@phdthesis{Heinrichs2018, author = {Heinrichs, Susanne Margarete}, title = {Myocardial B-cell infiltration following occlusion of the left anterior descending artery in mice is driven by CXCL13}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-168554}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2018}, abstract = {Myocardial B-cell infiltration after LAD occlusion in mice is driven by CXCL13 After myocardial infarction, the immune system is activated and regulates wound healing and remodeling processes in the heart. While the role of T cells has been elucidated already, the function of B cells in myocardial infarction remained relatively unclear until now. It is, however, already known that B cells are of importance in healing processes in other tissues, for example in the skin. Our studies therefore addressed the role and function of B cells in healing and early remodeling processes in the myocardium after infarction. Under physiological conditions, only few B cells can be found in the heart. After myocardial infarction, however, which we modelled with a permanent ligation of the left anterior descending artery (LAD) in C57BL/6J mice, we could demonstrate that B lymphocytes accumulate in the early phase after tissue injury (days one to seven) in the myocardium. To detect B cells, we performed immunofluorescence stainings on cryosections of infarcted hearts using an anti-B220 antibody. Quantitative analysis of tissue infiltration revealed that B cells peaked at day seven. In flow cytometry, we further characterized the B cells infiltrating infarcted tissue. We found that most of them were mature B cells (IgM+, IgD+). Next, we wanted to outline a potential mechanism responsible for B-cell infiltration to the site of tissue injury. We therefore performed ELISA experiments revealing that CXCL13 was upregulated in scar tissue. Antibody-mediated neutralization of CXCL13 verifiably attenuated B-cell infiltration. Treated mice also showed - in the tendency - smaller infarct sizes and an improved survival. In conclusion, we could show that B lymphocytes infiltrate the myocardium after MI in mice following a local CXCL13 gradient and that it is, most likely, beneficial to inhibit this process.}, subject = {Maus}, language = {en} } @article{DelgoboHeinrichsHapkeetal.2021, author = {Delgobo, Murilo and Heinrichs, Margarete and Hapke, Nils and Ashour, DiyaaElDin and Appel, Marc and Srivastava, Mugdha and Heckel, Tobias and Spyridopoulos, Ioakim and Hofmann, Ulrich and Frantz, Stefan and Ramos, Gustavo Campos}, title = {Terminally Differentiated CD4\(^+\) T Cells Promote Myocardial Inflammaging}, series = {Frontiers in Immunology}, volume = {12}, journal = {Frontiers in Immunology}, issn = {1664-3224}, doi = {10.3389/fimmu.2021.584538}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-229612}, year = {2021}, abstract = {The cardiovascular and immune systems undergo profound and intertwined alterations with aging. Recent studies have reported that an accumulation of memory and terminally differentiated T cells in elderly subjects can fuel myocardial aging and boost the progression of heart diseases. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether the immunological senescence profile is sufficient to cause age-related cardiac deterioration or merely acts as an amplifier of previous tissue-intrinsic damage. Herein, we sought to decompose the causality in this cardio-immune crosstalk by studying young mice harboring a senescent-like expanded CD4\(^+\) T cell compartment. Thus, immunodeficient NSG-DR1 mice expressing HLA-DRB1*01:01 were transplanted with human CD4\(^+\) T cells purified from matching donors that rapidly engrafted and expanded in the recipients without causing xenograft reactions. In the donor subjects, the CD4\(^+\) T cell compartment was primarily composed of na{\"i}ve cells defined as CCR7\(^+\)CD45RO\(^-\). However, when transplanted into young lymphocyte-deficient mice, CD4\(^+\) T cells underwent homeostatic expansion, upregulated expression of PD-1 receptor and strongly shifted towards effector/memory (CCR7\(^-\) CD45RO\(^+\)) and terminally-differentiated phenotypes (CCR7\(^-\)CD45RO\(^-\)), as typically seen in elderly. Differentiated CD4\(^+\) T cells also infiltrated the myocardium of recipient mice at comparable levels to what is observed during physiological aging. In addition, young mice harboring an expanded CD4\(^+\) T cell compartment showed increased numbers of infiltrating monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells in the heart. Bulk mRNA sequencing analyses further confirmed that expanding T-cells promote myocardial inflammaging, marked by a distinct age-related transcriptomic signature. Altogether, these data indicate that exaggerated CD4\(^+\) T-cell expansion and differentiation, a hallmark of the aging immune system, is sufficient to promote myocardial alterations compatible with inflammaging in juvenile healthy mice.}, language = {en} }