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Background: An inducible release of soluble junctional adhesion molecule-A (sJAM-A) under pro-inflammatory conditions was described in cultured non-CNS endothelial cells (EC) and increased sJAM-A serum levels were found to indicate inflammation in non-CNS vascular beds. Here we studied the regulation of JAM-A expression in cultured brain EC and evaluated sJAM-A as a serum biomarker of blood-brain barrier (BBB) function. Methodology/Principal Findings: As previously reported in non-CNS EC types, pro-inflammatory stimulation of primary or immortalized (hCMEC/D3) human brain microvascular EC (HBMEC) induced a redistribution of cell-bound JAM-A on the cell surface away from tight junctions, along with a dissociation from the cytoskeleton. This was paralleled by reduced immunocytochemical staining of occludin and zonula occludens-1 as well as by increased paracellular permeability for dextran 3000. Both a self-developed ELISA test and Western blot analysis detected a constitutive sJAM-A release by HBMEC into culture supernatants, which importantly was unaffected by pro-inflammatory or hypoxia/reoxygenation challenge. Accordingly, serum levels of sJAM-A were unaltered in 14 patients with clinically active multiple sclerosis compared to 45 stable patients and remained unchanged in 13 patients with acute ischemic non-small vessel stroke over time. Conclusion: Soluble JAM-A was not suited as a biomarker of BBB breakdown in our hands. The unexpected non-inducibility of sJAM-A release at the human BBB might contribute to a particular resistance of brain EC to inflammatory stimuli, protecting the CNS compartment.
Clinical application of transcranial Doppler for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery
(2010)
Objective: Neurologic injury is one of the most damaging complications for cardiac surgery. How to decrease neurologic impairment by improving perioperative monitoring remains a challenge for both cardiac surgeons and anesthetists. For this reason, transcranial doppler (TCD) has been widely used in cerebral monitoring during cardiac surgery. In this study, two experiments of clinical application of TCD for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery were to be done. One was “Solid and gaseous cerebral emboli during valvular surgery are significantly reduced with axillary artery cannulation”. The other was “Do intraoperative cerebral embolic signals differ between valvular surgery (VS) and CABG”. Methods: In experiment one, 20 valve and combined procedures with aortic cannulation (AoC group) were compared to 18 procedures with axillary cannulation (AxC group) in a prospective non-randomized study. In experiment two, 18 VS patients and 18 CABG patients were matched by extracorporeal circulation (ECC) time retrospectively. Intraoperative monitoring of both middle cerebral arteries was performed with TCD discriminating between solid and gaseous embolic signals (ES). Results: In experiment one, the AxC group had less solid ES than the AoC group (38±22 vs 55±25, P<0.05), but no significant difference was found in gaseous (501±271 vs 538±333, P>0.05) and total (539 ± 279 vs 593 ± 350, P>0.05) ES. The AxC group had less solid ES during arterial cannulation (2.1±1.5 vs 6.6±3.6, P<0.05) and during aortic cross-clamp time (4.4 ±3.1 vs 10.2 ± 5.1, P<0.05) than the AoC group. During ECC, gaseous ES was not significantly different between groups (398±210 vs 448±291, P>0.05). However, AxC showed less gaseous ES (85±68 vs 187±148, P<0.05) and less gaseous ES per minute (1.8±1.5 vs 4.5±3.2, P<0.05) during weaning off extracorporeal circulation than the AoC group. No significant difference in gaseous ES (313±163 vs 261±189, P>0.05) and gaseous ES per minute (3.1±2.2 vs 2.8±2.2, P>0.05) was found between groups from bypass start to aortic declamping. No neurologic complications occurred. In experiment two, no significant difference was found in solid (38±20 vs 40±26, P>0.05) or gaseous (457±263 vs 412±157, P>0.05) ES between the VS and CABG group during the whole recording time. During ECC, solid ES (20±10 vs 24±19, P>0.05) and gaseous ES (368±230 vs 317±157, P>0.05) were comparable between groups. Specifically, during weaning off ECC, the VS group had more gaseous ES/min (5.6±3.6 vs 3.1±1.2, P<0.05) than the CABG group. But this difference in gaseous ES/min was not significant during the period from bypass start to aortic declamping (2.5±1.8 vs 3.0±1.8, P>0.05). Conclusion: Cerebral embolization does occur during cardiac surgery. Through these two experiments, we demonstrated the feasibility and importance of clinical application of transcranial doppler for detection of cerebral emboli during cardiac surgery. Due to the diversity in clinical application of TCD, it is impossible to compare the number of ES between different research centers. More unified standards should be drawn in order to make wider clinical application possible. Up till now, no robust evidence shows the correlation between intraoperative ES and postoperative neurological impairment. The research on intraoperative ES and postoperative neurological impairment should rely on a complete concept.
Background: Circulating progenitor cells (CPC) contribute to the homeostasis of the vessel wall, and a reduced CPC count predicts cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. We tested the hypothesis that CPC count improves cardiovascular risk stratification and that this is modulated by low-grade inflammation. Methodology/Principal Findings: We pooled data from 4 longitudinal studies, including a total of 1,057 patients having CPC determined and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) collected. We recorded cardiovascular risk factors and high-sensitive C-reactive protein (hsCRP) level. Risk estimates were derived from Cox proportional hazard analyses. CPC count and/or hsCRP level were added to a reference model including age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors, prevalent CVD, chronic renal failure (CRF) and medications. The sample was composed of high-risk individuals, as 76.3% had prevalent CVD and 31.6% had CRF. There were 331 (31.3%) incident MACE during an average 1.7±1.1 year follow-up time. CPC count was independently associated with incident MACE even after correction for hsCRP. According to C-statistics, models including CPC yielded a non-significant improvement in accuracy of MACE prediction. However, the integrated discrimination improvement index (IDI) showed better performance of models including CPC compared to the reference model and models including hsCRP in identifying MACE. CPC count also yielded significant net reclassification improvements (NRI) for CV death, non-fatal AMI and other CV events. The effect of CPC was independent of hsCRP, but there was a significant more-than-additive interaction between low CPC count and raised hsCRP level in predicting incident MACE. Conclusions/Significance: In high risk individuals, a reduced CPC count helps identifying more patients at higher risk of MACE over the short term, especially in combination with a raised hsCRP level.
Despite sensible guidelines for the use of opioid analgesics, respiratory depression remains a significant risk with a possibility of fatal outcomes. Clinicians need to find a balance of analgesia with manageable respiratory effects. The ampakine CX717 (Cortex Pharmaceuticals, Irvine, CA, USA), an allosteric enhancer of glutamate-stimulated AMPA receptor activation, has been shown to counteract opioid-induced respiratory depression in rats while preserving opioid-induced analgesia. Adopting a translational approach, we orally administered 1500 mg of CX717 to 16 male healthy volunteers in a placebo controlled double-blind study. Starting 100 min after CX717 or placebo intake, alfentanil was administered by computerized intravenous infusion targeting a plateau of effective alfentanil plasma concentrations of 100 ng/ml. One hour after start of opioid infusion, its effects were antagonized by intravenous injection of 1.6 mg of the classical opioid antidote naloxone. Respiration was quantified prior to drug administration (baseline), during alfentanil infusion and after naloxone administration by (i) counting the spontaneous respiratory frequency at rest and (ii) by employing hypercapnic challenge with CO2 rebreathing that assessed the expiratory volume at a carbon dioxide concentration in the breathable air of 55% (VE55). Pain was quantified at the same time points, immediately after assessment of respiratory parameters, by (i) measuring the tolerance to electrical stimuli (5 Hz sine increased by 0.2 mA/s from 0 to 20 mA and applied via two gold electrodes placed on the medial and lateral side of the mid-phalanx of the right middle finger) and (ii) by measuring the tolerance to heat (increased by 0.3°C/s from 32 to 52.5°C applied to a 3 x 3 cm2 skin area of the left volar forearm, after sensitization with 0.15 g capsaicin cream 0.1%). CX717 was tolerated by all subjects without side effects that would have required medical intervention. We observed that CX717 was approximately as effective as naloxone in reversing the opioid induced reduction of the respiratory frequency. Despite the presence of high plasma alfentanil concentrations, the respiratory frequency decreased only by 8.9 ± 22.4% when CX717 was pre-administered, which was comparable to the 7.0 ± 19.3% decrease observed after administration of naloxone. In contrast, after placebo pre-administration the respiratory rate decreased by 30.0 ± 21.3% (p=0.0054 for CX717 versus placebo). In agreement with this, periods of a very low respiratory frequency of <= 4 min-1 under alfentanil alone were shortened by ampakine pre-dosing by 52.9% (p=0.0182 for CX717 versus placebo). Furthermore, VE55 was decreased during alfentanil infusion by 55.9 ± 16.7% under placebo preadministration but only by 46.0 ± 18.1% under CX717 pre-administration (p=0.017 for CX717 versus placebo). Most importantly, in contrast to naloxone, CX717 had no effect on opioid induced analgesia. Alfentanil increased the pain tolerance to electrical stimuli by 68.7 ± 59.5% with placebo pre-administration. With CX717 pre-administration, the increase of the electrical pain tolerance was similar (54.6 ± 56.7%, p=0.1 for CX717 versus placebo). Similarly, alfentanil increased the heat pain tolerance threshold by 24.6 ± 10.0% with placebo pre-administration. Ampakine co-administration had also no effect on the increase of the heat pain tolerance of the capsaicin-sensitized skin (23.1 ± 8.3%, p=0.46 for CX717 versus placebo). The results of this study allow us to draw the conclusion, that opioid induced ventilatory depression can be selectively antagonized in humans by co-administering an ampakine. This is the first successful translation of a selective antagonism of opioidinduced respiratory depression from animal research into application in humans. Ampakines, namely CX717, thus are the first selective antidote for opioid-induced respiratory depression without loss of analgesia, available for the use in humans.
Introduction: Acute lung injury (ALI) is an inflammatory disorder of pulmonary or extrapulmonary origin. We have previously demonstrated that netrin-1 dampens murine ALI, and in an attempt to advance this finding into future clinical practice we evaluated whether netrin-1 would reduce alveolar inflammation during porcine ALI. Methods: This was a controlled in vivo experimental study in pigs. We induced ALI through lipoploysaccharide (LPS) infusion (50 micro g/kg) for 2 hours. Following this, we exposed animals to either vehicle, intravenous netrin-1 (netrin-1 i.v.) or inhaled netrin-1 (netrin-1 inh.). Serum samples and bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were obtained to determine levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin (IL)-1beta, interleukin-6 and interleukin-8 at baseline and 6 hours following treatment. Myeloperoxidase activity (MPO) and protein levels were determined in the BAL, and tissue samples were obtained for histological evaluation. Finally, animals were scanned with spiral CT. Results: Following LPS infusion, animals developed acute pulmonary injury. Serum levels of TNF-alpha and IL-6 were significantly reduced in the netrin-1 i.v. group. BAL demonstrated significantly reduced cytokine levels 6 hours post-netrin-1 treatment (TNF-alpha: vehicle 633 ± 172 pg/ml, netrin-1 i.v. 84 ± 5 pg/ml, netrin-1 inh. 168 ± 74 pg/ml; both P < 0.05). MPO activity and protein content were significantly reduced in BAL samples from netrin-1-treated animals. Histological sections confirmed reduced inflammatory changes in the netrin-1-treated animals. Computed tomography corroborated reduced pulmonary damage in both netrin-1-treated groups. Conclusions: We conclude that treatment with the endogenous anti-inflammatory protein netrin-1 reduces pulmonary inflammation during the initial stages of ALI and should be pursued as a future therapeutic option.
BACKGROUND: Parkinson's disease (PD), the second most frequent neurodegenerative disorder at old age, can be caused by elevated expression or the A53T missense mutation of the presynaptic protein alpha-synuclein (SNCA). PD is characterized pathologically by the preferential vulnerability of the dopaminergic nigrostriatal projection neurons. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Here, we used two mouse lines overexpressing human A53T-SNCA and studied striatal dysfunction in the absence of neurodegeneration to understand early disease mechanisms. To characterize the progression, we employed young adult as well as old mice. Analysis of striatal neurotransmitter content demonstrated that dopamine (DA) levels correlated directly with the level of expression of SNCA, an observation also made in SNCA-deficient (knockout, KO) mice. However, the elevated DA levels in the striatum of old A53T-SNCA overexpressing mice may not be transmitted appropriately, in view of three observations. First, a transcriptional downregulation of the extraneural DA degradation enzyme catechol-ortho-methytransferase (COMT) was found. Second, an upregulation of DA receptors was detected by immunoblots and autoradiography. Third, extensive transcriptome studies via microarrays and quantitative real-time RT-PCR (qPCR) of altered transcript levels of the DA-inducible genes Atf2, Cb1, Freq, Homer1 and Pde7b indicated a progressive and genotype-dependent reduction in the postsynaptic DA response. As a functional consequence, long term depression (LTD) was absent in corticostriatal slices from old transgenic mice. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Taken together, the dysfunctional neurotransmission and impaired synaptic plasticity seen in the A53T-SNCA overexpressing mice reflect early changes within the basal ganglia prior to frank neurodegeneration. As a model of preclinical stages of PD, such insights may help to develop neuroprotective therapeutic approaches.
Within the visual cortex, it has been proposed that interhemispheric interactions serve to re-establish the continuity of the visual field across its vertical meridian (VM) by mechanisms similar to those used by intrinsic connections within a hemisphere. However, other specific functions of transcallosal projections have also been proposed, including contributing to disparity tuning and depth perception. Here, we consider whether interhemispheric connections modulate specific response properties, orientation and direction selectivity, of neurons in areas 17 and 18 of the ferret by combining reversible thermal deactivation in one hemisphere with optical imaging of intrinsic signals and single-cell electrophysiology in the other hemisphere. We found interhemispheric influences on both the strength and specificity of the responses to stimulus orientation and direction of motion, predominantly at the VM. However, neurons and domains preferring cardinal contours, in particular vertical contours, seem to receive stronger interhemispheric input than others. This finding is compatible with interhemispheric connections being involved in horizontal disparity tuning. In conclusion, our results support the view that interhemispheric interactions mainly perform integrative functions similar to those of connections intrinsic to one hemisphere. Key words: cooling deactivation , corpus callosum , ferret , optical imaging , orientation selectivity
Background: Abnormalities of 11q23 involving the MLL gene are found in approximately 10% of human leukemias. To date, nearly 100 different chromosome bands have been described in rearrangements involving 11q23 and 64 fusion genes have been cloned and characterized at the molecular level. In this work we present the identification of a novel MLL fusion partner in a pediatric patient with de novo biphenotypic acute leukemia. Methods: Cytogenetics, fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), molecular studies (RT-PCR and LDI-PCR), and bioinformatic sequence analysis were used to characterize the CT45A2 gene as novel MLL fusion partner in pediatric acute leukemia. Results: Fluorescence in situ hybridization of the patient G-banded metaphases demonstrated a cryptic insertion of 11q23 in Xq26.3 involving the MLL gene. Breakpoint fusion analysis revealed that a DNA fragment of 653 kb from 11q23, containing MLL exons 1-9 in addition to 16 other 11q23 genes, was inserted into the upstream region of the CT45A2 gene located at Xq26.3. In addition, a deletion at Xq26.3 encompassing the 3' region of the DDX26B gene (exons 9-16) and the entire CT45A1 gene was identified. RNA analysis revealed the presence of a novel MLL-CT45A2 fusion transcript in which the first 9 exons of the MLL gene were fused in-frame to exon 2 of the CT45A2 gene, resulting in a spliced MLL fusion transcript with an intact open reading frame. The resulting chimeric transcript predicts a fusion protein where the N-terminus of MLL is fused to the entire open reading frame of CT45A2. Finally, we demonstrate that all breakpoint regions are rich in long repetitive motifs, namely LINE/L1 and SINE/Alu sequences, but all breakpoints were exclusively identified outside these repetitive DNA sequences. Conclusion: We have identified CT45A2 as a novel spliced MLL fusion partner in a pediatric patient with de novo biphenotypic acute leukemia, as a result of a cryptic insertion of 11q23 in Xq26.3. Since CT45A2 is the first Cancer/Testis antigen family gene found fused with MLL in acute leukemia, future studies addressing its biologic relevance for leukemogenesis are warranted.
Summary: Information and communication is critical to the successful management of infectious diseases because an effective communication strategy prevents the surge of anxious patients who have not been genuinely exposed to the pathogen ('low risk patients') affecting medical infrastructures (1) and the future transmission of the infectious agent (2). Surge of low risk patients: The arrival of large numbers of low risk patients at hospitals following an infectious diseases emergency would be problematic for three main reasons. First, it would complicate the situation at hospitals receiving exposed patients, delaying the treatment of the acutely ill, creating difficulties of crowd control and tying up medical resources. Second, for the low risk patients themselves, attending hospital following an infectious disease emergency might increase their risk of exposure to the agent in question. Third, the needs of low risk patients may be poorly attended to at hospitals which are already overstretched dealing with medical casualties. Future transmission: Obtaining early information about symptoms and isolating infected patients is the most effective strategy to interrupt the chain of infection in the public in the absence of specific prophylaxis or treatment. Particularly at the beginning of an outbreak, these nonpharmaceutical interventions play an important role in enabling the early detection of signs or symptoms and in encouraging passengers to adopt appropriate preventive behaviour in order to limit the spread of the disease. This thesis includes two papers dealing with this problem: The first part is a systemic literature review of information needs following an infectious disease emergency (Anthrax, SARS, Pneumonic Plague). The key question was: what are the information needs of the public during an infectious disease emergency? The second part is an empirical investigation of information needs and communication strategies at the airport during the early stage of the Influenza Pandemic. The key question here was: what communication strategies help to meet the information needs and to enable the public to behave appropriately and responsibly? Conclusions: Evidence from the anthrax attacks in the United States suggested that a surge of low risk patients is by no means inevitable. Data from the SARS outbreak illustrated that if hospitals are seen as sources of contagion, many patients with non-bioterrorism related health care needs may delay seeking help. Finally, the events surrounding the Pneumonic Plague outbreak of 1994 in Surat, India, highlighted the need for the public to be kept adequately informed about an incident to avoid creating rumours. Clear, consistent and credible information is key to the successful management of infectious disease outbreaks. The results of the empirical investigation suggested that the desire for information is a reflection of current anxiety and does not mirror the objective scientific assessment of exposure. The airport study showed that perceived information needs were directly related to anxiety – the least anxious did not require any further information, the most anxious reported significant information needs concerning medical treatment, public health management and the assessment of the ongoing situation – irrespective of their actual exposure. A communication strategy only focussing on the 'real' exposed individuals neglects the information needs of those worrying about having contracted the virus and seeking medical attendance. Effective communication strategies should enable the general public to detect early signs or symptoms and provide them with behaviour advice to prevent the further transmission of the infectious agent. These include the provision of clear information about the incident, the symptoms and what to do to prevent the further transmission, detailed and regularly updated information in various media formats (telephone, internet, etc.) and rapid triage at hospital entrances to guide patients to the appropriate medical infrastructures. Relevance: These research findings could contribute to a shift in the organisational and communicative approach responding to infectious diseases outbreaks and could be considered relevant for future risk communication and policy decision making.
The eukaryotic glyoxalase system consists of two enzymatic components, glyoxalase I (lactoylglutathionelyase) and glyoxalase II (hydroxyacylglutathione hydrolase). These enzymes are dedicated to the removal of toxic alpha-oxoaldehydes like methylglyoxal (MG). MG is formed as a by-product of glycolysis and MG toxicity results from its damaging capability leading to modifications of proteins, lipids and nucleic acids. An efficient removal of MG appears to be essential to ensure cellular functionality and viability. Here we study the effects of the genetic modulation of genes encoding the components of the glyoxalase system in the filamentous ascomycete and aging model Podospora anserina. Overexpression of PaGlo1 leads to a lifespan reduction on glucose rich medium, probably due to depletion of reduced glutathione. Deletion of PaGlo1 leads to hypersensitivity against MG added to the growth medium. A beneficial effect on lifespan is observed when both PaGlo1 and PaGlo2 are overexpressed and the corresponding strains are grown on media containing increased glucose concentrations. Notably, the double mutant has a ‘healthy’ phenotype without physiological impairments. Moreover, PaGlo1/PaGlo2_OEx strains are not long-lived on media containing standard glucose concentrations suggesting a tight correlation between the efficiency and capacity to remove MG within the cell, the level of available glucose and lifespan. Overall, our results identify the up-regulation of both components of the glyoxalase system as an effective intervention to increase lifespan in P. anserina. Key words: Podospora anserina, aging, lifespan, glycation, glucose, methylglyoxal, advanced glycation end products