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Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide. Toxic contaminants in human food or medicinal products, such as substances like pyrrolizidine alkaloids (PAs), have been thought to contribute to cancer incidence. PAs are found in many plant species as secondary metabolites, and they may affect humans through contaminated food sources, herbal medicines, and dietary supplements. Hundreds of compounds belonging to PAs have been identified, differing in their chemical structures, either in their necine base moiety or esterification at their necic acid moiety. PAs undergo hepatic metabolism, and after this process, they can induce hepatotoxicity, genotoxicity, and carcinogenicity. However, the mechanism of inducing genotoxicity and carcinogenicity is still unclear and warrants further investigation.
Therefore, the present study aims to investigate the mechanism of genotoxicity induced by selected PAs with different chemical structures in in vitro systems. Primarily, human hepatoma HepG2 cells were utilized, and in co-culture, metabolically active HepG2 cells were combined with non-metabolically active human cervical HeLa H2B-GFP cells.
First, the genotoxicity of the PAs europine, lycopsamine, retrorsine, riddelliine, seneciphylline, echimidine, and lasiocarpine was investigated in the cytokinesis-block micronucleus (CBMN) assay. All seven selected PAs caused the formation of micronuclei in a dose-dependent manner, with the maximal increase of micronucleus formation ranging from 1.64 to 2.0 fold. The lowest concentrations at which significant induction of micronuclei was found were 3.2 µM for lasiocarpine and riddelliine, 32 µM for retrorsine and echimidine, and 100 µM for seneciphylline, europine, and lycopsamine. These results confirmed previously published potency rankings in the micronucleus assay.
The same PAs, with the exception of seneciphylline, were also investigated in a crosslink-modified comet assay, and reduced tail formation after hydrogen peroxide treatment was found in all diester-type PAs. Meanwhile, an equimolar concentration of the monoesters europine and lycopsamine did not significantly reduce DNA migration. Thus, the crosslinking activity was related to the ester type.
Next, the role of metabolic enzymes and membrane transporters in PA-induced genotoxicity was assessed. Ketoconazole (CYP 450-3A4 inhibitor) prevented lasiocarpine-induced micronucleus formation completely, while furafylline (CYP 450-1A2 inhibitor) reduced lasiocarpine-induced micronucleus formation, but did not abolish it completely. This implies that the CYP 450 enzymes play an important role in PA-induced genotoxicity.
Carboxylesterase 2 enzyme (CES 2) is commonly known to be involved in the detoxification of xenobiotics. Loperamide (CES 2 inhibitor) yielded an increased formation of lasiocarpine-induced micronuclei, revealing a possible role of CES-mediated detoxification in the genotoxicity of lasiocarpine. Also, intracellular glutathione (GSH) plays an important role in the detoxification of xenobiotics or toxins in the cells. Cells which had been pretreated with L-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) to reduce GSH content were significantly more sensitive for the induction of micronucleus formation by lasiocarpine revealing the importance of GSH in PA-induced genotoxicity.
Quinidine (Q) and nelfinavir (NFR) are OCT1 and OATP1B1 influx transporter inhibitors, respectively, which reduced micronucleus induction by lasiocarpine (only quinidine significantly), but not completely, pointing to a relevance of OCT1 for PA uptake in HepG2 cells. Verapamil (V) and benzbromarone (Bz) are MDR1 and MRP2 efflux transporter inhibitors, respectively, and they caused a slightly increased micronucleus induction by lasiocarpine (significant only for benzbromarone) thus, revealing the role of efflux transporters in PA-induced genotoxicity.
The mechanistic approach to PA-induced genotoxicity was further studied based on oxidative stress via the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in HepG2 cells. Overproduction of ROS can cross-link cellular macromolecules such as DNA, leading to genomic damage. An equimolar concentration of 10 µM of lasiocarpine (open-diester PA), riddelliine (cyclic-diester PA), and europine (monoester) significantly induced ROS production, with the highest ROS generation observed after lasiocarpine treatment, followed by riddelliine and then europine. No significant increase in ROS production was found with lycopsamine (10 µM; monoester PA), even at a higher concentration (320 µM). The generation of ROS by these PAs was further analyzed for confirmation by using 5 mM of the thiol radical scavenger antioxidant N-acetyl cysteine (NAC) combined with lasiocarpine, riddelliine, or europine. This analysis yielded a significant decrease in ROS after combining NAC with lasiocarpine, riddelliine, and europine. In addition, lasiocarpine, riddelliine, and europine induced a loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, pointing to mitochondria as the source of ROS generation.
In vivo, hepatic sinusoidal epithelial cells (HSECs) are known to be damaged first by PAs after hepatic metabolization, but HSECs themselves do not express the required metabolic enzymes for activation of PAs. To mimic this situation, HepG2 cells were used to metabolically activate PA in a co-culture with HeLa H2B-GFP cells as non-metabolically active neighbours. Due to the green fluorescent GFP label the HeLa cells could be identified easily based in the co-culture. The PAs europine, riddelliine and lasiocarpine induced micronucleus formation in HepG2 cells, and in HeLa H2B-GFP cells co-cultured with HepG2 cells, but not in HeLa H2B-GFP cells cultured alone. Metabolic inhibition of CYP 450 enzymes with ketoconazole abrogated micronucleus formation induced by the same PAs tested in the co-culture. The efflux transporter inhibitors verapamil and benzbromarone reduced the micronucleus formation in the co-culture. Furthermore, mitotic disturbances as an additional genotoxic mechanism of action were observed in HepG2 cells and in HeLa H2B-GFP cells co-cultured with HepG2 cells, but not in HeLa H2B-GFP cells cultured alone. Overall, we were able to show that PAs were activated by HepG2 cells and the metabolites induced genomic damage in co-cultured non-metabolically active green HeLa cells.
Finally, in HepG2 cells as well as the co-culture, combinations of PAs lasiocarpine and riddelliine favoured an additive effect rather than synergism. Thus, this study therefore provides support that the assumption of dose-addition can be applied in the characterization of the genotoxicity risk of PAs present in a mixture.
Das Mutationsspektrum einzelner Gene beziehungsweise zusammengefasster Gengruppen innerhalb von Signalwegen bei Patienten mit Multiplem Myelom wurde in den letzten Jahren eingehend untersucht und charakterisiert. Die Herausforderung besteht nun in der Interpretation der erhobenen Daten, insbesondere der Bewertung einzelner durch Sequenzierung identifizierter Biomarker bezüglich deren prognostischer Aussagekraft und konkreter therapeutischer Relevanz. Als übergeordnetes Ziel gilt die Ableitung von klinischen (Therapie-) Ansätzen. Auf dem Weg zu einem individualisierten Therapieansatz ist entscheidend, dass wir unser Wissen über die funktionelle Relevanz einzelner Mutationen wie hier im IGF1R im Hinblick auf deren Einbettung in Signalnetzwerke und auf das Proliferationsverhalten der MM Zellen erweitern. Konkret wurde im Rahmen der vorliegende Doktorarbeit der Einfluss von zwei IGF1R Punktmutationen, nämlich D1146N (Punktmutation des IGF1R der HMCL L-363) und N1129S (Punktmutation des IGF1R eines Patienten der DSMM XI Kohorte) auf die Proliferation und das nachgeschaltete Signalling in IGF1R-Überexpressionsmodellen der MM Zelllinien AMO-1 und U-266 untersucht. Zur stabilen Transfektion der HMCLs mit IGF1RWT und den zwei IGF1R Mutanten wurde ein Protokoll auf Grundlage des Sleeping Beauty (SB) Transposase Systems genutzt. In dieser und anderen assoziierten Arbeit konnte unter zu Hilfenahme von insgesamt vier verschiedenen gentechnisch veränderter HMCLs gezeigt werden, dass funktionelle Mutationen im IGF1R Effekte auf das Downstream Signalling zum Beispiel die Aktivierung von AKT und ERK, jedoch nicht auf die Zellproliferation haben. Im Vergleich der untersuchten HMCLs konnten jedoch keine verallgemeinerbaren Schlüsse gezogen werden, was die Heterogenität der Erkrankung und die Wichtigkeit der Einzelfallbetrachtung unterstreicht.
In der Pathogenese der Psoriasis spielen IL 17 und die Plastizität von Tregs zu Th17 Zellen mit Produktion proinflammatorischer Zytokine sowie die möglicherweise reduzierte suppressive Funktion von Tregs eine entscheidende Rolle. Wir versuchten daher in unserer Arbeit einen Überblick über die T Zellverteilung im peripherem Blut bei PSO und HC zu erhalten und die Reaktion der Zellen auf IL 17, anti IL 17 und Secukinumab sowie ein Th 17 induzierendes Milieu im Vergleich von PSO und HC zu evaluieren.
In der Analyse der PBMCs von PSO und HC konnten bei PSO tendenziell weniger inflammatorische Marker, wahrscheinlich aufgrund der niedrigen Krankheitsaktivität und der bereits eingeleiteten medikamentösen Therapie festgestellt werden.
Nach Isolierung der Tregs und Kultivierung konnten bei PSO im Vergleich zu HC erhöhte inflammatorische Marker nachgewiesen werden. Dies kann an der höheren Plastizität von Tregs bei PSO ex vivo ohne den Einfluss einer medikamentösen Therapie hin zu inflammatorischen Zellen.
In den Suppressionsversuchen zeigte sich sowohl bei PSO als auch bei HC unter Th17 Milieu eine verminderte Inhibition der PBMCs durch die autologen Tregs.
Ursächlich hierfür könnte eine Dysregulation der Tregs durch das Th17 Milieu oder eine Auswirkung des Th17-induzierenden Cocktails auf die PBMCs im Sinne einer Effektorresistenz gegenüber den Tregs sein.
Eine Veränderung der Suppression ergab sich für IL 17 oder anti IL 17 nicht. Unter der gleichzeitigen Kultivierung mit Secukinumab und einem Th17 induzierendem Cocktail konnte keine verbesserte Inhibition festgestellt werden.
Insgesamt bestätigt die Arbeit eine Instabilität der Tregs bei PSO mit der Möglichkeit der Plastizität zu Th17 Zellen unter proinflammatorischem Milieu, sowie einen Verlust der Suppressionsfähigkeit durch eine Treg Dysfunktion oder eine erhöhte Effektorresistenz. Für IL 17 oder die Blockade von IL 17 durch monoklonale Antikörper konnte in unserer Studie kein Einfluss festgestellt werden.
Ziel der Arbeit war es, den Einfluss der Platzierung der Restauration im Rohling auf die mechanischen Eigenschaften und die Scherfestigkeit zu dualhärtenden Befestigungskompositen zu untersuchen sowie Unterschiede in der Bruchfestigkeit zwischen zwei Multilayerkeramiken zu ermitteln.
Material und Methodik: Es wurden 160 zylindrische Prüfkörper aus der Multilayerkeramik Katana Zirconia ML hergestellt, um mechanische Eigenschaften wie Dichte, Biegefestigkeit und Härte zu bestimmen. Eine Gruppe wurde künstlich gealtert. Die Bruchfestigkeit von 32 Kronen (Katana Zirconia ML, Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer) wurde vor und nach thermischer sowie mechanischer Belastung untersucht. Zur Bestimmung der Scherfestigkeit wurden 512 quadratische Prüfkörper hergestellt, die verschiedenen thermischen Belastungen ausgesetzt wurden. Die Scherfestigkeit wurde mit einer Universalprüfmaschine bestimmt und die Brucharten (adhäsiv, kohäsiv, gemischt) wurden analysiert.
Ergebnisse: Es gab keinen signifikanten Unterschied zwischen den Schichten oder der Alterung bei Dichte, Biegefestigkeit und Härte. Katana Zirconia ML zeigte höhere Bruchfestigkeit als Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer. Die Scherfestigkeit von Panavia V5 zu Katana Zirconia ML war nicht durch thermische Belastung beeinflusst, jedoch bei Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer. Der Haftverbund von Visalys CemCore war durch thermische Belastung beeinflusst, während Panavia V5 zu beiden Keramiken höhere Werte aufwies. Katana Zirconia ML hatte höhere Scherfestigkeitswerte als Ceramill Zolid FX Multilayer.
Schlussfolgerung: Multilayerkeramik stellt eine arbeitsverringernde Alternative für den Seitenzahnbereich dar, ohne mechanische und ästhetische Einbußen. Die Platzierung im Rohling hat keinen Einfluss auf die Eigenschaften, jedoch ist der Haftverbund vom Befestigungskomposit abhängig.
Diese retrospektive, naturalistische Studie beschäftigte sich mit dem Therapeutischen Drug Monitoring von Kindern und Jugendlichen unter Psychopharmakotherapie mit Escitalopram und Mirtazapin. Die Datenauswertung erfolgte anhand von klinischen Routinedaten aus dem TDM-Service des Speziallabors für TDM des Zentrums für psychische Gesundheit des Universitätsklinikums Würzburg. In der Studie wurden die Zusammenhänge zwischen Dosis, Serumkonzentration und positiver bzw. negativer klinischer Effekte, auch im Hinblick auf mögliche Einflussfaktoren wie Geschlecht, Alter, BMI-Status, Komedikation und Raucherstatus, untersucht. Ein weiteres Ziel der Arbeit war, Hinweise für die Definition eines altersspezifischen therapeutischen Referenzbereiches (Diagnoseübergreifend und Depressions-spezifisch) für Kinder und Jugendliche beider Medikamente zu gewinnen. Hierfür wurden für Escitalopram 41 Patienten im Alter zwischen elf und 18 Jahren und für Mirtazapin 23 Patienten im Alter von sechs bis 18 Jahren eingeschlossen und Daten zur Demographie, Serumkonzentrationsbestimmungen im Steady State, Schwere der Erkrankung (CGI-S), Therapieeffektivität (CGI-I) und Nebenwirkungen (UKU-Skala) ausgewertet.
Escitalopram: Die mittlere Tagesdosis betrug 14,8 mg, wobei die Serumkonzentrationen mit einer mittleren Konzentration von 32,2 ng/ml (SD= 26,6 ng/ml) zwischen sechs und 109 ng/ml schwankten. Bei 63,4 % der Patienten lag die ermittelte Serumkonzentration in dem für Erwachsene definierten therapeutischen Referenzbereich (15-80 ng/ml). Zwischen der Tagesdosis und der Serumkonzentration ergab sich eine auf dem 1 %-Niveau signifikante positive lineare Beziehung (rs= 0,46; p= 0,003). 65,9 % der Patienten respondierten seit Behandlungsbeginn. Zwischen der Serumkonzentration und dem therapeutischen Effekt (rs= 0,193; p= 0,282) und zwischen der Serumkonzentration und den Nebenwirkungen (r= 0,127; p= 0,467) konnte jeweils kein signifikanter Zusammenhang gefunden werden. Die Nebenwirkungsrate lag bei 25,7 %, wobei am häufigsten Spannung und innere Unruhe dokumentiert wurde. Mit der Idee, die Definition für den vorläufigen therapeutischen Referenzbereich sowohl der Konsensus-Leitlinie der AGNP (Hiemke et al., 2018) als auch von Hiemke (2019) zu berücksichtigen, wird als vorläufiger therapeutischer Referenzbereich für Escitalopram für Kinder und Jugendliche mit Depression eine untere Grenze zwischen 10 ng/ml bis 15 ng/ml und eine obere Grenze von 50 ng/ml vorgeschlagen. Dieser Bereich liegt niedriger als der für erwachsene Patienten definierte Bereich für Escitalopram von 15 bis 80 ng/ml.
Mirtazapin: Die mittlere Tagesdosis betrug 28,6 mg, wobei die Serumkonzentrationen mit einer mittleren Konzentration von 40,8 ng/ml (SD= 28,1 ng/ml) zwischen 13 und 130 ng/ml schwankten. Für 52,2 % der Patienten lag die Serumkonzentration in dem für Erwachsene definierten therapeutischen Referenzbereich (30-80 ng/ml). Zwischen der Tagesdosis und der Serumkonzentration ergab sich eine auf dem 1 %-Niveau signifikante positive Korrelation (rs= 0,655; p= 0,001). Hinsichtlich des Therapieeffektes respondierten 52,2 % der Patienten seit Behandlungsbeginn. Zwischen der Serumkonzentration und dem therapeutischen Effekt ergab sich ein auf dem 5 %-Niveau signifikanter positiver Zusammenhang (rs= 0,534; p= 0,015). Zwischen der Serumkonzentration und den Nebenwirkungen konnte kein signifikanter Zusammenhang gefunden werden (r= 0,240; p= 0,282). Die Nebenwirkungsrate lag bei 30,4 %, wobei Schläfrigkeit und Sedierung am häufigsten berichtet wurden. Als vorläufiger therapeutischer Referenzbereich für Mirtazapin für Kinder und Jugendliche mit Depression wird eine untere Grenze zwischen 15 ng/ml bis 20 ng/ml und eine obere Grenze von 50 ng/ml vorgeschlagen. Dieser Bereich liegt niedriger als der für erwachsene Patienten definierte Bereich für Mirtazapin von 30 bis 80 ng/ml.
Die Limitationen der vorliegenden naturalistischen Studie beachtend, sollten die Ergebnisse mit Vorsicht interpretiert und anhand einer größeren Stichprobe unter kontrollierteren Bedingungen überprüft werden.
p97 uses the energy of ATP hydrolysis to unfold and thereby segregate proteins. It is involved in various cellular processes such as proteasomal degradation, DNA damage repair, autophagy, and endo-lysosomal trafficking. The specificity for these processes is controlled by more than 30 regulatory cofactors.
Interactions of p97 with cofactors and target proteins are known to be highly dynamic and transient. To identify new interaction partners and to uncover novel cellular functions of p97, the interactome of endogenous p97 was determined by using in cellulo crosslinking followed by immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry. Myoferlin (MYOF) was identified as a novel interactor of p97 and the interaction was validated in reciprocal immunoprecipitation experiments for different cell lines.
The ferlin family member MYOF is a tail-anchored membrane protein containing multiple C2 domains. MYOF is involved in various membrane repair and trafficking processes such as the endocytic recycling of cell surface receptors. The MYOF interactome was determined by mass spectrometry. Among others, the p97 cofactor PLAA, CD71 and Rab14 were identified as common interactors of p97 and MYOF. Immunoprecipitation experiments with PLAA KO cells revealed that the interaction between MYOF and p97 depends on PLAA. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed a co-localization of MYOF with Rab14 and Rab11, which are both involved in endocytic recycling pathways. Furthermore, immunofluoroscence experiments revealed that MYOF and the p97 cofactor PLAA are localized to Rab14- and Rab5-positive endosomal compartments.
Using p97 inhibitors and p97 trapping mutants, the presence of p97 at MYOF-positive and Rab14-positive structures could be demonstrated. Consistent with this finding, the endocytic recycling of transferrin was delayed upon inhibition of p97. Taken together, this work identified MYOF as a novel interactor of p97 and suggests a role for p97 in the recycling of endocytic cargo.
Trotz zahlreicher medizinischer Fortschritte sind Krebserkrankungen weiterhin eine der häufigsten Todesursachen weltweit (Bhupender S. Chhikara und Keykavous Parang 2023). Dabei ist das Multiple Myelom (MM) die zweithäufigste Krebserkrankung des blutbildenden Systems und für ca. 20% aller Todesfälle durch hämatologische Erkrankungen verantwortlich (Derlin und Bannas 2014). Die Krankheit gilt als schwer heilbar, die Patienten leiden unter schwerwiegenden Symptomen und die aktuelle Standardtherapie mittels hochdosierter Chemotherapeutika geht mit starken Nebenwirkungen einher (Cowan et al. 2022). Insofern besteht ein großes Interesse daran, neue und ergänzende Behandlungsmethoden zu finden. In der Forschung etablierte und bereits mit vielversprechenden Ergebnissen an Menschen mit anderen Krebserkrankungen getestete Verfahren sind die Methionin- (MetR) (Kaiser 2020) bzw. Cysteinrestriktion (CysR) (Garcia-Bermudez et al. 2020). Deshalb wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit in vitro überprüft, ob diese Methoden grundsätzlich einen möglichen Ansatz für die Therapie des MM darstellen. Untersucht wurden die murine MPC11- sowie die humanen L363- und KMS12-BM-Zelllinien des MM. Dabei konnte die antiproliferative Wirkung der Restriktionen bestätigt werden. Darüber hinaus wurde nachgewiesen, dass der Mangel der Aminosäuren nicht über endogene Stoffwechselwege kompensiert werden kann, die Zellen also von der exogenen Zufuhr abhängig sind. Des Weiteren wurde das Metabolom der MPC11-Zellen unter MetR massenspektrometrisch analysiert und ein charakteristischer „metaboler Fingerabdruck“ erstellt. Die Proliferationshemmung ohne Rückgang der Zellzahlen unter den Anfangswert zusammen mit den die gesunde Morphologie der Zellen dokumentierenden EVOS Bildern belegt das Vorliegen eines Low-Energy-Metabolismus (LEM) ohne Absterben der Zellen (Schmitz et al. 2021a). Als geeignete Marker (charakteristischer „metabolen Fingerabdruck“) für einen MetR induzierten LEM eignen sich das bereits in L929-Zellen herauskristallisierte Absinken des Kreatins, der Aminosäuren und Purine bzw. Pyrimidine sowie der Anstieg des Acetoacetats. In den MPC11-Zellen kommen zusätzlich eine Zunahme der Folsäure und eine Abnahme des SAM, SAH und MTA aus dem Methionin- bzw. MTA-Zyklus, des Pentose-5-Phosphats aus dem Pentose-Phosphat-Weg und des Hexose- und Glyceralphosphats sowie des Pyruvats und des Laktats aus der Glykolyse hinzu. Kein klassischer Marker für einen LEM, aber aufgrund des signifikanten Anstiegs dennoch als auffällige Abweichung unter MetR zusätzlich erwähnenswert, ist der deutliche Anstieg des Cystins.
A search for new phenomena in events with two same- charge leptons or three leptons and jets identi fi ed as originating from b - quarks in a data sample of 36.1 fb of pp collisions at ps = 13TeV recorded by the ATLAS detector at the Large Hadron Collider is reported. No signi fi cant excess is found and limits are set on vector- like quark, fourtop- quark, and same- sign top- quark pair production. The observed ( expected) 95% CL mass limits for a vector- like T - and B - quark singlet are mT > 0 : 98 ( 0 : 99) TeV and mB > 1 : 00 ( 1 : 01) TeV respectively. Limits on the production of the vector- like T5=3 - quark are also derived considering both pair and single production; in the former case the lower limit on the mass of the T5=3 - quark is ( expected to be) 1.19 ( 1.21) TeV. The Standard Model fourtop- quark production cross- section upper limit is ( expected to be) 69 ( 29) fb. Constraints are also set on exotic four- top- quark production models. Finally, limits are set on samesign top- quark pair production. The upper limit on uu ! tt production is ( expected to be) 89 ( 59) fb for a mediator mass of 1TeV, and a dark- matter interpretation is also derived, excluding a mediator of 3TeV with a dark- sector coupling of 1.0 and a coupling to ordinary matter above 0.31.
Invasive aspergillosis (IA) is an infectious disease caused by the fungal pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus that mainly affects immunocompromised hosts. To investigate immune cell cross-talk during infection with A. fumigatus, we co-cultured natural killer (NK) cells and dendritic cells (DC) after stimulation with whole fungal structures, components of the fungal cell wall, fungal lysate or ligands for distinct fungal receptors. Both cell types showed activation after stimulation with fungal components and were able to transfer activation signals to the counterpart not stimulated cell type. Interestingly, DCs recognized a broader spectrum of fungal components and thereby initiated NK cell activation when those did not recognize fungal structures. These experiments highlighted the supportive function of DCs in NK cell activation. Furthermore, we focused on soluble DC mediated NK cell activation and showed that DCs stimulated with the TLR2/Dectin-1 ligand zymosan could maximally stimulate the expression of CD69 on NK cells. Thus, we investigated the influence of both receptors for zymosan, Dectin-1 and TLR2, which are highly expressed on DCs but show only minimal expression on NK cells. Specific focus was laid on the question whether Dectin-1 or TLR2 signaling in DCs is important for the secretion of soluble factors leading to NK cell activation. Our results show that Dectin-1 and TLR2 are negligible for NK cell activation. We conclude that besides Dectin-1 and TLR2 other receptors on DCs are able to compensate for the missing signal.
Discovery of disease-associated autoantibodies has transformed the clinical management of a variety of neurological disorders. Detection of autoantibodies aids diagnosis and allows patient stratification resulting in treatment optimization. In the last years, a set of autoantibodies against proteins located at the node of Ranvier has been identified in patients with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). These antibodies target neurofascin, contactin1, or contactin-associated protein 1, and we propose to name CIDP patients with these antibodies collectively as seropositive. They have unique clinical characteristics that differ from seronegative CIDP. Moreover, there is compelling evidence that autoantibodies are relevant for the pathogenesis. In this article, we review the current knowledge on the characteristics of autoantibodies against the node of Ranvier proteins and their clinical relevance in CIDP. We start with a description of the structure of the node of Ranvier followed by a summary of assays used to identify seropositive patients; and then, we describe clinical features and characteristics linked to seropositivity. We review knowledge on the role of these autoantibodies for the pathogenesis with relevance for the emerging concept of nodopathy/paranodopathy and summarize the treatment implications.
Positive effects of shared reading for children’s language development are boosted by including instruction of word meanings and by increasing interactivity. The effects of engaging children as storytellers on vocabulary development have been less well studied. We developed an approach termed Interactive Elaborative Storytelling (IES), which employs both word-learning techniques and children’s storytelling in a shared-reading setting. To systematically investigate potential benefits of children as storytellers, we contrasted this approach to two experimental groups, an Elaborative Storytelling group employing word-learning techniques but no storytelling by children and a Read-Aloud group, excluding any additional techniques. The study was a 3 × 2 pre-posttest randomized design with 126 preschoolers spanning 1 week. Measured outcomes were receptive and expressive target vocabulary, story memory, and children’s behavior during story sessions. All three experimental groups made comparable gains on target words from pre- to posttest and there was no difference between groups in story memory. However, in the Elaborative Storytelling group, children were the least restless. Findings are discussed in terms of their contribution to optimizing shared reading as a method of fostering language.
The training intensity distribution (TID) of endurance athletes has retrieved substantial scientific interest since it reflects a vital component of training prescription: (i) the intensity of exercise and its distribution over time are essential components for adaptation to endurance training and (ii) the training volume (at least for most endurance disciplines) is already near or at maximum, so optimization of training procedures including TID have become paramount for success. This paper aims to elaborate the polarization-index (PI) which is calculated as log10(Zone 1/Zone 2∗Zone 3∗100), where Zones 1–3 refer to aggregated volume (time or distance) spent with low, mid, or high intensity training. PI allows to distinguish between non-polarized and polarized TID using a cut-off > 2.00 a.U. and to quantify the level of a polarized TID. Within this hypothesis paper, examples from the literature illustrating the usefulness of PI-calculation are discussed as well as its limitations. Further it is elucidated how the PI may contribute to a more precise definition of TID descriptors.
Tropical peat swamp forests sequester globally significant stores of carbon in deep layers of waterlogged, anoxic, acidic and nutrient-depleted peat. The roles of microbes in supporting these forests through the formation of peat, carbon sequestration and nutrient cycling are virtually unknown. This study investigated physicochemical peat properties and microbial diversity between three dominant tree species: Shorea uliginosa (Dipterocarpaceae), Koompassia malaccensis (legumes associated with nitrogen-fixing bacteria), Eleiodoxa conferta (palm) and depths (surface, 45 and 90 cm) using microbial 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Water pH, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, total phenolic contents and C/N ratio differed significantly between depths, but not tree species. Depth also strongly influenced microbial diversity and composition, while both depth and tree species exhibited significant impact on the archaeal communities. Microbial diversity was highest at the surface, where fresh leaf litter accumulates, and nutrient supply is guaranteed. Nitrogen was the core parameter correlating to microbial communities, but the interactive effects from various environmental variables displayed significant correlation to relative abundance of major microbial groups. Proteobacteria was the dominant phylum and the most abundant genus, Rhodoplanes, might be involved in nitrogen fixation. The most abundant methanogens and methanotrophs affiliated, respectively, to families Methanomassiliicoccaceae and Methylocystaceae. Our results demonstrated diverse microbial communities and provide valuable insights on microbial ecology in these extreme ecosystems.
B cell-derived interleukin-10 (IL-10) production has been described as a hallmark for regulatory function in B lymphocytes. However, there is an ongoing debate on the origin of IL-10-secreting B cells and lack of specific surface markers has turned into an important obstacle for studying human B regulatory cells. In this study, we propose that tumor necrosis factor receptor 2 (TNFR2) expression can be used for enrichment of IL-10-secreting B cells. Our data confirm that IL-10 production can be induced by TLR9 stimulation with CpG ODN and that IL-10 secretion accompanies differentiation of peripheral blood B cells into plasma blasts. We further show that CpG ODN stimulation induces TNFR2 expression, which correlates with IL-10 secretion and terminal differentiation. Indeed, flow cytometric sorting of TNFR2+ B cells revealed that TNFR2+ and TNFR2− fractions correspond to IL-10+ and IL-10− fractions, respectively. Furthermore, CpG-induced TNFR2+ B cells were predominantly found in the IgM+ CD27+ B cell subset and spontaneously released immunoglobulin. Finally, our data corroborate the functional impact of TNFR2 by demonstrating that stimulation with a TNFR2 agonist significantly augments IL-10 and IL-6 production in B cells. Altogether, our data highlight a new role for TNFR2 in IL-10-secreting human B lymphocytes along with the potential to exploit this finding for sorting and isolation of this currently ill-defined B cell subset.
Heat Shock Protein 90 as a Prognostic Marker and Therapeutic Target for Adrenocortical Carcinoma
(2019)
Background: Adrenocortical carcinoma (ACC) is a rare tumor entity with restricted therapeutic opportunities. HSP90 (Heat Shock Protein 90) chaperone activity is fundamental for cell survival and contributes to different oncogenic signaling pathways. Indeed, agents targeting HSP90 function have shown therapeutic efficacy in several cancer types. We have examined the expression of HSP90 in different adrenal tumors and evaluated the use of HSP90 inhibitors in vitro as possible therapy for ACC.
Methods: Immunohistochemical expression of HSP90 isoforms was investigated in different adrenocortical tumors and associated with clinical features. Additionally, a panel of N-terminal (17-allylamino-17-demethoxygeldanamycin (17-AAG), luminespib, and ganetespib) and C-terminal (novobiocin and silibinin) HSP90 inhibitors were tested on various ACC cell lines.
Results: Within adrenocortical tumors, ACC samples exhibited the highest expression of HSP90β. Within a cohort of ACC patients, HSP90β expression levels were inversely correlated with recurrence-free and overall survival. In functional assays, among five different compounds tested luminespib and ganetespib induced a significant decrease in cell viability in single as well as in combined treatments with compounds of the clinically used EDP-M scheme (etoposide, doxorubicin, cisplatin, mitotane). Inhibition of cell viability correlated furthermore with a decrease in proliferation, in cell migration and an increase in apoptosis. Moreover, analysis of cancer pathways indicated a modulation of the ERK1/2—and AKT—pathways by luminespib and ganetespib treatment.
Conclusions: Our findings emphasize HSP90 as a marker with prognostic impact and promising target with N-terminal HSP90 inhibitors as drugs with potential therapeutic efficacy toward ACC.
Background: According to current guidelines, stroke patients treated with rt-PA should undergo brain imaging to exclude intracerebral bleeding 24 h after thrombolysis, before the start of medical secondary prevention. However, the usefulness of routine follow-up imaging with regard to changes in therapeutic management in patients without neurological deterioration is unclear. We hypothesized that follow up brain imaging solely to exclude bleeding in patients who clinically improved after rt-PA application may not be necessary.
Methods: Retrospective single-center analysis including stroke patients treated with rt-PA. Records were reviewed for hemorrhagic transformation one day after systemic thrombolysis and brain imaging-based changes in therapeutic management. Twenty-four hour after thrombolysis patients were divided into four groups: (1) increased NIHSS score; (2) unchanged NIHSS score; (3) improved NIHSS score and; (4) NIHSS score = 0.
Results: Out of 188 patients (mean age 73 years, 100 female) receiving rt-PA, 32 (17%) had imaging-proven hemorrhagic transformation including 11 (6%) patients with parenchymal hemorrhage. Patients in group (1, 2) more often had hypertension (p = 0.015) and more often had parenchymal hemorrhage (9 vs. 4%; p < 0.206) compared to group (3, 4) and imaging-based changes in therapeutic management were more frequent (19% vs. 6%; p = 0.007). Patients of group (3, 4) had no changes in therapeutic management in 94% of the cases. Patients in group (4) had no hemorrhagic transformation in routine follow-up brain imaging.
Conclusions: Frequency of hemorrhagic transformation in Routine follow-up brain imaging and consecutive changes in therapeutic management were different depending on clinical course measured by NHISS score.
Behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) is characterized by deep alterations in behavior and personality. Although revised diagnostic criteria agree for executive dysfunction as most characteristic, impairments in social cognition are also suggested. The study aimed at identifying those neuropsychological and behavioral parameters best discriminating between bvFTD and healthy controls. Eighty six patients were diagnosed with possible or probable bvFTD according to Rascovsky et al. (2011) and compared with 43 healthy age-matched controls. Neuropsychological performance was assessed with a modified Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET), Stroop task, Trail Making Test (TMT), Hamasch-Five-Point Test (H5PT), and semantic and phonemic verbal fluency tasks. Behavior was assessed with the Apathy Evaluation Scale, Frontal Systems Behavioral Scale, and Bayer Activities of Daily Living Scale. Each test’s discriminatory power was investigated by Receiver Operating Characteristic curves calculating the area under the curve (AUC). bvFTD patients performed significantly worse than healthy controls in all neuropsychological tests. Discriminatory power (AUC) was highest in behavioral questionnaires, high in verbal fluency tasks and the RMET, and lower in executive function tests such as the Stroop task, TMT and H5PT. As fluency tasks depend on several cognitive functions, not only executive functions, results suggest that the RMET discriminated better between bvFTD and control subjects than other executive tests. Social cognition should be incorporated into diagnostic criteria for bvFTD in the future, such as in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-11, as already suggested in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM)-5.
Objective: In two independent study arms, we determine the effects of strength training (ST) and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) overload on cardiac autonomic modulation by measuring heart rate (HR) and vagal heart rate variability (HRV).
Methods: In the study, 37 well-trained athletes (ST: 7 female, 12 male; HIIT: 9 female, 9 male) were subjected to orthostatic tests (HR and HRV recordings) each day during a 4-day baseline period, a 6-day overload microcycle, and a 4-day recovery period. Discipline-specific performance was assessed before and 1 and 4 days after training.
Results: Following ST overload, supine HR, and vagal HRV (Ln RMSSD) were clearly increased and decreased (small effects), respectively, and the standing recordings remained unchanged. In contrast, HIIT overload resulted in decreased HR and increased Ln RMSSD in the standing position (small effects), whereas supine recordings remained unaltered. During the recovery period, these responses were reversed (ST: small effects, HIIT: trivial to small effects). The correlations between changes in HR, vagal HRV measures, and performance were weak or inconsistent. At the group and individual levels, moderate to strong negative correlations were found between HR and Ln RMSSD when analyzing changes between testing days (ST: supine and standing position, HIIT: standing position) and individual time series, respectively. Use of rolling 2–4-day averages enabled more precise estimation of mean changes with smaller confidence intervals compared to single-day values of HR or Ln RMSSD. However, the use of averaged values displayed unclear effects for evaluating associations between HR, vagal HRV measures, and performance changes, and have the potential to be detrimental for classification of individual short-term responses.
Conclusion: Measures of HR and Ln RMSSD during an orthostatic test could reveal different autonomic responses following ST or HIIT which may not be discovered by supine or standing measures alone. However, these autonomic changes were not consistently related to short-term changes in performance and the use of rolling averages may alter these relationships differently on group and individual level.
Early-life infections and associated neuroinflammation is incriminated in the pathogenesis of various mood disorders. Infection with human roseoloviruses, HHV-6A and HHV-6B, allows viral latency in the central nervous system and other tissues, which can later be activated causing cognitive and behavioral disturbances. Hence, this study was designed to evaluate possible association of HHV-6A and HHV-6B activation with three different groups of psychiatric patients. DNA qPCR, immunofluorescence and FISH studies were carried out in post-mortem posterior cerebellum from 50 cases each of bipolar disorder (BPD), schizophrenia, 15 major depressive disorder (MDD) and 50 appropriate control samples obtained from two well-known brain collections (Stanley Medical Research Institute). HHV-6A and HHV-6B late proteins (indicating active infection) and viral DNA were detected more frequently (p < 0.001 for each virus) in human cerebellum in MDD and BPD relative to controls. These roseolovirus proteins and DNA were found less frequently in schizophrenia cases. Active HHV-6A and HHV-6B infection in cerebellar Purkinje cells were detected frequently in BPD and MDD cases. Furthermore, we found a significant association of HHV-6A infection with reduced Purkinje cell size, suggesting virus-mediated abnormal Purkinje cell function in these disorders. Finally, gene expression analysis of cerebellar tissue revealed changes in pathways reflecting an inflammatory response possibly to HHV-6A infection. Our results provide molecular evidence to support a role for active HHV-6A and HHV-6B infection in BPD and MDD.
Genetically modified mice are indispensable for establishing the roles of platelets in arterial thrombosis and hemostasis. Microfluidics assays using anticoagulated whole blood are commonly used as integrative proxy tests for platelet function in mice. In the present study, we quantified the changes in collagen-dependent thrombus formation for 38 different strains of (genetically) modified mice, all measured with the same microfluidics chamber. The mice included were deficient in platelet receptors, protein kinases or phosphatases, small GTPases or other signaling or scaffold proteins. By standardized re-analysis of high-resolution microscopic images, detailed information was obtained on altered platelet adhesion, aggregation and/or activation. For a subset of 11 mouse strains, these platelet functions were further evaluated in rhodocytin- and laminin-dependent thrombus formation, thus allowing a comparison of glycoprotein VI (GPVI), C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC2) and integrin α6β1 pathways. High homogeneity was found between wild-type mice datasets concerning adhesion and aggregation parameters. Quantitative comparison for the 38 modified mouse strains resulted in a matrix visualizing the impact of the respective (genetic) deficiency on thrombus formation with detailed insight into the type and extent of altered thrombus signatures. Network analysis revealed strong clusters of genes involved in GPVI signaling and Ca2+ homeostasis. The majority of mice demonstrating an antithrombotic phenotype in vivo displayed with a larger or smaller reduction in multi-parameter analysis of collagen-dependent thrombus formation in vitro. Remarkably, in only approximately half of the mouse strains that displayed reduced arterial thrombosis in vivo, this was accompanied by impaired hemostasis. This was also reflected by comparing in vitro thrombus formation (by microfluidics) with alterations in in vivo bleeding time. In conclusion, the presently developed multi-parameter analysis of thrombus formation using microfluidics can be used to: (i) determine the severity of platelet abnormalities; (ii) distinguish between altered platelet adhesion, aggregation and activation; and (iii) elucidate both collagen and non-collagen dependent alterations of thrombus formation. This approach may thereby aid in the better understanding and better assessment of genetic variation that affect in vivo arterial thrombosis and hemostasis.