Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (5118)
- Doctoral Thesis (1465)
- Part of Periodical (210)
- Conference Proceeding (164)
- Preprint (159)
- Book (85)
- Contribution to a Periodical (60)
- Review (38)
- Working Paper (22)
- Part of a Book (16)
Language
Keywords
- inflammation (80)
- COVID-19 (58)
- SARS-CoV-2 (48)
- apoptosis (38)
- glioblastoma (38)
- Inflammation (37)
- cancer (37)
- breast cancer (34)
- autophagy (29)
- Apoptosis (25)
Institute
- Medizin (7357) (remove)
Introduction: Surgical practices constitute a common topic of complaint among medical students. The aim of this study is to analyze the type of surgical training that students receive in medical school and the impact of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
Methods: A survey based on the National Spanish Agency for the Quality of Evaluation and Accreditation (ANECA) guidelines was spread on social media between medical students and physicians waiting to start their residency. The time spent in surgical practices, the number of times that certain abilities were performed, and the desire of choosing a surgical specialty were analyzed.
Results: 1053 surveys were analyzed. Significant differences between the number of months that students rotate and the number of procedures performed as they gained seniority were found. A weak positive correlation between the number of months rotating and the number of procedures performed was found. The desire of choosing a surgical specialty was not associated with the time spent in surgical practice. SARS-CoV-2 pandemic has reduced the time spent in surgical practice and some of the surgical procedures performed.
Conclusion: The amount of surgical procedures performed by students is below the requirements of ANECA guidelines. A different level of dexterity between 6th year students’ group affected by SARS-CoV-2 pandemic and physicians’ group should not be expected because of the low number of procedures performed by both groups. Students’ role in the operating room and the need for different systems of skills learning should be reconsidered.
Onkogene RAS-Mutationen zählen mit einem Vorkommen von ca. 25% zu häufigen Genmutationen in malignen Tumoren. Auch im Rhabdomyosarkom (RMS), dem häufigsten Weichteilsarkom im Kindesalter, findet sich eine hohe Rate an wiederkehrenden RAS-Signalwegmutationen. Dabei scheint ein Zusammenhang zwischen der RMS-Risikostratifizierung und dem Vorkommen von RAS-Mutationen zu bestehen. Da Hochrisiko-RMS im Vergleich zu anderen Tumorentitäten im Kindesalter immer noch mit einer unterdurchschnittlichen Prognose einhergehen, stellen RAS-Mutationen einen interessanten Angriffspunkt für eine zielgerichtete Tumortherapie dar. Hierzu soll diese Arbeit durch eine genauere Charakterisierung der Auswirkungen onkogener RAS-Gene auf das RMS beitragen. Verwendet wurden genetisch modifizierte RMS13 Zellen mit ektoper Expression der onkogenen RAS-Mutationen HRAS12V, KRAS12V oder NRAS12V. Eine bereits gut beschriebene Eigenschaft von RAS ist die Förderung der Zellproliferation. Daneben wurde auch beschrieben, dass RAS Einfluss auf den programmierten Zelltod nehmen und in Abhängigkeit vom zellulären Kontext pro- oder auch antiapoptotisch wirken kann. Daher stellte sich die Frage, welche Auswirkungen onkogene RAS-Mutationen in diesem Kontext auf Rhabdomy-osarkomzellen haben. In dieser Arbeit wird gezeigt, dass die ektope Expression von HRAS12V, KRAS12V oder NRAS12V in RMS13 Zellen zu einer gesteigerten Zellproliferation führt, im Hinblick auf die spontane Zelltodrate jedoch keine Veränderungen bewirkt. Damit stellt die erhöhte Proliferationsrate RAS-mutierter Rhabdomyosarkome einen wichtigen Unterschied zu entsprechenden Tumoren ohne solche Mutationen dar. Chemotherapeutika wie Etoposid und Doxorubicin, die besonders effektiv gegen hochproliferierende Zellen sind, zeigen jedoch keinen signifikanten Unterschied in ihrer Wirksamkeit gegen RMS13 Zellen in Anwesenheit von onkogenem RAS. Damit scheint ein selektives Eingreifen in die proliferationsfördernden Mechanismen nötig zu sein, um RAS-mutierte Zellen gezielt in ihrem Wachstum zu hemmen. Dies verdeutlicht die Notwendigkeit, spezifischer, gezielter Tumortherapien. Neben dem Einfluss auf das Zellwachstum wurden auch Veränderungen in der Redoxhomöostase untersucht. Bisherige indirekte Hinweise auf einen erhöhten oxidativen Stress im RMS in Anwesenheit von RAS-Mutationen können in dieser Arbeit durch den direkten Nachweis erhöhter ROS-Level in RAS-mutierten RMS13 Zellen bestätigt werden. Die akzelerierte ROS-Konzentration lässt vermuten, dass das Überleben von RMS-Zellen mit konstitutiver RAS-Aktivierung in besonderem Maße von antioxidativen Zellstrukturen abhängig sein könnte. Dies könnte sie sensibler gegenüber exogenen Stimuli machen, die zu einer weiteren Erhöhung des oxidativen Stresses führen. Als hervorzuhebendes Ergebnis zeigt diese Arbeit jedoch, dass die ektope Expression von HRAS12V, KRAS12V oder NRAS12V in RMS13 Zellen vor einem oxidativen Zelltod schützt. In Anwesenheit der RAS-Mutationen zeigen RMS13 Zellen einen signifikant geringeren Zellviabilitätsverlust gegenüber einem Eingriff in verschiedene Komponenten des antioxidativen Systems wie durch RSL3 (Glutathion-Peroxidase 4 Inhibitor), Erastin (indirekter Inhibitor der Glutathion-Synthese) oder Auranofin (Thioredoxin-Reduktase-Inhibitor). Dies steht im Gegensatz zu den Erstbeschreibungen, in denen für RSL3 und Erastin eine RAS-selektive Wirkung gezeigt wurde. Als Besonderheit kann der durch RSL3 oder Erastin hervorgerufene Zelltod der RMS13 Zellen als Ferroptose identifiziert werden. Hierbei handelt es sich um eine vor kurzem neu beschriebene Form von programmiertem, oxidativem und eisenabhängigem Zelltod. Diese Arbeit verdeutlicht somit, dass onkogene RAS-Mutationen im RMS gezielt in die Redoxregulation eingreifen, jedoch nur in bestimmten zellulären Kontexten für oxidative Stressoren zu sensibilisieren scheinen. Daneben weist diese Arbeit auch einen protektiven Effekt von onkogenem RAS gegenüber dem dualen PI3K/mTOR-Inhibitor PI-103 in RMS13 Zellen nach. Zusammengenommen deutet dies darauf hin, dass RAS selektiv Einfluss auf durch zytotoxische Stimuli hervorgerufenen Zelltod nimmt. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit, insbesondere der Nachweis einer erhöhten Resistenz gegenüber oxidativen Stressoren in Anwesenheit onkogener RAS-Gene, leisten einen wichtigen Beitrag zur Entwicklung neuer zielgerichteter und selektiver RMS-Therapiestrategien.
Radiotherapy is a frequently used treatment for prostate cancer. It does not only causes the intended damage to cancer cells, but also affects healthy surrounding tissue. As a result radiation-induced urethral strictures occur in 2.2% of prostate cancer patients. Management of urethral strictures is challenging due to the presence of poor vascularized tissue for reconstruction and the proximity of the sphincter, which can impair the functional outcome. This review provides a literature overview of risk factors, diagnostics and management of radiation-induced urethral strictures.
Cell-free therapy using extracellular vesicles (EVs) from adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (ASCs) seems to be a safe and effective therapeutic option to support tissue and organ regeneration. The application of EVs requires particles with a maximum regenerative capability and hypoxic culture conditions as an in vitro preconditioning regimen has been shown to alter the molecular composition of released EVs. Nevertheless, the EV cargo after hypoxic preconditioning has not yet been comprehensively examined. The aim of the present study was the characterization of EVs from hypoxic preconditioned ASCs. We investigated the EV proteome and their effects on renal tubular epithelial cells in vitro. While no effect of hypoxia was observed on the number of released EVs and their protein content, the cargo of the proteins was altered. Proteomic analysis showed 41 increased or decreased proteins, 11 in a statistically significant manner. Furthermore, the uptake of EVs in epithelial cells and a positive effect on oxidative stress in vitro were observed. In conclusion, culture of ASCs under hypoxic conditions was demonstrated to be a promising in vitro preconditioning regimen, which alters the protein cargo and increases the anti-oxidative potential of EVs. These properties may provide new potential therapeutic options for regenerative medicine.
Nucleoredoxin (NXN) is a redox regulator of Disheveled and thereby of WNT signaling. Deficiency in mice leads to cranial dysmorphisms and defects of heart, brain, and bone, suggesting defects of cell fate determination. We used shRNA-mediated knockdown of NXN in SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells to study its impact on neuronal cells. We expected that shNXN cells would easily succumb to redox stress, but there were no differences in viability on stimulation with hydrogen peroxide. Instead, the proliferation of naïve shNXN cells was increased with a higher rate of mitotic cells in cell cycle analyses. In addition, basal respiratory rates were higher, whereas the relative change in oxygen consumption upon mitochondrial stressors was similar to control cells. shNXN cells had an increased expression of redox-sensitive heat shock proteins, Hsc70/HSPA8 and HSP90, and autophagy markers suggested an increase in autophagosome formation upon stimulation with bafilomycin and higher flux under low dose rapamycin. A high rate of self-renewal, autophagy, and upregulation of redox-sensitive chaperones appears to be an attractive anti-aging combination if it were to occur in neurons in vivo for which SH-SY5Y cells are a model.
The incidence of invasive mold disease (IMD) has significantly increased over the last decades, and IMD of the central nervous system (CNS) is a particularly severe form of this infection. Solid data on the incidence of CNS IMD in the pediatric setting are lacking, in which Aspergillus spp. is the most prevalent pathogen, followed by mucorales. CNS IMD is difficult to diagnose, and although imaging tools such as magnetic resonance imaging have considerably improved, these techniques are still unspecific. As microscopy and culture have a low sensitivity, non-culture-based assays such as the detection of fungal antigens (e.g., galactomannan or beta-D-glucan) or the detection of fungal nucleic acids by molecular assays need to be validated in children with suspected CNS IMD. New and potent antifungal compounds helped to improve outcome of CNS IMD, but not all agents are approved for children and a pediatric dosage has not been established. Therefore, studies have to rapidly evaluate dosage, safety and efficacy of antifungal compounds in the pediatric setting. This review will summarize the current knowledge on diagnostic tools and on the management of CNS IMD with a focus on pediatric patients.
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a slow-progressing joint disease, leading to the degradation and remodeling of the cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM). The usually quiescent chondrocytes become reactivated and accumulate in cell clusters, become hypertrophic, and intensively produce not only degrading enzymes, but also ECM proteins, like the cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP) and thrombospondin-4 (TSP-4). To date, the functional roles of these newly synthesized proteins in articular cartilage are still elusive. Therefore, we analyzed the involvement of both proteins in OA specific processes in in vitro studies, using porcine chondrocytes, isolated from femoral condyles. The effect of COMP and TSP-4 on chondrocyte migration was investigated in transwell assays and their potential to modulate the chondrocyte phenotype, protein synthesis and matrix formation by immunofluorescence staining and immunoblot. Our results demonstrate that COMP could attract chondrocytes and may contribute to a repopulation of damaged cartilage areas, while TSP-4 did not affect this process. In contrast, both proteins similarly promoted the synthesis and matrix formation of collagen II, IX, XII and proteoglycans, but inhibited that of collagen I and X, resulting in a stabilized chondrocyte phenotype. These data suggest that COMP and TSP-4 activate mechanisms to protect and repair the ECM in articular cartilage.
Bacterial and fungal toll-like receptor activation elicits type I IFN responses in mast cells
(2021)
Next to their role in IgE-mediated allergic diseases and in promoting inflammation, mast cells also have antiinflammatory functions. They release pro- as well as antiinflammatory mediators, depending on the biological setting. Here we aimed to better understand the role of mast cells during the resolution phase of a local inflammation induced with the Toll-like receptor (TLR)-2 agonist zymosan. Multiple sequential immunohistology combined with a statistical neighborhood analysis showed that mast cells are located in a predominantly antiinflammatory microenvironment during resolution of inflammation and that mast cell-deficiency causes decreased efferocytosis in the resolution phase. Accordingly, FACS analysis showed decreased phagocytosis of zymosan and neutrophils by macrophages in mast cell-deficient mice. mRNA sequencing using zymosan-induced bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMC) revealed a strong type I interferon (IFN) response, which is known to enhance phagocytosis by macrophages. Both, zymosan and lipopolysaccharides (LPS) induced IFN-β synthesis in BMMCs in similar amounts as in bone marrow derived macrophages. IFN-β was expressed by mast cells in paws from naïve mice and during zymosan-induced inflammation. As described for macrophages the release of type I IFNs from mast cells depended on TLR internalization and endosome acidification. In conclusion, mast cells are able to produce several mediators including IFN-β, which are alone or in combination with each other able to regulate the phagocytotic activity of macrophages during resolution of inflammation.
The interaction of macrophages with apoptotic cells is required for efficient resolution of inflammation. While apoptotic cell removal prevents inflammation due to secondary necrosis, it also alters the macrophage phenotype to hinder further inflammatory reactions. The interaction between apoptotic cells and macrophages is often studied by chemical or biological induction of apoptosis, which may introduce artifacts by affecting the macrophages as well and/or triggering unrelated signaling pathways. Here, we set up a pure cell death system in which NIH 3T3 cells expressing dimerizable Caspase-8 were co-cultured with peritoneal macrophages in a transwell system. Phenotype changes in macrophages induced by apoptotic cells were evaluated by RNA sequencing, which revealed an unexpectedly dominant impact on macrophage proliferation. This was confirmed in functional assays with primary peritoneal macrophages and IC-21 macrophages. Moreover, inhibition of apoptosis during Zymosan-induced peritonitis in mice decreased mRNA levels of cell cycle mediators in peritoneal macrophages. Proliferation of macrophages in response to apoptotic cells may be important to increase macrophage numbers in order to allow efficient clearance and resolution of inflammation.
Simple Summary:
Pharmacological activation of tumor suppressor p53 is a promising therapeutic strategy for a range of hematologic and solid cancers. Whether p53 activation augments or suppresses anti-tumor innate immunity is less understood. Here we show that treatment of differentiating human macrophages with a p53 activator idasanutlin suppresses their inflammatory responses to activators of toll-like receptors (TLR) -4 and -7/8. This is accompanied by reduced expression of TLR7, TLR8, as well as TLR4 co-receptor CD14. These data help evaluating the possibilities of combining p53-targeting and immunostimulatory anti-cancer therapies.
Abstract:
The transcription factor p53 has well-recognized roles in regulating cell cycle, DNA damage repair, cell death, and metabolism. It is an important tumor suppressor and pharmacological activation of p53 by interrupting its interaction with the ubiquitin E3 ligase mouse double minute 2 homolog (MDM2) is actively explored for anti-tumor therapies. In immune cells, p53 modulates inflammatory responses, but the impact of p53 on macrophages remains incompletely understood. In this study, we used the MDM2 antagonist idasanutlin (RG7388) to investigate the responses of primary human macrophages to pharmacological p53 activation. Idasanutlin induced a robust p53-dependent transcriptional signature in macrophages, including several pro-apoptotic genes. However, idasanutlin did not generally sensitize macrophages to apoptosis, except for an enhanced response to a Fas-stimulating antibody. In fully differentiated macrophages, idasanutlin did not affect pro-inflammatory gene expression induced by toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), TLR3, and TLR7/8 agonists, but inhibited interleukin-4-induced macrophage polarization. However, when present during monocyte to macrophage differentiation, idasanutlin attenuated inflammatory responses towards activation of TLR4 and TLR7/8 by low doses of lipopolysaccharide or resiquimod (R848). This was accompanied by a reduced expression of CD14, TLR7, and TLR8 in macrophages differentiated in the presence of idasanutlin. Our data suggest anti-inflammatory effects of pharmacological p53 activation in differentiating human macrophages.