TY - JOUR A1 - Ceteci, Fatih A1 - Ceteci, Semra A1 - Zanucco, Emanuele A1 - Thakur, Chitra A1 - Becker, Matthias A1 - El-Nikhely, Nefertiti A1 - Fink, Ludger A1 - Seeger, Werner A1 - Savai, Rajkumar A1 - Rapp, Ulf R. T1 - E-Cadherin Controls Bronchiolar Progenitor Cells and Onset of Preneoplastic Lesions in Mice JF - Neoplasia N2 - Although progenitor cells of the conducting airway have been spatially localized and some insights have been gained regarding their molecular phenotype, relatively little is known about the mechanisms regulating their maintenance, activation, and differentiation. This study investigates the potential roles of E-cadherin in mouse Clara cells, as these cells were shown to represent the progenitor/stem cells of the conducting airways and have been implicated as the cell of origin of human non-small cell lung cancer. Postnatal inactivation of E-cadherin affected Clara cell differentiation and compromised airway regeneration under injury conditions. In steady-state adult lung, overexpression of the dominant negative E-cadherin led to an expansion of the bronchiolar stem cells and decreased differentiation concomitant with canonical Wnt signaling activation. Expansion of the bronchiolar stem cell pool was associated with an incessant proliferation of neuroepithelial body-associated Clara cells that ultimately gave rise to bronchiolar hyperplasia. Despite progressive hyperplasia, only a minority of the mice developed pulmonary solid tumors, suggesting that the loss of E-cadherin function leads to tumor formation when additional mutations are sustained. The present study reveals that E-cadherin plays a critical role in the regulation of proliferation and homeostasis of the epithelial cells lining the conducting airways. KW - injury KW - lung cancer KW - stem cells KW - clara cell KW - gene expression KW - basal cell KW - in vivo KW - epithelium KW - airway KW - renewal Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-135407 VL - 14 IS - 12 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Gresle, Melissa M. A1 - Alexandrou, Estella A1 - Wu, Qizhu A1 - Egan, Gary A1 - Jokubaitis, Vilija A1 - Ayers, Margaret A1 - Jonas, Anna A1 - Doherty, William A1 - Friedhuber, Anna A1 - Shaw, Gerry A1 - Sendtner, Michael A1 - Emery, Ben A1 - Kilpatrick, Trevor A1 - Butzkueven, Helmut T1 - Leukemia Inhibitory Factor Protects Axons in Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis via an Oligodendrocyte-Independent Mechanism JF - PLoS One N2 - Leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) and Ciliary Neurotrophic factor (CNTF) are members of the interleukin-6 family of cytokines, defined by use of the gp130 molecule as an obligate receptor. In the murine experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) model, antagonism of LIF and genetic deletion of CNTF worsen disease. The potential mechanism of action of these cytokines in EAE is complex, as gp130 is expressed by all neural cells, and could involve immuno-modulation, reduction of oligodendrocyte injury, neuronal protection, or a combination of these actions. In this study we aim to investigate whether the beneficial effects of CNTF/LIF signalling in EAE are associated with axonal protection; and whether this requires signalling through oligodendrocytes. We induced MOG\(_{35-55}\) EAE in CNTF, LIF and double knockout mice. On a CNTF null background, LIF knockout was associated with increased EAE severity (EAE grade 2.1\(\pm\)0.14 vs 2.6\(\pm\)0.19; P<0.05). These mice also showed increased axonal damage relative to LIF heterozygous mice, as indicated by decreased optic nerve parallel diffusivity on MRI (1540\(\pm\)207 \(\mu\)m\(^2\)-/s vs 1310\(\pm\)175 \(\mu\)m\(^2\)-/s; P<0.05), and optic nerve (-12.5%) and spinal cord (-16%) axon densities; and increased serum neurofilament-H levels (2.5 fold increase). No differences in inflammatory cell numbers or peripheral auto-immune T-cell priming were evident. Oligodendrocyte-targeted gp130 knockout mice showed that disruption of CNTF/LIF signalling in these cells has no effect on acute EAE severity. These studies demonstrate that endogenous CNTF and LIF act centrally to protect axons from acute inflammatory destruction via an oligodendrocyte-independent mechanism. KW - receptor KW - ciliary neurotrophic factor KW - mulitple-sclerosis patients KW - factor prevents KW - demyelination KW - survival KW - neurons KW - injury KW - degeneration KW - motoneurons Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-134617 VL - 7 IS - 10 ER - TY - THES A1 - Sperling, Patrik Leonhart T1 - Thermische Verletzungen im Kindesalter: Eine retrospektive Kohortenstudie von 212 Fällen T1 - Thermic injuries in infancy: a retrospective cohort study of 212 cases N2 - Anhand einer retrospektiven Datenanalyse sollen Verteilungsmuster von Verbrennungen und Verbrühungen bezogen auf Alter und Geschlecht untersucht werden. Erfasst wurden 212 Patienten im Alter von 0 bis 16 Jahren betrachtet, die im Zeitraum vom 01.01.2004 bis zum 31.12.2009 auf Grund einer thermischen Verletzung stationär im Universitätsklinikum Würzburg der Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg behandelt wurden. Den größten Anteil thermischer Verletzungen im Kindesalter stellen Verbrühungen dar. Betroffen sind vor allem Kleinkinder. Verbrennungen finden sich häufiger bei älteren Kindern und Jugendlichen. Jungen sind gefährdeter als Mädchen solche Verletzungen zu erleiden. Verbrühungen treten vermehrt gegen Ende des Jahres auf, während Verbrennungen in den Sommermonaten gehäuft vorkommen. Betroffen ist zumeist die obere Körperhälfte, wobei Verbrühungen meist Brust, Arme und Beine verletzen, Verbrennungen meist Gesicht und Hände. II°- und III°-Verletzungen haben die gleiche Altersverteilung und sind gleich häufig. Die durchschnittliche Krankenhausverweildauer ist bei Verbrennungen höher als es bei Verbrühungen der Fall ist. Nicht jede III°-Verletzung bedarf einer Hauttransplantation. N2 - On the basis of an retrospective data analysis distribution pattern of burns and scalds should be investigated based on age and gender. 212 patients were mapped in the age of 0 to 16 years, which were treated residential in the university hospital of the Julius-Maximilians-University Würzburg between 01.01.2004 and 31.12.2009. The majority of thermic injuries in childhood are scalds. Affected are primarily infants. Burns are more common with elder children and adolescents. Boys are more endangered than girls to endure such injuries. Scalds occur more likely during winter, whereas burns occur more likely during summer. The upper body is most likely to be affected, whereat scalds mostly chest, arms and legs hurt, burns mostly face and hands. II°- and III°-injuries have the same age pattern and are equal frequent. The average length of stay is with burns higher than it is the case with scalds. Not every III°-injury needs skin graft. KW - Verbrühung KW - Kind KW - Verbrennung KW - scald KW - burn KW - infant KW - child KW - injury Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-74090 ER -