@phdthesis{GoebneeKlaus2023, author = {G{\"o}b [n{\´e}e Klaus], Vanessa Aline Domenica}, title = {Pathomechanisms underlying ischemic stroke}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-28672}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-286727}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Every year, stroke affects over 100 million people worldwide and the number of cases continues to grow. Ischemic stroke is the most prevalent form of stroke and rapid restoration of blood flow is the primary therapeutic aim. However, recanalization might fail or reperfusion itself induces detrimental processes leading to infarct progression. Previous studies identified platelets and immune cells as drivers of this so-called ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury, establishing the concept of ischemic stroke as thrombo-inflammatory disease. Reduced cerebral blood flow despite recanalization promoted the hypothesis that thrombus formation within the cerebral microcirculation induces further tissue damage. The results presented in this thesis refute this: using complementary methodologies, it was shown that infarct growth precedes the occurrence of thrombi excluding them as I/R injury-underlying cause. Blood brain barrier disruption is one of the hallmarks of ischemic stroke pathology and was confirmed as early event during reperfusion injury in the second part of this study. Abolished platelet α-granule release protects mice from vascular leakage in the early reperfusion phase resulting in smaller infarcts. Using in vitro assays, platelet α-granule-derived PDGF-AB was identified as one factor contributing to blood-brain barrier disruption. In vivo visualization of platelet activation would provide important insights in the spatio-temporal context of platelet activation in stroke pathology. As platelet signaling results in elevated intracellular Ca2+ levels, this is an ideal readout. To overcome the limitations of chemical calcium indicators, a mouse line expressing an endogenous calcium reporter specifically in platelets and megakaryocytes was generated. Presence of the reporter did not interfere with platelet function, consequently these mice were characterized in in vivo and ex vivo models. Upon ischemic stroke, neutrophils are among the first cells that are recruited to the brain. Since for neutrophils both, beneficial and detrimental effects are described, their role was investigated within this thesis. Neither neutrophil depletion nor absence of NADPH-dependent ROS production (Ncf-/- mice) affected stroke outcome. In contrast, abolished NET-formation in Pad4-/- mice resulted in reduced infarct sizes, revealing detrimental effects of NETosis in the context of ischemic stroke, which might become a potential therapeutic target. Cerebral venous (sinus) thrombosis, CV(S)T is a rare type of stroke with mainly idiopathic onset. Whereas for arterial thrombosis a critical contribution of platelets is known and widely accepted, for venous thrombosis this is less clear but considered more and more. In the last part of this thesis, it was shown that fab-fragments of the anti-CLEC-2 antibody INU1 trigger pathological platelet activation in vivo, resulting in foudroyant CVT accompanied by heavy neurological symptoms. Using this novel animal model for CVT, cooperative signaling of the two platelet receptors CLEC-2 and GPIIb/IIIa was revealed as major trigger of CVT and potential target for treatment.}, subject = {Schlaganfall}, language = {en} } @article{GoeritzerKuentzelBecketal.2023, author = {Goeritzer, Madeleine and Kuentzel, Katharina B. and Beck, Sarah and Korbelius, Melanie and Rainer, Silvia and Bradić, Ivan and Kolb, Dagmar and Mussbacher, Marion and Schrottmaier, Waltraud C. and Assinger, Alice and Schlagenhauf, Axel and Rost, Ren{\´e} and Gottschalk, Benjamin and Eichmann, Thomas O. and Z{\"u}llig, Thomas and Graier, Wolfgang F. and Vujić, Nemanja and Kratky, Dagmar}, title = {Monoglyceride lipase deficiency is associated with altered thrombogenesis in mice}, series = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, volume = {24}, journal = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, number = {4}, issn = {1422-0067}, doi = {10.3390/ijms24043116}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-304052}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Monoglyceride lipase (MGL) hydrolyzes monoacylglycerols (MG) to glycerol and one fatty acid. Among the various MG species, MGL also degrades 2-arachidonoylglycerol, the most abundant endocannabinoid and potent activator of the cannabinoid receptors 1 and 2. We investigated the consequences of MGL deficiency on platelet function using systemic (Mgl\(^{-/-}\)) and platelet-specific Mgl-deficient (platMgl\(^{-/-}\)) mice. Despite comparable platelet morphology, loss of MGL was associated with decreased platelet aggregation and reduced response to collagen activation. This was reflected by reduced thrombus formation in vitro, accompanied by a longer bleeding time and a higher blood volume loss. Occlusion time after FeCl\(_3\)-induced injury was markedly reduced in Mgl\(^{-/-}\) mice, which is consistent with contraction of large aggregates and fewer small aggregates in vitro. The absence of any functional changes in platelets from platMgl\(^{-/-}\) mice is in accordance with lipid degradation products or other molecules in the circulation, rather than platelet-specific effects, being responsible for the observed alterations in Mgl\(^{-/-}\) mice. We conclude that genetic deletion of MGL is associated with altered thrombogenesis.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Maier2023, author = {Maier, Sophia Edith}, title = {Mapping membrane receptor distribution on resting platelets combining Expansion Microscopy and fluorescence confocal microscopy}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-30031}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-300317}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Stroke and myocardial infarction are the most prominent and severe consequences of pathological thrombus formation. For prevention and/or treatment of thrombotic events there is a variety of anti-coagulation and antiplatelet medication that all have one side effect in common: the increased risk of bleeding. To design drugs that only intervene in the unwanted aggregation process but do not disturb general hemostasis, it is crucial to decipher the exact clotting pathway which has not been fully understood yet. Platelet membrane receptors play a vital role in the clotting pathway and, thus, the aim of this work is to establish a method to elucidate the interactions, clustering, and reorganization of involved membrane receptors such as GPIIb/IIIa and GPIX as part of the GPIb-IX-V complex. The special challenges regarding visualizing membrane receptor interactions on blood platelets are the high abundancy of the first and the small size of the latter (1—3µm of diameter). The resolution limit of conventional fluorescence microscopy and even super-resolution approaches prevents the successful differentiation of densely packed receptors from one another. Here, this issue is approached with the combination of a recently developed technique called Expansion Microscopy (ExM). The image resolution of a conventional fluorescence microscope is enhanced by simply enlarging the sample physically and thus pulling the receptors apart from each other. This method requires a complex sample preparation and holds lots of obstacles such as variable or anisotropic expansion and low images contrast. To increase ExM accuracy and sensitivity for interrogating blood platelets, it needs optimized sample preparation as well as image analysis pipelines which are the main part of this thesis. The colocalization results show that either fourfold or tenfold expanded, resting platelets allow a clear distinction between dependent, clustered, and independent receptor organizations compared to unexpanded platelets.Combining dual-color Expansion and confocal fluorescence microscopy enables to image in the nanometer range identifying GPIIb/IIIa clustering in resting platelets - a pattern that may play a key role in the clotting pathway}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Aigner2023, author = {Aigner, Max}, title = {Establishing successful protocols and imaging pipelines for Expansion Microscopy in murine blood platelets}, doi = {10.25972/OPUS-30900}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-309003}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Platelets play an important role in the body, since they are part of the hemostasis system, preventing and stopping blood loss. Nevertheless, when platelet or coagulation system function are impaired, uncontrolled bleedings but also irreversible vessel occlusion followed by ischemic tissue damage can occur. Therefore, understanding platelet function and activation, mechanisms which are controlled by a variety of platelet membrane receptors and other factors is important to advance out knowledge of hemostasis and platelet malfunction. For a complete picture of platelet function and their modulating behavior it is desired to be able to quantify receptor distributions and interactions of these densely packed molecular ensembles in the membrane. This challenges scientists for several reasons. Most importantly, platelets are microscopically small objects, challenging the spatial resolution of conventional light microscopy. Moreover, platelet receptors are highly abundant on the membrane so even super-resolution microscopy struggles with quantitative receptor imaging on platelets. With Expansion microscopy (ExM), a new super-resolution technique was introduced, allowing resolutions to achieve super-resolution without using a super-resolution microscope, but by combining a conventional confocal microscopy with a highly processed sample that has been expanded physically. In this doctoral thesis, I evaluated the potential of this technique for super-resolution platelet imaging by optimizing the sample preparation process and establishing an imaging and image processing pipeline for dual-color 3D images of different membrane receptors. The analysis of receptor colocalization using ExM demonstrated a clear superiority compared to conventional microscopy. Furthermore, I identified a library of fluorescently labeled antibodies against different platelet receptors compatible with ExM and showed the possibility of staining membrane receptors and parts of the cytoskeleton at the same time.}, subject = {Mikroskopie}, language = {en} }