@article{SanderdeJongRosenwaldetal.2014, author = {Sander, Brigitta and de Jong, Daphne and Rosenwald, Andreas and Xie, Wanling and Balagu{\´e}, Olga and Calaminici, Maria and Carreras, Joaquim and Gaulard, Philippe and Gribben, John and Hagenbeek, Anton and Kersten, Marie Jos{\´e} and Molina, Thierry Jo and Lee, Abigail and Montes-Moreno, Santiago and Ott, German and Raemaekers, John and Salles, Gilles and Sehn, Laurie and Thorns, Christoph and Wahlin, Bjorn E. and Gascoyne, Randy D. and Weller, Edie}, title = {The reliability of immunohistochemical analysis of the tumor microenvironment in follicular lymphoma: a validation study from the Lunenburg Lymphoma Biomarker Consortium}, series = {Haematologica}, volume = {99}, journal = {Haematologica}, number = {4}, issn = {1592-8721}, doi = {10.3324/haematol.2013.095257}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-116875}, pages = {715-725}, year = {2014}, abstract = {The cellular microenvironment in follicular lymphoma is of biological and clinical importance. Studies on the clinical significance of non-malignant cell populations have generated conflicting results, which may partly be influenced by poor reproducibility in immunohistochemical marker quantification. In this study, the reproducibility of manual scoring and automated microscopy based on a tissue microarray of 25 follicular lymphomas as compared to flow cytometry is evaluated. The agreement between manual scoring and flow cytometry was moderate for CD3, low for CD4, and moderate to high for CD8, with some laboratories scoring closer to the flow cytometry results. Agreement in manual quantification across the 7 laboratories was low to moderate for CD3, CD4, CD8 and FOXP3 frequencies, moderate for CD21, low for MIB1 and CD68, and high for CD10. Manual scoring of the architectural distribution resulted in moderate agreement for CD3, CD4 and CD8, and low agreement for FOXP3 and CD68. Comparing manual scoring to automated microscopy demonstrated that manual scoring increased the variability in the low and high frequency interval with some laboratories showing a better agreement with automated scores. Manual scoring reliably identified rare architectural patterns of T-cell infiltrates. Automated microscopy analyses for T-cell markers by two different instruments were highly reproducible and provided acceptable agreement with flow cytometry. These validation results provide explanations for the heterogeneous findings on the prognostic value of the microenvironment in follicular lymphoma. We recommend a more objective measurement, such as computer-assisted scoring, in future studies of the prognostic impact of microenvironment in follicular lymphoma patients.}, language = {en} } @article{SoehnleinDrechslerDoeringetal.2013, author = {Soehnlein, Oliver and Drechsler, Maik and D{\"o}ring, Yvonne and Lievens, Dirk and Hartwig, Helene and Kemmerich, Klaus and Ortega-G{\´o}mez, Almudena and Mandl, Manuela and Vijayan, Santosh and Projahn, Delia and Garlichs, Christoph D. and Koenen, Rory R. and Hristov, Mihail and Lutgens, Esther and Zernecke, Alma and Weber, Christian}, title = {Distinct functions of chemokine receptor axes in the atherogenic mobilization and recruitment of classical monocytes}, series = {EMBO Molecular Medicine}, volume = {5}, journal = {EMBO Molecular Medicine}, issn = {1757-4676}, doi = {10.1002/emmm.201201717}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-122204}, pages = {471-481}, year = {2013}, abstract = {We used a novel approach of cytostatically induced leucocyte depletion and subsequent reconstitution with leucocytes deprived of classical \((inflammatory/Gr1^{hi})\) or non-classical \((resident/Gr1^{lo})\) monocytes to dissect their differential role in atheroprogression under high-fat diet (HFD). Apolipoprotein E-deficient \((Apoe^{-/-})\) mice lacking classical but not non-classical monocytes displayed reduced lesion size and macrophage and apoptotic cell content. Conversely, HFD induced a selective expansion of classical monocytes in blood and bone marrow. Increased CXCL1 levels accompanied by higher expression of its receptor CXCR2 on classical monocytes and inhibition of monocytosis by CXCL1-neutralization indicated a preferential role for the CXCL1/CXCR2 axis in mobilizing classical monocytes during hypercholesterolemia. Studies correlating circulating and lesional classical monocytes in gene-deficient \(Apoe^{-/-}\) mice, adoptive transfer of gene-deficient cells and pharmacological modulation during intravital microscopy of the carotid artery revealed a crucial function of CCR1 and CCR5 but not CCR2 or \(CX_3CR1\) in classical monocyte recruitment to atherosclerotic vessels. Collectively, these data establish the impact of classical monocytes on atheroprogression, identify a sequential role of CXCL1 in their mobilization and CCR1/CCR5 in their recruitment.}, language = {en} }