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Ranvier-Schnürringe spielen eine entscheidende Rolle bei der schnellen Weiterleitung von elektrischen Impulsen in Nervenzellen. Bei bestimmten neurologischen Erkrankungen, den Neuropathien, kann es zu Störungen in der ultrastrukturellen Organisation verschiedener Schnürring-Proteine kommen (Doppler et al., 2018, Doppler et al., 2016).
Eine detailliertere Kenntnis der genauen Anordnung dieser Schnürring-Proteine und eventueller Abweichungen von dieser Anordnung im Krankheitsfall, könnte der Schlüssel zu einer vereinfachten Diagnostik von bestimmten Neuropathie- Formen sein.
Ziel meiner Arbeit war es daher, die Untersuchung der ultrastrukturellen Architektur der (para-)nodalen Adhäsionsproteine Neurofascin-155 und Caspr1 unter Verwendung der super-hochauflösenden Mikroskopiemethode dSTORM (direct Stochastic Optical Reconstruction Microscopy) an murinen Zupfnervenpräparaten zu etablieren. Nach erster Optimierung der Probenpräparation für die 2-Farben-dSTORM sowie der korrelationsbasierten Bildanalyse, konnte ich mittels modellbasierter Simulation die zugrundeliegende Molekülorganisation identifizieren und mit Hilfe der Ergebnisse aus früheren Untersuchungen validieren. In einem translationalen Ansatz habe ich anschließend humane Zupfnervenpräparate von 14 Probanden mit unterschiedlichen Formen einer Neuropathie mikroskopiert und ausgewertet, um die Anwendbarkeit dieses Ansatzes in der Diagnostik zu testen.
Obgleich keine signifikanten Unterschiede zwischen physiologischem und pathologischem neurologischem Gewebe hinsichtlich Neurofascin-155 und Caspr1 festgestellt werden konnten, scheint der Ansatz grundsätzlich dennoch vielversprechend zu sein, bedarf jedoch noch weiteren Anstrengungen hinsichtlich Probenpräparation, Auswertungs- und Versuchsprotokollen und einer größeren Anzahl an humanen Biopsien mit homogenerem Krankheitsbild.
Ischemia-reperfusion injury (I/R injury) is a common complication in ischemic stroke (IS) treatment, which is characterized by a paradoxical perpetuation of tissue damage despite the successful re-establishment of vascular perfusion. This phenomenon is known to be facilitated by the detrimental interplay of platelets and inflammatory cells at the vascular interface. However, the spatio-temporal and molecular mechanisms underlying these cellular interactions and their contribution to infarct progression are still incompletely understood. Therefore, this study intended to clarify the temporal mechanisms of infarct growth after cerebral vessel recanalization. The data presented here could show that infarct progression is driven by early blood-brain-barrier perturbation and is independent of secondary thrombus formation. Since previous studies unravelled the secretion of platelet granules as a molecular mechanism of how platelets contribute to I/R injury, special emphasis was placed on the role of platelet granule secretion in the process of barrier dysfunction. By combining an in vitro approach with a murine IS model, it could be shown that platelet α-granules exerted endothelial-damaging properties, whereas their absence (NBEAL2-deficiency) translated into improved microvascular integrity. Hence, targeting platelet α-granules might serve as a novel treatment option to reduce vascular integrity loss and diminish infarct growth despite recanalization.
Recent evidence revealed that pathomechanisms underlying I/R injury are already instrumental during large vessel occlusion. This indicates that penumbral tissue loss under occlusion and I/R injury during reperfusion share an intertwined relationship. In accordance with this notion, human observational data disclosed the presence of a neutrophil dominated immune response and local platelet activation and secretion, by the detection of the main components of platelet α-granules, within the secluded vasculature of IS patients. These initial observations of immune cells and platelets could be further expanded within this thesis by flow cytometric analysis of local ischemic blood samples. Phenotyping of immune cells disclosed a yet unknown shift in the lymphocyte population towards CD4+ T cells and additionally corroborated the concept of an immediate intravascular immune response that is dominated by granulocytes. Furthermore, this thesis provides first-time evidence for the increased appearance of platelet-leukocyte-aggregates within the secluded human vasculature. Thus, interfering with immune cells and/or platelets already under occlusion might serve as a potential strategy to diminish infarct expansion and ameliorate clinical outcome after IS.