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Early-onset torsion dystonia (DYT-TOR1A, DYT1) is an inherited hyperkinetic movement disorder caused by a mutation of the TOR1A gene encoding the torsinA protein. DYT-TOR1A is characterized as a network disorder of the central nervous system (CNS), including predominantly the cortico-basal ganglia-thalamo-cortical loop resulting in a severe generalized dystonic phenotype. The pathophysiology of DYTTOR1A is not fully understood. Molecular levels up to large-scale network levels of the CNS are suggested to be affected in the pathophysiology of DYT-TOR1A. The reduced penetrance of 30% - 40% indicates a gene-environmental interaction, hypothesized as “second hit”. The lack of appropriate and phenotypic DYT-TOR1A animal models encouraged us to verify the “second hit” hypothesis through a unilateral peripheral nerve trauma of the sciatic nerve in a transgenic asymptomatic DYT-TOR1A rat model (∆ETorA), overexpressing the human mutated torsinA protein. In a multiscale approach, this animal model was characterized phenotypically and pathophysiologically.
Nerve-injured ∆ETorA rats revealed dystonia-like movements (DLM) with a partially generalized phenotype. A physiomarker of human dystonia, describing increased theta oscillation in the globus pallidus internus (GPi), was found in the entopeduncular nucleus (EP), the rodent equivalent to the human GPi, of nerve-injured ∆ETorA rats. Altered oscillation patterns were also observed in the primary motor cortex. Highfrequency stimulation (HFS) of the EP reduced DLM and modulated altered oscillatory activity in the EP and primary motor cortex in nerve-injured ∆ETorA rats. Moreover, the dopaminergic system in ∆ETorA rats demonstrated a significant increased striatal dopamine release and dopamine turnover. Whole transcriptome analysis revealed differentially expressed genes of the circadian clock and the energy metabolism, thereby pointing towards novel, putative pathways in the pathophysiology of DYTTOR1A dystonia.
In summary, peripheral nerve trauma can trigger DLM in genetically predisposed asymptomatic ΔETorA rats leading to neurobiological alteration in the central motor network on multiple levels and thereby supporting the “second hit” hypothesis. This novel symptomatic DYT-TOR1A rat model, based on a DYT-TOR1A genetic background, may prove as a valuable chance for DYT-TOR1A dystonia, to further investigate the pathomechanism in more detail and to establish new treatment strategies.
Fulminant myocarditis is rare but a potentially life-threatening disease. Acute or mild myocarditis following acute ischemia is generally associated with a profound activation of the host’s immune system. On one hand this is mandatory to protect the host’s heart by fighting the invading agents (i.e., bacteria, viruses or other microbial agents) and/or to induce healing and repair processes in the damaged myocardium. On other hand, uncontrolled activation of the immune system may result in the generation of auto-reactive (not always beneficial) immune cells.
Myocarditis or inflammatory cardiomyopathy is characterized by focal or diffuse infiltrates, myocyte necrosis and/or apoptosis and subsequent fibrotic replacement of the heart muscle. In humans, about 30% of the myocarditis-patients develop dilated cardiomyopathy. As the clinical picture of myocarditis is multifaceted, it is difficult to diagnose the disease. Therefore, the main goal of the present work was to test and further develop novel non-invasive methods for the detection of myocardial inflammation by employing both contrast enhanced MRI techniques as well as novel nuclear tracers that are suitable for in vivo PET/ SPECT imaging.
As a part of this thesis, a pre-clinical animal model was successfully established by immunizing female Lewis rats with whole-porcine cardiac myosin (CM). Induction of Experimental Autoimmune Myocarditis (EAM) is considered successful when anti-myosin antibody titers are increased more than 100-fold over control animals and pericardial effusion develops. In addition, cardiac tissues from EAM-rats versus controls were analyzed for the expression of various pro-inflammatory and fibrosis markers. To further exploit non-invasive MRI techniques for the detection of myocarditis, our EAM-rats were injected either with (1) ultra-small Paramagnetic iron oxide particles (USPIO’s; Feraheme®), allowing for in vivo imaging , (2) micron sized paramagnetic iron oxide particles (MPIO) for ex vivo inflammatory cell-tracking by cMRI, or (3) with different radioactive nuclear tracers (67gallium citrate, 68gallium-labeled somatostatin analogue, and 68gallium-labeled cyclic RGD-peptide) which in the present work have been employed for autoradiographic imaging, but in principle are also suitable for in vivo nuclear imaging (PET/SPECT). In order to compare imaging results with histology, consecutive heart sections were stained with hematoxylin & eosin (HE, for cell infiltrates) and Masson Goldner trichrome (MGT, for fibrosis); in addition, immuno-stainings were performed with anti-CD68 (macrophages), anti-SSRT2A (somatostatin receptor type 2A), anti-CD61 (β3-integrins) and anti-CD31 (platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1).
Sera from immunized rats strongly reacted with cardiac myosin. In immunized rats, echocardiography and subsequent MRI revealed huge amounts of pericardial effusion (days 18-21). Analysis of the kinetics of myocardial infiltrates revealed maximal macrophage invasion between days 14 and 28. Disappearance of macrophages resulted in replacement-fibrosis in formerly cell-infiltrated myocardial areas. This finding was confirmed by the time-dependent differential expression of corresponding cytokines in the myocardium. Immunized animals reacted either with an early or a late pattern of post-inflammation fibrosis. Areas with massive cellular infiltrates were easily detectible in autoradiograms showing a high focal uptake of 67gallium-citrate and 68gallium labeled somatostatin analogues (68Ga DOTA-TATE). Myocardium with a loss of cardiomyocytes presented a high uptake of 68gallium labeled cyclic RGD-peptide (68Ga NOTA-RGD). MRI cell tracking experiments with Feraheme® as the contrast-agent were inconclusive; however, strikingly better results were obtained when MPIOs were used as a contrast-agent: histological findings correlated well with in vivo and ex vivo MPIO-enhanced MRI images.
Imaging of myocardial inflammatory processes including the kinetics of macrophage invasion after microbial or ischemic damage is still a major challenge in, both animal models and in human patients. By applying a broad panel of biochemical, histological, molecular and imaging methods, we show here that different patterns of reactivity may occur upon induction of myocarditis using one and the same rat strain. In particular, immunized Lewis rats may react either with an early or a late pattern of macrophage invasion and subsequent post-inflammation fibrosis. Imaging results achieved in the acute inflammatory phase of the myocarditis with MPIOs, 67gallium citrate and 68gallium linked to somatostatin will stimulate further development of contrast agents and radioactive-nuclear tracers for the non-invasive detection of acute myocarditis and in the near future perhaps even in human patients.
Assessing particle deposition in a representative in vitro model of the rat respiratory tract
(2014)
The aim of this thesis was to develop an in vitro model (IVR) of the rat lung for the purpose of investigating the deposition of drug particles in the rat airways. The model attempted to account for the affect of drug product characteristics and physiological parameters on deposition in the lungs. In addition, the model outputs were compared with in vivo lung deposition results from live rats and in silico predictions using published computer model of lung deposition in pre-clinical species.
Initial work focussed on developing an aerosol exposure system capable of dosing small rodent to a range of airborne test materials. The system consists of two main parts; a fluidised bed aerosol generator and connection of the generator output to a nose only exposure chamber capable of accommodating 12 small animals in a single layer. In addition, an aerodynamic particle spectrometer (APS) was installed for continuously measuring the size distribution and airborne concentration of aerosol particles generated in the exposure chamber. System validation showed acceptable degree of variation of the test material tested, Fluorescent Microspheres (FMS) throughout the exposure chamber (CV < 15.0%). Particle size (MMAD ± GSD) using the APS was shown to be stable throughout the exposure periods.
The IVR model developed in this project was based on a number of euthanased (n=7), female Sprague-Dawley rats (weight: 372 ± 56 g), which underwent high-resolution micro-CT scans. The physical model consisted of five sub sections; Extra-Thoracic region containing the snout and nasophyarynx, trachea-bronchial region containing the trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles. All sections of the model were attached to one another in numerical order and housed within a containment unit. At the rear end of the cast, a flexible diaphragm was attached in order to collect the fraction of inhaled particles exiting the TB section and possibly reaching the lung, referred to as the Post-TB section.
A study was conducted to assess the influence of inhalation parameters such as the breathing frequency and tidal volume on total and regional dose distribution using FMS as test material. The major finding of this study was the demonstration of the model sensitivity to changes in breathing parameters especially respiratory frequency, where the data showed increased deposition in the peripheral regions of the model with decreased respiratory frequency. Other studies assessed the effect of particle characteristics on deposition on the IVR model, such as particle size, dose increase and formulation changes.
The results assessing particle size effect showed a slightly higher deposition levels for the 4µm sized particles versus 2µm sized particles in the head region; 90.8 ± 3.6% and 88.2 ± 6.6%. However, this difference did not reach statistical significance (P> 0.05) probably due to the polydispersity of aerosolised FMS particles. In addition, the regional deposition analysis showed an increased lung peripheral deposition with the smaller particles. In addition, the model was shown to be sensitive to changes in formulation composition mediated by inclusion of MgSt.
The next stage of work was to validate the model in terms of comparison with lung deposition for in vivo rats. For lung deposition comparison, the absolute amount deposited in the IVR lung model (expressed as µg/kg) was shown to have a reasonably strong correlation with in vivo lung concentration measures (µg/kg); R2= 0.66, P < 0.05. Compounds were predicted well and within 2-folds of the measured lung deposition values. However, knowing the variability in biological systems and the multiple components required to estimate lung doses, predictions within 2-fold of the measured values would seem reasonable
In terms of comparison with in silico model predictions using MPPD, similar deposition levels were noted between the two models, particularly when the data was expressed as percentage of total particles inhaled. The data showed the highest deposition levels were noted in the head region (> 80%) and less than 5.0% deposition for the peripheral lung fractions.
With regards to using the IVR model to assess the relationship between dose, particle size and efficacy, an in vivo study using FP with different particle sizes (2.0 and 4.0 µm) but same doses ( 100 and 1000 µg/kg). This study demonstrated that exposure of rat to FP powder resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of neutrophils in BAL fluids. However, a clear difference in neutrophils suppression was demonstrated for equivalent doses but different particle sizes of FP, where the smaller FP particles (2.0 µm) induced a greater level of neutrophils suppression in comparison with larger FP particles (4.0 µm). In addition, a reasonably good correlation for the relationship between lung deposition in the IVR model and a neutrophils suppression level was demonstrated. Furthermore this data support the hypothesis that regional deposition is an important determinant in efficacy. Therefore, this suggests that the IVR model may be a useful as a tool to describe in vivo efficacy with in vitro data. However, further studies should be conducted to evaluate the validity of this model and relationship.
The IVR model has a number of important limitations. First, the model is based on scans up to generation four of the rat respiratory tract as this represented the limits of the micro-CT scanning technology at the time of this study. Therefore deposition in the deeper region of the lung may not be reflected precisely in the IVR model. Second, the regional deposition data generated using the model tended to show an overestimation of deposition in head region and an underestimation of deposition in the peripheral regions of the lung, in comparison with in vivo lung deposition data. Third, the current model does not take into account lung clearance. However, the amount of the drug present in the in vivo lungs is dependent on numerous physiological processes such as dissolution, passive or active absorption into the systemic circulation, binding to lung tissue and mucociliary clearance. Consequently, the results generated using this IVR model for drug molecules with high lung clearance rate should be treated with some caution.
Future work extending this research could go in a number of directions. In this research, a representative model of the rat respiratory tract was constructed from analysis of imaging data from a number of euthanised Sprague-Dawley rats. This model represented the “average respiratory tract” in terms of dimensions of Sprague-Dawley rats. However, there is considerable variability in the airway dimensions between rats. This variability encompasses a number of factors such as the strains of rats, sex and age, and disease state. Thus, it may be possible to produce a small number of airway models to represent small and large rats and scaled to represent the extrathoracic and peripheral regions based on literature reports of their dimensions in different rat populations. This approach will then enable the effect of intersubject airway dimensions for different rat populations on aerosol deposition to be thoroughly examined.
In addition, due to the limitation of the micro-CT technology used to construct the physical IVR model, detailed morphology only up to generation 4 were captured. However, recent advances in MRI technology, such as the use of in situ-MRI based scanning technology have enabled rat airway morphometry to be extended to 16 airway generation. This coupled with improvements in the resolutions of rapid-prototyping process means it may be possible to construct a rat model that reflects the in vivo lung morphology more accurately, and thus enable greater understanding of the link between aerosol deposition and airway geometry.
In conclusion, a model cast of the rat lung was developed and validated to allow the deposition of inhaled particles in the rat lung to be investigated. The model may be used to estimate the lung concentration in vivo rats in preference to exposure concentration measurements based on filter samples which have been shown to be a poor indicator of the lung concentration immediately after exposure. In addition, the model has the potential to be used along with live rats in an inhalation rig in pulmonary pharmaceutics research and may facilitate in development of inhaled formulations to target specific regions within the lung as well as screening of inhaled drugs in preclinical setting.
A precious treasure in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), acupuncture played a vital and irreplaceable role in contributing to people’s health in the thousands of years of Chinese history, and in 2010 was officially added to the “Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity” by the United Nations. Because of the side-effects of long-term drug therapy for pain, and the risks of dependency, acupuncture has been widely accepted as one of the most important alternative choice therapies for treating varieties of acute and chronic pain-related disorders. The clinical application and scientific mechanism research of acupuncture have therefore increased intensively in the last few decades. Besides hand acupuncture, other treatment approaches e.g. electroacupuncture (EA) have been widely accepted and applied as an important acupuncture-related technique for acupuncture analgesia (AA) research. The involvement of opioid peptides and receptors in acute AA has been shown via pre-EA application of opioid receptor/peptide antagonists. However, existing publications still cannot illuminate the answer to the following question: how does sustained antinociception happen by EA treatment? The hypothesis of opioid peptide-mediated tonic AA might be able to answer the question.
In the first part of this thesis, the institution of a reproducible acupuncture treatment model as well as the endogenous opioid-related mechanisms was demonstrated. An anatomically-based three-dimensional (3D) rat model was established to exhibit a digital true-to-life organism, accurate acupoint position and EA treatment protocol on bilateral acupoint GB-30 Huantiao. The optimal EA treatment protocol (100 Hz, 2-3 mA, 0.1 ms, 20 min) at 0 and 24 h after induction of inflammatory pain by complete Freund’s adjuvant (CFA) on conscious free-moving rats was then established. EA elicited significant sustained mechanical and thermal antinociception up to 144 h. Post-EA application of opioid receptors (mu opioid receptor, MOR; delta opioid receptor, DOR) antagonists naloxone (NLX) and naltrindole (NTI), or opioid peptide antibodies anti-beta-endorphin (anti-END), met-enkephalin (anti-ENK) or -dynorphin A (anti-DYN) could also block this effect at a late phase (96 h) of CFA post-EA, which suggested opioid-dependent tonic analgesia was produced by EA. Meanwhile, EA also reduced paw temperature and volume at 72-144 h post CFA indicating anti-inflammatory effects. Nociceptive thresholds were assessed by paw pressure threshold (Randall-Sellito) or paw withdrawal latency (Hargreaves) and an anti-inflammatory effect was evaluated by measurement of plantar temperature and volume of inflamed paw.
The second part of the thesis further suggests the correlation between the chemokine CXCL10 (= interferon-gamma inducible protein 10, IP-10) and opioid peptides in EA-induced antinociception. Based on a comprehensive Cytokine Array of 29 cytokines, targeted cytokines interleukin (IL)-1alpha, interleukin (IL)-1beta, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-4, interleukin (IL)-13, interferon (IFN)-gamma as well as CXCL10 were selected and quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and real time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) quantification confirmed upregulation of CXCL10 mRNA at both 72 and 96 h. The following hyperalgesic assessment suggested the antinociceptive effect of CXCL10. The double immunostaining localizing opioid peptides with macrophages expressed the evident upregulation of CXCR3-receptor of CXCL10 in EA treated samples as well as the significant upregulation or downregulation of opioid peptides by repeated treatment of CXCL10 or antibody of CXCL10 via behavioral tests and immune staining. Subsequent immunoblotting measurements showed non-alteration of opioid receptor level by EA, indicating that the opioid receptors did not apparently contribute to AA in the present studies. In vitro, CXCL10 did not directly trigger opioid peptide END release from freshly isolated rat macrophages. This might implicate an indirect property of CXCL10 in vitro stimulating the opioid peptide-containing macrophages by requiring additional mediators in inflammatory tissue.
In summary, this project intended to explore the peripheral opioid-dependent analgesic mechanisms of acupuncture with a novel 3D treatment rat model and put forward new information to support the pivot role of chemokine CXCL10 in mediating EA-induced tonic antinociception via peripheral opioid peptides.
Barbiturates inhibit binding of radioligands to A 1(Ri) adenosine receptors of rat brain membranes. This inhibition is dose-dependent and stereospecific and occurs in the range of pharmacologically active concentrations. The displacement of radiolabelled A1antagonists by barbiturates is not modified by GTP, indicating that barbiturates might act as antagonists at this receptor. This action of barbiturates does not seem to be related to the binding of barbiturates to plasma membranes, as the latter process has different characteristics. Barbiturates also inhibit the binding of radioligands to solubilized A1receptors, and saturation and kinetic experiments suggest that this is due to a competitive antagonism. These results indicate that barbiturates interact with the recognition site of the A1adenosine receptor.
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease of the brain. Today AD is the most common form of dementia in elderly people. It is clinically characterized by a progressive loss of memory and later on a decline in higher cognitive functions. The pathological hallmarks of AD, consistently demonstrated in brain tissue of patients, are extracellular amyloid-β (Aβ plaques, intracellular neurofibrillary tangles of tau protein and a profound loss of mainly cholinergic and glutamatergic synapses and ultimatively neurons. Estimates foresee that more than 80 million individuals will be affected by the disease by 2040 due to population aging worldwide underlining the high medical need for this disease. In order to find suitable drugs for the treatment of AD, experimental model systems are utilized to explore potential drug candidates. Such an experimental system is hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP), which is widely accepted as an in vitro model of cellular processes fundamentally involved in memory formation. The present thesis focuses on the establishment and validation of LTP in rat hippocampal slices to characterize memory enhancing drugs as a potential treatment of AD. First, a multi-slice recording system was set up enabling stable measurements of LTP for up to seven hours from several slices simultaneously (chapter 2). Then, distinct protocols to induce early and late CA1 LTP, resembling short-term and long-term memory, were established. They were validated by addressing the hallmarks accepted for these forms of LTP: protein-synthesis independence and NMDA receptor dependence without contribution of L-VDCCs for early LTP, as opposed to protein-synthesis and NMDA / L-VDCCs dependence for late LTP (chapter 3). As in AD patients a loss of mainly cholinergic and glutamatergic synapses is obvious, these validated forms of LTP were used to study drugs potentially being able to enhance cholinergic and/or glutamatergic neuronal functions. The effects of two drugs exclusively interfering with cholinergic function on LTP were tested: the α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholinergic receptor agonist TC-1827 (chapter 4) and the acetylcholine esterase inhibitor donepezil (chapter 5). Both drugs were found to increase early LTP, but to not affect late LTP. Furthermore, two drugs exclusively interfering with glutamatergic function were analyzed: the metabotropic glutamate 5 receptor postive allosteric modulator ADX-47273 (chapter 3) and the phosphodiesterase (PDE) 9A inhibitor BAY 73-6691 (chapter 5). ADX-47273 increased late LTP, but had no effect on early LTP, whereas BAY 73-6691 showed enhancing effects on both early and late LTP and even transformed early into late LTP. The same effects like for the PDE9A inhibitor were observed for the α7 nicotinic acetylcholinergic receptor partial agonist SSR180711 (chapter 4), which interferes with both, cholinergic and glutamatergic function. Thus, drugs facilitating glutamatergic function or both glutamatergic and cholinergic function seem to be more efficacious in enhancing LTP than drugs facilitating solely cholinergic function. To evaluate whether this finding also proves true for experimental circumstances mimicking decreased cognitive function together with pathophysiology in AD patients, the ability of the drugs to ameliorate LTP impaired by soluble Aβ oligomer was analyzed (chapter 6). Soluble Aβ oligomers, also referred to as amyloid-β derived diffusible ligands (ADDLs), are thought to a putative cause of AD. Here, they were demonstrated to impair early and late LTP to different extents by exclusively targeting NMDA receptors and/or their signaling. These results further contribute to the hypothesis that soluble Aβ oligomers cause synaptic dysfunction which might lead to cognitive decline seen in AD patients. Regarding drug effects, donepezil and TC-1827 slightly restored ADDLs induced impairment of early LTP, but had no effect on late LTP impaired by ADDLs. In contrast, both, SSR180711 and BAY 73-6691 completely rescued early as well as late LTP impaired by ADDLs. ADX-47273 had no restoring effect on ADDLs induced early LTP impairment, but partially restored late LTP impaired by ADDLs. Thus, the earlier finding of the present thesis was confirmed: drugs facilitating glutamatergic function not only seem to be more efficacious in enhancing LTP than drugs facilitating solely cholinergic function, but are also superior in ameliorating soluble Aβ oligomer induced LTP deficits. Therefore, from a preclinical perspective and based on the results of the present thesis, drugs interfering with glutamatergic function seem to have a high therapeutic potential as alternative treatment concerning cognitive deficits. Probably, they represent more efficacious approaches for the symptomatic treatment of AD than current treatments solely facilitating cholinergic function.
Interleukin-6 (IL-6), oncostatin M (OSM), leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF) and cardiotrophin-1 (CT-1) are members of the IL-6-type cytokine family that is characterised by sharing the common receptor subunit gp130. While the involvement of these polypeptides in cell differentiation, cell survival, proliferation, apoptosis, inflammation, haematopoiesis, immune response and acute phase reaction has already been demonstrated, the description of their role in development and progression of cardiac hypertrophy is still rather limited. A model has been postulated that declares the transient expression of IL-6-type cytokines as protective, while a continuous cardiac secretion of these proteins seems to be rather harmful for the heart. Within the first part of the study (results 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3) it was shown that OSM induces hypertrophy of primary neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCM), just as its related cytokines LIF, CT-1 and hIL-6/hsIL-6R (hsIL-6R, human soluble IL-6 receptor). Regarding the hypertrophic potentials the LIFR/gp130 utilising cytokines (hLIF, hOSM and hCT-1) are stronger inducers than the OSMR/gp130 utilising mOSM. Human IL-6/hsIL-6R which signals via a gp130 homodimer has the weakest hypertrophic effect. The thorough analysis of typical signalling pathways initiated by IL-6-type cytokines revealed that STAT3 phosphorylation at Y705 seems to be the most important hypertrophy promoting pathway. In addition and in contrast to published work, we clearly demonstrate that classical IL-6 signalling (upon pure IL-6 treatment) has no hypertrophic effect on cardiomyocytes, because they lack sufficient amounts of the membrane-bound IL-6R. This is also true for neonatal rat cardiac fibroblasts (NRCFB). Since these cells can also influence cardiac hypertrophy, signalling pathways and target genes were additionally examined in NRCFB in response to OSM, LIF and IL-6/sIL-6R. One of the key findings of this thesis is the selective change in expression of cytokines and receptors of the IL-6 family in both cell types upon IL-6-type cytokine stimulation. A striking difference between NRCM and NRCFB is the fact that the target gene induction in NRCM is of similar duration upon mOSM and hIL-6/hsIL-6R treatment, while hIL-6/hsIL-6R is capable of promoting the induction of OSMR and IL-6 significantly longer in NRCFB. By searching for transcription factors or intermediate cytokines which could be responsible for this difference, a strong correlation between increased Il6 transcription and amount of mRNA levels for C/EBPβ and C/EBPδ was observed in response to IL-6/sIL-6R stimulation. Interestingly, mOSM also mediates the induction of C/EBPβ and δ, but the initiation is significantly less efficient than in response to IL-6/sIL-6R. Therefore, we assume that mOSM stimulation fails to reach threshold values required for a prolonged IL-6 secretion. Since we additionally observe a slight IL-6R mRNA upregulation in NRCFB, we assume that the combination of IL-6, LIF, C/EBPβ, C/EBPδ and IL-6R expression might be responsible for the observed different kinetics with which IL-6 and OSM stimulate NRCFB. In addition to the aforementioned proteins, members of the renin-angiotensin system seem to support the IL-6-type cytokine mediated hypertrophy. Since it has already been shown that angiotensin II vice versa induces IL-6 expression in NRCM and NRCFB, this enhanced expression of AT1α and ACE could be of crucial interest for the hypertrophy supporting phenotype. The second part of the presented work dealt with the characterisation of the receptor complexes of rat OSM. The central question of this analysis was, whether rOSM, just like mOSM, only binds the type II (OSMR/gp130) receptor complex or is able to utilise the type II and type I (LIFR/gp130) receptor complex. Using different experimental approaches (knock-down of the OSMR expression by RNA interference, blocking of the LIFR by LIF-05, an antagonistic LIF variant, and generation of stably transfected Ba/F3 cells expressing the newly cloned rat OSMR/gp130 or LIFR/gp130 receptor complex) we can clearly show that rat OSM surprisingly utilises both, the type I and type II receptor complex. Therefore it closely mimics the human situation. Furthermore, rOSM displays cross-species activities and stimulates cells of human as well as murine origin. Its signaling capacities closely mimic those of human OSM in cell types of different origin in the way that strong activation of the JAK/STAT, the MAP kinase as well as the PI3K/Akt pathways can be observed. Therefore, the results obtained in the last section of this thesis clearly suggest that rat disease models would allow evaluation of the relevance of OSM for human biology much better than murine models.
iNKT cells are a population of T cells with unique characteristics. In contrast to most αβ T cells which recognize peptides presented by highly polymorphic MHC molecules, iNKT cells are reactive to glycolipids presented by CD1d, a non-polymorphic MHC-I like molecule. Moreover, whereas MHC-restricted αβ T cells bear highly variable receptors (TCRs) formed after somatic recombination of the V(D)J gene segments, the TCR of iNKT cells is formed by an invariant α chain, which always contains the same gene segments: AV14 and AJ18; and a β chain of limited BV gene usage: BV8S2, BV7 or BV2, in the mouse. This invariant α chain is the reason for which these cells are named “i” and the NK part of their name refers to the expression of receptors typical of natural killer (NK) cells. iNKT cells recognize glycolipids of endogenous and microbial origin. After activation they secrete large amounts of very different cytokines such as IFN-γ and IL-4 and thus influence immune responses and pathological conditions. One of the most potent iNKT cell agonists, recognized by the semi-invariant TCR, is the synthetic glycolipid α-Galactosylceramide (α-Gal). iNKT cells can be visualized using CD1d-multimeric complexes loaded with α-Gal and flow cytometry, since this reagent has enough avidity to stain these cells. Interestingly, mouse iNKT cells can be stained with human α-Gal-loaded CD1d oligomers and human iNKT cells can also be visualized with mouse α-Gal-loaded CD1d oligomers, indicating a high degree of conservation of the recognition of α-Gal presented by CD1d through evolution. Previous studies showed that rats have the genes necessary to build semi-invariant TCRs: They have a CD1d homologue; one or two BV8S2 homologues and interestingly, up to ten AV14 gene segments, which are highly conserved when compared to the mouse genes. Importantly, it has been shown at least for two of these AV14 gene segments that they can produce invariant TCRα chains which, when coexpressed with BV8-containing β chains, react to α-Gal presented by rat CD1d. Furthermore, ex vivo stimulation of primary splenocytes with α-Gal results in the secretion of IL-4 and IFN-γ. Surprisingly, rat semi-invariant TCRs do not recognize α-Gal presented by mouse CD1d and accordingly, mouse α-Gal-loaded CD1d tetramers failed to stain a discrete population of rat iNKT cells. Taking all together, despite that strong evidence suggested that iNKT cells are present in the rat, the direct identification of such population and the analysis of CD1d-restricted immune responses were still pending for this species. Hence the work presented in this doctoral thesis was aimed to identify iNKT cells, to analyze their phenotype and also to study the distribution and function of CD1d in the rat. For these purposes, we produced essential reagents which were still lacking such as rat specific anti-CD1d monoclonal antibodies and rat CD1d oligomers. Importantly, two of three anti-rat CD1d monoclonal antibodies (all of them generated in our laboratory before this thesis was initiated) also recognized mouse CD1d and therefore allowed a direct comparison of CD1d expression between rat and mouse. Whereas CD1d distribution in the hematopoietic system was found to be extremely similar between these two species; in non-lymphatic tissues important differences were observed. Interestingly, CD1d protein was detected at not yet described sites such as the rat exocrine pancreas and rat and mouse Paneth cells. These monoclonal antibodies did not only allowed the analysis of CD1d expression, but also the first demonstration of the function of rat CD1d as an antigen presenting molecule, since cytokine release in response to α-Gal was blocked when they were added to ex vivo cultures of rat primary cells. Staining of primary rat iNKT cells (possible now with the newly generated rat CD1d oligomers) revealed interesting similarities with human iNKT cells. First, we observed that rat iNKT cells are only a minority among all NKR-P1A/B positive T cells. Human iNKT cells constitute also a very small proportion of NKR-P1A (CD161) expressing T cells, whereas in mice inbred strains which express NKR-P1C (NK1.1), most of NKRP1C expressing T cells are iNKT cells. Second, the majority of rat iNKT cells are either CD4 or DN and only a small proportion expresses CD8β. These findings are similar to humans and different to mice which lack CD8+ iNKT cells. Third, analysis of various inbred rat strains demonstrated different iNKT cell frequencies which correlated with cytokine secretion after α-Gal stimulation of primary cells. In comparison to mice, iNKT cell numbers are markedly reduced in rats. In F344 rats, inbred rat strain which released the highest cytokine amounts after α-Gal stimulation, approximately 0.25% and 0.1% of total liver and spleen lymphocytes, respectively, are iNKT cells. In contrast, in LEW rats iNKT cells were practically absent and neither IL-4 nor IFN-γ were detected after stimulation of primary cells with α-Gal. Once more, these frequencies are very close to those observed in humans. Last, as reported for human peripheral blood cells, rat iNKT cells could be easily expanded in vitro by adding α-Gal to cultures of intrahepatic lymphocytes, whereas the expansion of mouse iNKT cells was not possible using the same protocol. The presence of a multimember AV14 gene segment family in the rat is an intriguing characteristic. These AV14 gene segments are extremely homologous except in the CDR2α region. Based on the amino acid sequence of this region they have been divided into two different types: Type I and II. A specific tissue distribution of the different types was proposed in the first study where the presence of several AV14 gene segments was described. We also analyzed the AV14 gene segment usage in F344 and LEW inbred rat strains. In F344 rats we found no preferential usage of either AV14 gene segment type in the spleen and the liver but type II AV14 gene segments appeared more frequently in the thymus. In contrast, LEW rats show a preferential usage of type I AV14 gene segments in all three compartments analyzed: Thymus, spleen and liver. Taken all together, the usage of newly generated reagents allowed to gain novel insights into CD1d expression in the rat and in the mouse and to directly identify rat iNKT cells for the first time. The phenotypic and functional analysis of rat iNKT cells revealed numerous similarities with human iNKT cells. These are of special interest, since rats serve to investigate several pathological conditions including models for autoimmune diseases. The possibility now to analyze iNKT cells and CD1d-restricted T cell responses in the rat might help to understand the pathogenesis of such diseases. In addition, the uncomplicated in vitro expansion and culture of rat iNKT cells should facilitate the analysis of the immunomoldulatory capacities of these cells.