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Das zeitgleiche Auftreten eines ischämischen Schlaganfalls sowie eines Takotsubo-Syndroms (TTS) scheint eine relevante, bisher nicht ausreichend verstandene klinische Konstellation zu sein. Die Pathologien können als über die Hirn-Herz-Achse gekoppelt verstanden werden, in die die Blut-Hirn-Schranke (BHS) als funktionale Komponente integriert ist. Das klinisch-neurologische Outcome dieses Patient:innen-Kollektivs scheint signifikant schlechter zu sein als nach solitärem ischämischen Insult. Es wurde hypothetisiert, dass die BHS in besonderem Maße kompromittiert sein könnte. Das vorwiegend weibliche, postmenopausale Patient:innenkollektiv präsentierte laborchemisch elevierte Katecholaminspiegel sowie Entzündungsparameter. Diese Konditionen wurden unter Sauerstoff-Glucose-Entzug (OGD) in vitro simuliert und resultierende Alterationen eines etablierten BHS-Modells aus murinen cEND-Zellen der cerebralen Mikrozirkulation untersucht. Die Evaluation der BHS-Integrität erfolgte anhand von spezifischen Junktionsproteinen sowie Integrinuntereinheiten. Alle Versuche wurden parallel unter Östrogen-Applikation (E2) durchgeführt, um die mögliche BHS-Protektion durch das weibliche Sexualhormon zu untersuchen. Die getrennte Applikation von Katecholaminen (KAT) sowie Entzündungsmediatoren (INF) führte gegenüber der simultanen Applikation zu einem geringeren BHS-Schaden. Dieser erschien zeitgebunden, wobei sich das Ausmaß gewissermaßen proportional zur Einwirkdauer verhielt. Auswirkungen von OGD sowie einer Reoxygenierung, im Sinne einer simulierten Reperfusion, potenzierten sich mit den Effekten von KAT/INF. Überwiegend kompromittierten OGD und KAT/INF die BHS-Integrität, wobei nach Reoxygenierung eine „Erholung“ oder ein „Reperfusionsschaden“ vorlag. Eine Protektion durch E2 war morphologisch nachweisbar, speziell gegenüber OGD, KAT/INF sowie einem „Reperfusionsschaden“. Auf Ebene der Gen- sowie Proteinexpression konnte dies nicht gezeigt werden. Die Homöostase des ZNS würde in vivo beeinträchtigt, Katecholamine sowie Entzündungsmediatoren könnten ungehindert das bereits durch die Ischämie geschädigte neuronale Gewebe erreichen. Insgesamt trägt diese Arbeit zu einem Verständnis der molekularen BHS-Veränderungen im Kontext des zeitgleichen Auftretens von TTS und einem ischämischem Insult bei. Es wurde eine experimentelle Grundlage geschaffen, um zukünftig pathogenetische Hintergründe weiter erforschen zu können. Darauf aufbauend könnten, nach weiterer in vitro- sowie in vivo-Forschung, klinische Therapiekonzepte optimiert werden.
Vergleich der Bakterienlast in vivo und Wachstumskinetik in vitro hyperletaler Meningokokkentypen
(2020)
Die invasive Meningokokkenerkrankung stellt weltweit mit einer Letalität von 5-10% trotz antibiotischer Therapie eine Herausforderung dar. Ein spezifisches Virulenzgen, welches die Schwere der Meningokokkenerkrankung bestimmt, konnte bisher nicht definiert werden. Vorangegangene Studien zeigen eine Korrelation der Letalität mit der Bakterienlast, Unterschiede bezüglich der Letalität je nach Serogruppe, eine erhöhte Letalität bei Infektionen mit sogenannten hyperletalen Feintypen (bisher nicht veröffentlichte Daten des NRZMHi) sowie einen Unterschied in der maximal in Flüssigkultur erreichten Konzentration der Bakterien zwischen invasiven Stämmen und Trägerstämmen.
In dieser Arbeit wurden mögliche Gründe für die Hyperletalität bestimmter Meningokokkentypen experimentell untersucht. Insbesondere wird die Frage analysiert, ob die hyperletalen Meningokokkentypen mit einer höheren bakteriellen Last im Blut assoziiert sind und ob sie andere Wachstumscharakteristiken im Vergleich zu ihren Kontrollstämmen in vitro zeigen.
Hierzu erfolgte mittels quantitativer Echtzeit-Polymerase-Kettenreaktion die Bestimmung der bakteriellen Last in 62 Blutproben von Patienten mit bestätigter invasiver Meningokokkenerkrankung über den Nachweis des ctrA-Gens. Darunter waren elf Proben des hyperletalen Feintyps B:P1.7-2,4:F1-5 und fünf Proben des hyperletalen Feintyps C:P1.5,2:F3-3.
Die Wachstumsversuche wurden mit 30 zufällig gewählten Stämmen der hyperletalen Feintypen B:P1.7-2,4:F1-5, C:P1.5-1,10-8:F3-6 und C:P1.5,2:F3-3 mit ihren jeweiligen nach Alter und Geschlecht abgeglichenen nicht zu der Gruppe der hyperletalen Feintypen gehörenden Kontrollstämmen in dem Medium PPM+ durchgeführt.
Die Wachstumsgeschwindigkeit μ sowie die Kapazität A (maximale Konzentrationszunahme als Logarithmus der gemessenen OD im Verhältnis zur Ausgangsdichte ODT0) wurden durch nicht-lineare Regression anhand der modifizierten Gompertz-Funktion ermittelt. Die Messung der optischen Dichte erfolgte alle 30 Minuten über 16 Stunden bei 620nm durch das Gerät TECAN Infinite 200 Pro (Tecan Group Ltd., Männedorf / Schweiz). Die Methode wurde anhand einer publizierten Studie zwischen Trägerstämmen und invasiven Stämmen (Schoen et al., 2014) validiert und bestätigte einen marginalen Unterschied in der optischen Dichte (p=0,057, Wilcoxon-Test) zwischen den Gruppen. Es zeigte sich kein Unterschied in der Wachstumsgeschwindigkeit.
Aus den Ergebnissen dieser Arbeit können drei wesentliche Schlussfolgerungen gezogen werden:
1.) Die Bakterienlast in dieser Stichprobe ist, entgegen der Literatur, nicht abhängig von der Serogruppe und dem Feintyp, jedoch von der Krankheitsmanifestation.
2.) Die Kapazität A ist in der Gruppe der „hyperletalen“ Typen im Vergleich zu den Kontrollstämmen möglicherweise höher.
3.) Größere Stichproben (Nativmaterial, Stämme) sind erforderlich, um die Beobachtungen dieser Studie zu bestätigen.
Tumore von Kopf und Hals gehen weiterhin mit einer schlechten Prognose einher. Im Rahmen einer operativen Therapie tritt Wundsekret (WS) aus, welches der Wundheilung dient. Dieses kann in Kontakt mit Tumorzellen bzw. Resttumor in der Wunde kommen.
Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Frage nach dem Einfluss von Wundsekret auf Zellvermehrung, Chemoresistenzentwicklung, den Zellzyklus und die Induktion einer Epithelial-mesenchymalen Transition (EMT) in Tumorzellen von Kopf und Hals gestellt.
Hierfür wurde das WS von Tag1 und das WS von Tag 2 im Dotblot auf seine Zytokinzusammensetzung analysiert. Zwei Tumorzelllinien von Kopf und Hals, FaDu und HlaC78, wurden mit WSTag1 und WSTag2 behandelt und untersucht, welche Effekte das WS auf die Zellen hat.
Verwendet wurden ein Proliferationsassay, eine Zellzyklusuntersuchung und Apoptosetestung mittels FACS, eine PCR, ein Spheroidmodell und die Lichtmikroskopie.
Im WS wurden erhöhte Konzentrationen verschiedener Zytokine, insbesondere von IL-6, nachgewiesen. Gezeigt werden konnte eine gesteigerte Proliferationsrate der Tumorzellen unter WS-Behandlung, jedoch keine veränderte Verteilung der Zellzyklusphasen. In HlaC78-Zellen konnte eine vermehrte Vitalität nach Cisplatinbehandlung nachgewiesen werden. In beiden Tumorzelllinien fand sich eine vermehrte Exprimierung von Snail 1, Snail 2 und Vimentin. E-Cadherin wurde vermindert exprimiert. Twist und N-Cadherin wiesen keine Veränderungen auf. Es zeigte sich eine vermehrte Migration der Tumorzellen in die Umgebung. Die Zellen wiesen nach Behandlung mit WS vermehrt mesenchymale Zeichen auf. Es konnte kein Unterschied der Auswirkungen einer Behandlung mit WSTag1 im Vergleich zu einer Behandlung mit WSTag2 festgestellt werden.
Insgesamt scheint WS in Tumorzellen von Kopf und Hals einen EMT-artigen Prozess in Gang zu setzen, also eine partial EMT (pEMT).
Als mögliche Auslöser dieser Veränderungen kommen die im WS nachgewiesenen Zytokine und v. a. IL-6 in Frage.
Neisseria gonorrhoeae is a human-specific pathogen that causes gonorrhea, the second most common sexually transmitted infection worldwide. Disease progression, drug discovery, and basic host-pathogen interactions are studied using different approaches, which rely on models ranging from 2D cell culture to complex 3D tissues and animals. In this review, we discuss the models used in N. gonorrhoeae research. We address both in vivo (animal) and in vitro cell culture models, discussing the pros and cons of each and outlining the recent advancements in the field of three-dimensional tissue models. From simple 2D monoculture to complex advanced 3D tissue models, we provide an overview of the relevant methodology and its application. Finally, we discuss future directions in the exciting field of 3D tissue models and how they can be applied for studying the interaction of N. gonorrhoeae with host cells under conditions closely resembling those found at the native sites of infection.
Primary osteoporosis is an age-related disease characterized by an imbalance in bone homeostasis. While the resorptive aspect of the disease has been studied intensely, less is known about the anabolic part of the syndrome or presumptive deficiencies in bone regeneration. Multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) are the primary source of osteogenic regeneration. In the present study we aimed to unravel whether MSC biology is directly involved in the pathophysiology of the disease and therefore performed microarray analyses of hMSC of elderly patients (79-94 years old) suffering from osteoporosis (hMSC-OP). In comparison to age-matched controls we detected profound changes in the transcriptome in hMSC-OP, e.g. enhanced mRNA expression of known osteoporosis-associated genes (LRP5, RUNX2, COL1A1) and of genes involved in osteoclastogenesis (CSF1, PTH1R), but most notably of genes coding for inhibitors of WNT and BMP signaling, such as Sclerostin and MAB21L2. These candidate genes indicate intrinsic deficiencies in self-renewal and differentiation potential in osteoporotic stem cells. We also compared both hMSC-OP and non-osteoporotic hMSC-old of elderly donors to hMSC of similar to 30 years younger donors and found that the transcriptional changes acquired between the sixth and the ninth decade of life differed widely between osteoporotic and non-osteoporotic stem cells. In addition, we compared the osteoporotic transcriptome to long term-cultivated, senescent hMSC and detected some signs for pre-senescence in hMSC-OP. Our results suggest that in primary osteoporosis the transcriptomes of hMSC populations show distinct signatures and little overlap with non-osteoporotic aging, although we detected some hints for senescence-associated changes. While there are remarkable inter-individual variations as expected for polygenetic diseases, we could identify many susceptibility genes for osteoporosis known from genetic studies. We also found new candidates, e.g. MAB21L2, a novel repressor of BMP-induced transcription. Such transcriptional changes may reflect epigenetic changes, which are part of a specific osteoporosis-associated aging process.
The enteric nervous system (ENS) innervates the gastrointestinal (GI) tract and controls central aspects of GI physiology including contractility of the intestinal musculature, glandular secretion and intestinal blood flow. The ENS is composed of neurons that conduct electrical signals and of enteric glial cells (EGCs). EGCs resemble central nervous system (CNS) astrocytes in their morphology and in the expression of shared markers such as the intermediate filament protein glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). They are strategically located at the interface of ENS neurons and their effector cells to modulate intestinal motility, epithelial barrier stability and inflammatory processes. The specific contributions of EGCs to the maintenance of intestinal homeostasis are subject of current research.
From a clinical point of view EGC involvement in pathophysiological processes such as intestinal inflammation is highly relevant. Like CNS astrocytes ECGs can acquire a reactive, tissue-protective phenotype in response to intestinal injury. In patients with chronic inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, alterations in the EGC network are well known, particularly a differential expression of GFAP, which is a hallmark of reactive gliosis in the CNS.
With increasing recognition of the role of EGCs in intestinal health and disease comes the need to study the glial population in its complexity. The overall aim of this thesis was to comprehensively study EGCs with focus on the reactive GFAP-expressing subpopulation under inflammatory conditions in vivo and in vitro. In a first step, a novel in vivo rat model of acute systemic inflammation mimicking sepsis was employed to investigate rapidly occuring responses of EGCs to inflammation. This study revealed that within a short time frame of a few hours, EGCs responded to the inflammation with an upregulation of Gfap gene expression. This inflammation-induced upregulation was confined to the myenteric plexus and varied in intensity along the intestinal rostro-caudal axis. This highly responsive myenteric GFAP-expressing EGC population was further characterized in vivo andin vitro using a transgenic mouse model (hGFAP-eGFP mice). Primary purified murine GFAP-EGC cultures in vitro were established and it was assessed how the transcriptomic and proteomic profiles of these cells change upon inflammatory stimulation. Here, myenteric GFAP-EGCs were found to undergo a shift in gene expression profile that predominantly affects expression of genes associated with inflammatory responses. Further, a secretion of inflammatory mediators was validated on protein level. The GFAP+ subpopulation is hence an active participant in inflammatory pathophysiology. In an acute murine IBD model in vivo, GFAP-EGCs were found to express components of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II in inflamed tissue, which also indicates a crosstalk of EGCs with the innate and the adaptive lamina propria immune system in acute inflammation.
Taken together, this work advances our knowledge on EGC (patho-)physiology by identifying and characterizing an EGC subpopulation rapidly responsive to inflammation. This study further provides the transcriptomic profile of this population in vivo and in vitro, which can be used to identify targets for therapeutic intervention. Due to the modulating influence of EGCs on the intestinal microenvironment, the study further underlines the importance of integrating EGCs into in vitro test systems that aim to model intestinal tissues in vitro and presents an outlook on a potential strategy.
Stabilization of the blood-brain barrier during and after stroke can lead to less adverse outcome. For elucidation of underlying mechanisms and development of novel therapeutic strategies validated in vitro disease models of the blood-brain barrier could be very helpful. To mimic in vitro stroke conditions we have established a blood-brain barrier in vitro model based on mouse cell line cerebEND and applied oxygen/glucose deprivation (OGD). The role of astrocytes in this disease model was investigated by using cell line C6. Transwell studies pointed out that addition of astrocytes during OGD increased the barrier damage significantly in comparison to the endothelial monoculture shown by changes of transendothelial electrical resistance as well as fluorescein permeability data. Analysis on mRNA and protein levels by qPCR, western blotting and immunofluorescence microscopy of tight junction molecules claudin-3,-5,-12, occludin and ZO-1 revealed that their regulation and localisation is associated with the functional barrier breakdown. Furthermore, soluble factors of astrocytes, OGD and their combination were able to induce changes of functionality and expression of ABC-transporters Abcb1a (P-gp), Abcg2 (bcrp), and Abcc4 (mrp4). Moreover, the expression of proteases (matrixmetalloproteinases MMP-2, MMP-3, MMP-9, and t-PA) as well as of their endogenous inhibitors (TIMP-1, TIMP-3, PAI-1) was altered by astrocyte factors and OGD which resulted in significant changes of total MMP and t-PA activity. Morphological rearrangements induced by OGD and treatment with astrocyte factors were confirmed at a nanometer scale using atomic force microscopy. In conclusion, astrocytes play a major role in blood-brain barrier breakdown during OGD in vitro.
Telomerase, the enzyme that maintains telomeres, preferentially lengthens short telomeres. The S. cerevisiae Pif1 DNA helicase inhibits both telomerase-mediated telomere lengthening and de novo telomere addition at double strand breaks (DSB). Here, we report that the association of the telomerase subunits Est2 and Est1 at a DSB was increased in the absence of Pif1, as it is at telomeres, suggesting that Pif1 suppresses de novo telomere addition by removing telomerase from the break. To determine how the absence of Pif1 results in telomere lengthening, we used the single telomere extension assay (STEX), which monitors lengthening of individual telomeres in a single cell cycle. In the absence of Pif1, telomerase added significantly more telomeric DNA, an average of 72 nucleotides per telomere compared to the 45 nucleotides in wild type cells, and the fraction of telomeres lengthened increased almost four-fold. Using an inducible short telomere assay, Est2 and Est1 no longer bound preferentially to a short telomere in pif1 mutant cells while binding of Yku80, a telomere structural protein, was unaffected by the status of the PIF1 locus. Two experiments demonstrate that Pif1 binding is affected by telomere length: Pif1 (but not Yku80) -associated telomeres were 70 bps longer than bulk telomeres, and in the inducible short telomere assay, Pif1 bound better to wild type length telomeres than to short telomeres. Thus, preferential lengthening of short yeast telomeres is achieved in part by targeting the negative regulator Pif1 to long telomeres.
Sigma factor SigB is crucial to mediate Staphylococcus aureus adaptation during chronic infections
(2015)
Staphylococcus aureus is a major human pathogen that causes a range of infections from acute invasive to chronic and difficult-to-treat. Infection strategies associated with persisting S. aureus infections are bacterial host cell invasion and the bacterial ability to dynamically change phenotypes from the aggressive wild-type to small colony variants (SCVs), which are adapted for intracellular long-term persistence. The underlying mechanisms of the bacterial switching and adaptation mechanisms appear to be very dynamic, but are largely unknown. Here, we analyzed the role and the crosstalk of the global S. aureus regulators agr, sarA and SigB by generating single, double and triple mutants, and testing them with proteome analysis and in different in vitro and in vivo infection models. We were able to demonstrate that SigB is the crucial factor for adaptation in chronic infections. During acute infection, the bacteria require the simultaneous action of the agr and sarA loci to defend against invading immune cells by causing inflammation and cytotoxicity and to escape from phagosomes in their host cells that enable them to settle an infection at high bacterial density. To persist intracellularly the bacteria subsequently need to silence agr and sarA. Indeed agr and sarA deletion mutants expressed a much lower number of virulence factors and could persist at high numbers intracellularly. SigB plays a crucial function to promote bacterial intracellular persistence. In fact, \(\Delta\)sigB-mutants did not generate SCVs and were completely cleared by the host cells within a few days. In this study we identified SigB as an essential factor that enables the bacteria to switch from the highly aggressive phenotype that settles an acute infection to a silent SCV-phenotype that allows for long-term intracellular persistence. Consequently, the SigB-operon represents a possible target to develop preventive and therapeutic strategies against chronic and therapy-refractory infections.
The objective of the present investigation was to study the ability of sulfobutylether-\(\beta\)-cyclodextrin (SBECD) to form an inclusion complex with sevoflurane (SEV), a volatile anesthetic with poor water solubility. The inclusion complex was prepared, characterized and its cellular toxicity and blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeation potential of the formulated SEV have also been examined for the purpose of controlled drug delivery. The SEV-SBE\(\beta\)CD complex was nontoxic to the primary brain microvascular endothelial (pEND) cells at a clinically relevant concentration of sevoflurane. The inclusion complex exhibited significantly higher BBB permeation profiles as compared with the reference substance (propranolol) concerning calculated apparent permeability values (P\(_{app}\)). In addition, SEV binding affinity to SBE\(\beta\)CD was confirmed by a minimal Gibbs free energy of binding (ΔG\(_{bind}\)) value of -1.727 ± 0.042 kcal・mol\(^{-1}\) and an average binding constant (K\(_{b}\)) of 53.66 ± 9.24 mM indicating rapid drug liberation from the cyclodextrin amphiphilic cavity.
Polyphenols exert beneficial effects in type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). However, their mechanism of action remains largely unknown. Endothelial Akt-kinase plays a key role in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular complications in T2DM and therefore the modulation of its activity is of interest. This work aimed to characterize effects of structurally different polyphenols on Akt-phosphorylation (pAkt) in endothelial cells (Ea.hy926) and to describe structure-activity features. A comprehensive screening via ELISA quantified the effects of 44 polyphenols (10 µM) on pAkt Ser473. The most pronounced inhibitors were luteolin (44 ± 18%), quercetin (36 ± 8%), urolithin A (35 ± 12%), apigenin, fisetin, and resveratrol; (p < 0.01). The results were confirmed by Western blotting and complemented with corresponding experiments in HUVEC cells. A strong positive and statistically significant correlation between the mean inhibitory effects of the tested polyphenols on both Akt-residues Ser473 and Thr308 (r = 0.9478, p = 0.0003) was determined by immunoblotting. Interestingly, the structural characteristics favoring pAkt inhibition partially differed from structural features enhancing the compounds’ antioxidant activity. The present study is the first to quantitatively compare the influence of polyphenols from nine different structural subclasses on pAkt in endothelial cells. These effects might be advantageous in certain T2DM-complications involving over-activation of the Akt-pathway. The suggested molecular mode of action of polyphenols involving Akt-inhibition contributes to understanding their effects on the cellular level.
RNase P processes the 5'-end of tRNAs. An essential catalytic RNA has been demonstrated in Bacteria, Archaea and the nuclei of most eukaryotes; an organism-specific number of proteins complement the holoenzyme. Nuclear RNase P from yeast and humans is well understood and contains an RNA, similar to the sister enzyme RNase MRP. In contrast, no protein subunits have yet been identified in the plant enzymes, and the presence of a nucleic acid in RNase P is still enigmatic. We have thus set out to identify and characterize the subunits of these enzymes in two plant model systems. Expression of the two known Arabidopsis MRP RNA genes in vivo was verified. The first wheat MRP RNA sequences are presented, leading to improved structure models for plant MRP RNAs. A novel mRNA encoding the central RNase P/MRP protein Pop1p was identified in Arabidopsis, suggesting the expression of distinct protein variants from this gene in vivo. Pop1p-specific antibodies precipitate RNase P activity and MRP RNAs from wheat extracts. Our results provide evidence that in plants, Pop1p is associated with MRP RNAs and with the catalytic subunit of RNase P, either separately or in a single large complex.
Calcium phosphate biocements based on calcium phosphate chemistry are well-established biomaterials for the repair of non-load bearing bone defects due to the brittle nature and low flexural strength of such cements. This article features reinforcement strategies of biocements based on various intrinsic or extrinsic material modifications to improve their strength and toughness. Altering particle size distribution in conjunction with using liquefiers reduces the amount of cement liquid necessary for cement paste preparation. This in turn decreases cement porosity and increases the mechanical performance, but does not change the brittle nature of the cements. The use of fibers may lead to a reinforcement of the matrix with a toughness increase of up to two orders of magnitude, but restricts at the same time cement injection for minimal invasive application techniques. A novel promising approach is the concept of dual-setting cements, in which a second hydrogel phase is simultaneously formed during setting, leading to more ductile cement-hydrogel composites with largely unaffected application properties.
Acute bacterial meningitis is a life-threatening disease in humans. Discussed as entry sites for pathogens into the brain are the blood-brain and the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCSFB). Although human brain microvascular endothelial cells (HBMEC) constitute a well established human in vitro model for the blood-brain barrier, until now no reliable human system presenting the BCSFB has been developed. Here, we describe for the first time a functional human BCSFB model based on human choroid plexus papilloma cells (HIBCPP), which display typical hallmarks of a BCSFB as the expression of junctional proteins and formation of tight junctions, a high electrical resistance and minimal levels of macromolecular flux when grown on transwell filters. Importantly, when challenged with the zoonotic pathogen Streptococcus suis or the human pathogenic bacterium Neisseria meningitidis the HIBCPP show polar bacterial invasion only from the physiologically relevant basolateral side. Meningococcal invasion is attenuated by the presence of a capsule and translocated N. meningitidis form microcolonies on the apical side of HIBCPP opposite of sites of entry. As a functionally relevant human model of the BCSFB the HIBCPP offer a wide range of options for analysis of disease-related mechanisms at the choroid plexus epithelium, especially involving human pathogens.
Multiple antenatal dexamethasone treatment alters brain vessel differentiation in newborn mouse pups
(2015)
Antenatal steroid treatment decreases morbidity and mortality in premature infants through the maturation of lung tissue, which enables sufficient breathing performance. However, clinical and animal studies have shown that repeated doses of glucocorticoids such as dexamethasone and betamethasone lead to long-term adverse effects on brain development. Therefore, we established a mouse model for antenatal dexamethasone treatment to investigate the effects of dexamethasone on brain vessel differentiation towards the blood-brain barrier (BBB) phenotype, focusing on molecular marker analysis. The major findings were that in total brains on postnatal day (PN) 4 triple antenatal dexamethasone treatment significantly downregulated the tight junction protein claudin-5, the endothelial marker Pecam-1/CD31, the glucocorticoid receptor, the NR1 subunit of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor, and Abc transporters (Abcb1a, Abcg2 Abcc4). Less pronounced effects were found after single antenatal dexamethasone treatment and in PN10 samples. Comparisons of total brain samples with isolated brain endothelial cells together with the stainings for Pecam-1/CD31 and claudin-5 led to the assumption that the morphology of brain vessels is affected by antenatal dexamethasone treatment at PN4. On the mRNA level markers for angiogenesis, the sonic hedgehog and the Wnt pathway were downregulated in PN4 samples, suggesting fundamental changes in brain vascularization and/or differentiation. In conclusion, we provided a first comprehensive molecular basis for the adverse effects of multiple antenatal dexamethasone treatment on brain vessel differentiation.
Molecular Effects of Polyphenols in Experimental Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and Metabolic Syndrome
(2019)
The growing prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) demands novel therapeutic and adjuvant strategies. Polyphenols (PPs) are plant secondary metabolites. Epidemiological studies demonstrate an inverse relationship between their increased intake and the risk of development of T2DM and cardiovascular complications. However, the PPs’ mechanism of action remains largely unknown. The present work aimed to expand knowledge regarding the effects of PPs on diabetes relevant molecular targets.
Pycnogenol® (PYC) is a standardized pine bark extract which consists of oligomeric and monomeric PPs. Its anti-diabetic effects have been demonstrated in clinical trials. As a part of a human study involving 20 healthy volunteers, the extract’s effects on dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP IV) were investigated. This protease terminates the insulin secretagogue action of incretins. Its inhibition is a promising strategy in T2DM treatment. This study uncovered that PYC-intake of 100 mg daily over 14 days statistically significantly reduced DPP IV serum concentrations by 8.2 % (n= 38, p= 0.032). Contrary to expectations, this decrease was not paralleled by a reduction in the serum DPP IV enzymatic activity. To the best of our knowledge, the present study was the first investigating the effects of PPs on DPP IV serum concentrations and activities in humans. The finding that PYC is capable of reducing DPP IV serum concentrations might be important with regard to diabetes, where DPP IV levels are increased.
Screenings for PPs’ in vitro effects on DPP IV activity were performed employing a purified enzyme. The effects of tested PPs (among which PYC ingredients) at a physiologically relevant concentration of 5 µM were weak (< 10 %) and too small compared to the reference compound sitagliptin, and thus not likely to be clinically relevant. This result is in discordance with some published data, but consistent with the outcome from the present human study. In addition, fluorescence interactions with the experimental setup were registered: under certain conditions urolithin B exhibited an autofluorescence which might mask eventual inhibitory activity. Quercetin quenched the fluorescence slightly which might contribute to false positive results. No statistically significant effects of selected constituents and metabolites of PYC on the total DPP IV protein expression were observed in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. Thus, the lower DPP IV in vivo concentrations after intake of PYC cannot be explained with down-regulation of the DPP IV expression in adipocytes.
Akt kinase is responsible for the transmission of insulin signals and its dysregulation is related to insulin resistance and plays an important role in development of cardiovascular complications in T2DM. Thus, the modulation of the phosphorylation status of endothelial Akt-kinase, respectively its activity, might be a promising strategy in the management of these pathologies. This work aimed to uncover the effects of PPs from different structural subclasses on Akt-phosphorylation (pAkt) in endothelial cells (Ea.hy926). Short-term effects (5 – 30 min) were investigated at a concentration of 10 µM. In a pilot study two model PPs induced a moderate, but reproducible inhibition of pAkt Ser473 of 52.37 ± 21.01 % (quercetin; p= 0.006, n= 3) and 37.79 ± 7.14 % (resveratrol; p= 0.021, n= 4) compared to the negative control. A primary screening with Western blot analysis investigated the effects of eight compounds from different subclasses on pAkt Ser473 and Thr308 to reveal whether the observed inhibition PPs a group effect or specific to certain compounds. In addition to resveratrol and quercetin, statistically significant inhibitions of pAkt Ser473 were induced by luteolin (29.96 ± 11.06 %, p< 0.01, n= 6) and apigenin (22.57 ± 10.30 %, p< 0.01, n= 6). In contrast, genistein, 3,4,5-trimethoxystilbene, taxifolin and (+)-catechin caused no inhibition. A strong positive and statistically significant correlation between the mean inhibitory effects of the tested PPs on both Akt-residues Ser473 and Thr308 (r= 0.9478, p= 0.0003) was determined. A comprehensive secondary screening via ELISA involving 44 compounds from nine structural groups quantified the effects of PPs on pAkt Ser473 to uncover potential structure-activity features. The most potent inhibitors were luteolin (44.31 ± 17.95 %), quercetin (35.71 ± 8.33 %), urolithin A (35.28 ± 11.80 %), apigenin (31.79 ± 6.16 %), fisetin (28.09 ± 9.09 %), and resveratrol (26.04 ± 5.58 %). These effects were statistically significant (p< 0.01, n= 3 to 6). Further lead structure optimization might be based on the fact that the effects of luteolin and resveratrol also differed statistically significantly from each other (p= 0.008).
To the best of our knowledge, the present study is the first to compare quantitatively the short term effects of PPs from different subclasses on pAkt in endothelial cells. Basic structure-activity relationships revealed that for flavones and flavonols the presence of a C2=C3 double bond (ring C) was essential for inhibitory activity and hydroxylation on the m- and p- positions in the ring B contributed to it. For stilbenoids, three free OH-groups appeared to be optimal. The comparison of the inhibitory potentials of ellagic acid and its microbial metabolites showed that urolithin A was statistically significantly more effective than its progenitor compound. Despite their structural similarities, the only active compound among all urolithins tested was urolithin A, hydroxylated at the C3 and C8 positions. This suggested a specific effect for urolithin A. Based on the common structural determinants and molecular geometry of the most active PPs a pharmacophore model regarding Akt-inhibition was proposed.
In summary, the effects of a wide variety of PPs from diverse structural subclasses on the in vitro phosphorylation of endothelial Akt were quantitatively analyzed for the first time, the effects of previously undescribed compounds were determined and structure activity relationships were elucidated. The inhibitory potential of individual PPs might be beneficial in cases of sustained over-activation of Akt-kinase and its substrates such as S6 kinase as reported for certain T2DM-related pathological states, such as insulin resistance, endothelial dysfunction, excessive angiogenesis, vascular calcification, and insulin triggered DNA-damage. The results of the present work suggest potential molecular mechanisms of action of PP involving Akt-inhibition and DPP IV-down-regulation and thus contribute to the understanding of anti-diabetic effects of these compounds on the molecular level.
Background: Treatment of patients with stage pT1 urothelial bladder cancer (UBC) continues to be a challenge due to its unpredictable clinical course. Reliable molecular markers that help to determine appropriate individual treatment are still lacking. Loss of aquaporin (AQP) 3 protein expression has previously been shown in muscle-invasive UBC. The aim of the present study was to investigate the prognostic value of AQP3 protein expression with regard to the prognosis of stage pT1 UBC.
Method: AQP 3 protein expression was investigated by immunohistochemistry in specimens of 87 stage T1 UBC patients, who were diagnosed by transurethral resection of the bladder (TURB) and subsequent second resection at a high-volume urological centre between 2002 and 2009. Patients underwent adjuvant instillation therapy with Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG). Loss of AQP3 protein expression was defined as complete absence of the protein within the whole tumour. Expression status was correlated retrospectively with clinicopathological and follow-up data (median: 31 months). Multivariate Cox regression analysis was used to assess the value of AQP3 tumour expression with regard to recurrence-free (RFS), progression-free (PFS) and cancer-specific survival (CSS). RFS, PFS and CSS were calculated by Kaplan-Meier analysis and Log rank test.
Results: 59% of patients were shown to exhibit AQP3-positive tumours, whereas 41% of tumours did not express the marker. Loss of AQP3 protein expression was associated with a statistically significantly worse PFS (20% vs. 72%, p=0.020). This finding was confirmed by multivariate Cox regression analysis (HR 7.58, CI 1.29 - 44.68; p=0.025).
Conclusions: Loss of AQP3 protein expression in pT1 UBC appears to play a key role in disease progression and is associated with worse PFS. Considering its potential prognostic value, assessment of AQP3 protein expression could be used to help stratify the behavior of patients with pT1 UBC.
Super-resolution microscopy can unravel previously hidden details of cellular structures but requires high irradiation intensities to use the limited photon budget efficiently. Such high photon densities are likely to induce cellular damage in live-cell experiments. We applied single-molecule localization microscopy conditions and tested the influence of irradiation intensity, illumination-mode, wavelength, light-dose, temperature and fluorescence labeling on the survival probability of different cell lines 20-24 hours after irradiation. In addition, we measured the microtubule growth speed after irradiation. The photo-sensitivity is dramatically increased at lower irradiation wavelength. We observed fixation, plasma membrane permeabilization and cytoskeleton destruction upon irradiation with shorter wavelengths. While cells stand light intensities of similar to 1 kW cm\(^{-2}\) at 640 nm for several minutes, the maximum dose at 405 nm is only similar to 50 J cm\(^{-2}\), emphasizing red fluorophores for live-cell localization microscopy. We also present strategies to minimize phototoxic factors and maximize the cells ability to cope with higher irradiation intensities.
Kinetic assessment by in vitro approaches - A contribution to reduce animals in toxicity testing
(2015)
The adoption of directives and regulations by the EU requires the development of alternative testing strategies as opposed to animal testing for risk assessment of xenobiotics. Additionally, high attrition rates of drugs late in the discovery phase demand improvement of current test batteries applied in the preclinical phase within the pharmaceutical area. These issues were taken up by the EU founded 7th Framework Program “Predict-IV”; with the overall goal to improve the predictability of safety of an investigational product, after repeated exposure, by integration of “omics” technologies applied on well established in vitro approaches. Three major target organs for drug-induced toxicity were in focus: liver, kidney and central nervous system. To relate obtained dynamic data with the in vivo situation, kinetics of the test compounds have to be evaluated and extrapolated by physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling.
This thesis assessed in vitro kinetics of the selected test compounds (cyclosporine A, adefovir dipivoxil and cisplatinum) regarding their reliability and relevance to respective in vivo pharmacokinetics. Cells were exposed daily or every other day to the test compounds at two concentration levels (toxic and non-toxic) for up to 14 days. Concentrations of the test compounds or their major biotransformation products were determined by LC-MS/MS or ICP-MS in vehicle, media, cells and plastic adsorption samples generated at five different time-points on the first and the last treatment day.
Cyclosporine A bioaccumulation was evident in primary rat hepatocytes (PRH) at the high concentration, while efficient biotransformation mediated by CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 was determined in primary human hepatocytes (PHH) and HepaRG cells. The lower biotransformation in PRH is in accordance with observation made in vivo with the rat being a poor model for CYP3A biotransformation. Further, inter-assay variability was noticed in PHH caused by biological variability in CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 activity in human donors. The inter-assay variability observed for PRH and HepaRG cells was a result of differences between vehicles regarding their cyclosporine A content. Cyclosporine A biotransformation was more prominent in HepaRG cells due to stable and high CYP3A4 and CYP3A5 activity. In addition, in vitro clearances were calculated and scaled to in vivo. All scaled in vitro clearances were overestimated (PRH: 10-fold, PHH: 2-fold, HepaRG cells: 2-fold). These results should be proven by physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling and additional experiments, in order to verify that these overestimations are constant for each system and subsequently can be diminished by implementation of further scaling factors.
Brain cell cultures, primary neuronal culture of mouse cortex cells and primary aggregating rat brain cells, revealed fast achieved steady state levels of cyclosporine A. This indicates a chemical distribution of cyclosporine A between the aqueous and organic phases and only minor involvement of biological processes such as active transport and biotransformation. Hence, cyclosporine A uptake into cells is presumably transport mediated, supported by findings of transporter experiments performed on a parallel artificial membrane and Caco-2 cells. Plastic adsorption of cyclosporine A was significant, but different for each model, and should be considered by physiologically based pharmacokinetic modeling.
Kinetics of adefovir dipivoxil highlights the limits of in vitro approaches. Active transporters are required for adefovir uptake, but were not functional in RPTECT/TERT1. Therefore, adefovir uptake was limited to passive diffusion of adefovir dipivoxil, which itself degrades time-dependently under culture conditions.
Cisplatinum kinetics, studied in RPTEC/TERT1 cells, indicated intracellular enrichment of platinum, while significant bioaccumulation was not noted. This could be due to cisplatinum not reaching steady state levels within 14 days repeated exposure. As shown in vivo, active transport occurred from the basolateral to apical side, but with lower velocity. Hence, obtained data need to be modeled to estimate cellular processes, which can be scaled and compared to in vivo.
Repeated daily exposure to two different drug concentrations makes it possible to account for bioaccumulation at toxic concentrations or biotransformation/extrusion at non-toxic concentrations. Potential errors leading to misinterpretation of data were reduced by analyses of the vehicles as the applied drug concentrations do not necessarily correspond to the nominal concentrations. Finally, analyses of separate compartments (medium, cells, plastic) give insights into a compound’s distribution, reduce misprediction of cellular processes, e.g. biotransformation, and help to interpret kinetic data. On the other hand, the limits of in vitro approaches have also been pointed out. For correct extrapolation to in vivo, it is essential that the studied in vitro system exhibits the functionality of proteins, which play a key role in the specific drug induced toxicity. Considering the benefits and limitations, it is worth to validate this long-term treatment experimental set-up and expand it on co-culture systems and on organs-on-chips with regard to alternative toxicity testing strategies for repeated dose toxicity studies.