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Background and objectives: Constrictive pericarditis (CP) is the result of a spectrum of primary cardiac and non-cardiac conditions. Little data exists on the cause-specific survival after pericardiectomy in the modern era. The impact of pericardial calcification (CA) on survival is unclear. We sought to determine the association of etiology of CP, CA and other clinical variables with long-term survival after pericardiectomy. Methods: We analyzed the records of 163 patients who underwent pericardiectomy for CP over a 24-year period at a single center. The diagnosis of CP was established by surgical report. Vital status was obtained by the Social Security Death Index. The Kaplan Meier method was used to estimate overall survival and survival by etiology group. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis was performed to assess the effect of various causes for CP on longterm survival while adjusting for age. Results: The etiology of CP was idiopathic in 75 patients (46%), prior cardiac surgery in 60 (37%), radiation treatment in 15 (9%) and miscellaneous in 13 patients (8%). Vital status was obtained in 160 patients (98%). Median follow-up was 6.9 years (range: 0.8 to 24.5 years). Perioperative mortality for all patients was 6%. Idiopathic CP had the best prognosis (7 year survival: 88%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 76% to 94%) followed by postsurgical (66%, 95% CI 52% to 78%) and postradiation CP (27%, 95% CI 9% to 58%). In bootstrap-validated proportional hazards analyses, predictors of poor survival were prior radiation, worse renal function, higher pulmonary artery pressure (PAP), abnormal left ventricular (LV) systolic function, lower serum sodium level, and older age. Pericardial calcification had no impact on survival. Conclusion: Long-term survival after pericardiectomy for CP is determined by the underlying etiology of constriction, LV systolic function, renal function, serum sodium, and PAP. Patients with postsurgical as well as postradiation CP have a survival inferior to patients with idiopathic CP. Perioperative Mortality is low. The relatively good survival after pericardiectomy in patients with idiopathic CP emphasizes the safety of pericardiectomy in this group.
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC), also referred to as marrow stromal cells, maintain the capacity to differentiate into multiple mesenchymal lineages such as osteoblasts, chondrocytes, adipocytes, myoblasts, stromal, neural and endothelial cells. The use of autologous MSC has generated widespread interest due to their developing application in regenerative medicine and tissue engineering in orthopedic surgery. They have become an indispensable cell source for successful implementation in many bone reconstruction procedures. In addition to their multipotency and selfrenewal capacity, they are easily harvested, have demonstrated a homing mechanism and can be efficiently expanded in vitro, thus providing a safe and costefficient tissue replacement for patients with skeletal injury or disease. Little information is currently available concerning donor characteristics for tissue engineering growth of osseous tissue. This study examines the influences of such donor characteristics, including injury pattern, gender, age, and site of harvest on the quantity, quality and osteogenic differentiation of MSC. The goal is to evaluate whether certain patient groups are practically suitable for an ex vivo expansion and therapeutic reimplantation of MSC. The effect of injury pattern on the reservoir and proliferative capacity of MSC in human bone marrow is clearly demonstrated in this analysis. Age and gender were also shown to influence MSC number and proliferation, as in previous studies. A total of 53 participants (46 patients and 7 healthy volunteers ranging from 18 to 64 years of age), who were scheduled to undergo operative procedures on the pelvis, vertebrae, tibia or hip as well as cancellous bone autografts for reconstruction of various bone defects, were included in the study. Participants were divided into 4 groups for each gender: single fracture, multiple trauma, atrophic nonunion and healthy volunteers. A minimum of 6 ml bone marrow samples were aspirated intraoperatively and processed immediately according to protocol. Following cultivation and expansion for 14 days, the cells were then stained for the colony forming unit-fibroblast (CFU-F) assay and each culture flask was photographed, digitized and converted to an 8 bit grey level TIF-format. Using the digitized CFU-F assay, the mean colony number, mean colony area and mean cell number per microscopic field of view (cell density) could be determined. In addition, confirmation of MSC phenotype was established using fluorescent activated cell sorting (FACS). MSC potential for osteogenic differentiation was quantified by von Kossa, alkaline phosphatase and alizarin staining. Furthermore, serum from a total of 39 randomly chosen participants was collected and tested for hormone levels of 17β-estradiol, testosterone and prolactin as well as the cytokine interleukin-6. These analyses demonstrate several significant trauma-related modifications in MSC reservoir and proliferation, in both male and female patients. In multiple trauma patients, the highest MSC frequency was found, independent of gender and age. Proliferative capacity was also highest in male multiple trauma patients. In the case of atrophic nonunion, the lowest MSC reservoir was detected, independent of gender. Furthermore, MSC frequency in male patients was significantly higher than in female, although analyses of hormone and interleukin-6 levels provided no correlation. Agerelated changes in MSC reservoir could also be observed, whereas the proliferative capacity produced only a tendency toward decreasing values with increasing age. Concerning the site of cell harvest, MSC isolated from the proximal extremity of the tibia, greater trochanter and vertebral body did not proliferate sufficiently enough to be included in statistical analysis, supporting the use of the iliac crest for efficient expansion of MSC. This data suggests the interaction of yet to be identified processes in bone marrow in multiple trauma situations which stimulate the activation and mobilization of MSC. Moreover, in the case of atrophic nonunion, the concentration in bone marrow is depleted and the absence of systemic stimulation present in multiple trauma results in reduced activation of proliferative capacity. Such patients, with severe injury or atrophic nonunion, represent a group of patients with an especially acute necessity for effective and successful bone reconstruction. This data can be used to determine the applicability of MSC from various patient groups for osseous tissue replacement procedures. Especially in such medically challenging situations, further research is essential not only to delineate the factors involved in MSC regulation but also to develop methods to stimulate MSC expansion and proliferation.
Background The purpose of the trial was to evaluate the safety and performance of the new Protégé stent in the treatment of common and/or internal carotid artery stenoses. Methods The Protégé® GPS stent is a self-expanding Nitinol stent system. It is mounted on a 6 Fr 0.018” (6-9mm stent) or 7 Fr, 0.035” (10mm stent) over-the-wire-delivery system and includes a new stent release system which allows exact placement of the stent. Seventyseven patients were enrolled in the trial. Study patient assessments were conducted clinically and by duplex scan at baseline, peri-procedure, discharge, one and six months post procedure. Results Seventyseven lesions were treated. Thirtyone lesions were symptomatic, 46 lesions were asymptomatic. The procedure was technically successful in 76 (99%) lesions. The percentage of stenosis was reduced from 86 ± 7 % to 16 ± 8 %. One procedure failed because the embolic protection device could not be retrieved and the patient was sent to surgery. Within 30 days there were 4 (5.2%) Major Adverse Neurological Events (MANEs). Three of the MANEs were major strokes (3.9%), one a minor stroke. The fifth MANE occurred prior to the six month follow-up visit; this patient had a major stroke 75 days after the procedure and died 36 days later. One additional death occurred due to urosepsis. Conclusions The trial shows that the Protégé stent satisfies safety and performance criteria for the treatment of carotid artery stenosis. The complication rate was comparable to the incidence of these events in other recent carotid stent and endarterectomy studies.
Visual information is processed hierarchically in the human visual system. Early during processing basic features are analysed separately while at later stages of processing, they are integrated into a unified percept. By investigating a basic visual feature and following its integration at different levels of processing one can identify specific patterns. In certain visual impairments, these patterns can function defectively and their detailed study can clarify the cause of the visual deficit. Here we investigate orientation as a basic feature and use a property of the visual system called adaptation. Adaptation occurs as a decrease in the level of neural activity during repetitive presentation of the same stimulus. Psychophysical studies have shown that adaptation transfers interocularly, meaning that if only one eye is adapted the other eye shows also adaptation effects. Our aim was to investigate interocular transfer by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Even though adaptation was demonstrated in the fMRI environment, the interocular transfer was never investigated in such a setup. First, we developed a method to measure interocular transfer of adaptation to gratings with fMRI. We then went further to test it in various groups of subjects. In normally sighted humans interocular transfer was present both in early (striate) as well as later visual areas (extrastriate). In subjects with impaired stereovision (with or without normal visual acuity) interocular transfer was absent in the investigated regions. Detailed analysis of the recorded differences between subjects with and subjects without stereovision was performed. The results of this analysis are presented in detail in this book. These results suggest that the neuronal mechanisms involved in the interocular transfer of pattern adaptation share, at least in part, the neural circuitry underlying binocular functions and stereopsis. We conclude that fMRI adaptation can be used for the assessment of cortical binocularity in humans with normal and impaired stereopsis. Further investigations are needed to address more subtle aspects of the lack of interocular transfer. Towards this purpose, through a fourth experiment we propose further directions that might shed more light on the issue of stereovision and its clinical implications. We show that carefully tuned variations in our experimental procedure might reveal other aspects of binocularity in the human visual system. We believe that the method we developed, apart from the interesting results shown here, has a high potential to be further used for other research questions. Following the above summarized ideas, the thesis comprises of three parts (chapters). The first chapter provides the main theoretical backgrounds of the visual system and of the MRI imaging technique, chapter two describes the experimental procedures while the results and their detailed discussion are detailed in chapter three.
Aims: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility and short-term efficacy of transcatheter paravalvular leak closure using different occlusion devices. Methods and Results: Twenty one patients underwent transcatheter closure of either aortic or mitral paravalvular leak from June 2002 to February 2006 using the Amplatzer PDA, ASD or VSD occluder. All patients had symptoms and signs of haemolysis and/or cardiac decompensation with dyspnoea. Implantation of a device was technically successful in twenty patients (95 %). Immediate residual leak was found in seventeen patients (85 %). Significant shunting persisted in nine cases during follow up (45 %). Permanent leaflet obstruction was observed in one patient. Severe complications during follow up led to early death in one patient and surgical intervention in three. A successful second catheter treatment was performed in another three patients. The event-free survival from reoperation, death and stroke at the end of the observation period was 80 %. Conclusion: Transcatheter closure of paravalvular leaks is a technically feasible, but demanding procedure. Residual leaks are common and may worsen pre-existing haemolysis. Due to the significant ongoing morbidity in this group of patients and the complexity of follow up individual patient results differ considerably. Nevertheless, it is possible to achieve some symptomatic relief, thus an interventional approach should be discussed as a potential treatment option for those patients with a limited defect and who are not deemed suitable for another operation.
End-stage renal disease has been denominated a vasculopathic state, owing to the accelerated arterial stiffening, which occurs in addition to and independent of atherosclerosis and bears an increased cardiovascular risk. The altered metabolic milieu in uraemia leads to an increased oxidative stress, heightened inflammatory burden, and an abnormal calcium-phosphate metabolism, which are thought to be responsible for the vascular changes. The pulse wave velocity (PWV) is a widely employed surrogate parameter of arteriosclerosis. The purpose of this study was to gain more insight into the pathogenesis of arterial stiffness, by investigating the influence of markers of oxidative stress, procoagulation, and inflammation, and of the calcium-phosphate product on the PWV. We conducted a cross-sectional study in 53 stable patients aged 59 ± 16 years, who had been on haemodialysis for at least 4 months (68 ± 48). Carotid-radial PWV was measured using a semi-automated device, Complior SP (Artech Medical, France). Advanced glycosylation end-products (AGE) and advanced oxidation protein products (AOPP), were quantified according to previously described methods. High sensitive CRP was measured using ELISA, whereas the other biochemical parameters, i.e. fibrinogen, albumin, calcium, phosphate, cholesterol, and triglycerides, were determined using routine methods. For statistical calculations we employed SPSS (Statistical Package of Social Science, 12.0, 2003). The correlations between PWV, as the dependent variable, and many dependent variables were assessed by means of multiple regression analysis, in which we controlled for the influence of the traditional cardiovascular risk factors and some of the patients’ medication (calcium-channel blockers and statins). PWV was found to be significantly correlated to serum CRP (p=0.003), LDLcholesterol (p<0.001), triglycerides (p<0.001), AGE (p=0.002), calcium (p<0.001), phosphate (p=0.001), and fibrinogen (p=0.020). Between PWV and dialysis duration (months) an interesting quadratic relationship (p=0.058) was noted. Against expectation, regression analysis showed a negative correlation between AOPP and PWV (p=0.001). We failed to confirm the correlation between PWV and age, systolic blood pressure, or heart rate. Among traditional cardiovascular risk factors only LDL-cholesterol was positively correlated to PWV. In this cross-sectional analysis we could put forward that PWV correlates positively and significantly with fibrinogen, CRP, AGEs, calcium, phosphate, and LDL-cholesterol in haemodialysis patients. It seems procoagulatory and proinflammatory pathways, oxidative stress, and the calcium-phosphate product exert a synergistic effect on disturbances of vascular architecture in ESRD patients.
The µ-opioid receptor is the primary target structure of most opioid analgesics and thus responsible for the predominant part of their wanted and unwanted effects. Carriers of the frequent genetic µ-opioid receptor variant N40D (allelic frequency 8.2 - 17 %), coded by the single nucleotide polymorphism A>G at position 118 of the µ-opioid receptor coding gene OPRM1 (OPRM1 118A>G SNP), suffer from a decreased opioid potency and from a higher need of opioid analgesics to reach adequate analgesia. The aim of the present work was to identify the mechanism by which the OPRM1 118A>G SNP decreases the opioid potency and to quantify its effects on the analgesic potency and therapeutic range of opioid analgesics.
To elucidate the consequences of the OPRM1 118A>G SNP for the effects of opioid analgesics, brain regions of healthy homozygous carriers of the OPRM1 118A>G SNP were identified by means of functional magnetic resonace imaging (fMRI), where the variant alters the response to opioid analgesics after painful stimulation. Afterwards, the µ-opioid receptor function was analyzed on a molecular level in post mortem samples of these brain regions. Finally, the consequences of the OPRM1 118A>G SNP for the analgesic and respiratory depressive effects of opioids were quantified in healthy carriers and non-carriers of OPRM1 118A>G SNP by means of experimental pain- and respiratory depression-models.
To identify pain processing brain regions, where the variant alters the response to opioid analgesics after painful stimulation, we investigated the effects of different alfentanil concentration levels (0, 25, 50 and 75 ng/ml) on pain-related brain activation achieved by short pulses (300 msec) of gaseous CO2 (66% v/v) delivered to the nasal mucosa using a 3.0 T magnetic head scanner in 16 non-carriers and nine homozygous carriers of the µ-opioid receptor gene variant OPRM1 118A>G. In brain regions associated with the processing of the sensory dimension of pain (pain intensity), such as the primary and secondary somatosensory cortices and the posterior insular cortex, the activation decreased linearly in relation to alfentanil concentrations, which was significantly less pronounced in OPRM1 118G carriers. In contrast, in brain regions known to process the affective dimension of pain (emotional dimension), such as the parahippocampal gyrus, amygdala and anterior insula, the pain-related activation disappeared already at the lowest alfentanil dose, without genotype differences.
Subsequently, we investigated the µ-opioid receptor-expression ([3H]-DAMGO saturation experiments, OPRM1 mRNA analysis by means of RT-PCR), the µ-opioid receptor affinity ([3H]-DAMGO saturation and competition experiments) and µ-opioid receptor signaling ([35S]- GTPγS binding experiments) in post mortem samples of the human SII-region, as a cortical projection region coding for pain intensity, and lateral thalamus, as an important region for nociceptive transmission. Samples of 22 non-carriers, 21 heterozygous and three homozygous carriers of OPRM1 118A>G SNP were included into the analysis. The receptor expression and receptor affinity of both brain regions did not differ between non-carriers and carriers of the variant N40D. In non-carriers, the µ-opioid receptors of the SII-region activated the receptor bound G-protein more efficiently than those of the thalamus (factor 1.55-2.27). This regional difference was missing in heterozygous (factor 0.78-1.66) and homozygous (factor 0.66-1.15) carriers of the N40D variant indicating a reduced receptor-G-protein-coupling in the SII-region.
Finally, the consequences of the alteration of µ-opioid receptor function in carriers and noncarriers of the genetic variant was investigated using pain- and respiratory depression-models. Therefore, 10 healthy non-carriers, four heterozygous and six homozygous carriers of the µ- opioid receptor variant N40D received an infusion of four different concentrations of alfentanil (0, 33.33, 66.66 and 100 ng/ml). At each concentration level, analgesia was assessed by means of electrically (5 Hz sinus 0 to 20 mA) and chemically (200 ms gaseous CO2 pulses applied to the nasal mucosa) induced pain, and respiratory depression was quantified by means of hypercapnic challenge according to Read and recording of the breathing frequency. The results showed that depending on the used pain model, both heterozygous and homozygous carriers of the variant N40D needed 2 – 4 times higher alfentanil concentrations to achieve the same analgesia as non-carriers. This increase seems to be at least for homozygous carriers unproblematic, because to reach a comparable respiratory depression as non-carriers, they needed 10-12 times higher alfentanil concentrations.
The results of this work demonstrate that the µ-opioid receptor variant N40D causes a regionally limited reduction of the signal transduction efficiency of µ-opioid receptors in brain regions involved in pain processing. Thus, the painful activation of sensory brain regions coding for pain intensity is not sufficiently suppressed by opioid analgesics in carriers of the variant N40D. Due to the insufficient suppression in hetero- and homozygous carriers of the variant N40D, the concentration of opioids has to be increased by a factor 2 - 4, in order to achieve the same analgesia as in non-carriers. At the same time, the respiratory depressive effects are decreased to a greater extent in homozygous carriers of the N40D variant as they need a 10 - 12 times higher opioid concentration to suffer from the same degree of respiratory depression as non-carriers. Due to the increased therapeutic range of opioid analgesics, an increase of the opioid dose seems to be harmless, at least for homozygous carriers of the N40D variant.
The removal of apoptotic cells (AC) can be regarded as an integral component of the program to terminate inflammation. Clearance of AC by professional phagocytes such as macrophages induces an anti-inflammatory phenotype in the latter ones. Anti-inflammatory or M2 polarization is also observed in macrophages infiltrating certain human tumors. These tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) contribute actively to tumor progression by promoting immune evasion, angiogenesis and tumor cell survival. The aim of my Ph.D. thesis was to approach the mechanisms as well as the characteristics of macrophage phenotype alterations induced by AC, and to elucidate a possible connection between tumor cell apoptosis and TAM generation. In the first part of my studies, I investigated the impact of AC on macrophage viability. I could show that macrophage survival against pro-apoptotic agents increased after the interaction with AC. Protection of macrophages against cell death required activation of phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI3K), extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) and Ca2+ signaling, and correlated with Bcl-XL and Bcl-2 up-regulation as well as Ser136-Bad phosphorylation. Unexpectedly, neither phagocytosis nor binding of apoptotic debris to the phagocyte was necessary to induce protection. AC released the bioactive lipid sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), dependent on sphingosine kinase (SphK) 2, as a survival messenger. These data indicated an active role of AC in preventing cell destruction in their neighborhood. My next aim was to elucidate the mechanism of S1P production by AC. During cell death, SphK 2 was cleaved at its N-terminus by caspase-1. Thereupon, the truncated but enzymatically active fragment of SphK 2 was released from cells. This release was coupled to phosphatidylserine exposure, a hallmark of apoptosis and a crucial signal for the phagocyte/apoptotic cell interaction. Thus, I observed a link between common signaling events during apoptosis and the extracellular production of S1P, which is known to affect immune cell attraction and polarization as well as angiogenesis in cancer. In the next part of my studies, I asked for a correlation between tumor cell apoptosis and TAM polarization. During co-culture of human macrophages with human breast cancer carcinoma cells (MCF-7), the latter ones were killed, while macrophages acquired an alternatively activated phenotype. This was characterized by decreased tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α; and interleukin (IL)-12-p70 production, but increased formation of IL-8 and IL-10. Alternative macrophage activation required tumor cell death, because a co-culture with apoptosis-resistant colon carcinoma cells (RKO) or Bcl-2-overexpressing MCF-7 cells failed to induce phenotype alterations. These phenotype alterations were also achieved with conditioned media from apoptotic tumor cells, which again argued for a soluble factor being involved. Knock-down of SphK2, but not SphK1, to attenuate S1P formation in MCF-7 cells, repressed the otherwise observed alternative macrophage polarization during co-culture. Furthermore, macrophage polarization achieved by tumor cell apoptosis or substitution of authentic S1P was characterized by suppression of pro-inflammatory nuclear factor (NF)-κB DNA binding. These findings suggested that tumor cell apoptosis-derived S1P contributes to the macrophage polarization present in human tumors. To validate these in vitro data, I used an in vivo tumor model to clarify the relevance of SphK2 and S1P in tumor development. The growth of, as well as blood vessel infiltration into SphK2 knock-down MCF-7 (MCF-7-siSphK2) xenografts in nude mice was markedly decreased in comparison to control MCF-7 xenografts. In contrast, macrophage infiltration was similar or even more pronounced. These data provided a first hint for an in vivo role of SphK2-derived S1P in macrophage polarization associated with tumor promotion. In summary, these data indicate a new mechanism how AC themselves shape macrophage polarization, which results in the termination of inflammatory responses and macrophage survival. Furthermore, my studies present evidence that human tumors may utilize this mechanism to foster growth via increased angiogenesis.
Imatinib (GleevecTM; GlivecTM; formerly STI571), a specific inhibitor of Abl tyrosine kinase, is efficacious in treating Philadelphiachromosomepositive (Ph+) leukaemias such as chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML) and Ph+ acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) (Ottmann, Druker et al. 2002). Within a few years of its introduction to the clinic, Imatinib had dramatically altered the firstline therapy for CML, because it was found that most newly diagnosed CML patients in the chronic phase achieve durable responses when treated with Imatinib (Goldman and Melo 2003). However, a small percentage of these patients, as well as most advancedphase CML and Ph+ ALL patients, relapse on Imatinib therapy (Yokota, Kimura et al. 2006). Several mechanisms of refractoriness and relapse have been reported. These include point mutations within the Abl kinase domain, overexpression of BcrAbl mRNA (Hofmann, Jones et al. 2002), decreased intracellular drug levels mediated by Pglycoprotein (Pgp) (Hegedus, Orfi et al. 2002), and nonBcrAbl dependent mechanisms (activation of the SFKs) (Donato, Wu et al. 2003). In this research work, a possible means of overcoming resistance to Imatinib by the use of the specific dual Src/Abl kinase inhibitor AZD0530 has been investigated. The efficacy of AZD0530 in the treatment of Ph+ leukaemias, sensitive to or resistant to Imatinib, has been tested on cell lines, primary patient material and in vivo in transduction/transplantation mouse model of Imatinib sensitive or resistant BcrAbl dependent CML-like disease. Data with AZD0530 has been compared to cells treated with Imatinib. The potential of inhibiting both Src and Abl kinases while inducing growth arrest and apoptosis has been analysed. AZD0530 specifically inhibited the growth of CML and Ph+ ALL cells in a dosedependent manner, but has shown a marginal effect on Ph- ALL cells. Treatment of p185BcrAbl expressing Ba/F3 cells with AZD0530 has led to apoptosis induction and growth inhibition in these cells, while the untransformed Ba/F3 cells have remained unaffected. Resistance to Imatinib due to mutation in the Ba/F3MutY253F cells has been overcomed by this compound. The growth inhibitory effect of AZD0530 correlates with its induction of apoptosis. Combination of AZD0530 and Imatinib at low concentrations has shown an additive effect on the inhibition of proliferation of BV173 cells. The growth inhibition and apoptosis induction by AZD0530 have shown to be uncoupled to major changes in cell cycle. An exception is the CML blast crisis cell line BV173 which has shown a considerable G0/G1 arrest in the presence of AZD0530 and Imatinib as single agents. Immunoblotting of whole cell lysates from Imatinib or AZD0530 treated BV173, Ba/F3 expressing p185(BcrAbl) MutT253F cells and the WTSupB15 cells, for Src and BcrAbl clearly demonstrates that there is an ongoing transphosphorylation taking place between the SFKs and BcrAbl. This transphosphorylation synergizes and influences the aggressive nature of CML blast crisis and Ph+ ALL. Investigations have been carried out on downstream signaling events to determine how Src family members contribute to BcrAbl signaling. Specifically, Stat, Erk and PI3K/ Akt activation status have been characterised in Imatinib sensitive and resistant Ph+ cells. AZD0530 has significantly downregulated the activation of survival signaling pathways as shown by it’s inhibition of Stat5, Akt and Erk kinases in Ph+ cells, resistant or sensitive to Imatinib. The only exception to this has been the Imatinib resistant cell line RTSupB15, in which activated Akt kinase level has remained unaffected. AZD0530 has shown to be efficient in the treatment of cells isolated from three Ph+ leukaemic patients (resistant or sensitive to Imatinib), and has led to an induction of apoptosis. Equally, in the same patients, growth and survival pathways have been inhibited in vitro in the presence of AZD0530. An overall therapeutic effect of AZD0530 in vivo has been studied in mouse model of Imatinib sensitive and Imatinib resistant, BcrAbldependent desease. Mice with a BcrAbllike disease responded to Imatinib treatment but not to AZD0530. Using the CFU assay, an influence on the differentiation status of primary leukaemic blast stem cells have been tested. The in vivo studies as well as the CFU results have shown discrepancies to the effects of AZD0530 tested so far in this research work. These discrepancies have paralleled with the upregulation of BcrAbl in most AZD0530 treated cells. These are to be further analysed. These data elucidate the role of Src kinases in BcrAbl leukaemogenesis. Results gotten from this research work has shown that AZD0530 targets both Src and BcrAbl kinase activity and reduces the transforming potential of BcrAbl. It also shows that there is an ongoing transphosphorylation between SFKs and BcrAbl kinase. AZD0530 has proven effective in CML cell lines, Ph+ ALL cell lines and patient cells resistant to Imatinib. These have demonstrated that AZD0530 is a potential drug target which can be used to overcome Imatinib resistance.
Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive technique which can be used to study different intracortical excitatory and inhibitory neuronal circuits in the intact human being. In the primary motor cortex, there are essentially three different TMS measures of inhibitory neuronal circuits as determined by paired-pulse TMS: short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI), long-interval intracortical inhibition (LICI) and interhemispheric inhibition (IHI). It was hypothesized that SICI is a GABAA receptor mediated inhibition (Ilic et al., 2002) whereas LICI and IHI are mediated by GABAB receptors (Daskalakis et al., 2002; McDonnell et al., 2006). Additionally, it was shown that these inhibitory circuits interact negatively, possible due to presynaptic GABAB receptor mediated inhibition (Sanger et al., 2001; Daskalakis et al., 2002). Which neuronal populations exactly underlie SICI, LICI and IHI, is not completely clear and by which mechanism these inhibitory circuits interact has never been tested pharmacologically so far. Thus, the effects of a single oral dose of Diazepam (DZP), a specific positive allosteric modulator at the GABAA receptor, and of Baclofen (BAC), a specific GABAB receptor agonist, on SICI, LICI and IHI as well as their interactions were tested here in a randomized, placebo controlled, double-blinded crossover study. SICI significantly increased after intake of DZP whereas BAC did not change SICI. Conversely, LICI significantly increased after intake of BAC but did not change after intake of DZP. IHI showed only a trend towards a decrease after intake of DZP but no change after intake of BAC. The interactions IHI-SICI, LICI-IHI and LICI-SICI were all negative at baseline. SICI and IHI were partially suppressed in the presence of IHI and LICI, respectively, and SICI in the presence of LICI was almost completely blocked. BAC did not change any of these interactions, whereas DZP significantly increased SICI in the presence of LICI. This study is the first to examine by means of pharmacological testing the complex interactions between different inhibitory circuits in the human motor cortex. The effects of DZP and BAC on SICI and LICI confirmed the notion that SICI is a GABAA receptor mediated intracortical inhibition whereas LICI depends on GABAB receptor mediated neurotransmission. The pharmacology of IHI at short interstimulus intervals of < 20 ms (12 ms in this study) remains still inconclusive and warrants further investigation. Findings further suggest that SICI, LICI and IHI represent three different inhibitory neuronal circuits which can be tested non-invasively by means of paired-pulse TMS. Furthermore, the data support the idea that the negative interactions IHI-SICI, LICI-IHI and LICI-SICI are most likely due to presynaptic GABAB receptor mediated autoinhibition.