TY - JOUR A1 - Haarmann, Axel A1 - Deiss, Annika A1 - Prochaska, Juergen A1 - Foerch, Christian A1 - Weksler, Babette A1 - Romero, Ignacio A1 - Couraud, Pierre-Olivier A1 - Stoll, Guido A1 - Rieckmann, Peter A1 - Buttmann, Mathias T1 - Evaluation of Soluble Junctional Adhesion Molecule-A as a Biomarker of Human Brain Endothelial Barrier Breakdown N2 - Background: An inducible release of soluble junctional adhesion molecule-A (sJAM-A) under pro-inflammatory conditions was described in cultured non-CNS endothelial cells (EC) and increased sJAM-A serum levels were found to indicate inflammation in non-CNS vascular beds. Here we studied the regulation of JAM-A expression in cultured brain EC and evaluated sJAM-A as a serum biomarker of blood-brain barrier (BBB) function. Methodology/Principal Findings: As previously reported in non-CNS EC types, pro-inflammatory stimulation of primary or immortalized (hCMEC/D3) human brain microvascular EC (HBMEC) induced a redistribution of cell-bound JAM-A on the cell surface away from tight junctions, along with a dissociation from the cytoskeleton. This was paralleled by reduced immunocytochemical staining of occludin and zonula occludens-1 as well as by increased paracellular permeability for dextran 3000. Both a self-developed ELISA test and Western blot analysis detected a constitutive sJAM-A release by HBMEC into culture supernatants, which importantly was unaffected by pro-inflammatory or hypoxia/reoxygenation challenge. Accordingly, serum levels of sJAM-A were unaltered in 14 patients with clinically active multiple sclerosis compared to 45 stable patients and remained unchanged in 13 patients with acute ischemic non-small vessel stroke over time. Conclusion: Soluble JAM-A was not suited as a biomarker of BBB breakdown in our hands. The unexpected non-inducibility of sJAM-A release at the human BBB might contribute to a particular resistance of brain EC to inflammatory stimuli, protecting the CNS compartment. KW - Biomarker KW - Gehirn Y1 - 2010 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-68468 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zeller, Daniel A1 - Dang, Su-Yin A1 - Weise, David A1 - Rieckmann, Peter A1 - Toyka, Klaus V. A1 - Classen, Joseph T1 - Excitability decreasing central motor plasticity is retained in multiple sclerosis patients N2 - Background: Compensation of brain injury in multiple sclerosis (MS) may in part work through mechanisms involving neuronal plasticity on local and interregional scales. Mechanisms limiting excessive neuronal activity may have special significance for retention and (re-)acquisition of lost motor skills in brain injury. However, previous neurophysiological studies of plasticity in MS have investigated only excitability enhancing plasticity and results from neuroimaging are ambiguous. Thus, the aim of this study was to probe long-term depression-like central motor plasticity utilizing continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS), a non-invasive brain stimulation protocol. Because cTBS also may trigger behavioral effects through local interference with neuronal circuits, this approach also permitted investigating the functional role of the primary motor cortex (M1) in force control in patients with MS. Methods: We used cTBS and force recordings to examine long-term depression-like central motor plasticity and behavioral consequences of a M1 lesion in 14 patients with stable mild-to-moderate MS (median EDSS 1.5, range 0 to 3.5) and 14 age-matched healthy controls. cTBS consisted of bursts (50 Hz) of three subthreshold biphasic magnetic stimuli repeated at 5 Hz for 40 s over the hand area of the left M1. Corticospinal excitability was probed via motor-evoked potentials (MEP) in the abductor pollicis brevis muscle over M1 before and after cTBS. Force production performance was assessed in an isometric right thumb abduction task by recording the number of hits into a predefined force window. Results: cTBS reduced MEP amplitudes in the contralateral abductor pollicis brevis muscle to a comparable extent in control subjects (69 ± 22% of baseline amplitude, p < 0.001) and in MS patients (69 ± 18%, p < 0.001). In contrast, postcTBS force production performance was only impaired in controls (2.2 ± 2.8, p = 0.011), but not in MS patients (2.0 ± 4.4, p = 0.108). The decline in force production performance following cTBS correlated with corticomuscular latencies (CML) in MS patients, but did not correlate with MEP amplitude reduction in patients or controls. Conclusions: Long-term depression-like plasticity remains largely intact in mild-to-moderate MS. Increasing brain injury may render the neuronal networks less responsive toward lesion-induction by cTBS. KW - Medizin KW - Multiple sclerosis KW - LTD KW - Motor plasticity KW - TMS KW - Motor cortex Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-76333 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sadovnick, A. Dessa A1 - Traboulsee, Anthony L. A1 - Bernales, Cecily Q. A1 - Ross, Jay P. A1 - Forwell, Amanda L. A1 - Yee, Irene M. A1 - Guillot-Noel, Lena A1 - Fontaine, Bertrand A1 - Cournu-Rebeix, Isabelle A1 - Alcina, Antonio A1 - Fedetz, Maria A1 - Izquierdo, Guillermo A1 - Matesanz, Fuencisla A1 - Hilven, Kelly A1 - Dubois, Bénédicte A1 - Goris, An A1 - Astobiza, Ianire A1 - Alloza, Iraide A1 - Antigüedad, Alfredo A1 - Vandenbroeck, Koen A1 - Akkad, Denis A. A1 - Aktas, Orhan A1 - Blaschke, Paul A1 - Buttmann, Mathias A1 - Chan, Andrew A1 - Epplen, Joerg T. A1 - Gerdes, Lisa-Ann A1 - Kroner, Antje A1 - Kubisch, Christian A1 - Kümpfel, Tania A1 - Lohse, Peter A1 - Rieckmann, Peter A1 - Zettl, Uwe K. A1 - Zipp, Frauke A1 - Bertram, Lars A1 - Lill, Christina M. A1 - Fernandez, Oscar A1 - Urbaneja, Patricia A1 - Leyva, Laura A1 - Alvarez-Cermeño, Jose Carlos A1 - Arroyo, Rafael A1 - Garagorri, Aroa M. A1 - García-Martínez, Angel A1 - Villar, Luisa M. A1 - Urcelay, Elena A1 - Malhotra, Sunny A1 - Montalban, Xavier A1 - Comabella, Manuel A1 - Berger, Thomas A1 - Fazekas, Franz A1 - Reindl, Markus A1 - Schmied, Mascha C. A1 - Zimprich, Alexander A1 - Vilariño-Güell, Carles T1 - Analysis of Plasminogen Genetic Variants in Multiple Sclerosis Patients JF - G3: Genes Genomes Genetics N2 - Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a prevalent neurological disease of complex etiology. Here, we describe the characterization of a multi-incident MS family that nominated a rare missense variant (p.G420D) in plasminogen (PLG) as a putative genetic risk factor for MS. Genotyping of PLG p.G420D (rs139071351) in 2160 MS patients, and 886 controls from Canada, identified 10 additional probands, two sporadic patients and one control with the variant. Segregation in families harboring the rs139071351 variant, identified p.G420D in 26 out of 30 family members diagnosed with MS, 14 unaffected parents, and 12 out of 30 family members not diagnosed with disease. Despite considerably reduced penetrance, linkage analysis supports cosegregation of PLG p.G420D and disease. Genotyping of PLG p.G420D in 14446 patients, and 8797 controls from Canada, France, Spain, Germany, Belgium, and Austria failed to identify significant association with disease (P = 0.117), despite an overall higher prevalence in patients (OR = 1.32; 95% CI = 0.93–1.87). To assess whether additional rare variants have an effect on MS risk, we sequenced PLG in 293 probands, and genotyped all rare variants in cases and controls. This analysis identified nine rare missense variants, and although three of them were exclusively observed in MS patients, segregation does not support pathogenicity. PLG is a plausible biological candidate for MS owing to its involvement in immune system response, blood-brain barrier permeability, and myelin degradation. Moreover, components of its activation cascade have been shown to present increased activity or expression in MS patients compared to controls; further studies are needed to clarify whether PLG is involved in MS susceptibility. KW - multiple sclerosis KW - genetics KW - linkage KW - association KW - plasminogen Y1 - 2016 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-165405 VL - 6 IS - 7 ER -