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Stroke risk factors prepare rat brainstem tissues for a modified localized Shwartzman reaction
(1988)
Stroke risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, advanced age, and genetic predisposition to stroke were demonstrated to prepare rat brainstem tissues for a modified local Shwartzman reaction. A single intracisternal injection of endotoxin provoked the reaction, and affected rats manifested neurologie deficits accompanied by pathologie lesions. Brainstem infarcts developed in only a small proportion of rats without recognized risk factors after intracisternal injection of endotoxin. Thus, stroke risk factors, whieh are ordinarily regarded as operating through acceleration of atherosclerosis, may predispose to brain ischemia by local effects on brain mierocirculation such as those thought to underlie preparation of a tissue for the local Shwartzman reaction.
Background and Purpose: Reperfusion following transient global cerebral ischemia is characterized by an initial hyperemic phase, which precedes hypo perfusion. The pathogenesis of these flow derangements remains obscure. Our study investigates the dynamics of postischemic cerebral blood flow changes, with particular attention to the role of local neurons. Metho(Js: We assessed local cortical blood flow continuously by laser Doppler flowmetry to permit observation of any rapid flow changes after forebrain ischemia induced by four-vessel occlusion for 20 minutes in rats. To investigate the role of local cortical neurons in the regulation of any blood flow fluctuations, five rats received intracortical microinjections of a neurotoxin (10 p,g ibotenic acid in 1 p,1; 1.5-mm-depth parietal cortex) 24 hours before ischemia to induce selective and localized neuronal depletion in an area corresponding to the sampie volume of the laser Doppler probe (1 mm3 ). Local cerebral blood flow was measured within the injection site and at an adjacent control site. Results: Ischemia was followed by marked hyperemia (235 ±23% of control, n =7), followed by secondary hypoperfusion (45±3% of control, n=7). The transition from hyperemia to hypoperfusioo occurred not gradually but precipitously (maximal slope of flow decay: 66±6%/min; n=7). In ibotenic acid-injected rats, hyperemia was preserved at the injection site, but the sudden decline of blood flow was abolished (maximal slope of flow decay: 5±3%/min compared with 53±8%/min at the control site; n=5, p<O.OOI) and 00 significant hypoperfusion de\eloped (103±20% of control at 60 minutes). Conclusions: These data suggest that the rapid transition to cortical hypo perfusion after forebrain ischemia may be triggered locally by a neuronal mechanism but that this mechanism does not underlie the initial hyperemia.
Background and Purpose: We reported previously that stroke risk factors prepared the brain stem for the development of ischemia and hemorrhage and induced the production of tumor necrosis factor following an intrathecal injection of Iipopolysaccharide, a prototypic monocyte-activating stimulus. This study evaluates whether blood or brain cells of hypertensive rats produce more proinflammatory and prothrombotic mediators than do blood or brain cells of normotensive rats. MethotJs: Levels of tumor necrosis factor, platelet-activating factor, 6-ketoprostaglandin F1a, and thromboxane B2 in the cerebrospinal fluid and blood of spontaneously hypertensive and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto rats were monitored before and after achallenge with Iipopolysaccharide. Results: Little or no activity from these media tors was found in the cerebrospinal fluid or blood of saline-injected control animals. Intravenous administration of Iipopolysaccharide (0.001, 0.1, and 1.8 mg/kg) produced dose-dependent increases in blood levels of all mediators in hypertensive rats. In normotensive rats the levels were less than in hypertensive rats and were not c1early dose-related. When Iipopolysaccharide was injected intracerebroventricularly, more tumor necrosis factor was measured in the cerebrospinal fluid than in the blood, suggesting local synthesis of this cytokine. Levels of tumor necrosis factor and platelet-activating factor in the cerebrospinal fluid were higher in hypertensive than in normotensive rats. The thromboxane A2/prostacyclin ratio was not aItered significantly between the two rat strains. Conclusions: It is suggested that the higher incidence of brain stem ischemia and hemorrhage after the intrathecal injection oflipopolysaccharide in hypertensive rats than in normotensive rats might be related to the higher levels of the two cytotoxic factors tumor necrosis factor and platelet-activating factor produced in response to such challenge.
Background and Purpose: We earlier reported that risk factors for stroke prepare brain stem tissue for a modified Shwartzman reaction, incIuding the development of ischemia and hemorrhage and the production of tumor necrosis factor-a, after a provocative dose of lipopolysaccharide. In the present study, we sought to determine whether blood and central nervous system cells of rats with the stroke risk factor of advanced age produce more proinflammatory and prothrombotic media tors than do those of young rats of the same strain. Methods: Levels of tumor necrosis factor-a and platelet activating factor in the cerebrospinal fluid and tumor necrosis factor-a in the serum of 2-year-old and 16-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats were monitored before and after challenge with lipopolysaccharide. Results: No consistent tumor necrosis factor-a activity was found in the cerebrospinal fluid or blood of control animals. Intravenous administration of lipopolysaccharide (1.8 mg/kg) increased serum tumor necrosis factor-a levels but had no effect on tumor necrosis factor-a in the cerebrospinal fluid. Serum tumor necrosis factor-a increased much more in aged rats than in young rats. When lipopolysaccharide was injected intracerebroventricularly, tumor necrosis factor-a activity in cerebrospinal fluid increased significantly more in old rats than in young rats. Baseline levels of platelet activating factor in cerebrospinal fluid were significantly higher in old rats than in young rats, and the levels increased to a greater degree in aged rats on stimulation. Conclusions: Rats with the stroke risk factor of advanced age respond to lipopolysaccharide with a more exuberant production of tumor necrosis factor-a and platelet activating factor than young rats of the same strain. These findings are consistent with our working hypothesis that perivascular cells are capable of exaggerated signaling of endothelium through cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-a in animals with stroke risk factors. The effect of such signaling might be to prepare the endothelium of the local vascular segment for thrombosis or hemorrhage in accord with the local Shwartzman reaction paradigm.
Background and Pur pose: Interleukin-1ß is a proinftammatory cytokine produced by blood-borne and resident brain inftammatory cells. The present study was conducted to determine if interleukin-1ß mRNA was produced in the brain of rats subjected to permanent focal ischemia. Methods: Rat interleukin-1ß cDNA, synthesized from stimulated rat peritoneal macrophage RNA by reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction and c10ned in plasmid Bluescript KS+, was used to evaluate the expression of interleukin-1ß mRNA in cerebral cortex from spontaneously hypertensive rats and normotensive rats subjected to permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion. Interleukin-1ß mRNA was quantified by Northern blot analysis and compared with rat macrophage RNA standard. To correct for gel loading, blots were also analyzed with cyclophilin cDNA, which encodes an abundant, conserved protein that was unchanged by the experimental conditions. Results: Interleukin-1ß mRNA produced in the ischemic zone was significantly increased from 6 hours to 120 hours, with a maximum of211±24% ofinterleukin-1ß reference standard, ie, 0.2 ng stimulated rat macrophage RNA, mRNA compared with the level in nonischemic cortices (4±2%) at 12 hours after ischemia (P<.OI; n=6). Interleukin-1ß mRNA at 12 hours after ischemia was markedly elevated in hypertensive rats over levels found in two normotensive rat strains. Neurological deficits were also apparent only in the hypertensive rats. Conclusions: Brain interleukin-1ß mRNA is elevated acutely after permanent focal ischemia and especially in hypertensive rats. These data suggest that this potent proinflammatory and procoagulant cytokine might have a role in brain damage following ischemia.
Mutationsanalyse des Gens für das Zelladhäsionsmolekül CELSR1bei familiärer katatoner Schizophrenie
(2003)
In einer kürzlich durchgeführten Kopplungsanalyse der periodischen Katatonie wurden zwei Genloci auf Chromosom 15 und auf Chromosom 22 identifiziert. Für den Genlocus auf Chromosom 22p13.3 wurde ein LOD-Score von 1,85 (p=0,0018) ermittelt. Bei einer Durchsicht der in der fraglichen Region auf Chromosom 22 lokalisierten Gene unter Berücksichtigung ihrer Funktion, erschien CELSR1 als eines der vielversprechendsten Gene, nicht zuletzt, da es relativ selektiv im Nervensystem exprimiert wird. CELSR1 ist ein zur Gruppe der Cadherine gehörendes Zelladhäsionsmolekül. Cadherine spielen eine wichtige Rolle bei der Entwicklung des Gehirns, da sie eine Art Zellsortiermechanismus darstellen, der die Bildung spezifischer Hirnnuclei durch Zellagreggation ermöglicht. Darüber hinaus sind sie an der synaptischen Plastizität, wie sie bei neuronalen Lernvorgängen vorkommt, beteiligt [Huntley, (2002); Skaper, (2001)]. CELSR1 bildet innerhalb der Cadherine eine eigene Subgruppe. Seine Funktion scheint zum einen in der frühen Embryonalentwicklung zu liegen, zum anderen ist das Drosophila-Ortholog Flamingo einer der wichtigsten Modulatoren des Dendritenwachstums. Dementsprechend erscheint CELSR1 als interessanter Kandidat für Schizophrenien, bei denen sowohl Störungen in der Embryogenese des Gehirns, als auch eine Dysregulation der synaptischen Plastizität diskutiert wird. CELSR1 wurde in einer mutmaßlichen Promotorregion, dem Exonbereich, Exon/Intron-Übergängen und einem polymorphen Intron auf Mutationen untersucht. DNA-Proben von zwei der erkrankten Familienmitgliedern und drei Kontrollen wurden sequenziert und die so erhaltene Sequenz mittels eines Online-Analyseprogramms verifiziert. Dabei wurden 18 Allelvarianten, 12 stumme Transitionen, fünf missense-Mutationen und eine Insertion entdeckt, die aber in keiner der Patientenproben exklusiv auftrat. Mit grosser Wahrscheinlichkeit enthält CELSR1 keine krankheitsverursachende Mutation Die gefundenen Polymorphismen stellen eine interessante Ausgangsbasis für Assoziationsstudien dar.
Inhaltsübersicht zum Schwerpunktthema: - Neurobiologie, Ökologie und Evolution des Verhaltens - "Unsere Forschungen werden international sehr stark beachtet" - Kleine Gehirne - großer Fortschritt - Fruchtfliegen verhelfen Laufrobotern zu sicherem Tritt - Mehr als eine Nummer aus dem Flohzirkus - DNA-Fingerabdruck weist Sklaverei bei Ameisen nach u. a.
In this thesis, I introduce the Virtual Brain Protocol, which facilitates applications of the Standard Brain of Drosophila melanogaster. By providing reliable and extensible tools for the handling of neuroanatomical data, this protocol simplifies and organizes the recurring tasks involved in these applications. It is demonstrated that this protocol can also be used to generate average brains, i.e. to combine recordings of several brains with the same features such that the common features are emphasized. One of the most important steps of the Virtual Insect Protocol is the aligning of newly recorded data sets with the Standard Brain. After presenting methods commonly applied in a biological or medical context to align two different recordings, it is evaluated to what extent this alignment can be automated. To that end, existing Image Processing techniques are assessed. I demonstrate that these techniques do not satisfy the requirements needed to guarantee sensible alignments between two brains. Then, I analyze what needs to be taken into account in order to formulate an algorithm which satisfies the needs of the protocol. In the last chapter, I derive such an algorithm using methods from Information Theory, which bases the technique on a solid mathematical foundation. I show how Bayesian Inference can be applied to enhance the results further. It is demonstrated that this approach yields good results on very noisy images, detecting apparent boundaries between structures. The same approach can be extended to take additional knowledge into account, e.g. the relative position of the anatomical structures and their shape. It is shown how this extension can be utilized to segment a newly recorded brain automatically.
Das humane Chromosom 15 wurde bereits im Zusammenhang mit anderen Erkrankungen wie dem Marfan Syndrom und der Tay Sachs Erkrankung erwähnt. Für deren Genese wurden auf dem Chromosom gelegene Gene verantwortlich gemacht (Richard et al. 1994). Aufbauend auf den Vorarbeiten der Würzburger Arbeitsgruppe (Stöber et al. 2000, 2002; Meyer et al. 2002) wurden auf Chromosom 15 anhand der Lokalisation, der Funktion und dem Vorhandensein im Zentralnervensystem die Gene Cx36 und TYRO3 für die Mutationsanalyse ausgewählt, um sie nach der Methode von Sanger (Sanger et al. 1977) zu sequenzieren. Sowohl Cx36 als auch TYRO3 spielen eine zentrale Rolle in der Entwicklung und Zellinteraktion im ZNS. Es wäre denkbar, daß ein Defekt während der Synaptogenese im ZNS an der Krankheitsentstehung beteiligt ist, ebenso wie eine unzureichende Ausbildung von Gap junctions, an denen Cx36 maßgeblich beteiligt ist. Die Patienten-DNA wurde aus Blutproben von Probanden mit periodischer Katatonie gewonnen. Diese wurden aus der Familie 11 der bereits erwähnten Studie rekrutiert, die in drei Generationen von der Erkrankung betroffen ist und zehn gesunde, sowie 7 kranke Mitglieder zählt. Die Proben wurden zusammen mit solchen von gesunden Kontrollpersonen vergleichend sequenziert und auf Übereinstimmung mit den Einträgen der GenBank überprüft mit dem Ziel, Mutationen zu finden, die zu einem Defekt im Protein führen und zur Ausprägung der Krankheit beitragen, bzw. die Gene als Kandidaten auszuschließen.
Olfaction plays an important role in a variety of behaviors throughout the life of the European honeybee. Caste specific, environmentally induced and aging/experiencedependent differences in olfactory behavior represent a promising model to investigate mechanisms and consequences of phenotypic neuronal plasticity within the olfactory pathway of bees. This study focuses on the two different female phenotypes within the honeybee society, queens and workers. In this study, for the first time, structural plasticity in the honeybee brain was investigated at the synaptic level. Queens develop from fertilized eggs that are genetically not different from those that develop into workers. Adult queens are larger than workers, live much longer, and display different behaviors. Developmental trajectory is mainly determined by nutritional factors during the larval period. Within the subsequent post-capping period, brood incubation is precisely controlled, and pupae are incubated close to 35°C via thermoregulatory activity of adult workers. Behavioral studies suggest that lower rearing temperatures cause deficits in olfactory learning in adult bees. To unravel possible neuronal correlates for thermoregulatory and caste dependent influences on olfactory behavior, I examined structural plasticity of developing as well as mature olfactory synaptic neuropils. Brood cells were reared in incubators and pupal as well as adult brains were dissected for immunofluorescent staining. To label synaptic neuropils, I used an antibody to synapsin and fluophore-conjugated phalloidin which binds to filamentous (F-) actin. During development, neuronal F-actin is expressed in growing neurons, and in the mature nervous system, F-actin is most abundant in presynaptic terminals and dendritic spines. In the adult brains, this double labeling technique enables the quantification of distinct synaptic complexes microglomeruli [MG]) within olfactory and visual input regions of the mushroom bodies (MBs) prominent higher sensory integration centers. Analyses during larval-adult metamorphosis revealed that the ontogenetic plasticity in the female castes is reflected in the development of the brain. Distinct differences among the timing of the formation of primary and secondary olfactory neuropils were also revealed. These differences at different levels of the olfactory pathway in queens and workers correlate with differences in tasks performed by both female castes. In addition to caste specific differences, thermoregulation of sealed brood cells has important consequences on the synaptic organization within the MB calyces of adult workers and queens. Even small differences in rearing temperatures affected the number of MG in the olfactory calyx lip regions. In queens, the highest number of MG in the olfactory lip developed at 1°C below the temperature where the maximum of MG is found in workers (33.5 vs. 34.5°C). Apart from this developmental neuronal plasticity, this study exhibits a striking age-related plasticity of MG throughout the extended life span of queens. Interestingly, MG numbers in the olfactory lip increased with age, but decreased within the adjacent visual collar of the MB calyx. To conclude, developmental and adult plasticity of the synaptic circuitry in the sensory input regions of the MB calyx may underlie caste- and age-specific adaptations and long-term plasticity in behavior.