Prof. Dr. Nina Wettschureck
Max Planck Institute for Heart and Lung Research
Department of Pharmacology
Ludwigstr. 43
61231 Bad Nauheim
Germany
Phone: +49 (0)6032 705 1214
Fax: +49 (0)6032 705 1204
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Curriculum Vitae
Since 2012 Professor for Molecular Pharmacology, University of Frankfurt / Main
Since 2009 Group Leader, Max-Planck-Institute for Heart and Lung Research Bad Nauheim.
2007 "Habilitation" for Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Heidelberg
2000 - 2009 Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Institute of Pharmacology, University of Heidelberg
1998 – 2000 Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Institute of Pharmacology, FU Berlin
1996 – 1998 Dept. of Internal Medicine V, University of Heidelberg
1990 – 1996 Studies of Medicine, M.D. degree, University of Frankfurt / Main, Germany
G-protein signaling group (Wettschureck group)
Group leader: Nina Wettschureck
Postdocs: Malarvizhi Gurusamy
PhD students: Jingchen Shao, Tianpeng Wang, Jeonghyeon Kwon, Niharika Shiva, Hilal Taskiran
Technical assistant: Martina Finkbeiner
Our group studies all aspects of cell communication in the vessel wall, for example the regulation of leukocyte/endothelial interactions, the interplay between endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells, and the communication between vascular cells and stromal/parenchymal cells. Most of our projects focus on the large family of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), which mediate the intracellular effects of numerous hormones, neurotransmitters, or local mediators. In the past, we identified new functions for GPCRs and their effector families G12/13 and Gq/11 in the cardiovascular, endocrine, and immune system (for example Herroeder et al., Immunity 2009; Sassmann et al., J Clin Invest 2010; Takefuji et al., Circulation 2012; Takefuji et al., J Exp Med 2013; Sivaraj et al., Dev Cell 2013; Chen et al., J Clin Invest 2014; Kaur et al., Circ Res 2016). More recently, we focus on orphan GPCRs, i.e., GPCRs with yet unknown endogenous ligand and function. To better understand the biological function of these enigmatic GPCRs, we performed single-cell expression analyses in primary murine vascular and immune cells (Kaur et al., Nat Commun 2017; Tischner et al., JCI Insight 2017) and identified rare cell populations with specific GPCR repertoires. Based on these data, we are currently analyzing the function of orphan GPCRs in specialized subpopulations of smooth muscle (Carvalho et al., Circulation 2020), endothelial cells and immune cells (Gurusamy et al., Nat Commun 2021, accepted). Other projects address the role of angiocrine factors in cardiac remodeling or the regulation of leukocyte/endothelial interactions.
Overview of topics addressed by the G-protein signaling group.
Selected references
Gurusamy M, Tischner D, Shao J, Klatt S, Zukunft S, Bonnavion R, Günther S, Siebenbrodt K, Kestner RI, Kuhlmann T, Fleming I, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N (2021): G-protein-coupled receptor P2Y10 mediates facilitation of chemokine-induced CD4 T cell migration through autocrine/paracrine mediators. Nat Commun, 12(1):6798.
Carvalho J, Chennupati R, Li R, Günther S, Kaur H, Zhao W, Tonack S, Kurz M, Mößlein N, Bünemann M, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N (2020). Orphan G-protein-coupled receptor GPRC5B controls smooth muscle contractility and differentiation by inhibiting prostacyclin receptor signaling. Circulation 141(14):1168-83.
Tischner D, Grimm M, Kaur H, Staudenraus D, Carvalho J, Looso M, Günther S, Wanke F, Moos S, Siller N, Breuer J, Schwab N, Zipp F, Waisman A, Kurschus FC, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N (2017): Single-cell profiling reveals GPCR heterogeneity and functional patterning during neuroinflammation. JCI Insight 3;2(15), doi: 10.1172.
Kaur H, Carvalho J, Looso M, Singh P, Chennupati R, Preussner J, Günther S, Albarrán-Juárez J, Tischner D, Classen S, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N (2017): Single-cell profiling reveals heterogeneity and functional patterning of GPCR expression in the vascular system. Nat Commun 8:15700; DOI: 10.1038.
Kaur H, Takefuji M, Ngai C, Carvalho J, Bayer J, Wietelmann A, Poetsch A, Holper S, Conway SJ, Mollmann H, Looso M, Troidl C, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N (2016): Targeted Ablation of Periostin-Expressing Activated Fibroblasts Prevents Adverse Cardiac Remodeling in Mice. Circ Res. 118:1906-17.
Chen H, Assmann JC, Krenz A, Rahman M, Grimm M, Karsten CM, Kohl J, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N*, and Schwaninger M* (2014): Hydroxycarboxylic acid receptor 2 mediates dimethyl fumarate's protective effect in EAE. J Clin Invest 124:2188-92. (*contributed equally)
Sivaraj KK, Takefuji M, Schmidt I, Adams RH, Offermanns S, and Wettschureck N (2013): G13 controls angiogenesis through regulation of VEGFR-2 expression. Dev Cell 25:427-34.
Takefuji M, Kruger M, Sivaraj KK, Kaibuchi K, Offermanns S, and Wettschureck N (2013): RhoGEF12 controls cardiac remodeling by integrating G protein- and integrin-dependent signaling cascades. J Exp Med 210:665-73.
Takefuji M, Wirth A, Lukasova M, Takefuji S, Boettger T, Braun T, Althoff T, Offermanns S, and Wettschureck N (2012): G13-mediated signaling pathway is required for pressure overload-induced cardiac remodeling and heart failure. Circulation 126:1972-82.
Sassmann A, Gier B, Grone HJ, Drews G, Offermanns S, and Wettschureck N (2010): The Gq/G11-mediated signaling pathway is critical for autocrine potentiation of insulin secretion in mice. J Clin Invest 120:2184-93.
Herroeder S, Reichardt P, Sassmann A, Zimmermann B, Jaeneke D, Hoeckner J, Hollmann MW, Fischer KD, Vogt S, Grosse R, Hogg N, Gunzer M, Offermanns S, Wettschureck N (2009): Guanine nucleotide-binding proteins of the G12 family shape immune functions by controlling CD4+ T cell adhesiveness and motility. Immunity 30:708-20.