51 results on '"Paul Debbage"'
Search Results
2. Doubly derivatized poly(lactide)–albumin nanoparticles as blood vessel-targeted transport device for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
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Paul Debbage, Christian Kremser, Klaudia Mistlberger, Thomas H. Helbich, Bernhard K. Keppler, Dieter Baurecht, Kristian Pfaller, Heribert Talasz, Irena Pashkunova-Martic, Werner Jaschke, and Beate Bechter-Hugl
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Materials science ,Size-exclusion chromatography ,Serum albumin ,Nanoparticle ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,General Materials Science ,biology ,General Chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,chemistry ,Covalent bond ,Modeling and Simulation ,biology.protein ,Biophysics ,Surface modification ,Glutaraldehyde ,Molecular imaging ,0210 nano-technology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Macromolecule - Abstract
Molecular imaging using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is expected to play a crucial future role in oncological diagnosis and in monitoring of therapeutic progress. Targeted nanoparticle contrast media (CM) with high relaxivities are required in order to obtain adequate signal-to-noise ratios as well as visualization of a desired pathologic area of the human body. The aims of this study were to synthesize and define certain physicochemical and enhancement properties of new doubly derivatized polylactic acid–bovine serum albumin (PLA-BSA) nanoparticles (NPs) modified by the covalent coupling of glutaraldehyde as a crosslinking agent. An additional functionalization with endothelial cells (ECs) targeting groups (tomato lectins; LEA) and signal-emitting moieties (DTPA-Gd) enables its use as a macromolecular, biodegradable contrast agent for MRI. The NPs were characterized by different spectroscopies, size exclusion chromatography, and scanning and transmission electron microscopy. In a human vein model, the dynamics of the nanoparticle interactions with the vein wall were examined in MRI, with correlative imaging in electron microscopy. In vitro studies were conducted to show endothelial binding and persistent enhancement at the apical EC surface. NPs with a diameter between 55 and 75 nm, able to carry simultaneous signal emitting, and targeting motifs on a single construct were successfully prepared. A high Gd payload and endothelial binding to blood vessel walls were observed. The binding affinity and specificity of LEA was preserved, and a strong enhancement at the endothelium was achieved. The stabilized core–shell structure of PLA-NP might allow for further encapsulation of lipophilic drugs or for attachment of other targeting molecules, such as antibodies. Graphical abstract
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- 2021
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3. Albumin-based nanoparticles as contrast medium for MRI: vascular imaging, tissue and cell interactions, and pharmacokinetics of second-generation nanoparticles
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Anna Helbok, Werner Jaschke, Christian Kremser, Klammsteiner N, Paul Debbage, Maria M Stollenwerk, K Albrecht-Schgoer, E. A. Wallnöfer, Gudrun C. Thurner, Heribert Talasz, and Hermann Dietrich
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0301 basic medicine ,Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Gadolinium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Contrast Media ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,Pharmacokinetics ,Albumins ,medicine ,Animals ,Chelation ,Tissue Distribution ,cardiovascular diseases ,Molecular Biology ,Chelating Agents ,Kidney ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Albumin ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Cell Biology ,Human serum albumin ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Rats ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Contrast medium ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Injections, Intravenous ,cardiovascular system ,Nanoparticles ,Female ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This multidisciplinary study examined the pharmacokinetics of nanoparticles based on albumin-DTPA-gadolinium chelates, testing the hypothesis that these nanoparticles create a stronger vessel signal than conventional gadolinium-based contrast agents and exploring if they are safe for clinical use. Nanoparticles based on human serum albumin, bearing gadolinium and designed for use in magnetic resonance imaging, were used to generate magnet resonance images (MRI) of the vascular system in rats (“blood pool imaging”). At the low nanoparticle doses used for radionuclide imaging, nanoparticle-associated metals were cleared from the blood into the liver during the first 4 h after nanoparticle application. At the higher doses required for MRI, the liver became saturated and kidney and spleen acted as additional sinks for the metals, and accounted for most processing of the nanoparticles. The multiple components of the nanoparticles were cleared independently of one another. Albumin was detected in liver, spleen, and kidneys for up to 2 days after intravenous injection. Gadolinium was retained in the liver, kidneys, and spleen in significant concentrations for much longer. Gadolinium was present as significant fractions of initial dose for longer than 2 weeks after application, and gadolinium clearance was only complete after 6 weeks. Our analysis could not account quantitatively for the full dose of gadolinium that was applied, but numerous organs were found to contain gadolinium in the collagen of their connective tissues. Multiple lines of evidence indicated intracellular processing opening the DTPA chelates and leading to gadolinium long-term storage, in particular inside lysosomes. Turnover of the stored gadolinium was found to occur in soluble form in the kidneys, the liver, and the colon for up to 3 weeks after application. Gadolinium overload poses a significant hazard due to the high toxicity of free gadolinium ions. We discuss the relevance of our findings to gadolinium-deposition diseases.
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- 2020
4. Molecular imaging with nanoparticles: the dwarf actors revisited 10 years later
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Gudrun C. Thurner and Paul Debbage
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Translation ,Histology ,Computer science ,Near infrared ,02 engineering and technology ,Review ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Nanotechnology ,Quantum nanoparticles ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Targeting ,Low toxicity ,Tunable photoluminescence ,Cell Biology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Data science ,0104 chemical sciences ,Molecular Imaging ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Nanomedicine ,Nanoparticles ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
We explore present-day trends and challenges in nanomedicine. Creativity in the laboratories continues: the published literature on novel nanoparticles is now vast. Nanoagents are discussed here which are composed entirely of strongly photoluminescent materials, tunable to desired optical properties and of inherently low toxicity. We focus on “quantum nanoparticles” prepared from allotropes of carbon. The principles behind strong, tunable photoluminescence are quantum mechanical: we present them in simple outline. The major industries racing to develop these materials can offer significant technical guidance to nanomedicine, which could help to custom-design strongly signalling nanoagents specifically for stated clinical applications. Since such agents are small, they can be targeted easily, making active targeting possible. We consider it timely now to study the interactions nanoparticles undergo with tissue components in living animals and to learn to understand and overcome the numerous barriers the organism interposes between the blood and targets in or on parenchymal cells. As the near infra-red spectrum opens up, detection of glowing nanoparticles several centimeters deep in a living human subject becomes calculable and we present a simple way to do this. Finally, we discuss the slow-fuse and resource-inefficient entry of nanoparticles into clinical application. A first possible reason is failure to target across the body’s barriers, see above. Second, in the sparse translational landscape funding and support gaps yawn widely between academic research and subsequent development. We consider the agendas of the numerous “stakeholders” participating in this sad landscape and point to some faint glimmers of hope for the future.
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- 2018
5. Targeting Drug Delivery in the Elderly: Are Nanoparticles an Option for Treating Osteoporosis?
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Johannes Haybaeck, Gudrun C. Thurner, and Paul Debbage
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Howship’s lacuna ,QH301-705.5 ,Common disease ,Osteoporosis ,Nanoparticle ,Review ,Bioinformatics ,Catalysis ,Bone resorption ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Targeted nanoparticles ,Blood vessel walls ,medicine ,Humans ,Biology (General) ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,QD1-999 ,Molecular Biology ,targeting ,Spectroscopy ,Aged ,Drug Carriers ,business.industry ,Organic Chemistry ,tissue-barriers ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Computer Science Applications ,Chemistry ,Nanomedicine ,Drug delivery ,Nanoparticles ,business - Abstract
Nanoparticles bearing specific targeting groups can, in principle, accumulate exclusively at lesion sites bearing target molecules, and release therapeutic agents there. However, practical application of targeted nanoparticles in the living organism presents challenges. In particular, intravasally applied nanoparticles encounter physical and physiological barriers located in blood vessel walls, blocking passage from the blood into tissue compartments. Whereas small molecules can pass out of the blood, nanoparticles are too large and need to utilize physiological carriers enabling passage across endothelial walls. The issues associated with crossing blood-tissue barriers have limited the usefulness of nanoparticles in clinical applications. However, nanoparticles do not encounter blood-tissue barriers if their targets are directly accessible from the blood. This review focuses on osteoporosis, a disabling and common disease for which therapeutic strategies are limited. The target sites for therapeutic agents in osteoporosis are located in bone resorption pits, and these are in immediate contact with the blood. There are specific targetable biomarkers within bone resorption pits. These present nanomedicine with the opportunity to treat a major disease by use of simple nanoparticles loaded with any of several available effective therapeutics that, at present, cannot be used due to their associated side effects.
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- 2021
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6. Development of human albumin-based nanoparticles for diagnostic optical molecular imaging of early inflammation and adenocarcinoma
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Paul Debbage, Gudrun C. Thurner, and Alshaimaa Abdelmoez
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Inflammation ,Pharmacology ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Human albumin ,Adenocarcinoma ,medicine.disease ,Molecular Imaging ,Albumins ,Humans ,Nanoparticles ,Medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Molecular imaging ,medicine.symptom ,business - Published
- 2017
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7. Crosstalk between DNA repair and cancer stem cell (CSC) associated intracellular pathways
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Ira Skvortsova, Peter Lukas, Sergej Skvortsov, and Paul Debbage
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Cancer Research ,DNA Repair ,Models, Genetic ,DNA damage ,DNA repair ,Cell ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,MRN complex ,Cancer stem cell ,Neoplasms ,DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,Humans ,Stem cell ,Intracellular ,DNA Damage ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
DNA damaging agents (ionizing radiation and chemotherapeutics) are considered as most effective in cancer treatment. However, there is a subpopulation of carcinoma cells within the tumour demonstrating resistance to DNA damaging treatment approaches. It is suggested that limited tumour response to this kind of therapy can be associated with specific molecular properties of carcinoma stem cells (CSCs) representing the most refractory cell subpopulation. This review article presents novel data about molecular features of CSCs underlying DNA damage response and related intracellular signalling.
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- 2015
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8. Rac1 as a multifunctional therapeutic target to prevent and combat cancer metastasis
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Peter Lukas, Christoph Reinhold Arnold, Paul Debbage, Gudrun C. Thurner, Sergej Skvortsov, Ira-Ida Skvortsova, and Alshaimaa Abdelmoez
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Cancer Research ,business.industry ,Cell migration ,RAC1 ,head and neck squamous cell carcinoma ,Bioinformatics ,medicine.disease ,Head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma ,carcinoma stem cells ,Metastasis ,treatment resistance ,Endothelial stem cell ,Oncology ,Research Perspective ,Cancer research ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,metastasis ,Anoikis ,Stem cell ,business ,Rac1 - Abstract
Metastatic progression of malignant tumors resistant to conventional therapeutic approaches is an ultimate challenge in clinical oncology. Despite the efforts of basic and clinical researchers, there is still no effective treatment schedule to prevent or combat metastatic spread of malignant tumors. This report presents recent findings that could help in the development of targeted therapeutics directed against the most aggressive and treatment-resistant carcinoma cells. It was demonstrated that HNSCC carcinoma cell lines with acquired treatment resistance possessed increased number of cells with carcinoma stem cell (CSC) properties. Furthermore, resistant cells were characterized by increased expression of Rac1, enhanced cell migration, and accelerated release of proangio- and vasculogenic factors (VEGF-A) and influence on endothelial cell (HMEC-1) migration. Inhibition of Rac1 signaling in the treatment-resistant carcinoma cells can interrupt metastatic process due to anoikis restoration and decrease of cell migration. It is also suggested that carcinoma cells with repressed survival capacities will be characterized by reduced release of proangiogenic factors, resulting in the decrease of endothelial cell migration. Therefore targeting of Rac1-related pathways may be considered as a promising therapeutic approach to prevent or combat metastatic lesions.
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- 2014
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9. Proteomics of cancer stem cells
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Ira Skvortsova, Sergej Skvortsov, and Paul Debbage
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Proteomics ,Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,Cluster of differentiation ,biology ,Cell ,CD44 ,Cell Separation ,Cell sorting ,Stem cell marker ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cancer stem cell ,Proteome ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,medicine ,biology.protein ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Subcellular Fractions - Abstract
New understanding of cancer stem cell (CSC) biology continues to emerge due to development of novel methods in genomics and proteomics. Analysis of nucleic acids (RNA, DNA) is widely used to elucidate molecular perturbations in malignant tumors and carcinoma cells, however genome data do not reflect the functional activities of encoded proteins. Therefore proteome-based methods could enhance knowledge about deregulation of pathways as a result of altered expression and activities of proteins in CSC.A sufficient number of CSC for proteomic analyses can be obtained in a variety of ways: Fluorescence (FACS) and magnetic (MACS) activated cell sorting, laser cell capture microdissection, and three-dimensional spheroid/organoid cell culture. These methods to enrich and isolate CSC can be performed either with or without staining using antibodies against currently known CSC-specific cell surface molecules, such as clusters of differentiation 44, 24, 133 (CD44, CD24, CD133), epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM), aldehyde-dehydrogenase-1 (ALDH1), etc. The most important limitation on using antibody-based staining of CSC is that we still do not possess definitive CSC surface markers. This review article discusses methods that could be used to study protein profiling of CSC and to identify novel CSC-specific biomarkers and therapeutic targets.Despite an opinion that the proteomic approach is time-consuming, laborious and difficult, this method can be used effectively to clarify which pathways are involved in regulating various intratumoral processes, including activation of CSC. Based on this point of view, searching and identification of single molecules as biomarkers or therapeutic targets could become possible when CSC-associated pathways are well described and clearly understood due to detailed investigation of the protein patterns in pre-clinical models and clinical samples.
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- 2014
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10. Putative biomarkers and therapeutic targets associated with radiation resistance
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Paul Debbage, Sergej Skvortsov, Peter Lukas, William C. Cho, and Ira Skvortsova
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rac1 GTP-Binding Protein ,Proteome ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Protein Array Analysis ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Proteomics ,Radiation Tolerance ,Biochemistry ,Ionizing radiation ,Cancer stem cell ,Neoplasms ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Molecular Biology ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Radiation resistance ,Cancer ,NM23 Nucleoside Diphosphate Kinases ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Radiation therapy ,Cancer cell ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Cancer research ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
Radiation therapy plays an important role in the management of malignant tumors, however, the problem of radiation resistance resulting in tumor recurrences after treatment is still unsolved. The emergence of novel biomarkers to predict cancer cell insensitivity to ionizing radiation could help to improve therapy results in cancer patients receiving radiation therapy. The proteomic approach could be effectively used to identify proteins associated with cancer radiation resistance. It is generally believed that radiation resistance could be associated with cancer stem cell persistence within the tumor. Therefore, determination of the molecular characteristics of cancer stem cells could provide additional possibilities to discover novel biomarkers to predict radiation resistance in cancer patients. This review addresses proteome-based findings that could be used for further biomarker identification and preclinical and clinical validation.
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- 2014
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11. Targeted Drugs and Nanomedicine: Present and Future
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Gudrun C. Thurner, Monika Chabicovsky, Alshaimaa Abdelmoez, and Paul Debbage
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- 2016
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12. Transbarrier targeting in the intestine: nanomedical options in oncology
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Paul Debbage and Gudrun C. Thurner
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Pharmacology ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Text mining ,Drug Design ,Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Nanoparticles ,Tissue Distribution ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Intestinal Mucosa ,business - Published
- 2012
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13. Nanomedicine Faces Barriers
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Gudrun C. Thurner and Paul Debbage
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Drug ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:Medicine ,lcsh:RS1-441 ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Review ,Bioinformatics ,lcsh:Pharmacy and materia medica ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Targeted nanoparticles ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,030304 developmental biology ,media_common ,0303 health sciences ,lesion-specific targeting ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,glandular tissues ,nanomedicine ,3. Good health ,vascular barriers ,Drug delivery ,central nervous tissues ,transbarrier targeting ,Molecular Medicine ,Nanomedicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Targeted nanoparticles have the potential to improve drug delivery efficiencies by more than two orders of magnitude, from the ~ 0.1% which is common today. Most pharmacologically agents on the market today are small drug molecules, which diffuse across the body’s blood-tissue barriers and distribute not only into the lesion, but into almost all organs. Drug actions in the non-lesion organs are an inescapable part of the drug delivery principle, causing “side-effects” which limit the maximally tolerable doses and result in inadequate therapy of many lesions. Nanoparticles only cross barriers by design, so side-effects are not built into their mode of operation. Delivery rates of almost 90% have been reported. This review examines the significance of these statements and checks how far they need qualification. What type of targeting is required? Is a single targeting sufficient? What new types of clinical challenge, such as immunogenicity, might attend the use of targeted nanoparticles?
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- 2010
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14. Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and c-myc expression are the determinants of cetuximab-induced enhancement of squamous cell carcinoma radioresponse
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Ira Skvortsova, Peter Lukas, Paul Debbage, Paul Eichberger, Taras Stasyk, Uma Raju, Eva Maria Schottdorf, Andreas Neher, Bernhard Schiestl, Luka Milas, Oliver Riesterer, Guenther K. Bonn, Sergej Skvortsov, Bela Andre Popper, and Lukas A. Huber
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Male ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Angiogenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Blotting, Western ,Cell ,Cetuximab ,Mice, Nude ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Vimentin ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Radiation Tolerance ,Mice ,Western blot ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Radiation, Ionizing ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Animals ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Epithelial–mesenchymal transition ,neoplasms ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Hematology ,Cadherins ,medicine.disease ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,Up-Regulation ,Radiation therapy ,Disease Models, Animal ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Salivary alpha-Amylases ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,biology.protein ,business ,Cell Division ,Signal Transduction ,medicine.drug - Abstract
PURPOSE: Radiation therapy cures malignant tumors of the head and neck region more effectively when it is combined with application of the anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody cetuximab. Despite the successes achieved, we still do not know how to select patients who will respond to this combination of anti-EGFR monoclonal antibody and radiation. This study was conducted to elucidate possible mechanisms which cause the combined treatment with cetuximab and irradiation to fail in some cases of squamous cell carcinomas. METHODS AND MATERIALS: Mice bearing FaDu and A431 squamous cell carcinoma xenograft tumors were treated with cetuximab (total dose 3 mg, intraperitoneally), irradiation (10 Gy) or their combination at the same doses. Treatment was applied when tumors reached 8mm in size. To collect samples for further protein analysis (two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis (2-D DIGE), mass spectrometry MALDI-TOF/TOF, Western blot analysis, and ELISA), mice from each group were sacrificed on the 8th day after the first injection of cetuximab. Other mice were subjected to tumor growth delay assay. RESULTS: In FaDu xenografts, treatment with cetuximab alone was nearly as effective as cetuximab combined with ionizing radiation, whereas A431 tumors responded to the combined treatment with significantly enhanced delay in tumor growth. Tumors extracted from the untreated FaDu and A431 xenografts were analysed for protein expression, and 34 proteins that were differently expressed in the two tumor types were identified. The majority of these proteins are closely related to intratumoral angiogenesis, cell adhesion, motility, differentiation, epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), c-myc signaling and DNA repair. CONCLUSIONS: The failure of cetuximab to enhance radiation response in FaDu xenografts was associated with the initiation of the program of EMT and with c-myc up-regulation in the carcinoma cells. For this reason, c-myc and EMT-related proteins (E-cadherin, vimentin) may be considered as potential biomarkers to predict squamous cell carcinoma response after treatment with cetuximab in combination with radiation.
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- 2010
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15. Targeted Drugs and Nanomedicine: Present and Future
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Paul Debbage
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Drug ,medicine.drug_class ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Aptamer ,Nanotechnology ,Protein Engineering ,Monoclonal antibody ,Drug Delivery Systems ,Dendrimer ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,Liposome ,Chemistry ,Drug Administration Routes ,Immunotoxins ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Nanomedicine ,Pharmaceutical Preparations ,Drug Design ,Biophysics ,Nanocarriers ,Drug carrier ,Forecasting - Abstract
Packaging small-molecule drugs into nanoparticles improves their bio-availability, bio-compatibility and safety profiles. Multifunctional particles carrying large drug payloads for targeted transport, immune evasion and favourable drug release kinetics at the target site, require a certain minimum size usually 30-300 nm diameter, so are nanoparticles. Targeting particles to a disease site can signal the presence of the disease site, block a function there, or deliver a drug to it. Targeted nanocarriers must navigate through blood-tissue barriers, varying in strength between organs and highest in the brain, to reach target cells. They must enter target cells to contact cytoplasmic targets; specific endocytotic and transcytotic transport mechanisms can be used as trojan horses to ferry nanoparticles across cellular barriers. Specific ligands to cell surface receptors, antibodies and antibody fragments, and aptamers can all access such transport mechanisms to ferry nanoparticles to their targets. The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of the targeted drug-bearing particle depend critically on particle size, chemistry, surface charge and other parameters. Particle types for targeting include liposomes, polymer and protein nanoparticles, dendrimers, carbon-based nanoparticles e.g. fullerenes, and others. Immunotargeting by use of monoclonal antibodies, chimeric antibodies and humanized antibodies has now reached the stage of clinical application. High-quality targeting groups are emerging: antibody engineering enables generation of human/like antibody (fragments) and facilitates the search for clinically relevant biomarkers; conjugation of nanocarriers to specific ligands and to aptamers enables specific targeting with improved clinical efficacy. Future developments depend on identification of clinically relevant targets and on raising targeting efficiency of the multifunctional nanocarriers.
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- 2009
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16. In vivo determination of the time and location of mucoadhesive drug delivery systems disintegration in the gastrointestinal tract
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Andreas Bernkop-Schnürch, Christian Kremser, Karin Albrecht, Melanie Greindl, Paul Debbage, and Christian Wolf
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Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Gadolinium ,Acrylic Resins ,Biomedical Engineering ,Biophysics ,Administration, Oral ,Contrast Media ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Mucoadhesive polymers ,Drug Delivery Systems ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Intestinal Mucosa ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Phantoms, Imaging ,Polymer ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Rats ,chemistry ,Dry powder ,Drug delivery ,Fluorescein ,Artifacts ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Objective The objective of this study was to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to detect the time when and the location at which orally delivered mucoadhesive drugs are released. Materials and Methods Drug delivery systems comprising tablets or capsules containing a mucoadhesive polymer were designed to deliver the polymer to the intestine in dry powder form. Dry Gd-DTPA [diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid gadolinium(III) dihydrogen salt hydrate] powder was added to the mucoadhesive polymer, resulting in a susceptibility artifact that allows tracking of the application forms before their disintegration and that gives a strong positive signal on disintegration. Experiments were performed with rats using T 1 -weighted spin-echo imaging on a standard 1.5-T MRI system. Results The susceptibility artifact produced by the dry Gd-DTPA powder in tablets or capsules was clearly visible within the stomach of the rats and could be followed during movement towards the intestine. Upon disintegration, a strong positive signal was unambiguously observed. The time between ingestion and observation of a positive signal was significantly different for different application forms. Quantification of the remaining mucoadhesive polymer in the intestine 3 h after observed release showed significant differences in mucoadhesive effectiveness. Conclusion MRI allows detection of the exact time of release of the mucoadhesive polymer in vivo, which is a prerequisite for a reliable quantitative comparison between different application forms.
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- 2008
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17. Screening and identification of molecular targets for cancer therapy
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Peter Lukas, Débora C. Coraça-Huber, Sergej Skvortsov, Gudrun C. Thurner, Alshaimaa Abdelmoez, Ira-Ida Skvortsova, and Paul Debbage
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Proteomics ,Target ,0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Cellular membranes ,Signaling pathways ,Druggability ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer stem cell ,Neoplasms ,Carcinoma ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Animals ,Humans ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Cancer ,Cancer stem cells ,medicine.disease ,High-Throughput Screening Assays ,Neoplasm Proteins ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer cell ,Immunology ,Identification (biology) - Abstract
In recent decades, targeted therapeutics have significantly improved therapy results in patients with malignant tumors of different origins. However, malignant diseases characterized by aggressiveness and increased capacity for metastatic spread still require basic researchers and clinicians to direct enormous efforts toward the development of novel therapeutic targets. Potential targets should be selected with the clinical endpoint in view; targeted therapeutics can be developed: for use in combination with currently existing therapeutic approaches in order to improve their efficacy; to overcome the treatment resistance of tumor cells and thus protect the patient from recurrence; to repress molecular mechanisms related to immune escape of cancer cells; and to combat the metastatic dissemination of carcinoma cells. Taking into account the specific clinical aim that should be achieved, different strategies and techniques can be proposed to identify the most promising candidate molecules for further development as therapeutic targets. Since cellular membranes contain a large number of druggable molecules, evaluation of the membrane protein profiles of carcinoma cells having different properties can provide a basis for further development of therapeutic targets. This review considers how cellular membranes obtained from different pre-clinical and clinical samples can be used in screening and to identify targets for cancer therapy.
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- 2015
18. Radiation resistance: Cancer stem cells (CSCs) and their enigmatic pro-survival signaling
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Ira Skvortsova, Vinod Kumar, Sergej Skvortsov, and Paul Debbage
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Cancer Research ,Cell signaling ,DNA Repair ,DNA repair ,Cell Survival ,Cell ,Population ,Biology ,Radiation Tolerance ,Resting Phase, Cell Cycle ,Cancer stem cell ,Radioresistance ,Neoplasms ,medicine ,DNA-(Apurinic or Apyrimidinic Site) Lyase ,Animals ,Humans ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Cell cycle ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Intracellular ,DNA Damage ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Despite the fact that radiation therapy is a highly effective therapeutic approach, a small intratumoral cell subpopulation known as "cancer stem cells" (CSCs) is radiation-resistant and possesses specific molecular properties protecting it against radiation-induced damage. The exact mechanisms of this radioresistance are still not fully elucidated, but they relate to these cells' enhanced DNA repair capacities and their low intracellular ROS concentrations, resulting from their up-regulation of ROS scavengers. The low ROS content is accompanied by disturbances in cell cycle regulation, so it can be assumed that either CSCs are quiescent or dormant themselves, or that this cell population consists of at least two cell subpopulations: the normally and the slowly proliferating cells (quiescent or dormant cells). Slowly dividing CSCs show concomitant dysregulation of the signaling molecules mediating both cell cycle progression and maintenance of cell stemness. Despite a massive accumulation of data concerning the mechanisms underlying DNA damage response in CSCs, it represents a challenge to researchers in the era of personalized medicine to elucidate the role of intracellular ROS and of signaling pathways associated with the radiation resistance of these cells; there is a clear need to understand the molecular mechanisms helping CSCs to survive radiation exposure.
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- 2015
19. Future of Musculoskeletal Ultrasound
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Paul Debbage, Mihra S. Taljanovic, Andrea Klauser, Mohamed M. H. Abd Ellah, John O. Bamidele, and Werner Jaschke
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Image fusion ,business.industry ,Ultrasound ,Sonoelastography ,Musculoskeletal ultrasound ,Color doppler ,Peripheral nerve ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiology ,Doppler Ultrasound Imaging ,business ,Image guidance - Abstract
In this article, we review the recent updates in musculoskeletal ultrasound (MSK US). The progressive development in ultrasound scanners including both hard- and softwares has already been reflected in its ability to diagnose different MSK diseases efficiently. We discuss here the recent applications of conventional US techniques as peripheral nerve imaging and image-guided therapies. The role of color Doppler US and contrast-enhanced US is also discussed with its impact especially in soft tissue tumors and small joint arthropathies. Sonoelastography as a new and promising technique is discussed in detail in this review. It may provide better and more robust diagnosis for many MSK diseases and may replace some of the relatively old routine techniques applied nowadays. In the end, 3D imaging and image fusion are discussed with their impact in image guidance of therapy as well as their teaching applications.
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- 2015
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20. Human triglyceride-rich lipoproteins impair glucose metabolism and insulin signalling in L6 skeletal muscle cells independently of non-esterified fatty acid levels
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Lukas A. Huber, Paul Debbage, Susanne Kaser, Michael Kranebitter, Josef R. Patsch, Andreas Niederwanger, Julia Engl, and Michael T. Pedrini
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Lipoproteins ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Glucose uptake ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Muscle Fibers, Skeletal ,Fatty Acids, Nonesterified ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biology ,Cell Line ,Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 ,Lactones ,Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,Insulin resistance ,GSK-3 ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Insulin ,Phosphorylation ,Glycogen synthase ,LDL-Receptor Related Proteins ,Triglycerides ,Orlistat ,Biological Transport ,Lipase ,Lipid Metabolism ,Phosphoproteins ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Glucose ,Glycogen Synthase ,Endocrinology ,Biochemistry ,Insulin Receptor Substrate Proteins ,biology.protein ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt ,Glycogen ,Signal Transduction ,Chylomicron ,Lipoprotein - Abstract
Elevated fasting and postprandial plasma levels of triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TGRLs), i.e. VLDL/remnants and chylomicrons/remnants, are a characteristic feature of insulin resistance and are considered a consequence of this state. The aim of this study was to investigate whether intact TGRL particles are capable of inducing insulin resistance. We studied the effect of highly purified TGRLs on glycogen synthesis, glycogen synthase activity, glucose uptake, insulin signalling and intramyocellular lipid (IMCL) content using fully differentiated L6 skeletal muscle cells. Incubation with TGRLs diminished insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis, glycogen synthase activity, glucose uptake and insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of Akt and glycogen synthase kinase 3. Insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of IRS-1, and IRS-1- and IRS-2-associated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) activity were not impaired by TGRLs, suggesting that these steps were not involved in the lipoprotein-induced effects on glucose metabolism. The overall observed effects were time- and dose-dependent and paralleled IMCL accumulation. NEFA concentration in the incubation media did not increase in the presence of TGRLs indicating that the effects observed were solely due to intact lipoprotein particles. Moreover, co-incubation of TGRLs with orlistat, a potent active-site inhibitor of various lipases, did not alter TGRL-induced effects, whereas co-incubation with receptor-associated protein (RAP), which inhibits interaction of TGRL particles with members of the LDL receptor family, reversed the TGRL-induced effects on glycogen synthesis and insulin signalling. Our data suggest that the accumulation of TGRLs in the blood stream of insulin-resistant patients may not only be a consequence of insulin resistance but could also be a cause for it.
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- 2005
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21. Proteomic approach to understand metastatic spread
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Peter Lukas, Ira Skvortsova, Christoph Reinhold Arnold, Paul Debbage, and Sergej Skvortsov
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Proteomics ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Cancer ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Bioinformatics ,Phenotype ,Primary tumor ,Metastasis ,Metastatic carcinoma ,Cell Movement ,Neoplasms ,Genotype ,Proteome ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Humans ,Molecular Targeted Therapy ,Neoplasm Metastasis - Abstract
The majority of tumor-related deaths are due to metastasis. Despite the clinical importance of understanding metastasis, we lack knowledge of the molecular mechanisms underlying tumor cell spreading and cell survival far from the primary tumor. Elucidating the molecular characteristics of highly metastatic carcinoma cells would help identify biomarkers or therapeutic targets relevant to predicting or combatting metastasis, and for this the phenotype of metastatic cells could be much more important than their genotype. Hence, proteomic approaches have wide potential utility. This review discusses possibilities of analyzing metastasis-specific protein patterns in a range of sample types, including in vitro and in vivo cancer models, and tissues and biological fluids from patients. Proteome approaches can identify proteins involved in regulating the metastatic capacities of tumors.
- Published
- 2014
22. Ossification in the human calcaneus: a model for spatial bone development and ossification
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Paul Debbage, Erich Brenner, and Helga Fritsch
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Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Histology ,Gestational Age ,Endothelial Growth Factors ,Biology ,Models, Biological ,Collagen Type I ,Imaging, Three-Dimensional ,Osteogenesis ,medicine ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Endochondral ossification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Lymphokines ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factors ,Ossification ,Osteoid ,Cartilage ,Infant, Newborn ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Immunohistochemistry ,Extracellular Matrix ,Calcaneus ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Epiphysis ,Intramembranous ossification ,Laminin ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,Perichondral ossification ,Research Article ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Perichondral bone, the circumferential grooves of Ranvier and cartilage canals are features of endochondral bone development. Cartilage canals containing connective tissue and blood vessels are found in the epiphysis of long bones and in cartilaginous anlagen of small and irregular bones. The pattern of cartilage canals seems to be integral to bone development and ossification. The canals may be concerned with the nourishment of large masses of cartilage, but neither their role in the formation of ossification centres nor their interaction with the circumferential grooves of Ranvier has been established. The relationships between cartilage canals, perichondral bone and the ossification centre were studied in the calcaneus of 9 to 38-wk-old human fetuses, by use of epoxy resin embedding, three-dimensional computer reconstructions and immunhistochemistry on paraffin sections. We found that cartilage canals are regularly arranged in shells surrounding the ossification centre. Whereas most of the shell canals might be involved in the nourishment of the cartilage, the inner shell is directly connected with the perichondral ossification groove of Ranvier and with large vessels from outside. In this way the inner shell canal imports extracellular matrix, cells and vessels into the cartilage. With the so-called communicating canals it is also connected to the endochondral ossification centre to which it delivers extracellular matrix, cells and vessels. The communicating canals can be considered as inverted ‘internal’ ossification grooves. They seem to be responsible for both build up intramembranous osteoid and for the direction of growth and thereby for orientation of the ossication centre.
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- 2001
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23. Cryopreparation Provides New Insight into the Effects of Brefeldin A on the Structure of the HepG2 Golgi Apparatus
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Monika Vetterlein, Michael W. Hess, Paul Debbage, Margit Pavelka, and Martin Müller
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0106 biological sciences ,Time Factors ,Freeze Substitution ,Endosome ,Golgi Apparatus ,Biology ,01 natural sciences ,Cryofixation ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Structural Biology ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Humans ,Fragmentation (cell biology) ,030304 developmental biology ,Cryopreservation ,0303 health sciences ,Brefeldin A ,Vesicle ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,Intracellular Membranes ,Golgi apparatus ,Cell biology ,Freeze substitution ,chemistry ,Ultrastructure ,symbols ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
High-pressure freezing and freeze-substitution were used to study Golgi ultrastructure and its brefeldin A-induced transformations in HepG2 human hepatoma cells. Cryoimmobilization arrested subcellular dynamics within milliseconds, thus considerably improving the temporal resolution in monitoring the very early effects of high brefeldin concentrations at the ultrastructural level (i.e., 20 μg/ml brefeldin applied for 35 s to 8 min). Moreover, this approach ruled out possible cumulative and/or synergistic effects of the drug and fixatives. Several findings differed from studies based on chemical fixation. In particular, Golgi breakdown did not proceed gradually but occurred in distinct steps. We found a conspicuous lag between the absence of nonclathrin coats on Golgi membranes after 30 s of brefeldin treatment and the disassembly of the stacks, which did not start until after 90 to 120 s. At this time, domains at the trans and cis faces separated from the stacks, starting tubulation and fragmentation. After 3–5 min the Golgi apparatus was completely replaced by loose meshworks of straight tubules of different sizes and staining properties; also frequent were bent tubules and vesicles forming glomerule-like structures. After 8 min all kinds of Golgi-derived structures had aggregated within huge clusters. The morphologically highly distinct structures found after brefeldin treatment could in part be correlated with particular Golgi domains in the control cells.
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- 2000
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24. Entwicklung und Anwendung dynamischer MRT-Messungen zur Evaluierung von Perfusionsveränderungen bei Rektumkarzinomen unter Bestrahlung in der klinischen Routine Erste Ergebnisse
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Paul Debbage, Thomas Gneiting, M Schocke, Peter Lukas, G Rettl, F Aichner, Dietmar Ofner, Christian Kremser, J. Hoflehner, M. Brandl, Jürgen Griebel, S. Peer, A. de Vries, and W. Judmaier
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Oncology ,Gadolinium DTPA ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,business ,Rectal disease - Abstract
Entwicklung und Anwendung dynamischer Magnetresonanztomographiemessungen zur Erhebung von Perfusionsparametern bei Rektumkarzinomen unter Bestrahlung in der klinischen Routine.
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- 1999
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25. Endocytic routes to the Golgi apparatus
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M. Pavelka, Jürgen Roth, Christian Loewe, Monika Vetterlein, Adolf Ellinger, and Paul Debbage
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Histology ,Endosome ,Endocytic cycle ,Golgi Apparatus ,Biology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Islets of Langerhans ,symbols.namesake ,Liver Neoplasms, Experimental ,Lectins ,Cell Compartmentation ,Animals ,Humans ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,Secretory pathway ,Vesicle ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Biological Transport ,Cell Biology ,Fibroblasts ,Golgi apparatus ,Rats ,Cell biology ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Ferritins ,symbols ,Golgi cisterna - Abstract
The endocytic routes of labelled lectins as well as cationic ferritin were studied in cells with a regulated secretion, i.e. pancreatic beta cells, and in constitutively secreting cells, i.e. fibroblasts and HepG2 hepatoma cells, paying particular attention to routes into the Golgi apparatus. Considerable amounts of internalised molecules were taken up into the trans Golgi network (TGN) and into Golgi subcompartments in all three cell types as well as in secretory granules of the pancreatic beta cells. The internalised materials did not pass rapidly the TGN and Golgi stacks, but were still present hours after internalisation, being then particularly concentrated in TGN-elements and in the transmost Golgi cisterna. Endocytosed materials reached forming secretory granules present in the TGN. Further, direct fusion between endocytotic vesicles and mature secretory granules was observed. Golgi subcompartments as well as endocytic TGN containing endocytosed materials were in close apposition to specialised regions of the endoplasmic reticulum. The Golgi apparatus including its parts containing endocytosed materials were transformed into a tubular reticulum upon treatment with the fungal metabolite Brefeldin A. Rarely, internalised material was observed in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum, thus providing evidence for an endocytic plasma membrane to endoplasmic reticulum route.
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- 1998
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26. Lectin Intravital Perfusion Studies in Tumor-bearing Mice: Micrometer-resolution, Wide-area Mapping of Microvascular Labeling, Distinguishing Efficiently and Inefficiently Perfused Microregions in the Tumor
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Monika Ried, A. DeVries, Thomas Gneiting, Peter Hutzler, Paul Debbage, and Jürgen Griebel
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0301 basic medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Adenocarcinoma ,Biology ,Microcirculation ,Micrometre ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Lectins ,Microscopy ,medicine ,Animals ,Mice, Inbred C3H ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,Resolution (electron density) ,Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental ,Lectin ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Perfusion ,Microscopy, Electron ,Contrast medium ,030104 developmental biology ,Wide area ,biology.protein ,Female ,Anatomy ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Intravital lectin perfusion was combined with computer-guided scanning digital microscopy to map the perfused elements of the vasculature in tumor-bearing mice. High-precision composite images (spatial precision 1.3 μm and optical resolution 1.5 μm) were generated to permit exact positioning, reconstruction, analysis, and mapping of entire tumor cross-sections (c. 1 cm in diameter). Collation of these mosaics with nuclear magnetic resonance maps in the same tumor plane identified sites of rapid contrast medium uptake as tumor blood vessels. Digitized imaging after intravital double labeling allowed polychromatic visualization of two different types of mismatched staining. First, simultaneous application of two lectins, each bearing a different fluorochrome, revealed organ-specific differential processing in the microvascular wall. Second, sequential application of two boluses of one lectin, bearing different fluorochromes successively, distinguished between double-labeled microvessels, representing efficiently perfused vascular segments, and single-labeled microvessels, with inefficient or intermittent perfusion. Intravital lectin perfusion images of blood vessels in the vital functional state thus highlighted biologically significant differences in vessel function and served as high-resolution adjuncts to MR imaging.
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- 1998
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27. Nanomaterial interference with early human placenta: Sophisticated matter meets sophisticated tissues
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Paul Debbage, Liudmila Nikitina, Martin Gauster, Herbert Juch, and Gottfried Dohr
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Reproductive toxicology ,Placenta ,Early gestation ,Human placenta ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Bioinformatics ,Engineered nanoparticles ,Villous trophoblast ,Nanostructures ,First trimester ,Nanotoxicology ,Pregnancy ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Pharmacokinetics ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange - Abstract
Next to nothing is known about nanoparticle and nanofiber trafficking at the feto-maternal interface in early human pregnancy. As the first trimester is thought to be crucial for the further placental and fetal development, it will be important to assess the possible risks of nanomaterial exposures during this period. There are some intriguing observations in nanotoxicology, however, indicating certain differences between classical toxicology and nanotoxicology. To understand nanomaterial-biokinetics and placental toxicity in early gestation, the special architecture, the hypoxic condition, the bilayer of villous trophoblast, the plugging of spiral arteries and the contribution of intrauterine glands to nutrition, as well as the delicate immunologic situation at the implantation site, will have to be considered. Unless nano-specific biokinetics are properly understood, it will be difficult to ensure identification of potential "nano-thalidomides" among all the newly engineered nanoparticles and fibers, based on the models available in reproductive toxicology.
- Published
- 2013
28. Radioresistant head and neck squamous cell carcinoma cells: Intracellular signaling, putative biomarkers for tumor recurrences and possible therapeutic targets
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Ira Skvortsova, Paul Eichberger, Sergej Skvortsov, Paul Debbage, Peter Lukas, Jaco C. Knol, Connie R. Jimenez, Bernhard Schiestl, Medical oncology laboratory, and CCA - Innovative therapy
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Cell Survival ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Blotting, Western ,Biology ,Radiation Tolerance ,Metastasis ,Western blot ,Cell Movement ,Reference Values ,Radiation, Ionizing ,Radioresistance ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Viability assay ,Oncogene Proteins ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck ,Cell migration ,Hematology ,medicine.disease ,Head and neck squamous-cell carcinoma ,Radiation therapy ,Oncology ,Head and Neck Neoplasms ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Cancer research ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Purpose Treatment of local and distant head and neck cancer recurrences after radiotherapy remains an unsolved problem. In order to identify potential targets for use in effective therapy of recurrent tumors, we have investigated protein patterns in radioresistant (FaDu-IRR and SCC25-IRR, "IRR cells") as compared to parental (FaDu and SCC25) head and neck carcinoma cells. Methods and materials Radiation resistant IRR cells were derived from parental cells after repeated exposure to ionizing radiation 10 times every two weeks at a single dose of 10Gy, resulting in a total dose of 100Gy. Protein profiling in parental and IRR cells was carried out using two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) followed by MALDI-TOF/TOF mass spectrometry. Cell viability, cell migration assays and Western blot analysis were used to confirm results obtained using the proteome approach. Results Forty-five proteins that were similarly modulated in FaDu-IRR and SCC25-IRR cells compared to parental cells were selected to analyze their common targets. It was found that these either up- or down-regulated proteins are closely related to the enhancement of cell migration which is regulated by Rac1 protein. Further investigations confirmed that Rac1 is up-regulated in IRR cells, and inhibiting its action reduces the migratory abilities of these cells. Additionally, the Rac1 inhibitor exerts cytostatic effects in HNSCC cells, mostly in migratory cells. Conclusions Based on these results, we conclude that radioresistant HNSCC cells possess enhanced metastatic abilities that are regulated by a network of migration-related proteins. Rac1 protein may be considered as a putative biomarker of HNSCC radiation resistance, and as a potential therapeutic target for treating local and distant HNSCC recurrences.
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- 2011
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29. Lead contributes to arterial intimal hyperplasia through nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor-mediated endothelial interleukin 8 synthesis and subsequent invasion of smooth muscle cells
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Sandra Frotschnig, Simone B. Kreutmayer, Stefan Blunder, Iris Zeller, David Bernhard, Günther Laufer, Johann Willeit, Paul Debbage, Evelyn Wallnoefer, Marlies Stelzmüller, Andreas Seubert, Georg Wick, Barbara Messner, Michael Knoflach, and Stefan Kiechl
- Subjects
Carotid Artery Diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intimal hyperplasia ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,NF-E2-Related Factor 2 ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myocytes, Smooth Muscle ,Organ culture ,Risk Assessment ,Severity of Illness Index ,Muscle, Smooth, Vascular ,Young Adult ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Cell Movement ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Odds Ratio ,Myocyte ,Humans ,Interleukin 8 ,Mammary Arteries ,Cells, Cultured ,Heat-Shock Proteins ,Cell Proliferation ,Ultrasonography ,Hyperplasia ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,business.industry ,Interleukin-8 ,Interleukin ,Endothelial Cells ,medicine.disease ,Elastin ,Up-Regulation ,Endocrinology ,Cytokine ,Logistic Models ,Lead ,Immunology ,Radial Artery ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Tunica Intima - Abstract
Objective— To validate the hypothesis that the toxic heavy metal lead (Pb) may be linked to cardiovascular diseases via the initiation of atherosclerosis, in vivo and in vitro studies were conducted. Methods and Results— During the human study part of this project, serum Pb levels of healthy young women were correlated to carotid intima-media thickness. Multivariate logistic regression analyses showed that increased serum Pb levels were significantly associated with an increased intima-media thickness ( P =0.01; odds ratio per SD unit, 1.6 [95% CI, 1.1 to 2.4]). In vitro, Pb induced an increase in interleukin 8 production and secretion by vascular endothelial cells. Nuclear factor erythroid 2–related factor–2 is the crucial transcription factor involved in Pb-induced upregulation of interleukin 8. Endothelial cell–secreted interleukin 8 triggered intimal invasion of smooth muscle cells and enhanced intimal thickening in an arterial organ culture model. This phenomenon was further enhanced by Pb-increased elastin synthesis of smooth muscle cells. Conclusion— Our data support the hypothesis that Pb is a novel, independent, and significant risk factor for intimal hyperplasia.
- Published
- 2010
30. Albumin-based nanoparticles as magnetic resonance contrast agents: II. Physicochemical characterisation of purified and standardised nanoparticles
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Paul Debbage, Eleonore Fröhlich, Helena Talasz, Maria Mrakovcic, Gudrun C. Thurner, Alshaimaa Abdelmoez, Werner Jaschke, Klammsteiner N, Christian Kremser, and E. A. Wallnöfer
- Subjects
Histology ,Materials science ,Gadolinium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nanoparticle ,Contrast Media ,Drug Stability ,Materials Testing ,medicine ,Humans ,Molecular Biology ,Serum Albumin ,Chromatography ,Cell Biology ,Human serum albumin ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Diafiltration ,chemistry ,Reagent ,Drug Design ,Particle ,Nanoparticles ,Particle size ,Molecular imaging ,medicine.drug - Abstract
We are developing a nanoparticulate histochemical reagent designed for histochemistry in living animals (molecular imaging), which should finally be useful in clinical imaging applications. The iterative development procedure employed involves conceptual design of the reagent, synthesis and testing of the reagent, then redesign based on data from the testing; each cycle of testing and development generates a new generation of nanoparticles, and this report describes the synthesis and testing of the third generation. The nanoparticles are based on human serum albumin and the imaging modality selected is magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Testing the second particle generation with newly introduced techniques revealed the presence of impurities in the final product, therefore we replaced dialysis with diafiltration. We introduced further testing methods including thin layer chromatography, arsenazo III as chromogenic assay for gadolinium, and several versions of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, for physicochemical characterisation of the nanoparticles and intermediate synthesis compounds. The high grade of chemical purity achieved by combined application of these methodologies allowed standardised particle sizes to be achieved (low dispersities), and accurate measurement of critical physicochemical parameters influencing particle size and imaging properties. Regression plots confirmed the high purity and standardisation. The good degree of quantitative physicochemical characterisation aided our understanding of the nanoparticles and allowed a conceptual model of them to be prepared. Toxicological screening demonstrated the extremely low toxicity of the particles. The high magnetic resonance relaxivities and enhanced mechanical stability of the particles make them an excellent platform for the further development of MRI molecular imaging.
- Published
- 2010
31. Lectin conjugates as biospecific contrast agents for MRI. Coupling of Lycopersicon esculentum agglutinin to linear water-soluble DTPA-loaded oligomers
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Bernhard K. Keppler, Christian Kremser, Vladimir B. Arion, Irena Pashkunova-Martic, Werner Jaschke, Paul Debbage, Petra Schluga, and Markus Galanski
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Cancer Research ,Gadolinium ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Contrast Media ,Mass Spectrometry ,Agglutinin ,Solanum lycopersicum ,Polymer chemistry ,Molecule ,Animals ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Chelation ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Lectin ,Water ,Fast protein liquid chromatography ,Serum Albumin, Bovine ,Oligosaccharide ,Pentetic Acid ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Solubility ,Proton NMR ,biology.protein ,Chromatography, Gel ,Cattle ,Plant Lectins - Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) requires synthesis of contrast media bearing targeting groups and numerous gadolinium chelating groups generating high relaxivity. This paper explores the results of linking the gadolinium chelates to the targeting group, a protein molecule, via various types of linkers. Polycondensates of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) with either diols or diamines were synthesised and coupled to the targeting group, a lectin (Lycopersicon esculentum agglutinin, tomato lectin) which binds with high affinity to specific oligosaccharide configurations in the endothelial glycocalyx. The polycondensates bear up to four carboxylic groups per constitutive unit. Gd-chelate bonds are created through dative interactions with the unshared pair of electrons on each oxygen and nitrogen atom on DTPA. This is mandatory for complexation of Gd(III) and avoidance of the severe toxicity of free gadolinium ions. The polymer-DTPA compounds were characterised by (1)H NMR and mass spectrometry. The final lectin-DTPA-polycondensate conjugates were purified by fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC). The capacity for specific binding was assessed, and the MRI properties were examined in order to evaluate the use of these oligomers as components of selective perfusional contrast agents.
- Published
- 2010
32. Lectin-Gd-loaded chitosan hydrogel nanoparticles: a new biospecific contrast agent for MRI
- Author
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Paul Debbage, Bernhard K. Keppler, Markus Galanski, Werner Jaschke, Vladimir B. Arion, Irena Pashkunova-Martic, and Christian Kremser
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Gadolinium ,Dispersity ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nanoparticle ,Contrast Media ,macromolecular substances ,Chitosan ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Chitin ,Pulmonary surfactant ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Lectins ,Animals ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Aqueous solution ,Hydrogels ,equipment and supplies ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Nanoparticles ,Glutaraldehyde ,Nuclear chemistry - Abstract
Non-specific extracellular contrast agents have been on the market for more than 15 years. Here, we report on the synthesis of new selective lectin–gadolinium (Gd)-loaded chitosan nanoparticles with a prolonged clearance time and a much higher relaxivity in comparison to other preparations. Chitosan nanoparticles were prepared from 85% deacetylated chitin by glutaraldehyde cross-linking of an aqueous acetic acid dispersion of chitosan in a mixture of n-hexane using sodium bis(ethylhexyl)sulfosuccinate as a surfactant. Several crucial parameters, namely, the Gd and protein content of the nanoparticles, their size and dispersity were determined. Magnetic resonance measurements were carried out by intravenous perfusion of mono-disperse suspensions of the nanoparticles into mice. Chitosan nanoparticles can be used as contrast agents in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). They are excellent candidates for controlled delivery of bioactive compounds to molecular targets and as biospecific diagnostic tools in MRI.
- Published
- 2010
33. In vivo investigation of thiomer-polyvinylpyrrolidon nanoparticles using magnetic resonance imaging
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Paul Debbage, Andreas Bernkop-Schnürch, Karin Albrecht, Melanie Greindl, Maria M Stollenwerk, Heribert Talasz, Britta Deutel, Christian Kremser, and Christian Wolf
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Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,Stereochemistry ,Gadolinium ,Urinary Bladder ,Acrylic Resins ,Pharmaceutical Science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Administration, Oral ,Contrast Media ,Kidney ,Permeability ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Pharmacokinetics ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Cysteine ,Microparticle ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Thiomer ,Povidone ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Permeation ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Rats ,chemistry ,Gastric Mucosa ,Drug delivery ,Nanoparticles ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
This study focused on the investigation of the permeation enhancing effects of a stomach targeted, nanoparticulate drug delivery system. The polyacrylic acid-cysteine/polyvinylpyrrolidon nanoparticles were loaded with the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid gadolinium(III)dihydrogen salt (Gd-DTPA). Average particle size was determined to be 130 nm and the optimum for stability was found to be below a pH of 4.5. In vitro permeation studies were performed on rat gastric mucosa and revealed an eightfold increase in Gd-DTPA uptake when incorporated in the nanoparticles compared to evaluation in the presence of unformulated polyacrylic acid-cysteine. In vivo investigations with rats were performed via the noninvasive MRI method in order to track the nanoparticles way through the gastrointestinal tract. When Gd-DTPA was administered orally as nanoparticulate suspension, an increased MRI signal in the urinary bladder was detected after 34 min, providing evidence for systemic uptake and renal elimination of the contrast agent. As control experiments with Gd-DTPA only or in combination with unformulated polyacrylic acid-cysteine revealed no MRI signal increase at all, the significant permeation enhancing effect could be identified based on the nanoparticulate formulation.
- Published
- 2009
34. Imaging with a Terahertz quantum cascade laser
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Mattias Beck, Christian Kremser, Karl Unterrainer, Jérôme Faist, Paul Debbage, Vincas Tamosiunas, Marcella Giovannini, J. Kroll, Juraj Darmo, and Gernot Fasching
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Materials science ,Terahertz radiation ,business.industry ,Spectral density ,Laser ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Semiconductor laser theory ,law.invention ,Wavelength ,Optics ,Terahertz quantum cascade laser ,law ,business ,Image resolution ,Coherence (physics) - Abstract
We demonstrate bio-medical imaging using a Terahertz quantum cascade laser. This new optoelectronic source of coherent Terahertz radiation allows building a compact imaging system with a large dynamic range and high spatial resolution. We obtain images of a rat brain section at 3.4 THz. Distinct regions of brain tissue rich in fat, proteins, and fluid-filled cavities are resolved showing the high contrast of Terahertz radiation for biological tissue. These results suggest that continuous-wave Terahertz imaging with a carefully chosen wavelength can provide valuable data on samples of biological origin; these data appear complementary to those obtained from white-light images.
- Published
- 2009
35. Imaging of placental transport mechanisms: a review
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Peter Hutzler, Christian Kremser, Paul Debbage, Elisabeth Sölder, and Irena Rohr
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Optical sectioning ,Placenta ,Biological Transport, Active ,Biology ,Syncytiotrophoblast ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,Image resolution ,Maternal-Fetal Exchange ,Microscopy, Confocal ,Pixel ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Biological Transport ,Thresholding ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,Temporal resolution ,Female ,Molecular imaging ,Plant Lectins ,Biomedical engineering ,Fluorescent tag - Abstract
Functional analysis of material transfers requires precise statement of residence times in each tissue compartment. For the placenta, neither extractive biochemistry, isotope partitioning, nor mass-based quantitative assays provide adequate spatial resolution to allow the necessary precision. Dual-perfusion assays of material transfer in isolated placental cotyledons provide time-series data for two compartments, the maternal and fetal blood, but fail to distinguish the two cellular compartments (syncytiotrophoblast, fetal endothelium) which actively regulate rates of transfer in each direction for essentially every important molecule type. At present, no definitive technology exists for functional analysis of placental transfer functions. The challenge in developing such a technology lies in the exquisitely small and delicate structures involved, which are scaled at cellular and subcellular sizes (between 50 nm and 50 microm). The only available technologies attaining this high spatial resolution are imaging technologies, primarily light and electron microscopy. To achieve the high-quality images necessary, confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) is required, to provide a uniform optical sectioning plane. In turn, this requires relatively high fluorescence intensities. Design of an adequate technology therefore bases on CLSM imaging fluorochrome-tagged tracers. The temporal resolution necessary to analyse placental material transfers is expected to be of the order of a few seconds, so that conventional wet-fixation protocols are too slow. For adequately rapid fixation, snap-freezing is required. As part of this review we report results obtained from an appropriately designed experimental protocol, analysed by CLSM and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The images acquired were tested for uniformity of illumination and fluorescence emission strength. Relevant data was encoded in the green channel of the trichrome images obtained, and this was thresholded by application of strict quantitative criteria. The thresholding procedure is suitable for automation and produces reproducible, objectifiable results. Thresholded images were subjected to image calculation procedures designed to highlight image elements (pixels) containing (green) fluorescence associated with the tracer protein; all other sources of fluorescence were visualised in the final images only if no green fluorescence was detectable in that pixel. The resulting images were maps, showing the distribution of tracer molecules at a predefined time interval after perfusion of the tracer into the vital (term) cotyledon. Spatial resolution was routinely better than 1 microm and temporal resolution was approximately 5s. At timepoints up to 10 min after intravital application into the fetal vascular circulation, tracer was associated with capillaries in the villous structures, and no tracer was observed in the syncytiotrophoblast. Clear distinction was achieved between the four tissue compartments relevant to placental transfers, thus providing a novel technology capable of generating high-quality data concerning the regulation of transfers of any molecule that can bear a fluorescent tag. The potential applications of this methodology lie in analyses of factors influencing the rates of fetomaternal and maternofetal exchanges (for example, drugs), and of functional responses of the placental regulation to pathophysiological conditions such as hypoxia.
- Published
- 2009
36. Molecular mapping deep within a living human organ: analysis of microvessel function on the timescale of seconds and with sub-micrometre spatial resolution
- Author
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Paul Debbage, Peter Hutzler, Christian Kremser, I. Rohr, and Elisabeth Sölder
- Subjects
Histology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Placenta ,Biology ,Grayscale ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Pregnancy ,Microscopy ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Contrast (vision) ,Humans ,Fluorescein Angiography ,Molecular Biology ,Microvessel ,Image resolution ,media_common ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Molecular mapping ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Microvessels ,Ultrastructure ,Female ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Function (biology) ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
Visualising vascular endothelial cell function in individual blood microvessels allows elucidation of molecular interactions at the vascular wall, the first barrier between blood-borne therapeutic agent and its target. Functional analysis in situ requires sub-micrometer spatial resolution and tagged molecules generating contrast in living blood vessels. Light microscopy fulfills these requirements, particularly if fluorescent tags deliver the contrast. However, vascular arborisations in living organs defy morpho-functional analysis, filling tissues with closely meshed three-dimensional networks which are inaccessible to optical imaging. We protocol here successful morpho-functional analysis of microvascular processing in a living organ, the human placental cotyledon. Fluorescence-tagged tracer was positionally fixed by snap-freezing, frozen sections were cut, freeze-dried and heat-fixed. A brief histochemical procedure then labelled all vascular elements in the sections, providing fluorescence contrast in two colour channels. Mosaic monochromatic images acquired in both channels delivered high-resolution maps of centimeter-wide tissue areas. Quantitative analysis of the images’ greyscale histograms defined objectifiable, reproducible thresholds, used to reduce the images to colour-coded wide-area functional maps tracking placental vascular processing of the tagged molecules. Rapid positional fixing of tracer with reduction of images to maps was combined with ultrastructural tracking to elucidate vascular processing at scales of nanometres and seconds.
- Published
- 2009
37. Molecular imaging with nanoparticles: giant roles for dwarf actors
- Author
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Paul Debbage and Werner Jaschke
- Subjects
Diagnostic Imaging ,Biodistribution ,Optics and Photonics ,Materials science ,Histology ,Surface Properties ,Nanoparticle ,Contrast Media ,Nanotechnology ,Nanoclusters ,Dendrimer ,Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted ,Medical imaging ,Animals ,Humans ,Particle Size ,Molecular Biology ,Ultrasonography ,Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon ,Microscopy ,Cell Biology ,Acoustics ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Radiography ,Contrast medium ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Nanomedicine ,Positron-Emission Tomography ,Nanoparticles ,Molecular imaging ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed - Abstract
Molecular imaging, first developed to localise antigens in light microscopy, now encompasses all imaging modalities including those used in clinical care: optical imaging, nuclear medical imaging, ultrasound imaging, CT, MRI, and photoacoustic imaging. Molecular imaging always requires accumulation of contrast agent in the target site, often achieved most efficiently by steering nanoparticles containing contrast agent into the target. This entails accessing target molecules hidden behind tissue barriers, necessitating the use of targeting groups. For imaging modalities with low sensitivity, nanoparticles bearing multiple contrast groups provide signal amplification. The same nanoparticles can in principle deliver both contrast medium and drug, allowing monitoring of biodistribution and therapeutic activity simultaneously (theranostics). Nanoparticles with multiple bioadhesive sites for target recognition and binding will be larger than 20 nm diameter. They share functionalities with many subcellular organelles (ribosomes, proteasomes, ion channels, and transport vesicles) and are of similar sizes. The materials used to synthesise nanoparticles include natural proteins and polymers, artificial polymers, dendrimers, fullerenes and other carbon-based structures, lipid-water micelles, viral capsids, metals, metal oxides, and ceramics. Signal generators incorporated into nanoparticles include iron oxide, gadolinium, fluorine, iodine, bismuth, radionuclides, quantum dots, and metal nanoclusters. Diagnostic imaging applications, now appearing, include sentinal node localisation and stem cell tracking.
- Published
- 2008
38. Association of vasoactive intestinal peptide with polymer-grafted liposomes: structural aspects for pulmonary delivery
- Author
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Fritz Andreae, Paul Debbage, Ruth Prassl, Brigitte Stark, and Wilhelm Mosgoeller
- Subjects
Male ,Circular dichroism ,Nanostructure ,Polymers ,Vasoactive intestinal peptide ,Peptide ,Biochemistry ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Polyethylene Glycols ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Drug Delivery Systems ,X-Ray Diffraction ,Lipid bilayer ,Lung ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Liposome ,Chemistry ,Polyethlene glycolated liposome ,Bilayer ,Circular Dichroism ,Phosphatidylglycerols ,Perfusion ,Membrane ,Phosphatidylcholines ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Amphipathic peptide ,Peptide–lipid interaction ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biophysics ,Phospholipid ,Pulmonary Artery ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Administration, Inhalation ,Scattering, Small Angle ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Isotonic Contraction ,Unilamellar Liposomes ,Phosphatidylethanolamines ,Spectrum Analysis ,Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy ,Cell Biology ,Sterically stabilized liposome ,Rats ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,Models, Chemical - Abstract
A polymer-grafted liposomal formulation that has the potential to be developed for aerosolic pulmonary delivery of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), a potent vasodilatory neuropeptide, is described. As VIP is prone to rapid proteolytic degradation in the microenvironment of the lung a proper delivery system is required to increase the half-life and bioavailability of the peptide. Here we investigate structural parameters of unilamellar liposomes composed of palmitoyl-oleoyl-phosphatidylcholine, lyso-stearyl-phosphatidylglycerol and distearyl-phosphatidyl-ethanolamine covalently linked to polyethylene glycol 2000, and report on VIP–lipid interaction mechanisms. We found that the cationic VIP is efficiently entrapped by the negatively charged spherical liposomes and becomes converted to an amphipathic α-helix. By fluorescence spectroscopy using single Trp-modified VIP we could show that VIP is closely associated to the membrane. Our data suggest that the N-terminal random-coiled domain is embedded in the interfacial headgroup region of the phospholipid bilayer. By doing so, neither the bilayer thickness of the lipid membrane nor the mobility of the phospholipid acyl chains are affected as shown by small angle X-ray scattering and electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Finally, in an ex vivo lung arterial model system we found that liposomal-associated VIP is recognized by its receptors to induce vasodilatory effects with comparable high relaxation efficiency as free VIP but with a significantly retarded dilatation kinetics. In conclusion, we have designed and characterized a liposomal formulation that is qualified to entrap biologically active VIP and displays structural features to be considered for delivery of VIP to the lung.
- Published
- 2006
39. Comparative in vivo mucoadhesion studies of thiomer formulations using magnetic resonance imaging and fluorescence detection
- Author
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Christian Kremser, Paul Debbage, Melanie Greindl, Christian Wolf, Andreas Bernkop-Schnürch, and Karin Albrecht
- Subjects
Gadolinium DTPA ,Male ,Latex ,Metoclopramide ,Polymers ,Swine ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Contrast Media ,In Vitro Techniques ,Dosage form ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Intestinal mucosa ,Polymethacrylic Acids ,In vivo ,medicine ,Mucoadhesion ,Animals ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Mucous Membrane ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Chemistry ,Thiomer ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Fluorescence ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Body Fluids ,Rats ,Spectrometry, Fluorescence ,Gastric Emptying ,Intestinal Absorption ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Fluorescein ,Tablets, Enteric-Coated ,Oral retinoid ,Biomedical engineering - Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare different oral delivery systems based on the thiolated polymer polycarbophil-cysteine (PCP-Cys) and to provide evidence for the validity of the hypothesis that unhydrated polymers provide better mucoadhesion in vivo. To achieve dry polymer application, a new, experimental dosage form named Eutex (made of Eu dragit® L100-55 and la tex ) capsule has been developed. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to localize the point of release of the thiolated polymer from the application forms via the positive magnetic resonance signal from a gadolinium complex (Gd-DTPA). In vivo mucoadhesion was determined by ascertaining the residence time of the fluorescence-tagged thiomer on intestinal mucosa after 3 h. Results showed that in comparison to conventional application forms the Eutex capsules led to 1.9-fold higher mucoadhesive properties of PCP-Cys when compared to application with a conventional enteric-coated capsule, and to 1.4-fold higher mucoadhesion when compared to administration with an enteric-coated tablet of the thiomer. The findings of this study should contribute to the understanding of mucoadhesion and mucoadhesion influencing parameters in vivo and should therefore be of considerable interest for the development of future mucoadhesive oral drug delivery dosage forms.
- Published
- 2006
40. CD34+/CD133- circulating endothelial precursor cells (CEP): characterization, senescence and in vivo application
- Author
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Paul Debbage, Eberhard Gunsilius, Harald C. Ott, Christian Koppelstaetter, Holger Rumpold, Ruth Koeck, Gerold Untergasser, and Dominik Wolf
- Subjects
CD31 ,Adult ,Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor p21 ,Male ,Aging ,Endothelium ,Angiogenesis ,Population ,CD34 ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Antigens, CD34 ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Cell Line ,Rats, Nude ,Endocrinology ,Antigens, CD ,Precursor cell ,von Willebrand Factor ,Genetics ,medicine ,Cell Adhesion ,Animals ,Humans ,AC133 Antigen ,education ,Molecular Biology ,Cellular Senescence ,Glycoproteins ,education.field_of_study ,Endothelial Cells ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Cell Biology ,Cell cycle ,Middle Aged ,Cell biology ,Rats ,Platelet Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Phenotype ,Immunology ,Models, Animal ,CD146 ,Peptides - Abstract
Circulating endothelial precursor cells (CEP) are interesting candidates for the treatment of ischemic diseases and for tumor targeting/imaging. We isolated a homogeneous population of CEP from CD34+/CD133− cells of peripheral blood that can be expanded easily on collagen-type-I coated plastic. CEP displayed a phenotype of mature endothelial cells (vWF, CD31, CD34, VEGF-R2, CD105, CD146) similar to that of cord-blood CEP and umbilical vein endothelial cells. They bound UEA-1 lectin, incorporated acetylated LDL and formed tube-like structures with capillary lumens in vitro. Weibel-Palade bodies were observed by electron microscopy. After 40–60 cell population doublings, CEP cultures underwent a terminal growth arrest, had shorter telomeres, up-regulated cell cycle inhibitory proteins, such as p21CIP1 and stained positive for senescence-associated-beta galactosidase. During the whole expansion period CEP retained their endothelial phenotype and a normal karyotype. CEP had the capacity to home to ischemic tissue in vivo after systemic injection in nude rats. The convenient expandability, the homogenous phenotype, the functional cellular senescence program, the regular karyotype and the homing capacity to ischemic myocardium suggest autologous CEP cultures as a safe and promising tool for cell-based therapeutic approaches in targeting ischemic tissue and tumors.
- Published
- 2005
41. Design, synthesis, physical and chemical characterisation, and biological interactions of lectin-targeted latex nanoparticles bearing Gd-DTPA chelates: an exploration of magnetic resonance molecular imaging (MRMI)
- Author
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Nadezhda Shcherbakova, Bernhard K. Keppler, Paul Debbage, Elisabeth Sölder, Isabella Höliner, Kristian Pfaller, Klaudia Mistlberger, Beate Hugl, Yiping Zou, Markus Galanski, Irena Paschkunova-Martic, Hermann Dietrich, W. Buchberger, Heribert Talasz, and Christian Kremser
- Subjects
Gadolinium DTPA ,Histology ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Gadolinium ,Nanoparticle ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Contrast Media ,In Vitro Techniques ,Cell membrane ,Mice ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Chelation ,Molecular Biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,biology ,Chemistry ,Lectin ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Cell Biology ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Microspheres ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,Blood Vessels ,Polystyrenes ,Molecular imaging ,Plant Lectins - Abstract
The physical and chemical parameters involved in the design and synthesis of biospecifically targeted nanoparticulate contrast media for magnetic resonance molecular imaging (MRMI) were explored in this pilot investigation. Latex nanoparticles 100, 400 and 900 nm in diameter were doubly derivatised, first with tomato lectin and then with gadolinium(III)-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (Gd-chelates) to target them to epithelial and endothelial glycocalyceal N-glycans and to generate contrast enhancement in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). After intravenous injection into mice, human placental cotyledons or human Vena saphena magna, contrasty images of the vascular structures were obtained in 1.5 T MRI with spatial resolution 0.1 mm in the imaging plane and 0.6 mm in the z axis, persisting >60 min and resistant to washing out by buffer rinses. Ultrastructural analysis of the nanoparticles revealed the targeting groups at the nanoparticle surfaces and the distribution of the Gd-chelates within the nanoparticles and enabled counts for use in determining relaxivity. The relaxivity values revealed were extremely high, accounting for the strong MR signals observed. Occasionally, nanoparticles larger than 100 nm were seen in close spatial association with disrupted regions of cell membrane or of collagen fibrils in the extracellular matrix. The data suggest that 100-nm nanoparticles generate adequate contrast for MRMI and cause least disruption to endothelial cell surfaces.
- Published
- 2005
42. In focus in Prague: intermediate filaments
- Author
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Paul Debbage, Jürgen Roth, and Pavel Hozák
- Subjects
Medical Laboratory Technology ,Histology ,Peripheral nerve ,Political science ,Library science ,Nuclear lamina ,Cost action ,University medical ,Cell Biology ,Simple type ,Intermediate filament ,Molecular Biology ,Lamin - Abstract
‘‘Intermediate Filaments in Health and Disease’’ were the focus of the scientific program of the 55th Symposium of the Society for Histochemistry in Prague, Czech Republic. Various aspects of intermediate filaments (IF) and associated proteins were presented and discussed with emphasis on imaging and sample preparation methods including both light and electron microscopy and specific labeling techniques. The Symposium was organized in cooperation with BMBS COST Action Nanomechanics of Intermediate Filaments Networks (NANONET) and took place in the Conference Center of the Institute of the Molecular Genetics, Academy of Science of the Czech Republic. Pavel Hozak as the local organizer together with his dedicated team did put together a very exciting and representative program. Robert D. Goldman (Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, USA) presented the ‘‘Robert Feulgen Lecture’’ sponsored by the Society of Histochemistry and communicated ‘‘Recent Insights into Cytoskeletal and Nucleoskeletal Intermediate Filaments Networks.’’ Ueli Aebi (M.E. Muller Institute for Structural Biology, University of Basel, Switzerland) presented the ‘‘EMBO Lecture’’ and gave a critical appraisal of ‘‘IF Research—Quo Vadis?’’ Nam-On Ku (Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea) contributed the ‘‘Histochemistry and Cell Biology Lecture 2013’’ and reviewed ‘‘Keratin Function in Simple Type Epithelia’’ (Yi and Ku 2013). In the Session on ‘‘Regulation of IF Assembly and Dynamics in Vivo and in Vitro,’’ Harish C. Pant (Laboratory of Neuronal Cytoskeletal Protein Regulation Section, NINDS, NIH Bethesda, USA) presented an update on the topographic regulation of neuronal IF proteins in health and disease (Binukumar et al. 2013). In the Session on ‘‘IF Structure, Mechanical Properties and Mechanotransduction,’’ Ohad Medalia (Ben-Gurion University, Beer-Sheva, Israel) reviewed structural aspects of lamins and of the nuclear lamina organization as they classically relate to the shape of the nuclear envelope and the nucleus as well as the more recently recognized involvement of lamins in various nuclear functions such as DNA replication and repair, regulation of gene expression, and signaling. A comprehensive and critical appraisal of laminopathies caused by mutations of lamin A, and associated proteins were also presented (Zwerger and Medalia 2013). In the Session on ‘‘IF Associated Proteins and Regulatory Crosstalk in a Cell,’’ Gerhard Wiche (Max F. Perutz Laboratories, University of Vienna, Austria) presented a most comprehensive perspective on plectin-intermediate filament partnership in skin, skeletal muscle, and peripheral nerve. He gave an overview of the structural features and functional properties of plectin and discussed most recent progress in defining the role of its isoforms in stress-prone tissues and the implicated diseases (Castanon et al. 2013). In the same session, Yassemi Capetanaki (Biomedical J. Roth (&) Department of Integrated OMICS for Biomedical Science, WCU Program of Graduate School, Yonsei University, Seoul 120-749, Korea e-mail: jurgen.roth@yonsei.ac.kr
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Countervailing effects of rapamycin (sirolimus) on nuclear factor-kappa B activities in neointimal and medial smooth muscle cells
- Author
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Klaudia Mistlberger, Franz Weidinger, Paul Debbage, Jozef Dulak, Matthias Frick, Zhong-qun Yan, Eva-Maria Stocker, Wolfgang Dichtl, Otmar Pachinger, and Hannes Alber
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Angiogenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myocytes, Smooth Muscle ,TNF ,Inflammation ,Aorta, Thoracic ,Pharmacology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,restenosis ,angiogenesis ,NF-\kappa B ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Restenosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Cells, Cultured ,Neointimal hyperplasia ,Sirolimus ,business.industry ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Growth factor ,NF-kappa B ,drug-eluting stents ,medicine.disease ,VEGF ,Surgery ,Rats ,Up-Regulation ,Vascular endothelial growth factor ,chemistry ,inflammation ,neointimal smooth muscle cells ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Tunica Intima ,Tunica Media ,Immunosuppressive Agents ,medicine.drug ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Local application of rapamycin (sirolimus) by drug-eluting stents prevents lumen obliteration after angioplasty by inhibition of neointimal hyperplasia. The effects of rapamycin on neointimal smooth muscle cells (niSMC) which are responsible for the occurrence of restenosis have not been investigated so far.Rat niSMC and medial SMC (mSMC) were obtained from balloon catheter-injured arteries. The niSMC exhibited higher basal NF-kappaB activity and TNF-alpha mRNA levels. Nuclear protein binding to NF-kappaB-DNA was attenuated in niSMC by incubation with rapamycin (0.1 and 1 microg/ml) for 24 and 48 h. In contrast in mSMC, 0.1 microg/ml rapamycin had no effect and at 1 microg/ml even increased nuclear protein binding to NF-kappaB-DNA. After 12 h incubation, rapamycin (0.001-10 microg/ml) induced IkappaB-alpha protein in niSMC, whereas in mSMC it stimulated IkappaB-alpha at much lower levels. Prolonged rapamycin treatment (1 microg/ml for 72 h) had no effect on TNF-alpha mRNA level and NF-kappaB activity in niSMC, whereas it led to their increase in mSMC. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) secretion was higher in mSMC than in niSMC; rapamycin decreased VEGF levels in both cell types. Ultrastructural analysis suggested that rapamycin caused early signs of degeneration in niSMC, but enhanced protein synthesis in mSMC.This study shows that rapamycin influences the inflammatory phenotypes of SMC in opposite directions: it reduces the high basal NF-kappaB activity in niSMC and enhances NF-kappaB activity and TNF-alpha expression in mSMC. In addition, rapamycin inhibits VEGF production regardless of the phenotype of SMC. These findings shed light on molecular mechanisms and structural changes underlying therapeutic applications of rapamycin in prevention of restenosis, inhibition of chronic transplant arteriosclerosis and reduction of secondary malignoma formation due to immunosuppression.
- Published
- 2004
44. Access of tumor-derived macromolecules and cells to the blood: an electron microscopical study of structural barriers in microvessel clusters in highly malignant primary prostate carcinomas
- Author
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Dagmar Strohmeyer, Elisabeth Wieser, Paul Debbage, Wolfgang Horninger, Georg Bartsch, and Hermann Rogatsch
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Stromal cell ,Endothelium ,Angiogenesis ,Macromolecular Substances ,Urology ,Extracellular matrix ,Neovascularization ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Medicine ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Microvessel ,Aged ,Neovascularization, Pathologic ,business.industry ,Endothelial Cells ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Capillaries ,Endothelial stem cell ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Prostate neoplasm ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND The neo-angiogenetic microvessels forming a major reactive stromal element in highly malignant prostate neoplasms may exhibit fine-structural features relevant to our understanding of the passage of macromolecules from tumor to blood, on the one hand, and of events facilitating the metastatic cascade, on the other hand. METHODS Ensuring rapid, optimal fixation in buffered glutaraldehyde was a foremost concern. Thin parings from radical prostatectomy specimens of Gleason scores (GS) 5–9 were taken from the tumor and from the contralateral side of the gland, glutaraldehyde-fixed, diced to smaller than 1 mm3, postfixed in osmium tetroxide, embedded in Epon, ultrathin-sectioned, contrasted with lead and uranyl salts, and viewed in a transmission electron microscope. RESULTS In dysplastic tissue areas, intraductal microvessels located in gland ducts were occasionally observed, and found to be aggressively invasive and highly active in producing neo-angiogenetic sprouts. Closely spaced microvessel clusters contained almost exclusively neo-angiogenetic microvessels, which were in cell–cell contact with numerous ameboid migratory cells, some of which were likely to be tumor cells. In these microvessel clusters, all structural barriers hindering passage of tumor-derived molecules or cells to the blood were eliminated. CONCLUSION In microvessel clusters, the ultrastructural equivalent of microvascular hotspots, tumor invasion of microvessels is facilitated, but equally microvessels are observed invading the gland duct epithelial walls. This reciprocal invasivity of tumor cells and microvascular endothelial cells generates ideal conditions for tumor products and metastatic cells to enter the blood. © 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2004
45. Intravital lectin perfusion analysis of vascular permeability in human micro- and macro- blood vessels
- Author
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Beate Hugl, Alfons Kreczy, Dietmar Öfner, Paul Debbage, Elisabeth Sölder, Sonja Seidl, and Peter Hutzler
- Subjects
Umbilical Veins ,Histology ,Endothelium ,Vascular permeability ,Umbilical vein ,Umbilical Cord ,Glycocalyx ,Capillary Permeability ,Lectins ,medicine ,Humans ,Saphenous Vein ,Molecular Biology ,Basement membrane ,Factor VIII ,biology ,Rectum ,Lectin ,Biological Transport ,Cell Biology ,Anatomy ,Immunohistochemistry ,Cell biology ,Vesicular transport protein ,Perfusion ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Adipose Tissue ,Paracellular transport ,biology.protein ,Blood Vessels ,Female ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Plant Lectins ,Fluorescein-5-isothiocyanate - Abstract
We previously applied intravital lectin perfusion in mouse models to elucidate mechanisms underlying vascular permeability. The present work transfers this technique to human models, analysing vascular permeability in macro- and microvessels. Human vascular endothelial surface carbohydrate biochemistry differs significantly from its murine counterpart, lacking alpha-galactosyl epitopes and expressing the L-fucose moiety in the glycocalyx; the poly-N-lactosamine glycan backbone is common to all mammals. We examined extensively lectin binding specificities in sections and in vivo, and then applied the poly-N-lactosamine-specific lectin LEA and the L-fucose-specific lectin UEA-I in human intravital perfusions. Transendothelial transport differed in macrovessels and microvessels. In microvessels of adult human fat tissue, rectal wall and rectal carcinomas, slow transendothelial transport by vesicles was followed by significant retention at the subendothelial basement membrane; paracellular passage was not observed. Passage time exceeded 1 h. Thus we found barrier mechanisms resembling those we described previously in murine tissues. In both adult and fetal macrovessels, the vena saphena magna and the umbilical vein, respectively, rapid passage across the endothelial lining was observed, the tracer localising completely in the subendothelial tissues within 15 min; vesicular transport was more rapid than in microvessels, and retention at the subendothelial basement membrane briefer.
- Published
- 2001
46. Vascular permeability and hyperpermeability in a murine adenocarcinoma after fractionated radiotherapy: an ultrastructural tracer study
- Author
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Sonja Seidl, Peter Hutzler, Alfons Kreczy, Margit Pavelka, Peter Lukas, and Paul Debbage
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Histology ,Endothelium ,Motility ,Vascular permeability ,Biology ,Adenocarcinoma ,Basement Membrane ,Capillary Permeability ,Mice ,Tumour Fractionated radiotherapy Vascular permeability Hyperpermeability Lectin tracer Ultrastrucure ,Lectins ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Basement membrane ,Mice, Inbred C3H ,Mammary Neoplasms, Experimental ,Intracellular vesicle ,Cell Biology ,Vesicular transport protein ,Medical Laboratory Technology ,Microscopy, Electron ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Transcytosis ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,Permeability (electromagnetism) ,Biophysics ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Neoplasm Transplantation - Abstract
Large radiation doses cause postradiation vascular hyperpermeability by disrupting endothelia. The cumulative sequences of small doses (fractionated radiotherapy) standard in clinical practice cause it too, but not by endothelial disruption: the mechanisms are unknown. In this study, correlated fluorescent and ultrastructural localisation of a tracer revealed the architecture, fine structure and function of microvessels in mouse AT17 tumours, before and after 42 Gy fractionated radiation. Before irradiation, tumour vascular permeability lay in the normophysiological range defined by the gut and cerebral cortex. A double barrier regulated permeability: vesicular transport through the endothelial wall required approximately 2 h and then the basement membrane charge barrier trapped tracer for 2 h longer. Irradiation abolished the double barrier: tracer passed instantly through both endothelial wall and underlying basement membrane, forming diffusion haloes around microvessels within 2–5 min. Structurally, irradiated tumour microvessels were lined by a continuous and vital endothelium with closed interendothelial junctions; endothelial basement membranes were intact, though loosened. Irradiated endothelia exhibited extremely active membrane motility and intracellular vesicle trafficking. Radiation treatment raised vascular permeability by enhancing transendothelial transcytosis, and by altering the passive filter properties of the subendothelial basement membrane. This type of vascular hyperpermeability should be susceptible to pharmacological modulation.
- Published
- 2000
47. Hyperphosphorylation of histone H2A.X and dephosphorylation of histone H1 subtypes in the course of apoptosis
- Author
-
Herbert Lindner, Paul Debbage, Bernd Puschendorf, Heribert Talasz, Wilfried Helliger, and Bettina Sarg
- Subjects
Hyperphosphorylation ,Enzyme Activators ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Chromatin remodeling ,MAP2K7 ,Histones ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Murine-Derived ,Mice ,Histone H1 ,Histone H2A ,Animals ,ASK1 ,Protease Inhibitors ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Phosphorylation ,Molecular Biology ,Kinase ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Cell Biology ,3T3 Cells ,Molecular biology ,Chromatin ,Cantharidin ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Carrier Proteins - Abstract
Chromatin condensation paralleled by DNA fragmentation is one of the most important nuclear events occurring during apoptosis. Histone modifications, and in particular phosphorylation, have been suggested to affect chromatin function and structure during both cell cycle and cell death. We report here that phosphate incorporation into all H1 subtypes decreased rapidly after induction of apoptosis, evidently causing a strong reduction in phosphorylated forms of main H1 histone subtypes. H1 dephosphorylation is accompanied by chromatin condensation preceding the onset of typical chromatin oligonucleosomal fragmentation, whereas H2A.X hyperphosphorylation is strongly correlated to apoptotic chromatin fragmentation. Using various kinase inhibitors we were able to exclude some of the possible kinases which can be involved directly or indirectly in phosphorylation of histone H2A.X. Neither DNA-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase A, protein kinase G, nor the kinases driven by the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAP) pathway appear to be responsible for H2A.X phosphorylation. The protein kinase C activator phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), however, markedly reduced the induction of apoptosis in TNFalpha-treated cells with a simultaneous change in the phosphorylation pattern of histone H2A.X. Hyperphosphorylation of H2A.X in apoptotic cells depends indirectly on activation of caspases and nuclear scaffold proteases as shown in zVAD-(OMe)-fmk- or zAPF-cmk-treated cells, whereas the dephosphorylation of H1 subtypes seems to be influenced solely by caspase inhibitors. Together, these results illustrate that H1 dephosphorylation and H2A.X hyperphosphorylation are necessary steps on the apoptotic pathway.
- Published
- 2000
48. Monitoring of tumor microcirculation during fractionated radiation therapy in patients with rectal carcinoma: preliminary results and implications for therapy
- Author
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Peter Lukas, Thomas Gneiting, Karl-Peter Pfeiffer, Paul Debbage, W. Buchberger, Christian Kremser, Thomas Kremser, Werner Judmaier, Jürgen Griebel, and Alexander de Vries
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Rectum ,Adenocarcinoma ,Microcirculation ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Rectal Neoplasms ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Combined Modality Therapy ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Radiation therapy ,Contrast medium ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Arterial blood ,Radiology ,Dose Fractionation, Radiation ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
To measure microcirculatory changes during chemoirradiation and to correlate perfusion index (PI) values with therapy outcome.Perfusion data in 11 patients with cT3 (clinical staging, tumor invaded the perirectal tissue) rectal carcinoma who underwent preoperative chemoirradiation were analyzed. Perfusion data were acquired by using a T1 mapping sequence with a whole-body magnetic resonance (MR) imager. After contrast medium was intravenously infused at a constant rate, concentration-and-time curves were evaluated for arterial blood and tumor. All patients underwent MR imaging before and at constant intervals during chemoirradiation. Clinical stages before therapy were compared with surgical stages after therapy.Spatial and temporal resolution on dynamic T1 maps were sufficient to reveal changes in contrast medium accumulation in the tumor. Comparison of PI values and radiation dose showed a significant increase in the 1st (P: =.003) and 2nd weeks (P: =.01) of treatment; values subsequently returned to pretreatment levels or showed a renewed increase. High initial PI values correlated with greater lymph node downstaging (P: =.042).Dynamic T1 mapping provides a suitable tool for monitoring tumor microcirculation during chemoirradiation and offers the potential for individual optimization of therapeutic procedures. Furthermore, these results indicate that the PI map may serve as a prognostic factor.
- Published
- 2000
49. 5000-year-old myelin: uniquely intact in molecular configuration and fine structure
- Author
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Paul Debbage, G. Klima, Michael W. Hess, H. Hohenberg, E. Kirschning, and Kristian Pfaller
- Subjects
Male ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all) ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,Molecular Conformation ,Hominidae ,Anatomy ,Mummies ,Tissue sampling ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Molecular conformation ,Myelin ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Austria ,Lectins ,Freezing ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Femoral Nerve ,Myelin Sheath - Abstract
We are indebted to W. Platzer, O. Gaber and K.H. Kunzel (Innsbruck) for tissue sampling, B. Afzelius and B. Fundin (Stockholm), H. Lassmann and R. Valenta (Vienna), G. Rutter (Hamburg), M. Pavelka, W. Pfaller, W. Schmidt and G. Sperk (Innsbruck) for helpful discussions, and C. Huckhagel, K. Gutleben and R. Haring for technical assistance.
- Published
- 1998
50. In vivo monitoring of tumor microcirculation changes during radiotherapy in patients with rectal carcinomas: preliminary results and possible implications for therapy
- Author
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Paul Debbage, J. Hoflehner, A. DeVries, Peter Lukas, Dietmar Ofner, Chr. Kremser, and Jürgen Griebel
- Subjects
Radiation therapy ,Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,In vivo ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Tumor microcirculation ,medicine ,In patient ,Radiology ,business - Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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