyaluronan facilitates tumor invasion and metastasis, as inhibition of its export by zaprinast inhibited metastasis formation in mice. However, the precise steps of the metastatic cascade, which were influenced by zaprinast, have not been identified as yet. Here we analyzed the cell biological effects of the inhi...
Article
Until recently little information was available on the molecular details of the extracellular matrix (ECM) of secondary lymphoid tissues. There is now growing evidence that these ECMs are unique structures, combining characteristics of basement membranes and interstitial or fibrillar matrices, resulting in scaffolds that are strong and highly flexi...
Article
Full-text available
Caveolin-1 (Cav-1) is essential for the morphology of membrane caveolae and exerts a negative influence on a number of signaling systems, including nitric oxide (NO) production and activity of the MAP kinase cascade. In the vascular system, ablation of caveolin-1 may thus be expected to cause arterial dilatation and increased vessel wall mass (remo...
Article
IntroductionAdhesion of Leukocytes to High Endothelial Venules: The HEV Assay MaterialsProcedure Preparation of Frozen Lymphatic Tissue BlocksHEV AssayExpected ResultsTroubleshootingReferencesAdhesion of Leukocytes to Cultured Endothelium, With or Without Shear MaterialsProcedureExpected ResultsTroubleshootingAdditional Comments and HintsBibliograp...
Article
Full-text available
Antileukoproteinase (ALP) is a physiological inhibitor of granulocytic serine proteases that has been shown to have anti-inflammatory properties in addition to its antiproteolytic activity. On the basis of its potential to block anti-collagen type II (CII) antibody-induced arthritis (CAIA) and to suppress the conformational activation of beta2-inte...
Article
Full-text available
After infection with Borrelia burgdorferi, humans and mice under certain conditions develop arthritis. Initiation of inflammation is dependent on the migration of innate immune cells to the site of infection, controlled by interactions of a variety of adhesion molecules. In this study, we used the newly synthesized compound S18407, which is a prodr...
Article
Full-text available
yme disease caused by three genospecies of the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato is the most common tick- borne disease in humans in the Northern Hemisphere. In- fection with B. burgdorferi provokes a multiorgan inflammatory ailment, but the precise underlying mechanisms are not well un- derstood (1). The disease is characterized by some o...
Article
Full-text available
Endothelial cells of the blood and lymphatic vasculature are polarized cells with luminal surfaces specialized to interact with inflammatory cells upon the appropriate stimulation; they contain specialized transcellular transport systems, and their basal surfaces are attached to an extracellular basement membrane. In adult tissues the basement memb...
Article
Full-text available
The annexin A5 gene (Anxa5) was recently found to be expressed in the developing and adult vascular system as well as the skeletal system. In this paper, the expression of an Anxa5-lacZ fusion gene was used to define the onset of expression in the vasculature and to characterize these Anxa5-lacZ-expressing vasculature-associated cells. After blasto...
Chapter
Endothelial cells separate the blood from the environment of local tissues, but also mediate signals between these two compartments and facilitate directed leukocyte migration. Leukocyte transmigration through the blood vessel wall is part of the recirculation pathway of mononuclear leukocytes between the blood and the lymphatic system, and it is e...
Article
Full-text available
Chemokines are thought to control lymphocyte recruitment to the inflamed endothelium. To dissect chemokine-mediated adhesion, binding of ex vivo isolated splenocytes to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-activated endothelial cells was analyzed under shear stress. We observed specific adhesion of naive follicular B cells, which could be blocked by pertuss...
Article
One of the most fascinating immunologic questions is how the genetically distinct fetus is able to survive and develop within the mother without provoking an immune rejection response. The pregnant uterus undergoes rapid morphological and functional changes, and these changes may influence the nature of local immune responses at the maternal/fetal...
Article
To investigate the pathomechanisms of leukocytoclastic vasculitis (LcV) we compared mouse models of LcV with non-vasculitic irritant contact dermatitis (ICD). Criteria for LcV as met by the immune complex-mediated Arthus reaction (Art-r) were also fulfilled by the localized Shwartzman reaction (Shw-r) and by cutaneous Loxoscelism (Lox) (injection o...
Article
Selectins are C-type, cell surface lectins that are key players in leukocyte adhesion to the blood vessel wall endothelium. We describe here epitopes for a series of novel monoclonal antibodies (moAbs), UZ4-UZ7, directed against mouse E-selectin. All four antibodies specifically bind to mouse E-selectin, but not to P- or L-selectin, and all inhibit...
Article
Full-text available
Regulated adhesion of leukocytes to the extracellular matrix is essential for transmigration of blood vessels and subsequent migration into the stroma of inflamed tissues. Although β2-integrins play an indisputable role in adhesion of polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) to endothelium, we show here that β1- and β3-integrins but not β2-integrin are...
Article
Full-text available
An active involvement of blood–brain barrier endothelial cell basement membranes in development of inflammatory lesions in the central nervous system (CNS) has not been considered to date. Here we investigated the molecular composition and possible function of the extracellular matrix encountered by extravasating T lymphocytes during experimental a...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Endothelial cell activation is an important step in the inflammatory cascade which leads to the extravasation of leukocytes into the site of inflammation. The rolling of leukocytes is the beginning of this cascade and is mediated by the selectins. We have analysed the binding of both polymorphonuclear granulocytes and mononuclear cells to E-selecti...
Article
TNF-alpha has been clearly identified as central mediator of T cell activation-induced acute hepatic injury in mice, e.g., Con A hepatitis. In this model, liver injury depends on both TNFRs, i.e., the 55-kDa TNFR1 as well as the 75-kDa TNFR2. We show in this report that the hepatic TNFRs are not transcriptionally regulated, but are regulated by rec...
Article
L-selectin (CD62L) is a prerequisite for leucocyte adhesion to endothelial cells of blood vessels and consequently for transmigration. Its expression on the cell surface therefore regulates the ability of lymphocytes to enter lymph nodes, to re-enter blood vessels or to invade tissues at sites of inflammation. The aim of this study was to determine...
Article
The anti-inflammatory effect of low-dose radiotherapy (LD-RT) still is not understood. The adhesion of leukocytes to endothelial cells (EC) of the vessel wall is the initial event of tissue invasion, and thus, crucially contributes to the regulation of inflammation. We investigated the influence of LD-RT on the adhesion process in vitro. Isolated p...
Article
Iron is required by the brain for normal function, however, the mechanisms by which it crosses the blood-brain barrier (BBB) are poorly understood. The uptake and efflux of transferrin (Tf) and Fe by murine brain-derived (bEND3) and lymph node-derived (m1END1) endothelial cell lines was compared. The effects of iron chelators, metabolic inhibitors...
Article
Full-text available
The success of pregnancy depends on the ability of trophoblast cells to infiltrate the maternal decidua and breach uterine vessels. To ask whether the antigenic phenotype of maternal endothelial cells (EC) in the vascular zone and central decidua basalis may reflect a specialized programming of these vessels for interaction with the trophoblast, we...
Article
In normal pregnancy, the maternal immune system fails to reject the fetus or the placenta as an allogeneic graft. We hypothesize that specialized mechanisms of leukocyte recruitment might limit access of circulating maternal immune cells to the maternal/fetal interface. During the critical period of initial trophoblast invasion there is an elegantl...
Article
The dy/dy mouse is an animal model for human merosin-negative congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD), which has been reported to have reduced or no expression of the basement membrane protein laminin alpha2. We here investigate various myogenic and nonmyogenic tissues of mature dy/dy and control 129ReJ mice histologically and for laminin alpha2 expres...
Article
Self tolerance is acquired by the developing immune system. As reported here, particular properties of the neonatal tissue contribute to this process. Neonatal skin, but not adult skin, was accessible for naı̈ve CD8 T cells. In mouse bone marrow chimeras generated at different ages, recent thymic emigrants were tolerized to a skin-expressed major h...
Article
Full-text available
Previous data suggested a role of endothelial selectins in skin homing of lymphocytes. In the current study, we have analyzed the expression and functional role of E-and P-selectin ligands on CD4+ T cells induced in vivo upon skin sensitization, using soluble selectin-Ig chimera and blocking Abs. Only low numbers of CD4+ cells expressing significan...
Article
In experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) inflammatory cells cross the endothelial blood-brain barrier (BBB) and gain access to the central nervous system (CNS). Here we show that E- and P-selectin are not involved in the recruitment of inflammatory cells across the BBB. Neither expression of E- nor P-selectin is induced in BBB-forming end...
Article
In experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) inflammatory cells cross the endothelial blood-brain barrier (BBB) and gain access to the central nervous system (CNS). Here we show that E- and P-selectin are not involved in the recruitment of inflammatory cells across the BBB. Neither expression of E- nor P-selectin is induced in BBB-forming end...
Article
Full-text available
We have shown recently that mouse Th1 cells but not Th2 cells are selectively recruited into inflamed sites of a delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reaction of the skin. This migration was blocked by monoclonal antibodies (mAb) against P- and E-selectin. Here we show that Th1 cells bind to P-selectin via the P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-...
Article
T lymphocytes interact with components of the extracellular matrix after transendothelial migration on their way to sites of inflammation. To characterize the molecular basis of the interaction between T lymphocytes with different extracellular matrix proteins, we investigated the role of intracellular Ca2+ as a signal mediating such interactions a...
Article
When activated, T helper cells differentiate into one of two subsets, Th1 and Th2, characterized by distinct profiles of cytokine production. Th1 cells activate pro-inflammatory effector mechanisms involved in protection and autoimmunity, whereas Th2 cells induce humoral and allergic responses and downregulate local inflammation. Apart from differe...
Article
The mechanism of adhesion of purified mouse polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) to extracellular matrix proteins characteristic of basement membranes and the interstitium has been investigated and compared with the adhesion of a mouse progranulocytic cell line, 32DC13, and a mouse monocytic cell line, WEHI 78/24. All three cell types bound specifi...
Article
Few markers specific for mouse endothelium exist. We describe here one such marker, MECA-32, a monoclonal antibody which shows high specificity for mouse endothelium in both embryonic and mature tissues. The MECA-32 antigen has a M(r) of 50-55 x 10(3) under reducing conditions and M(r) of 100-120 x 10(3) under nonreducing conditions. It is expresse...
Article
Laminin expression was studied in endothelial cells derived from different mouse tissues and primary cultures of bovine aortic endothelium (BAEC). Immunoprecipitation with polyclonal anti-laminin-1 revealed two 200-kDa chains, a novel 400-kDa chain and nidogen in all cells studied. Two-dimensional electrophoresis of laminin complexes immunoprecipit...
Article
The specificity of lymphocyte homing from the blood into a tissue is determined in part by complementary pairs of adhesion receptors on lymphocytes and endothelial cells termed homing receptors and vascular addressins, respectively. The mucosal vascular addressin involved in lymphocyte homing to Peyer's patches is a 66-kDa glycoprotein, MAdCAM-1. I...
Article
The adhesion of leukocytes to the endothelium is a hallmark in the development of an inflammation. Adhesion is caused by a number of mechanisms that depend upon the activation of the endothelium. The adhesion has to be specific for the different leukocyte types. I review here recent data with respect to polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) adhesion...
Article
Full-text available
We have distinguished five TNF-alpha-inducible cell adhesion mechanisms on microvasculature-derived endothelioma cells of the mouse which mediate the binding of different types of leukocytes. Three of these mechanisms could be identified as the mouse homologs of ICAM-1, VCAM-1, and E-selectin, of which the latter was defined by the novel mAb 21KC10...
Article
The binding of polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) to activated vascular endothelium is a crucial step in the recruitment of PMN to an inflammatory site. Studies employing cytokine-activated endothelium in culture have shown that PMN binding involves the CD18 family of leukocyte integrins, but also CD18-independent adhesion mechanism(s) on PMN tha...
Article
Full-text available
Tumor necrosis factor type alpha (TNF-alpha) inhibits endothelial cell proliferation in vitro. Basal cell growth (in the absence of exogenously added growth factor) and fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-stimulated cell proliferation are inhibited in a dose-dependent manner from 0.1 to 10 ng/ml with half-maximal inhibition occurring at 0.5-1.0 ng of TN...
Article
We have previously investigated distinct areas of vascular regression in the developing vascular system of the chick limb bud. Avascular areas appear in a characteristic spatial and temporal pattern, and are correlated with the position of developing cartilage. In the present study, we examined limb-bud sections which had been double labeled for en...
Article
Full-text available
Capillaries derived from the perineural vascular plexus invade brain tissue early in embryonic development. Considerably later they differentiate into blood-brain barrier (BBB)-forming blood vessels. In the chick, the BBB as defined by impermeability for the protein horseradish peroxidase develops around embryonic day 13. We have previously found t...
Article
The blood-brain barrier is a specific property of differentiated brain endothelium. To study the differentiation of blood vessels in the brain, we have correlated the expression of a number of proteins in brain endothelial cells with the development of the blood-brain barrier in mouse, quail, and chick embryos. Using histochemical methods, alkaline...
Article
Full-text available
When crude extracts of the slime mold Physarum polycephalum were incubated with ATP and Mg2+ at 35 degrees C, a peptide of approximately 42,000 Da was predominantly phosphorylated. The kinase, separated from the phosphorylatable peptide, phosphorylated neither actin nor fragmin, both proteins of 42,000 Da, the latter known to cap and shorten actin...

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