TY - JOUR A1 - Belair, Cédric A1 - Baud, Jessica A1 - Chabas, Sandrine A1 - Sharma, Cynthia M A1 - Vogel, Jörg A1 - Staedel, Cathy A1 - Darfeuille, Fabien T1 - Helicobacter pylori interferes with an embryonic stem cell micro RNA cluster to block cell cycle progression JF - Silence : a Journal of RNA regulation N2 - Background MicroRNAs, post-transcriptional regulators of eukaryotic gene expression, are implicated in host defense against pathogens. Viruses and bacteria have evolved strategies that suppress microRNA functions, resulting in a sustainable infection. In this work we report that Helicobacter pylori, a human stomach-colonizing bacterium responsible for severe gastric inflammatory diseases and gastric cancers, downregulates an embryonic stem cell microRNA cluster in proliferating gastric epithelial cells to achieve cell cycle arrest. Results Using a deep sequencing approach in the AGS cell line, a widely used cell culture model to recapitulate early events of H. pylori infection of gastric mucosa, we reveal that hsa-miR-372 is the most abundant microRNA expressed in this cell line, where, together with hsa-miR-373, it promotes cell proliferation by silencing large tumor suppressor homolog 2 (LATS2) gene expression. Shortly after H. pylori infection, miR-372 and miR-373 synthesis is highly inhibited, leading to the post-transcriptional release of LATS2 expression and thus, to a cell cycle arrest at the G1/S transition. This downregulation of a specific cell-cycle-regulating microRNA is dependent on the translocation of the bacterial effector CagA into the host cells, a mechanism highly associated with the development of severe atrophic gastritis and intestinal-type gastric carcinoma. Conclusions These data constitute a novel example of host-pathogen interplay involving microRNAs, and unveil the couple LATS2/miR-372 and miR-373 as an unexpected mechanism in infection-induced cell cycle arrest in proliferating gastric cells, which may be relevant in inhibition of gastric epithelium renewal, a major host defense mechanism against bacterial infections. KW - MicroRNAs KW - cell cycle KW - Helicobacter pylori KW - gastric cancer Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140438 VL - 2 IS - 7 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Edelmann, Frank A1 - Wachter, Rolf A1 - Düngen, Hans-Dirk A1 - Störk, Stefan A1 - Richter, Annette A1 - Stahrenberg, Raoul A1 - Neumann, Till A1 - Lüers, Claus A1 - Angermann, Christiane E. A1 - Mehrhof, Felix A1 - Gelbrich, Götz A1 - Pieske, Burkert T1 - Heart failure therapy in diabetic patients-comparison with the recent ESC/EASD guideline JF - Cardiovascular Diabetology N2 - Background: To assess heart failure therapies in diabetic patients with preserved as compared to impaired systolic ventricular function. Methods: 3304 patients with heart failure from 9 different studies were included (mean age 63 +/- 14 years); out of these, 711 subjects had preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (>= 50%) and 994 patients in the whole cohort suffered from diabetes. Results: The majority (>90%) of heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction (SHF) and diabetes were treated with an ACE inhibitor (ACEi) or angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) or with beta-blockers. By contrast, patients with diabetes and preserved ejection fraction (HFNEF) were less likely to receive these substance classes (p < 0.001) and had a worse blood pressure control (p < 0.001). In comparison to patients without diabetes, the probability to receive these therapies was increased in diabetic HFNEF patients (p < 0.001), but not in diabetic SHF patients. Aldosterone receptor blockers were given more often to diabetic patients with reduced ejection fraction (p < 0.001), and the presence and severity of diabetes decreased the probability to receive this substance class, irrespective of renal function. Conclusions: Diabetic patients with HFNEF received less heart failure medication and showed a poorer control of blood pressure as compared to diabetic patients with SHF. SHF patients with diabetes were less likely to receive aldosterone receptor blocker therapy, irrespective of renal function. KW - Preserved Ejection Fraction KW - Diastocic Dysfunction KW - Myocardial-Infarction KW - Hyperkalemia KW - Eplerenone KW - Mortality KW - Predictors KW - Framingham KW - Morbidity KW - Outcomes Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140397 VL - 10 IS - 15 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Quarta, Serena A1 - Vogl, Christian A1 - Constantin, Cristina E. A1 - Üçeyler, Nurcan A1 - Sommer, Claudia A1 - Kress, Michaela T1 - Genetic evidence for an essential role of neuronally expressed IL-6 signal transducer gp130 in the induction and maintenance of experimentally induced mechanical hypersensitivity \(in\) \(vivo\) and \(in\) \(vitro\) JF - Molecular Pain N2 - Tenderness and mechanical allodynia are key symptoms of malignant tumor, inflammation and neuropathy. The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-6 (IL-6) is causally involved in all three pathologies. IL-6 not only regulates innate immunity and inflammation but also causes nociceptor sensitization and hyperalgesia. In general and in most cell types including immune cells and sensory neurons, IL-6 binds soluble mu receptor subunits which heteromerizes with membrane bound IL-6 signal transducer gp130. In the present study, we used a conditional knock-out strategy to investigate the importance of signal transducer gp130 expressed in C nociceptors for the generation and maintenance of mechanical hypersensitivity. Nociceptors were sensitized to mechanical stimuli by experimental tumor and this nociceptor sensitization was preserved at later stages of the pathology in control mice. However, in mice with a conditional deletion of gp130 in Nav1.8 expressing nociceptors mechanical hypersensitivity by experimental tumor, nerve injury or inflammation recovery was not preserved in the maintenance phase and nociceptors exhibited normal mechanical thresholds comparable to untreated mice. Together, the results argue for IL-6 signal transducer gp130 as an essential prerequisite in nociceptors for long-term mechanical hypersensitivity associated with cancer, inflammation and nerve injury. KW - Leukemia Inhibitory Factor KW - Mediated Inflammatory Hyperalgesia KW - Necrosis-factor-Alpha KW - Oncostatin-M-Receptor KW - Rat Sensory Neurons KW - Rheumatoid-Arthritis KW - Interleukin-6-Deficient mice KW - Peripheral Inflammation KW - Thermal Hyperalgesia KW - Heat Hyperalgesia KW - proinflammatory cytokine KW - Interleukin-6 KW - chronic pain KW - nociceptor sensitization KW - hyperalgesia KW - allodynia Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140380 VL - 7,73 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sacépé, Benjamin A1 - Oostinga, Jeroen B. A1 - Li, Jian A1 - Ubaldini, Alberto A1 - Couto, Nuno J. G. A1 - Giannini, Enrico A1 - Morpurgo, Alberto F. T1 - Gate-tuned normal and superconducting transport at the surface of a topological insulator JF - Nature Communications N2 - Three-dimensional topological insulators are characterized by the presence of a bandgap in their bulk and gapless Dirac fermions at their surfaces. New physical phenomena originating from the presence of the Dirac fermions are predicted to occur, and to be experimentally accessible via transport measurements in suitably designed electronic devices. Here we study transport through superconducting junctions fabricated on thin Bi2Se3 single crystals, equipped with a gate electrode. In the presence of perpendicular magnetic field B, sweeping the gate voltage enables us to observe the filling of the Dirac fermion Landau levels, whose character evolves continuously from electron- to hole-like. When B=0, a supercurrent appears, whose magnitude can be gate tuned, and is minimum at the charge neutrality point determined from the Landau level filling. Our results demonstrate how gated nano-electronic devices give control over normal and superconducting transport of Dirac fermions at an individual surface of a three-dimensional topological insulators. KW - Physical sciences KW - Condensed matter KW - Materials science KW - nanotechnology Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-140175 VL - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lindemann, Dirk A1 - Rethwilm, Axel T1 - Foamy Virus Biology and Its Application for Vector Development JF - Viruses N2 - Spuma- or foamy viruses (FV), endemic in most non-human primates, cats, cattle and horses, comprise a special type of retrovirus that has developed a replication strategy combining features of both retroviruses and hepadnaviruses. Unique features of FVs include an apparent apathogenicity in natural hosts as well as zoonotically infected humans, a reverse transcription of the packaged viral RNA genome late during viral replication resulting in an infectious DNA genome in released FV particles and a special particle release strategy depending capsid and glycoprotein coexpression and specific interaction between both components. In addition, particular features with respect to the integration profile into the host genomic DNA discriminate FV from orthoretroviruses. It appears that some inherent properties of FV vectors set them favorably apart from orthoretroviral vectors and ask for additional basic research on the viruses as well as on the application in Gene Therapy. This review will summarize the current knowledge of FV biology and the development as a gene transfer system. KW - terminal gag domain KW - env leader protein KW - enhance viral transcription KW - subviral particle release KW - cell-cycle dependence KW - foamyviruses KW - retroviral vectors KW - LAD KW - Fanconi Anemia KW - cis-acting sequences KW - dna-binding protein KW - pol messenger-rna KW - reverse-transcriptase KW - gene-expression Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-139811 VL - 3 IS - 5 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Hoffmann, Linda S A1 - Schmidt, Peter M A1 - Keim, Yvonne A1 - Hoffmann, Carsten A1 - Schmidt, Harald H H W A1 - Stasch, Johannes-Peter T1 - Fluorescence Dequenching Makes Haem-Free Soluble Guanylate Cyclase Detectable in Living Cells JF - PLOS ONE N2 - In cardiovascular disease, the protective NO/sGC/cGMP signalling-pathway is impaired due to a decreased pool of NO-sensitive haem-containing sGC accompanied by a reciprocal increase in NO-insensitive haem-free sGC. However, no direct method to detect cellular haem-free sGC other than its activation by the new therapeutic class of haem mimetics, such as BAY 58-2667, is available. Here we show that fluorescence dequenching, based on the interaction of the optical active prosthetic haem group and the attached biarsenical fluorophor FlAsH can be used to detect changes in cellular sGC haem status. The partly overlap of the emission spectrum of haem and FlAsH allows energy transfer from the fluorophore to the haem which reduces the intensity of FlAsH fluorescence. Loss of the prosthetic group, e. g. by oxidative stress or by replacement with the haem mimetic BAY 58-2667, prevented the energy transfer resulting in increased fluorescence. Haem loss was corroborated by an observed decrease in NO-induced sGC activity, reduced sGC protein levels, and an increased effect of BAY 58-2667. The use of a haem-free sGC mutant and a biarsenical dye that was not quenched by haem as controls further validated that the increase in fluorescence was due to the loss of the prosthetic haem group. The present approach is based on the cellular expression of an engineered sGC variant limiting is applicability to recombinant expression systems. Nevertheless, it allows to monitor sGC's redox regulation in living cells and future enhancements might be able to extend this approach to in vivo conditions. KW - spontaneously hypersensitive-rats KW - nitric-oxide KW - down-regulation KW - energy-transfer KW - cyclic-gmp KW - protein KW - activation KW - identification KW - in-vivo KW - no Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-139631 VL - 6 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Taubenböck, H A1 - Wurm, M A1 - Netzband, M A1 - Zwenzner, H A1 - Roth, A A1 - Rahman, A A1 - Dech, S T1 - Flood risks in urbanized areas - multi-sensoral approaches using remotely sensed data for risk assessment JF - NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES N2 - Estimating flood risks and managing disasters combines knowledge in climatology, meteorology, hydrology, hydraulic engineering, statistics, planning and geography - thus a complex multi-faceted problem. This study focuses on the capabilities of multi-source remote sensing data to support decision-making before, during and after a flood event. With our focus on urbanized areas, sample methods and applications show multi-scale products from the hazard and vulnerability perspective of the risk framework. From the hazard side, we present capabilities with which to assess flood-prone areas before an expected disaster. Then we map the spatial impact during or after a flood and finally, we analyze damage grades after a flood disaster. From the vulnerability side, we monitor urbanization over time on an urban footprint level, classify urban structures on an individual building level, assess building stability and quantify probably affected people. The results show a large database for sustainable development and for developing mitigation strategies, ad-hoc coordination of relief measures and organizing rehabilitation. KW - damage assessment disaster KW - satellite data KW - management KW - radar KW - inundation KW - disaster KW - sar KW - gis KW - integration KW - earthquake Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-139605 VL - 11 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Petritsch, Bernhard A1 - Goltz, Jan Peter A1 - Hahn, Dietbert A1 - Wendel, Frank T1 - Extensive craniocervical bone pneumatization JF - Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology N2 - We report a case of extensive abnormal craniocervical bone pneumatization accidentally found in a patient without any history of trauma or surgery. The patient had only mild unspecific thoracic pain and bilateral paresthesia that did not correlate with computed tomography findings. KW - vertebral pneumaticity KW - sauropod dinosaurs KW - bone KW - skull KW - cervical vertebrae pneumatization Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-139349 VL - 17 IS - 4 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bittner, Stefan A1 - Bobak, Nicole A1 - Feuchtenberger, Martin A1 - Herrmann, Alexander M A1 - Göbel, Kerstin A1 - Kinne, Raimund W A1 - Hansen, Anker J A1 - Budde, Thomas A1 - Kleinschnitz, Christoph A1 - Frey, Oliver A1 - Tony, Hans-Peter A1 - Wiendl, Heinz A1 - Meuth, Sven G T1 - Expression of K\(_2\)\(_P\)5.1 potassium channels on CD4\(^+\)T lymphocytes correlates with disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis patients JF - Arthritis Research & Therapy N2 - Introduction CD4+ T cells express K2P5.1 (TWIK-related acid-sensitive potassium channel 2 (TASK2); KCNK5), a member of the two-pore domain potassium channel family, which has been shown to influence T cell effector functions. Recently, it was shown that K2P5.1 is upregulated upon (autoimmune) T cell stimulation. The aim of this study was to correlate expression levels of K2P5.1 on T cells from patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) to disease activity in these patients. Methods Expression levels of K2P5.1 were measured by RT-PCR in the peripheral blood of 58 patients with RA and correlated with disease activity parameters (C-reactive protein levels, erythrocyte sedimentation rates, disease activity score (DAS28) scores). Twenty patients undergoing therapy change were followed-up for six months. Additionally, synovial fluid and synovial biopsies were investigated for T lymphocytes expressing K2P5.1. Results K2P5.1 expression levels in CD4+ T cells show a strong correlation to DAS28 scores in RA patients. Similar correlations were found for serological inflammatory parameters (erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein). In addition, K2P5.1 expression levels of synovial fluid-derived T cells are higher compared to peripheral blood T cells. Prospective data in individual patients show a parallel behaviour of K2P5.1 expression to disease activity parameters during a longitudinal follow-up for six months. Conclusions Disease activity in RA patients correlates strongly with K2P5.1 expression levels in CD4+ T lymphocytes in the peripheral blood in cross-sectional as well as in longitudinal observations. Further studies are needed to investigate the exact pathophysiological mechanisms and to evaluate the possible use of K2P5.1 as a potential biomarker for disease activity and differential diagnosis. KW - neurology Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-139334 VL - 13 IS - R21 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zanucco, Emanuele A1 - Götz, Rudolf A1 - Potapenko, Tamara A1 - Carraretto, Irene A1 - Ceteci, Semra A1 - Ceteci, Fatih A1 - Seeger, Werner A1 - Savai, Rajkumar A1 - Rapp, Ulf R. T1 - Expression of B-RAF V600E in Type II Pneumocytes Causes Abnormalities in Alveolar Formation, Airspace Enlargement and Tumor Formation in Mice JF - PLOS ONE N2 - Growth factor induced signaling cascades are key regulatory elements in tissue development, maintenance and regeneration. Perturbations of these cascades have severe consequences, leading to developmental disorders and neoplastic diseases. As a major function in signal transduction, activating mutations in RAF family kinases are the cause of human tumorigenesis, where B-RAF V600E has been identified as the prevalent mutant. In order to address the oncogenic function of B-RAF V600E, we have generated transgenic mice expressing the activated oncogene specifically in lung alveolar epithelial type II cells. Constitutive expression of B-RAF V600E caused abnormalities in alveolar epithelium formation that led to airspace enlargements. These lung lesions showed signs of tissue remodeling and were often associated with chronic inflammation and low incidence of lung tumors. The inflammatory cell infiltration did not precede the formation of the lung lesions but was rather accompanied with late tumor development. These data support a model where the continuous regenerative process initiated by oncogenic B-RAF-driven alveolar disruption provides a tumor-promoting environment associated with chronic inflammation. KW - obstructive pulmonary-disease KW - lung-cancer KW - somatic mutations KW - epithelial-cells KW - mouse models KW - protein KW - kinase KW - inflammation KW - activation KW - pathway Y1 - 2011 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-137061 VL - 6 IS - 12 ER -