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Cellular stress induces erythrocyte assembly on intravascular von Willebrand factor strings and promotes microangiopathy (2018)
Nicolay, Jan Peter ; Thorn, Verena ; Daniel, Christoph ; Amann, Kerstin ; Siraskar, Balasaheb ; Lang, Florian ; Hillgruber, Carina ; Görge, Tobias ; Hoffmann, Stefan ; Gorzelanny, Christian ; Huck, Volker ; Mess, Christian ; Obser, Tobias ; Schneppenheim, Reinhard ; Fleming, Ingrid ; Schneider, Matthias F. ; Schneider, Stefan W.
Microangiopathy with subsequent organ damage represents a major complication in several diseases. The mechanisms leading to microvascular occlusion include von Willebrand factor (VWF), notably the formation of ultra-large von Willebrand factor fibers (ULVWFs) and platelet aggregation. To date, the contribution of erythrocytes to vascular occlusion is incompletely clarified. We investigated the platelet-independent interaction between stressed erythrocytes and ULVWFs and its consequences for microcirculation and organ function under dynamic conditions. In response to shear stress, erythrocytes interacted strongly with VWF to initiate the formation of ULVWF/erythrocyte aggregates via the binding of Annexin V to the VWF A1 domain. VWF-erythrocyte adhesion was attenuated by heparin and the VWF-specific protease ADAMTS13. In an in vivo model of renal ischemia/reperfusion injury, erythrocytes adhered to capillaries of wild-type but not VWF-deficient mice and later resulted in less renal damage. In vivo imaging in mice confirmed the adhesion of stressed erythrocytes to the vessel wall. Moreover, enhanced eryptosis rates and increased VWF binding were detected in blood samples from patients with chronic renal failure. Our study demonstrates that stressed erythrocytes have a pronounced binding affinity to ULVWFs. The discovered mechanisms suggest that erythrocytes are essential for the pathogenesis of microangiopathies and renal damage by actively binding to ULVWFs.
Phenotyping non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease by the gut microbiota: ready for prime time? (2020)
Demir, Münevver ; Lang, Sonja ; Martin, Anna ; Farowski, Fedja ; Wisplinghoff, Hilmar ; Vehreschild, Maria J. G. T. ; Krawczyk, Marcin ; Nowag, Angela ; Scholz, Claus Jürgen ; Kretzschmar, Anne ; Roderburg, Christoph ; Lammert, Frank ; Goeser, Tobias ; Kasper, Philipp ; Steffen, Hans‐Michael
Background and Aim: Several studies observed alterations in the gut microbiota in patients with non‐alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). However, analyzed patient populations and methods strongly differ among these studies. The aim of this study was to prove the reproducibility of published results and to provide a detailed overview of all findings in our NAFLD cohort using next generation sequencing methods. Methods: The individual taxonomic microbiota composition of fecal samples from 90 NAFLD patients and 21 healthy controls was analyzed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Study participants were grouped according to their disease stage and compared regarding their gut microbiota composition. Studies were identified from PubMed listed publications, and the results were compared with the findings in our cohort. Results: Results from 13 identified studies were compared with our data. A decreased abundance of the Bacteroidetes and Ruminococcaceae as well as an increased abundance of Lactobacillaceae and Veillonellaceae and Dorea were the most frequently reported changes among NAFLD patients in 4/13, 5/13, 4/13, 2/13, and 3/13 studies, respectively. Even though these alterations in the gut microbiota composition were also observed in our patient cohort, the majority of published differences could not be reproduced, neither in our own nor in other NAFLD cohort studies. Conclusion: Despite repeatedly reproduced abundance patterns of specific bacteria, the heterogeneous study results did not reveal a consistent disease specific gut microbiota signature. Further prospective studies with homogenous patient cohorts and standardized methods are necessary to phenotype NAFLD by the gut microbiota.
High protein intake is associated with histological disease activity in patients with NAFLD (2020)
Lang, Sonja ; Martin, Anna ; Farowski, Fedja ; Wisplinghoff, Hilmar ; Vehreschild, Maria J. G. T. ; Liu, Jinyuan ; Krawczyk, Marcin ; Nowag, Angela ; Kretzschmar, Anne ; Herweg, Jens ; Schnabl, Bernd ; Tu, Xin M. ; Lammert, Frank ; Goeser, Tobias ; Tacke, Frank ; Heinzer, Kathrin ; Kasper, Philipp ; Steffen, Hans‐Michael ; Demir, Münevver
Overconsumption of carbohydrates and lipids are well known to cause nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), while the role of nutritional protein intake is less clear. In Western diet, meat and other animal products are the main protein source, with varying concentrations of specific amino acids. Whether the amount or composition of protein intake is associated with a higher risk for disease severity has not yet been examined. In this study, we investigated associations of dietary components with histological disease activity by analyzing detailed 14‐day food records in a cohort of 61 patients with biopsy‐proven NAFLD. Furthermore, we used 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing to detect associations with different abundances of the gut microbiota with dietary patterns. Patients with definite nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NAFLD activity score of 5‐8 on liver biopsy) had a significantly higher daily relative intake of protein compared with patients with a NAFLD activity score of 0‐4 (18.0% vs. 15.8% of daily protein‐based calories, P = 0.018). After adjustment for several potentially confounding factors, a higher protein intake (≥17.3% of daily protein‐based calories) remained associated with definite nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, with an odds ratio of 5.09 (95% confidence interval 1.22‐21.25, P = 0.026). This association was driven primarily by serine, glycine, arginine, proline, phenylalanine, and methionine. A higher protein intake correlated with a lower Bacteroides abundance and an altered abundance of several other bacterial taxa. Conclusion: A high protein intake was independently associated with more active and severe histological disease activity in patients with NAFLD. Further studies are needed to investigate the potential harmful role of dietary amino acids on NAFLD, with special attention to meat as their major source.
A dosimetric comparison of real-time adaptive and non-adaptive radiotherapy : a multi-institutional study encompassing robotic, gimbaled, multileaf collimator and couch tracking (2016)
Colvill, Emma ; Booth, Jeremy ; Nill, Simeon ; Fast, Martin ; Bedford, James ; Oelfke, Uwe ; Nakamura, Mitsuhiro ; Poulsen, Per ; Worm, Esben ; Hansen, Rune ; Ravkilde, Thomas ; Rydhög, Jonas Scherman ; Pommer, Tobias ; Munck af Rosenschold, Per ; Lang, Stephanie ; Guckenberger, Matthias ; Groh, Christian ; Herrmann, Christian ; Verellen, Dirk ; Poels, Kenneth ; Wang, Lei ; Hadsell, Michael ; Sothmann, Thilo ; Blanck, Oliver ; Keall, Paul
Purpose: A study of real-time adaptive radiotherapy systems was performed to test the hypothesis that, across delivery systems and institutions, the dosimetric accuracy is improved with adaptive treatments over non-adaptive radiotherapy in the presence of patient-measured tumor motion. Methods and materials: Ten institutions with robotic(2), gimbaled(2), MLC(4) or couch tracking(2) used common materials including CT and structure sets, motion traces and planning protocols to create a lung and a prostate plan. For each motion trace, the plan was delivered twice to a moving dosimeter; with and without real-time adaptation. Each measurement was compared to a static measurement and the percentage of failed points for γ-tests recorded. Results: For all lung traces all measurement sets show improved dose accuracy with a mean 2%/2 mm γ-fail rate of 1.6% with adaptation and 15.2% without adaptation (p < 0.001). For all prostate the mean 2%/2 mm γ-fail rate was 1.4% with adaptation and 17.3% without adaptation (p < 0.001). The difference between the four systems was small with an average 2%/2 mm γ-fail rate of <3% for all systems with adaptation for lung and prostate. Conclusions: The investigated systems all accounted for realistic tumor motion accurately and performed to a similar high standard, with real-time adaptation significantly outperforming non-adaptive delivery methods.
Measurement of the quasi free np → npπ+π− and np → ppπ−π0 reactions at 1.25 GeV with HADES (2014)
Kurilkin, Aleksey K. ; Arnold, Oliver ; Atomssa, Ermias T. ; Behnke, Claudia ; Belyaev, Alexei V. ; Berger-Chen, Jia-Chii ; Biernat, Jacek ; Blanco, Alberto ; Blume, Christoph ; Böhmer, Michael ; Bordalo, Paula ; Chernenko, Sergey ; Deveaux, Christina Anna ; Dybczak, Adrian ; Epple, Eliane ; Fabbietti, Laura ; Fateev, Oleg ; Fonte, Paulo ; Franco, Celso ; Friese, Jürgen ; Fröhlich, Ingo ; Galatyuk, Tetyana ; Garzón, Juan A. ; Gill, Katharina ; Golubeva, Marina ; González-Díaz, Diégo ; Guber, Fedor ; Gumberidze, Malgorzata ; Harabasz, Szymon ; Hennino, Thierry ; Höhne, Claudia ; Holzmann, Romain ; Ierusalimov, Alexander P. ; Ivashkin, Alexander ; Jurkovič, Martin ; Kämpfer, Burkhard ; Karavicheva, Tatiana ; Kardan, Behruz ; Koenig, Ilse ; Koenig, Wolfgang ; Kolb, Burkhard W. ; Korcyl, Grzegorz ; Kornakov, Georgy ; Kotte, Roland ; Krása, Antonin ; Krebs, Erik ; Krizek, Filip ; Kuc, Hubert ; Kugler, Andrej ; Kunz, Tobias ; Kurepin, Alexei ; Kurilkin, Pavel ; Ladygin, Vladimir P. ; Lalik, Rafał Tomasz ; Lang, Simon Martin ; Lapidus, Kirill ; Lebedev, Alexander ; Lopes, Luis Alberto Vieira ; Lorenz, Manuel ; Maier, Ludwig W. ; Mangiarotti, Alessio ; Markert, Jochen ; Metag, Volker ; Michel, Jan ; Müntz, Christian ; Münzer, Robert Helmut ; Naumann, Lothar ; Palka, Marek ; Pechenov, Vladimir ; Pechenova, Olga ; Petousis, Vlasios ; Pietraszko, Jerzy ; Przygoda, Witold ; Ramstein, Béatrice ; Rehnisch, Laura ; Reshetin, Andrey ; Rost, Adrian ; Rustamov, Anar ; Sadovsky, Alexander ; Salabura, Piotr ; Scheib, Timo ; Schmidt-Sommerfeld, Korbinian ; Schuldes, Heidi ; Sellheim, Patrick ; Siebenson, Johannes Stephan ; Silva, Luis ; Sobolev, Yuri G. ; Spataro, Stefano ; Ströbele, Herbert ; Stroth, Joachim ; Strzempek, Paweł ; Sturm, Christian ; Svoboda, Ondřej ; Tarantola, Attilio ; Teilab, Khaled ; Tlustý, Pavel ; Traxler, Michael ; Tsertos, Haralabos ; Vasiliev, Taras A. ; Wagner, Vladimir ; Wendisch, Christian ; Wirth, Joana ; Wüstenfeld, Jörn ; Yurevich, Sergey ; Zanevsky, Yuri V.
We present the results of two-pion production in tagged quasi-free np collisions at a deutron incident beam energy of 1.25 GeV/c measured with the High-Acceptance Di-Electron Spectrometer (HADES) installed at GSI. The specific acceptance of HADES allowed for the first time to obtain high-precision data on π+π− and π−π0 production in np collisions in a region corresponding to large transverse momenta of the secondary particles. The obtained differential cross section data provide strong constraints on the production mechanisms and on the various baryon resonance contributions (∆∆, N(1440), N(1520), ∆(1600)). The invariant mass and angular distributions from the np → npπ+π −and np → ppπ−π0 reactions are compared with different theoretical model predictions.
Characterization of blunt chest trauma in a long-term porcine model of severe multiple trauma (2016)
Horst, Klemens ; Simon, Tim-Philipp ; Pfeifer, Roman ; Teuben, Michel Paul Johan ; Almahmoud, Khalid ; Qiao, Zhi ; Aguiar Santos, Susana ; Castelar Wembers, Carlos Emilio ; Leonhardt, Steffen ; Heussen, Nicole ; Störmann, Philipp ; Auner, Birgit ; Relja, Borna ; Marzi, Ingo ; Haug, Alexander Tobias ; Griensven, Martijn van ; Kalbitz, Miriam ; Huber-Lang, Markus ; Tolba, René H. ; Reiss, Lucy Kathleen ; Uhlig, Stefan ; Marx, Gernot ; Pape, Hans-Christoph ; Hildebrand, Frank
Chest trauma has a significant relevance on outcome after severe trauma. Clinically, impaired lung function typically occurs within 72 hours after trauma. However, the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms are still not fully elucidated. Therefore, we aimed to establish an experimental long-term model to investigate physiological, morphologic and inflammatory changes, after severe trauma. Male pigs (sus scrofa) sustained severe trauma (including unilateral chest trauma, femur fracture, liver laceration and hemorrhagic shock). Additionally, non-injured animals served as sham controls. Chest trauma resulted in severe lung damage on both CT and histological analyses. Furthermore, severe inflammation with a systemic increase of IL-6 (p = 0.0305) and a local increase of IL-8 in BAL (p = 0.0009) was observed. The pO2/FiO2 ratio in trauma animals decreased over the observation period (p < 0.0001) but not in the sham group (p = 0.2967). Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) revealed differences between the traumatized and healthy lung (p < 0.0001). In conclusion, a clinically relevant, long-term model of blunt chest trauma with concomitant injuries has been developed. This reproducible model allows to examine local and systemic consequences of trauma and is valid for investigation of potential diagnostic or therapeutic options. In this context, EIT might represent a radiation-free method for bedside diagnostics.
Pediatric posttransplant relapsed/refractory B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia shows durable remission by therapy with the T-cell engaging bispecific antibody blinatumomab (2014)
Schlegel, Patrick ; Lang, Peter ; Zugmaier, Gerhard ; Ebinger, Martin ; Kreyenberg, Hermann ; Witte, Kai-Erik ; Feucht, Judith ; Pfeiffer, Matthias ; Teltschik, Heiko-Manuel ; Kyzirakos, Christina ; Feuchtinger, Tobias ; Handgretinger, Rupert
We report on posttransplant relapsed pediatric patients with B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia with no further standard of care therapy who were treated with the T-cell engaging CD19/CD3-bispecific single-chain antibody construct blinatumomab on a compassionate use basis. Blast load was assessed prior to, during and after blinatumomab cycle using flow cytometry to detect minimal residual disease, quantitative polymerase chain reaction for rearrangements of the immunoglobulin or T-cell receptor genes, and bcr/abl mutation detection in one patient with Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia. Blinatumomab was administered as a 4-week continuous intravenous infusion at a dosage of 5 or 15 μg/m2/day. Nine patients received a total of 18 cycles. Four patients achieved complete remission after the first cycle of treatment; 2 patients showed a complete remission from the second cycle after previous reduction of blast load by chemotherapy. Three patients did not respond, of whom one patient proceeded to a second cycle without additional chemotherapy and again did not respond. Four patients were successfully retransplanted in molecular remission from haploidentical donors. After a median follow up of 398 days, the probability of hematologic event-free survival is 30%. Major toxicities were grade 3 seizures in one patient and grade 3 cytokine release syndrome in 2 patients. Blinatumomab can induce molecular remission in pediatric patients with posttransplant relapsed B-precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia and facilitate subsequent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation from haploidentical donor with subsequent long-term leukemia-free survival.
Children with relapsed or refractory nephroblastoma : favorable long-term survival after high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation (2014)
Illhardt, Toni ; Ebinger, Martin ; Schwarze, Carl Philipp ; Feuchtinger, Tobias ; Furtwängler, Rhoikos ; Schlegel, Paul-Gerhardt ; Klingebiel, Thomas ; Greil, Johann ; Beck, James F. ; Handgretinger, Rupert ; Lang, Peter
Background: High-dose chemotherapy (HDC) with autologous stem-cell rescue (ASCR) is a treatment option for pediatric patients with relapsed nephroblastoma. We present long term results of 9 patients treated between 1993 and 2013 at our center. Procedure: Reinduction therapy was carried out according to GPOH and SIOP recommendations. The conditioning regimen consisted of carboplatin (1 200 mg/m²), etoposide (800 mg/m² or 40 mg/kg) and melphalan (180 mg/m²). Purging of the grafts with immunomagnetic CD34 positive selection was performed in 5 patients. Results: 8 of 9 Patients (90%) are alive without evidence of disease after a median follow-up of 8.5 years. Leukocyte engraftment occurred after a median of 10 days (range 8-12). Median numbers of 667/µl CD3+, 329/µl CD4+, 369/µl CD8+T cells and 949/µl B cells were reached after 180 days. No negative impact of CD34 selection was observed. No transplantation-related death occurred. Acute toxicity comprised mucositis III°-IV° in all and veno-occlusive disease in one patient. Long term effects probably related to treatment occurred in 3/7 evaluable patients and comprised hearing impairment, reduced renal phosphate reabsorption, mild creatinine elevation and hypothyroidism (n=1, each). Conclusion: Thus, in our experience HDC with ASCR is an effective treatment of recurrent or refractory nephroblastoma with acceptable side effects. However, a randomized trial proving its efficiency with a high level of evidence is needed.
CHIP as a membrane-shuttling proteostasis sensor (2017)
Kopp, Yannick ; Lang, Wei-Han ; Schuster, Tobias B. ; Martínez-Limón, Adrián ; Hofbauer, Harald F. ; Ernst, Robert ; Calloni, Giulia ; Vabulas, Martin
Cells respond to protein misfolding and aggregation in the cytosol by adjusting gene transcription and a number of post-transcriptional processes. In parallel to functional reactions, cellular structure changes as well; however, the mechanisms underlying the early adaptation of cellular compartments to cytosolic protein misfolding are less clear. Here we show that the mammalian ubiquitin ligase C-terminal Hsp70-interacting protein (CHIP), if freed from chaperones during acute stress, can dock on cellular membranes thus performing a proteostasis sensor function. We reconstituted this process in vitro and found that mainly phosphatidic acid and phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate enhance association of chaperone-free CHIP with liposomes. HSP70 and membranes compete for mutually exclusive binding to the tetratricopeptide repeat domain of CHIP. At new cellular locations, access to compartment-specific substrates would enable CHIP to participate in the reorganization of the respective organelles, as exemplified by the fragmentation of the Golgi apparatus (effector function).
Auch Studenten müssen mit Nichtwissen umgehen können (2018)
Lang, Tobias
Als Gymnasiast machte ich den Fehler, Latein als tote Sprache abzutun. Gut gemeinte Ratschläge, wonach Latein eine für alle romanischen Sprachen Erleuchtung bringende Grammatikschule sei, ignorierte ich. Fast neun Jahre nach dieser Entscheidung stand ich vor einem Problem: Für das Lehramtsstudium in Geschichte trat Latein nun doch sehr lebhaft in meinen Alltag. Für die meisten historischen Quellen aus zwei der drei Epochen war es unabdingbar – und nicht zuletzt als formale Voraussetzung, um mein Studium abschließen zu können. ...
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