Refine
Year of publication
- 2024 (272)
- 2023 (1039)
- 2022 (1434)
- 2021 (1554)
- 2020 (1242)
- 2019 (994)
- 2018 (883)
- 2017 (738)
- 2016 (876)
- 2015 (897)
- 2014 (903)
- 2013 (811)
- 2012 (832)
- 2011 (745)
- 2010 (576)
- 2009 (441)
- 2008 (431)
- 2007 (410)
- 2006 (420)
- 2005 (403)
- 2004 (397)
- 2003 (308)
- 2002 (277)
- 2001 (164)
- 2000 (85)
- 1999 (22)
- 1998 (7)
- 1997 (4)
- 1996 (7)
- 1995 (12)
- 1994 (215)
- 1993 (214)
- 1992 (197)
- 1991 (177)
- 1990 (159)
- 1989 (147)
- 1988 (132)
- 1987 (122)
- 1986 (106)
- 1985 (74)
- 1984 (69)
- 1983 (59)
- 1982 (53)
- 1981 (50)
- 1980 (57)
- 1979 (48)
- 1978 (41)
- 1977 (36)
- 1976 (40)
- 1975 (28)
- 1974 (19)
- 1973 (26)
- 1972 (24)
- 1971 (15)
- 1970 (14)
- 1969 (10)
- 1968 (8)
- 1967 (2)
- 1965 (3)
- 1964 (2)
- 1963 (2)
- 1961 (1)
- 1845 (1)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (8848)
- Journal article (8209)
- Complete part of issue (703)
- Book article / Book chapter (479)
- Book (217)
- Conference Proceeding (202)
- Preprint (129)
- Review (115)
- Master Thesis (104)
- Working Paper (104)
Language
- English (10680)
- German (8554)
- French (58)
- Multiple languages (22)
- Spanish (22)
- Russian (6)
- Italian (2)
- Portuguese (2)
Keywords
- Würzburg (736)
- Universität (668)
- Wuerzburg (666)
- Wurzburg (659)
- University (608)
- Organische Chemie (135)
- Psychologie (127)
- Anorganische Chemie (124)
- Maus (124)
- Toxikologie (123)
Institute
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (2239)
- Graduate School of Life Sciences (999)
- Physikalisches Institut (786)
- Institut für Anorganische Chemie (673)
- Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik I (633)
- Institut für Psychologie (583)
- Institut für Organische Chemie (545)
- Medizinische Klinik und Poliklinik II (536)
- Klinik und Poliklinik für Allgemein-, Viszeral-, Gefäß- und Kinderchirurgie (Chirurgische Klinik I) (498)
- Neurologische Klinik und Poliklinik (495)
Schriftenreihe
- Cultural Animal Studies, Band 3 (24)
- Spezielle Didaktik der Sportarten (2)
- Aesthetische Eigenzeiten, 17 (1)
- Akten des ... Symposiums des Mediävistenverbandes; 13,2 (1)
- Alter Orient und Altes Testament : Sonderreihe Veröffentlichungen zur Kultur und Geschichte des Alten Orients ; 3 (1)
- Aventiuren; 13 (1)
- Berichte aus der Informatik (1)
- Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Studies (1)
- Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Yearbook (1)
- Epistemata. Reihe Literaturwissenschaft ; 483 (1)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
- VolkswagenStiftung (24)
- Johns Hopkins School of Medicine (18)
- Fraunhofer-Institut für Silicatforschung ISC (8)
- IZKF Nachwuchsgruppe Geweberegeneration für muskuloskelettale Erkrankungen (7)
- Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur, Mainz (6)
- DFG Forschungsgruppe 2757 / Lokale Selbstregelungen im Kontext schwacher Staatlichkeit in Antike und Moderne (LoSAM) (6)
- Clinical Trial Center (CTC) / Zentrale für Klinische Studien Würzburg (ZKSW) (5)
- Helmholtz Institute for RNA-based Infection Research (HIRI) (5)
- Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (5)
- Universität Leipzig (5)
ResearcherID
- B-1911-2015 (1)
- B-4606-2017 (1)
- C-2593-2016 (1)
- D-1221-2009 (1)
- D-1250-2010 (1)
- D-3057-2014 (1)
- I-5818-2014 (1)
- J-8841-2015 (1)
- M-1240-2017 (1)
- N-2030-2015 (1)
Skin cytokine expression in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome is not different from controls
(2014)
Background
Fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) is a chronic pain syndrome of unknown etiology. There is increasing evidence for small nerve fiber impairment in a subgroup of patients with FMS. We investigated whether skin cytokine and delta opioid receptor (DOR) gene expression in FMS patients differs from controls as one potential contributor to small nerve fiber sensitization.
Methods
We investigated skin punch biopsies of 25 FMS patients, ten patients with monopolar depression but no pain, and 35 healthy controls. Biopsies were obtained from the lateral upper thigh and lower calf. Gene expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF), interleukin (IL)-6, and IL-8 and of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 was analyzed using quantitative real-time PCR and normalizing data to 18sRNA as housekeeping gene. Additionally, we assessed DOR gene expression.
Results
All cytokines and DOR were detectable in skin samples of FMS patients, patients with depression, and healthy controls without intergroup difference. Also, gene expression was not different in skin of the upper and lower leg within and between the groups and in FMS patient subgroups.
Conclusions
Skin cytokine and DOR gene expression does not differ between patients with FMS and controls. Our results do not support a role of the investigated cytokines in sensitization of peripheral nerve fibers as a potential mechanism of small fiber pathology in FMS.
Background
Fabry disease is an inborn lysosomal storage disorder which is associated with small fiber neuropathy. We set out to investigate small fiber conduction in Fabry patients using pain-related evoked potentials (PREP).
Methods
In this case–control study we prospectively studied 76 consecutive Fabry patients for electrical small fiber conduction in correlation with small fiber function and morphology. Data were compared with healthy controls using non-parametric statistical tests. All patients underwent neurological examination and were investigated with pain and depression questionnaires. Small fiber function (quantitative sensory testing, QST), morphology (skin punch biopsy), and electrical conduction (PREP) were assessed and correlated. Patients were stratified for gender and disease severity as reflected by renal function.
Results
All Fabry patients (31 men, 45 women) had small fiber neuropathy. Men with Fabry disease showed impaired cold (p < 0.01) and warm perception (p < 0.05), while women did not differ from controls. Intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENFD) was reduced at the lower leg (p < 0.001) and the back (p < 0.05) mainly of men with impaired renal function. When investigating A-delta fiber conduction with PREP, men but not women with Fabry disease had lower amplitudes upon stimulation at face (p < 0.01), hands (p < 0.05), and feet (p < 0.01) compared to controls. PREP amplitudes further decreased with advance in disease severity. PREP amplitudes and warm (p < 0.05) and cold detection thresholds (p < 0.01) at the feet correlated positively in male patients.
Conclusion
Small fiber conduction is impaired in men with Fabry disease and worsens with advanced disease severity. PREP are well-suited to measure A-delta fiber conduction.
A high load of white matter lesions and enlarged basilar arteries have been shown in selected patients with Fabry disease, a disorder associated with an increased stroke risk. We studied a large cohort of patients with Fabry disease to differentially investigate white matter lesion load and cerebral artery diameters. We retrospectively analyzed cranial magnetic resonance imaging scans of 87 consecutive Fabry patients, 20 patients with ischemic stroke, and 36 controls. We determined the white matter lesion load applying the Fazekas score on fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequences and measured the diameters of cerebral arteries on 3D-reconstructions of the time-of-flight-MR-angiography scans. Data of different Fabry patient subgroups (males – females; normal – impaired renal function) were compared with data of patients with stroke and controls. A history of stroke or transient ischemic attacks was present in 4/30 males (13%) and 5/57 (9%) females with Fabry disease, all in the anterior circulation. Only one man with Fabry disease showed confluent cerebral white matter lesions in the Fazekas score assessment (1%). Male Fabry patients had a larger basilar artery (p<0.01) and posterior cerebral artery diameter (p<0.05) compared to male controls. This was independent of disease severity as measured by renal function and did not lead to changes in arterial blood flow properties. A basilar artery diameter of >3.2 mm distinguished between men with Fabry disease and controls (sensitivity: 87%, specificity: 86%, p<0.001), but not from stroke patients. Enlarged arterial diameters of the posterior circulation are present only in men with Fabry disease independent of disease severity.
Objective: We investigated cerebral opioid receptor binding potential in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) using positron-emission-tomography (PET) and correlated our results with patients’ systemic interleukin-4 (IL-4) gene expression.
Methods: In this pilot study, seven FMS patients (1 man, 6 women) agreed to participate in experimental PET scans. All patients underwent neurological examination, were investigated with questionnaires for pain, depression, and FMS symptoms. Additionally, blood for IL-4 gene expression analysis was withdrawn at two time points with a median latency of 1.3 years. Patients were investigated in a PET scanner using the opioid receptor ligand F-18-fluoro-ethyl-diprenorphine ([18F]FEDPN) and results were compared with laboratory normative values.
Results: Neurological examination was normal in all FMS patients. Reduced opioid receptor binding was found in mid cingulate cortex compared to healthy controls (p < 0.005). Interestingly, three patients with high systemic IL-4 gene expression had increased opioid receptor binding in the fronto-basal cortex compared to those with low IL-4 gene expression (p < 0.005).
Conclusion: Our data give further evidence for a reduction in cortical opioid receptor availability in FMS patients as another potential central nervous system contributor to pain in FMS.
Fabry disease is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder due to impaired activity of alpha-galactosidase A with intracellular accumulation of globotriaosylceramide. Associated small fiber pathology leads to characteristic pain in Fabry disease. We systematically assessed sensory system, physical activity, metabolic parameters, and morphology of male and female mice with alpha-galactosidase A deficiency (Fabry ko) from 2 to 27 months of age and compared results with those of age- and gender-matched wild-type littermates of C57Bl/6J background. Results From the age of two months, male and female Fabry mice showed mechanical hypersensitivity (p < 0.001 each) compared to wild-type littermates. Young Fabry ko mice of both genders were hypersensitive to heat stimulation (p < 0.01) and developed heat hyposensitivity with aging (p < 0.05), while cold hyposensitivity was present constantly in young (p < 0.01) and old (p < 0.05) Fabry ko mice compared to wild-type littermates. Stride angle increased only in male Fabry ko mice with aging (p < 0.01) in comparison to wild-type littermates. Except for young female mice, male (p < 0.05) and female (p < 0.01) Fabry ko mice had a higher body weight than wild-type littermates. Old male Fabry ko mice were physically less active than their wild-type littermates (p < 0.05), had lower chow intake (p < 0.001), and lost more weight (p < 0.001) in a one-week treadmill experiment than wild-type littermates. Also, Fabry ko mice showed spontaneous pain protective behavior and developed orofacial dysmorphism resembling patients with Fabry disease.
Conclusions. Mice with alpha-galactosidase A deficiency show age-dependent and distinct deficits of the sensory system. alpha-galactosidase A-deficient mice seem to model human Fabry disease and may be helpful when studying the pathophysiology of Fabry-associated pain.
The investigation of the Earth system and interplays between its components is of utmost importance to enhance the understanding of the impacts of global climate change on the Earth's land surface. In this context, Earth observation (EO) provides valuable long-term records covering an abundance of land surface variables and, thus, allowing for large-scale analyses to quantify and analyze land surface dynamics across various Earth system components. In view of this, the geographical entity of river basins was identified as particularly suitable for multivariate time series analyses of the land surface, as they naturally cover diverse spheres of the Earth. Many remote sensing missions with different characteristics are available to monitor and characterize the land surface. Yet, only a few spaceborne remote sensing missions enable the generation of spatio-temporally consistent time series with equidistant observations over large areas, such as the MODIS instrument.
In order to summarize available remote sensing-based analyses of land surface dynamics in large river basins, a detailed literature review of 287 studies was performed and several research gaps were identified. In this regard, it was found that studies rarely analyzed an entire river basin, but rather focused on study areas at subbasin or regional scale. In addition, it was found that transboundary river basins remained understudied and that studies largely focused on selected riparian countries. Moreover, the analysis of environmental change was generally conducted using a single EO-based land surface variable, whereas a joint exploration of multivariate land surface variables across spheres was found to be rarely performed.
To address these research gaps, a methodological framework enabling (1) the preprocessing and harmonization of multi-source time series as well as (2) the statistical analysis of a multivariate feature space was required. For development and testing of a methodological framework that is transferable in space and time, the transboundary river basins Indus, Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna (IGBM) in South Asia were selected as study area, having a size equivalent to around eight times the size of Germany. These basins largely depend on water resources from monsoon rainfall and High Mountain Asia which holds the largest ice mass outside the polar regions. In total, over 1.1 billion people live in this region and in parts largely depend on these water resources which are indispensable for the world's largest connected irrigated croplands and further domestic needs as well. With highly heterogeneous geographical settings, these river basins allow for a detailed analysis of the interplays between multiple spheres, including the anthroposphere, biosphere, cryosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere, and atmosphere.
In this thesis, land surface dynamics over the last two decades (December 2002 - November 2020) were analyzed using EO time series on vegetation condition, surface water area, and snow cover area being based on MODIS imagery, the DLR Global WaterPack and JRC Global Surface Water Layer, as well as the DLR Global SnowPack, respectively. These data were evaluated in combination with further climatic, hydrological, and anthropogenic variables to estimate their influence on the three EO land surface variables. The preprocessing and harmonization of the time series was conducted using the implemented framework. The resulting harmonized feature space was used to quantify and analyze land surface dynamics by means of several statistical time series analysis techniques which were integrated into the framework. In detail, these methods involved (1) the calculation of trends using the Mann-Kendall test in association with the Theil-Sen slope estimator, (2) the estimation of changes in phenological metrics using the Timesat tool, (3) the evaluation of driving variables using the causal discovery approach Peter and Clark Momentary Conditional Independence (PCMCI), and (4) additional correlation tests to analyze the human influence on vegetation condition and surface water area.
These analyses were performed at annual and seasonal temporal scale and for diverse spatial units, including grids, river basins and subbasins, land cover and land use classes, as well as elevation-dependent zones. The trend analyses of vegetation condition mostly revealed significant positive trends. Irrigated and rainfed croplands were found to contribute most to these trends. The trend magnitudes were particularly high in arid and semi-arid regions. Considering surface water area, significant positive trends were obtained at annual scale. At grid scale, regional and seasonal clusters with significant negative trends were found as well. Trends for snow cover area mostly remained stable at annual scale, but significant negative trends were observed in parts of the river basins during distinct seasons. Negative trends were also found for the elevation-dependent zones, particularly at high altitudes. Also, retreats in the seasonal duration of snow cover area were found in parts of the river basins. Furthermore, for the first time, the application of the causal discovery algorithm on a multivariate feature space at seasonal temporal scale revealed direct and indirect links between EO land surface variables and respective drivers. In general, vegetation was constrained by water availability, surface water area was largely influenced by river discharge and indirectly by precipitation, and snow cover area was largely controlled by precipitation and temperature with spatial and temporal variations. Additional analyses pointed towards positive human influences on increasing trends in vegetation greenness. The investigation of trends and interplays across spheres provided new and valuable insights into the past state and the evolution of the land surface as well as on relevant climatic and hydrological driving variables. Besides the investigated river basins in South Asia, these findings are of great value also for other river basins and geographical regions.
Breaking inversion symmetry in crystalline solids enables the formation of spin-polarized electronic states by spin-orbit coupling without the need for magnetism. A variety of interesting physical phenomena related to this effect have been intensively investigated in recent years, including the Rashba effect, topological insulators and Weyl semimetals. In this work, the interplay of inversion symmetry breaking and spin-orbit coupling and, in particular their general influence on the character of electronic states, i.e., on the spin and orbital degrees of freedom, is investigated experimentally. Two different types of suitable model systems are studied: two-dimensional surface states for which the Rashba effect arises from the inherently broken inversion symmetry at the surface, and a Weyl semimetal, for which inversion symmetry is broken in the three-dimensional crystal structure. Angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy provides momentum-resolved access to the spin polarization and the orbital composition of electronic states by means of photoelectron spin detection and dichroism with polarized light. The experimental results shown in this work are also complemented and supported by ab-initio density functional theory calculations and simple model considerations.
Altogether, it is shown that the breaking of inversion symmetry has a decisive influence on the Bloch wave function, namely, the formation of an orbital angular momentum. This mechanism is, in turn, of fundamental importance both for the physics of the surface Rashba effect and the topology of the Weyl semimetal TaAs.
Since the early days of Dirac flux quantization, magnetic monopoles have been sought after as a potential corollary of quantized electric charge. As opposed to magnetic monopoles embedded into the theory of electromagnetism, Weyl semimetals (WSM) exhibit Berry flux monopoles in reciprocal parameter space. As a function of crystal momentum, such monopoles locate at the crossing point of spin-polarized bands forming the Weyl cone. Here, we report momentum-resolved spectroscopic signatures of Berry flux monopoles in TaAs as a paradigmatic WSM. We carried out angle-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy at bulk-sensitive soft X-ray energies (SX-ARPES) combined with photoelectron spin detection and circular dichroism. The experiments reveal large spin- and orbital-angular-momentum (SAM and OAM) polarizations of the Weyl-fermion states, resulting from the broken crystalline inversion symmetry in TaAs. Supported by first-principles calculations, our measurements image signatures of a topologically non-trivial winding of the OAM at the Weyl nodes and unveil a chirality-dependent SAM of the Weyl bands. Our results provide directly bulk-sensitive spectroscopic support for the non-trivial band topology in the WSM TaAs, promising to have profound implications for the study of quantum-geometric effects in solids. Weyl semimetals exhibit Berry flux monopoles in momentum-space, but direct experimental evidence has remained elusive. Here, the authors reveal topologically non-trivial winding of the orbital-angular-momentum at the Weyl nodes and a chirality-dependent spin-angular-momentum of the Weyl bands, as a direct signature of the Berry flux monopoles in TaAs.
Background: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis on cytokine levels in patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS). Methods: Through December 2010 we systematically reviewed the databases PubMed, MEDLINE, and PsycINFO and screened the reference lists of 22 review articles for suitable original articles. Original articles investigating cytokines in patients with FMS were included. Data were extracted by two independent authors. Differences of the cytokine levels of FMS patients and controls were summarized by standardized mean differences (SMD) using a random effects model. Study quality was assessed applying methodological scores: modified Center of Evidence Based Medicine, Newcastle-Ottawa-Scale, and Würzburg Methodological Quality Score. Results: Twenty-five articles were included investigating 1255 FMS patients and 800 healthy controls. Data of 13/25 studies entered meta-analysis. The overall methodological quality of studies was low. The results of the majority of studies were not comparable because methods, investigated material, and investigated target cytokines differed. Systematic review of the selected 25 articles revealed that FMS patients had higher serum levels of interleukin (IL)-1 receptor antagonist, IL-6, and IL-8, and higher plasma levels of IL-8. Meta-analysis of eligible studies showed that FMS patients had higher plasma IL-6 levels compared to controls (SMD = -0.34 [-0.64, -0.03] 95% CI; p = 0.03). The majority of investigated cytokines were not different between patients and controls. Conclusions: The pathophysiological role of cytokines in FMS is still unclear. Studies of higher quality and with higher numbers of subjects are needed.
Das kolorektale Karzinom ist in der westlichen Welt die zweithäufigste Todesursache bei Männer und Frauen. Wichtige Pathomechanismen der kolorektalen Karzinome konnten in den letzten Jahren aufgedeckt werden. Die Anhäufung von genetischen Alterationen spielen sowohl bei sporadischen, als auch bei den hereditären Formen eine wichtige Rolle. Zwei molekulargenetische Hauptwege sind bei der kolorektalen Karzinogenese identifiziert worden: erstens der Tumorsuppressor-Pathway, bei dem es zu Alterationen in Tumorsuppresor- und Onkogenen kommt und zweitens der Mutatior-Pathway, der auf genetischen Alterationen in DNA-mismatch-Reparatur-Genen beruht, die zu einer genetischen Instabilität führen mit einer hohen Mutationsrate in repetitiven DNA-Sequenzen (sog. Mikrosatelliten). Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass oxidativer Stress, der durch die Bildung von H2O2 und anderen reaktiven Sauerstoffspezies (ROS) hervorgerufen wird, zur Entstehung von zellulären und DNA-Schäden wie z.B. oxidative Basenschäden, die ihrerseits u.a. die Entstehung von fixen Punktmutationen, Fragmentation der Desoxiribose und DNA-Strangbrüche initiieren, führen kann. Diese Veränderungen und auch die Mismatch-Reparatur-Defizienz begünstigen die Tumorprogression im Kolon. Es wird geschätzt, dass durch ROS täglich ca.20 000 hits pro Zelle verursacht werden. Es existieren sowohl extrazelluläre, als auch zelluläre antioxidative Abwhrsysteme, die Biomoleküle wie u.a. die DNA vor dem oxidativen Stress schützen. Unter diesen protektiven Enzymen gibt es neben der Superoxidismutase und der Katalase auch zahlreiche Selenoproteine, die Selenocystein in ihrem aktiven Zentrum tragen. Zu diesen Enzymen, die antioxidative Funktionen wahrnehmen gehören u.a. die Glutathionperoxidase, die Thioredoxinreduktase und das Selenoprotein P. Die Glutathionperoxidase-Familie besteht aus der cytosolischen Glutathioperoxidase (cGPx), der plasmatischen Glutathionperoxidase (pGPx), der gastrointestinalen Glutathionperoxidase (GI-GPx) und der Phospholipid-Hydroperoxid-Glutathionperoxidase (PH-GPx). Diese Enzymfamilie ist an der Reduktion von Hydroperoxiden beteiligt, wobei sie Glutathion als Cofaktor benutzt. Die Thioredoxinreduktase-Familie (TrxR-alpha und Trxr-beta) regeneriert oxidiertes Thioresoxin, das in die DNA-Synthese involviert ist und auch in zelluläre Redox-Regulationssysteme eingreift und Transkriptionsfaktoren beeinflusst. Das Selenoprotein P, das bis zu 10 Seleocysteinreste pro Molekül enthält, baut Peroxinitrit ab, das seinerseits ein starkes Agens bei der Nitrosylation von Biomolekülen ist. Zusätzlich reduziert Selenoprotein P auch Phospholipid-Hydroperoxide, wenn auch weniger effektiv als PH-GPx. Es konnte in Vorarbeiten gezeigt werden, dass Selenoproteine im Gastrointestinaltrakt eine differentielle Expression aufweisen. Kürzlich konnte in unserer Arbeitsgruppe die inverse mRNA-Expression selnocysteinhaltigen Proteine GI-GPx und Selenoprotein P in kolorektalen Adenomen im Vergleich zur Normalmukosa charakterisiert werden. Dabei zeigte sich eine dramatische Abnahme der Selenoprotein P-Expression, während die Expression der GI-GPx signifikant erhöht war. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit untersuchten wir die Expression der GI-GPx in kolorektalen Karzinomen und Kolonkarzinom-Zelllinien, um auf Ebene der Selenoprotein-kodierenden Gene nach Alterationen zu suchen, die die veränderte Expression mit verursachen könnten.