@article{HomolaJbabdiBeckmannetal.2012, author = {Homola, Gy{\"o}rgy A. and Jbabdi, Saad and Beckmann, Christian F. and Bartsch, Andreas J.}, title = {A Brain Network Processing the Age of Faces}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-75513}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Age is one of the most salient aspects in faces and of fundamental cognitive and social relevance. Although face processing has been studied extensively, brain regions responsive to age have yet to be localized. Using evocative face morphs and fMRI, we segregate two areas extending beyond the previously established face-sensitive core network, centered on the inferior temporal sulci and angular gyri bilaterally, both of which process changes of facial age. By means of probabilistic tractography, we compare their patterns of functional activation and structural connectivity. The ventral portion of Wernicke's understudied perpendicular association fasciculus is shown to interconnect the two areas, and activation within these clusters is related to the probability of fiber connectivity between them. In addition, post-hoc age-rating competence is found to be associated with high response magnitudes in the left angular gyrus. Our results provide the first evidence that facial age has a distinct representation pattern in the posterior human brain. We propose that particular face-sensitive nodes interact with additional object-unselective quantification modules to obtain individual estimates of facial age. This brain network processing the age of faces differs from the cortical areas that have previously been linked to less developmental but instantly changeable face aspects. Our probabilistic method of associating activations with connectivity patterns reveals an exemplary link that can be used to further study, assess and quantify structure-function relationships.}, subject = {Medizin}, language = {en} } @article{SchmidtAltDeoghareetal.2022, author = {Schmidt, Sven and Alt, Yvonne and Deoghare, Nikita and Kr{\"u}ger, Sarah and Kern, Anna and Rockel, Anna Frederike and Wagner, Nicole and Erg{\"u}n, S{\"u}leyman and W{\"o}rsd{\"o}rfer, Philipp}, title = {A blood vessel organoid model recapitulating aspects of vasculogenesis, angiogenesis and vessel wall maturation}, series = {Organoids}, volume = {1}, journal = {Organoids}, number = {1}, issn = {2674-1172}, doi = {10.3390/organoids1010005}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-284043}, pages = {41 -- 53}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Blood vessel organoids are an important in vitro model to understand the underlying mechanisms of human blood vessel development and for toxicity testing or high throughput drug screening. Here we present a novel, cost-effective, and easy to manufacture vascular organoid model. To engineer the organoids, a defined number of human induced pluripotent stem cells are seeded in non-adhesive agarose coated wells of a 96-well plate and directed towards a lateral plate mesoderm fate by activation of Wnt and BMP4 signaling. We observe the formation of a circular layer of angioblasts around days 5-6. Induced by VEGF application, CD31\(^+\) vascular endothelial cells appear within this vasculogenic zone at approximately day 7 of organoid culture. These cells arrange to form a primitive vascular plexus from which angiogenic sprouting is observed after 10 days of culture. The differentiation outcome is highly reproducible, and the size of organoids is scalable depending on the number of starting cells. We observe that the initial vascular ring forms at the interface between two cell populations. The inner cellular compartment can be distinguished from the outer by the expression of GATA6, a marker of lateral plate mesoderm. Finally, 14-days-old organoids were transplanted on the chorioallantois membrane of chicken embryos resulting in a functional connection of the human vascular network to the chicken circulation. Perfusion of the vessels leads to vessel wall maturation and remodeling as indicated by the formation of a continuous layer of smooth muscle actin expressing cells enwrapping the endothelium. In summary, our organoid model recapitulates human vasculogenesis, angiogenesis as well as vessel wall maturation and therefore represents an easy and cost-effective tool to study all steps of blood vessel development and maturation directly in the human setting without animal experimentation.}, language = {en} } @article{DoryabTaskinStahlhutetal.2021, author = {Doryab, Ali and Taskin, Mehmet Berat and Stahlhut, Philipp and Schr{\"o}ppel, Andreas and Wagner, Darcy E. and Groll, J{\"u}rgen and Schmid, Otmar}, title = {A Biomimetic, Copolymeric Membrane for Cell-Stretch Experiments with Pulmonary Epithelial Cells at the Air-Liquid Interface}, series = {Advanced Functional Materials}, volume = {31}, journal = {Advanced Functional Materials}, number = {10}, doi = {10.1002/adfm.202004707}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-225645}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Chronic respiratory diseases are among the leading causes of death worldwide, but only symptomatic therapies are available for terminal illness. This in part reflects a lack of biomimetic in vitro models that can imitate the complex environment and physiology of the lung. Here, a copolymeric membrane consisting of poly(ε-)caprolactone and gelatin with tunable properties, resembling the main characteristics of the alveolar basement membrane is introduced. The thin bioinspired membrane (≤5 μm) is stretchable (up to 25\% linear strain) with appropriate surface wettability and porosity for culturing lung epithelial cells under air-liquid interface conditions. The unique biphasic concept of this membrane provides optimum characteristics for initial cell growth (phase I) and then switch to biomimetic properties for cyclic cell-stretch experiments (phase II). It is showed that physiologic cyclic mechanical stretch improves formation of F-actin cytoskeleton filaments and tight junctions while non-physiologic over-stretch induces cell apoptosis, activates inflammatory response (IL-8), and impairs epithelial barrier integrity. It is also demonstrated that cyclic physiologic stretch can enhance the cellular uptake of nanoparticles. Since this membrane offers considerable advantages over currently used membranes, it may lead the way to more biomimetic in vitro models of the lung for translation of in vitro response studies into clinical outcome.}, language = {en} } @article{DoryabTaskinStahlhutetal.2021, author = {Doryab, Ali and Taskin, Mehmet Berat and Stahlhut, Philipp and Schr{\"o}ppel, Andreas and Orak, Sezer and Voss, Carola and Ahluwalia, Arti and Rehberg, Markus and Hilgendorff, Anne and St{\"o}ger, Tobias and Groll, J{\"u}rgen and Schmid, Otmar}, title = {A Bioinspired in vitro Lung Model to Study Particokinetics of Nano-/Microparticles Under Cyclic Stretch and Air-Liquid Interface Conditions}, series = {Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology}, volume = {9}, journal = {Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology}, issn = {2296-4185}, doi = {10.3389/fbioe.2021.616830}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-223830}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Evolution has endowed the lung with exceptional design providing a large surface area for gas exchange area (ca. 100 m\(^{2}\)) in a relatively small tissue volume (ca. 6 L). This is possible due to a complex tissue architecture that has resulted in one of the most challenging organs to be recreated in the lab. The need for realistic and robust in vitro lung models becomes even more evident as causal therapies, especially for chronic respiratory diseases, are lacking. Here, we describe the Cyclic In VItro Cell-stretch (CIVIC) "breathing" lung bioreactor for pulmonary epithelial cells at the air-liquid interface (ALI) experiencing cyclic stretch while monitoring stretch-related parameters (amplitude, frequency, and membrane elastic modulus) under real-time conditions. The previously described biomimetic copolymeric BETA membrane (5 μm thick, bioactive, porous, and elastic) was attempted to be improved for even more biomimetic permeability, elasticity (elastic modulus and stretchability), and bioactivity by changing its chemical composition. This biphasic membrane supports both the initial formation of a tight monolayer of pulmonary epithelial cells (A549 and 16HBE14o\(^{-}\)) under submerged conditions and the subsequent cell-stretch experiments at the ALI without preconditioning of the membrane. The newly manufactured versions of the BETA membrane did not improve the characteristics of the previously determined optimum BETA membrane (9.35\% PCL and 6.34\% gelatin [w/v solvent]). Hence, the optimum BETA membrane was used to investigate quantitatively the role of physiologic cyclic mechanical stretch (10\% linear stretch; 0.33 Hz: light exercise conditions) on size-dependent cellular uptake and transepithelial transport of nanoparticles (100 nm) and microparticles (1,000 nm) for alveolar epithelial cells (A549) under ALI conditions. Our results show that physiologic stretch enhances cellular uptake of 100 nm nanoparticles across the epithelial cell barrier, but the barrier becomes permeable for both nano- and micron-sized particles (100 and 1,000 nm). This suggests that currently used static in vitro assays may underestimate cellular uptake and transbarrier transport of nanoparticles in the lung.}, language = {en} } @article{VonaMazaheriLinetal.2021, author = {Vona, Barbara and Mazaheri, Neda and Lin, Sheng-Jia and Dunbar, Lucy A. and Maroofian, Reza and Azaiez, Hela and Booth, Kevin T. and Vitry, Sandrine and Rad, Aboulfazl and R{\"u}schendorf, Franz and Varshney, Pratishtha and Fowler, Ben and Beetz, Christian and Alagramam, Kumar N. and Murphy, David and Shariati, Gholamreza and Sedaghat, Alireza and Houlden, Henry and Petree, Cassidy and VijayKumar, Shruthi and Smith, Richard J. H. and Haaf, Thomas and El-Amraoui, Aziz and Bowl, Michael R. and Varshney, Gaurav K. and Galehdari, Hamid}, title = {A biallelic variant in CLRN2 causes non-syndromic hearing loss in humans}, series = {Human Genetics}, volume = {140}, journal = {Human Genetics}, number = {6}, issn = {1432-1203}, doi = {10.1007/s00439-020-02254-z}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-267740}, pages = {915-931}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Deafness, the most frequent sensory deficit in humans, is extremely heterogeneous with hundreds of genes involved. Clinical and genetic analyses of an extended consanguineous family with pre-lingual, moderate-to-profound autosomal recessive sensorineural hearing loss, allowed us to identify CLRN2, encoding a tetraspan protein, as a new deafness gene. Homozygosity mapping followed by exome sequencing identified a 14.96 Mb locus on chromosome 4p15.32p15.1 containing a likely pathogenic missense variant in CLRN2 (c.494C > A, NM_001079827.2) segregating with the disease. Using in vitro RNA splicing analysis, we show that the CLRN2 c.494C > A variant leads to two events: (1) the substitution of a highly conserved threonine (uncharged amino acid) to lysine (charged amino acid) at position 165, p.(Thr165Lys), and (2) aberrant splicing, with the retention of intron 2 resulting in a stop codon after 26 additional amino acids, p.(Gly146Lysfs*26). Expression studies and phenotyping of newly produced zebrafish and mouse models deficient for clarin 2 further confirm that clarin 2, expressed in the inner ear hair cells, is essential for normal organization and maintenance of the auditory hair bundles, and for hearing function. Together, our findings identify CLRN2 as a new deafness gene, which will impact future diagnosis and treatment for deaf patients.}, language = {en} } @article{GilmoreCruzRodzLeimeisterWaechteretal.1989, author = {Gilmore, Michael S. and Cruz-Rodz, Armando L. and Leimeister-W{\"a}chter, Michaela and Kreft, J{\"u}rgen and Goebel, Werner}, title = {A Bacillus cereus cytolytic determinant, cereolysin AB, which comprises the phospholipase C and sphingomyelinase genes: nucleotide sequence and genetic linkage}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-60588}, year = {1989}, abstract = {A cloned cytolytic determinant from the genome of Bacillus cereus GP-4 has been characterized at the molecular Ievel. Nucleotide sequence determination revealed the presence of two open reading frames. 8oth open reading frames were found by deletion and complementation analysis to be necessary for expression of the hemolytic phenotype by Bacillus subtilis and Escherichia coli hosts. The 5' open reading frame was found to be nearly identical to a recently reported phospholipase C gene derived from a mutant B. cereus strain which overexpresses the respective protein, and it conferred a lecithinase-positive phenotype to the B. subtilis host. The 3' open reading frame encoded a sphingomyelinase. The two tandemly encoded activities, phospholipase C and sphingomyelinase, constitute a biologically functional cytolytic determinant of B. cereus termed cereolysin AB.}, subject = {Biologie}, language = {en} } @article{SperlichHahnEdeletal.2018, author = {Sperlich, Billy and Hahn, Lea-Sofie and Edel, Antonia and Behr, Tino and Helmprobst, Julian and Leppich, Robert and Wallmann-Sperlich, Birgit and Holmberg, Hans-Christer}, title = {A 4-week intervention involving mobile-based daily 6-minute micro-sessions of functional high-intensity circuit training improves strength and quality of life, but not cardio-respiratory fitness of young untrained adults}, series = {Frontiers in Physiology}, volume = {9}, journal = {Frontiers in Physiology}, number = {423}, doi = {10.3389/fphys.2018.00423}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-176565}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The present study was designed to assess the psycho-physiological responses of physically untrained individuals to mobile-based multi-stimulating, circuit-like, multiple-joint conditioning (Circuit\(_{HIIT}\)) performed either once (1xCircuitHIIT) or twice (2xCircuit\(_{HIIT}\)) daily for 4 weeks. In this single-center, two-arm randomized, controlled study, 24 men and women (age: 25 ± 5 years) first received no training instructions for 4 weeks and then performed 4 weeks of either 1xCircuitHIIT or 2xCircuit\(_{HIIT}\) (5 men and 7 women in each group) daily. The 1xCircuitHIIT and 2xCircuit\(_{HIIT}\) participants carried out 90.7 and 85.7\% of all planned training sessions, respectively, with average heart rates during the 6-min sessions of 74.3 and 70.8\% of maximal heart rate. Body, fat and fat-free mass, and metabolic rate at rest did not differ between the groups or between time-points of measurement. Heart rate while running at 6 km⋅h\(^{-1}\) declined after the intervention in both groups. Submaximal and peak oxygen uptake, the respiratory exchange ratio and heart rate recovery were not altered by either intervention. The maximal numbers of push-ups, leg-levers, burpees, 45°-one-legged squats and 30-s skipping, as well as perception of general health improved in both groups. Our 1xCircuit\(_{HIIT}\) or 2xCircuit\(_{HIIT}\) interventions improved certain parameters of functional strength and certain dimensions of quality of life in young untrained individuals. However, they were not sufficient to enhance cardio-respiratory fitness, in particular peak oxygen uptake.}, language = {en} } @article{SchmittLindner2016, author = {Schmitt, Joachim and Lindner, Nathalie}, title = {A 3-week multimodal intervention involving high-intensity interval training in female cancer survivors: a randomized controlled trial}, series = {Physiological Reports}, volume = {4}, journal = {Physiological Reports}, number = {3}, doi = {10.14814/phy2.12693}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-146455}, pages = {e12693}, year = {2016}, abstract = {To compare the effects of a 3-week multimodal rehabilitation involving supervised high-intensity interval training (HIIT) on female breast cancer survivors with respect to key variables of aerobic fitness, body composition, energy expenditure, cancer-related fatigue, and quality of life to those of a standard multimodal rehabilitation program. A randomized controlled trial design was administered. Twenty-eight women, who had been treated for cancer were randomly assigned to either a group performing exercise of low-to-moderate intensity (LMIE; n = 14) or a group performing high-intensity interval training (HIIT; n = 14) as part of a 3-week multimodal rehabilitation program. No adverse events related to the exercise were reported. Work economy improved following both HIIT and LMIE, with improved peak oxygen uptake following LMIE. HIIT reduced mean total body fat mass with no change in body mass, muscle or fat-free mass (best P < 0.06). LMIE increased muscle and total fat-free body mass. Total energy expenditure (P = 0.45) did not change between the groups, whereas both improved quality of life to a similar high extent and lessened cancer-related fatigue. This randomized controlled study demonstrates that HIIT can be performed by female cancer survivors without adverse health effects. Here, HIIT and LMIE both improved work economy, quality of life and cancer-related fatigue, body composition or energy expenditure. Since the outcomes were similar, but HIIT takes less time, this may be a time-efficient strategy for improving certain aspects of the health of female cancer survivors.}, language = {en} } @article{KieselBeyersKaliszetal.2022, author = {Kiesel, Matthias and Beyers, Inga and Kalisz, Adam and Joukhadar, Ralf and W{\"o}ckel, Achim and Herbert, Saskia-Laureen and Curtaz, Carolin and Wulff, Christine}, title = {A 3D printed model of the female pelvis for practical education of gynecological pelvic examination}, series = {3D Printing in Medicine}, volume = {8}, journal = {3D Printing in Medicine}, doi = {10.1186/s41205-022-00139-7}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-313347}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Background Pelvic palpation is a core component of every Gynecologic examination. It requires vigorous training, which is difficult due to its intimate nature, leading to a need of simulation. Up until now, there are mainly models available for mere palpation which do not offer adequate visualization of the concerning anatomical structures. In this study we present a 3D printed model of the female pelvis. It can improve both the practical teaching of gynecological pelvic examination for health care professionals and the spatial understanding of the relevant anatomy. Methods We developed a virtual, simplified model showing selected parts of the female pelvis. 3D printing was used to create a physical model. Results The life-size 3D printed model has the ability of being physically assembled step by step by its users. Consequently, it improves teaching especially when combining it with commercial phantoms, which are built solely for palpation training. This is achieved by correlating haptic and visual sensations with the resulting feedback received. Conclusion The presented 3D printed model of the female pelvis can be of aid for visualizing and teaching pelvic anatomy and examination to medical staff. 3D printing provides the possibility of creating, multiplying, adapting and sharing such data worldwide with little investment of resources. Thus, an important contribution to the international medical community can be made for training this challenging examination.}, language = {en} } @article{SchneiderKruseBernardellideMattosetal.2021, author = {Schneider, Verena and Kruse, Daniel and Bernardelli de Mattos, Ives and Z{\"o}phel, Saskia and Tiltmann, Kendra-Kathrin and Reigl, Amelie and Khan, Sarah and Funk, Martin and Bodenschatz, Karl and Groeber-Becker, Florian}, title = {A 3D in vitro model for burn wounds: monitoring of regeneration on the epidermal level}, series = {Biomedicines}, volume = {9}, journal = {Biomedicines}, number = {9}, issn = {2227-9059}, doi = {10.3390/biomedicines9091153}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-246068}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Burns affect millions every year and a model to mimic the pathophysiology of such injuries in detail is required to better understand regeneration. The current gold standard for studying burn wounds are animal models, which are under criticism due to ethical considerations and a limited predictiveness. Here, we present a three-dimensional burn model, based on an open-source model, to monitor wound healing on the epidermal level. Skin equivalents were burned, using a preheated metal cylinder. The healing process was monitored regarding histomorphology, metabolic changes, inflammatory response and reepithelialization for 14 days. During this time, the wound size decreased from 25\% to 5\% of the model area and the inflammatory response (IL-1β, IL-6 and IL-8) showed a comparable course to wounding and healing in vivo. Additionally, the topical application of 5\% dexpanthenol enhanced tissue morphology and the number of proliferative keratinocytes in the newly formed epidermis, but did not influence the overall reepithelialization rate. In summary, the model showed a comparable healing process to in vivo, and thus, offers the opportunity to better understand the physiology of thermal burn wound healing on the keratinocyte level.}, language = {en} }