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377 Publications visible to you, out of a total of 377

Abstract

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Authors: Sai Wang, Frederik Link, Mei Han, Roohi Chaudhary, Anastasia Asimakopoulos, Roman Liebe, Ye Yao, Seddik Hammad, Anne Dropmann, Marinela Krizanac, Matthias Ebert, Ralf Weiskirchen, Yoav I. Henis, Marcelo Ehrlich, Steven Dooley

Date Published: 2024

Publication Type: InProceedings

Abstract (Expand)

PURPOSE: With abdominal magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) often suffering from breathing artifacts, it is recommended to perform MRE during breath-hold. However, breath-hold acquisition prohibits extended multifrequency MRE examinations and yields inconsistent results when patients cannot hold their breath. The purpose of this work was to analyze free-breathing strategies in multifrequency MRE of abdominal organs. METHODS: Abdominal MRE with 30, 40, 50, and 60 Hz vibration frequencies and single-shot, multislice, full wave-field acquisition was performed four times in 11 healthy volunteers: once with multiple breath-holds and three times during free breathing with ungated, gated, and navigated slice adjustment. Shear wave speed maps were generated by tomoelastography inversion. Image registration was applied for correction of intrascan misregistration of image slices. Sharpness of features was quantified by the variance of the Laplacian. RESULTS: Total scan times ranged from 120 seconds for ungated free-breathing MRE to 376 seconds for breath-hold examinations. As expected, free-breathing MRE resulted in larger organ displacements (liver, 4.7 +/- 1.5 mm; kidneys, 2.4 +/- 2.2 mm; spleen, 3.1 +/- 2.4 mm; pancreas, 3.4 +/- 1.4 mm) than breath-hold MRE (liver, 0.7 +/- 0.2 mm; kidneys, 0.4 +/- 0.2 mm; spleen, 0.5 +/- 0.2 mm; pancreas, 0.7 +/- 0.5 mm). Nonetheless, breathing-related displacement did not affect mean shear wave speed, which was consistent across all protocols (liver, 1.43 +/- 0.07 m/s; kidneys, 2.35 +/- 0.21 m/s; spleen, 2.02 +/- 0.15 m/s; pancreas, 1.39 +/- 0.15 m/s). Image registration before inversion improved the quality of free-breathing examinations, yielding no differences in image sharpness to uncorrected breath-hold MRE in most organs (P > .05). CONCLUSION: Overall, multifrequency MRE is robust to breathing when considering whole-organ values. Respiration-related blurring can readily be corrected using image registration. Consequently, ungated free-breathing MRE combined with image registration is recommended for multifrequency MRE of abdominal organs.

Authors: M. Shahryari, T. Meyer, C. Warmuth, H. Herthum, G. Bertalan, H. Tzschatzsch, L. Stencel, S. Lukas, L. Lilaj, J. Braun, I. Sack

Date Published: 26th Oct 2020

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a significant health burden in obese children for which there is currently no specific therapy. Preclinical studies indicate that epoxyeicosanoids, a class of bioactive lipid mediators that are generated by cytochrome P450 (CYP) epoxygenases and inactivated by the soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH), play a protective role in NAFLD. We performed a comprehensive lipidomics analysis using liver tissue and blood samples of 40 children with NAFLD. Proteomics was performed to determine CYP epoxygenase and sEH expressions. Hepatic epoxyeicosanoids significantly increased with higher grades of steatosis, while their precursor PUFAs were unaltered. Concomitantly, total CYP epoxygenase activity increased while protein level and activity of sEH decreased. In contrast, hepatic epoxyeicosanoids showed a strong decreasing trend with higher stages of fibrosis, accompanied by a decrease of CYP epoxygenase activity and protein expression. These findings suggest that the CYP epoxygenase/sEH pathway represents a potential pharmacologic target for the treatment of NAFLD.

Authors: L. Kalveram, W. H. Schunck, M. Rothe, B. Rudolph, C. Loddenkemper, H. G. Holzhutter, S. Henning, P. Bufler, M. Schulz, D. Meierhofer, I. W. Zhang, K. H. Weylandt, S. Wiegand, C. A. Hudert

Date Published: 4th Jan 2021

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Renal oncocytomas are rare benign tumors of the kidney and characterized by a deficient complex I (CI) enzyme activity of the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) system caused by mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations. Yet, little is known about the underlying molecular mechanisms and alterations of metabolic pathways in this tumor. We compared renal oncocytomas with adjacent matched normal kidney tissues on a global scale by multi-omics approaches, including whole exome sequencing (WES), proteomics, metabolomics, and metabolic pathway simulation. The abundance of proteins localized to mitochondria increased more than 2-fold, the only exception was a strong decrease in the abundance for CI subunits that revealed several pathogenic heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations by WES. We also observed renal oncocytomas to dysregulate main metabolic pathways, shunting away from gluconeogenesis and lipid metabolism. Nevertheless, the abundance of energy carrier molecules such as NAD(+), NADH, NADP, ATP, and ADP were significantly higher in renal oncocytomas. Finally, a substantial 5000-fold increase of the reactive oxygen species scavenger glutathione can be regarded as a new hallmark of renal oncocytoma. Our findings demonstrate that renal oncocytomas undergo a metabolic switch to eliminate ATP consuming processes to ensure a sufficient energy supply for the tumor.

Authors: G. Kurschner, Q. Zhang, R. Clima, Y. Xiao, J. F. Busch, E. Kilic, K. Jung, N. Berndt, S. Bulik, H. G. Holzhutter, G. Gasparre, M. Attimonelli, M. Babu, D. Meierhofer

Date Published: 1st Dec 2017

Publication Type: Not specified

Abstract

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Authors: Seddik Hammad, Christoph Ogris, Amnah Othman, Pia Erdoesi, Wolfgang Schmidt-Heck, Ina Biermayer, Barbara Helm, Yan Gao, Weronika Piorońska, Lorenza D'Alessandro, Fabian J. Theis, Matthias P. Ebert, Ursula Klingmüller, Jan Hengstler, Nikola S. Mueller, Steven Dooley

Date Published: 2023

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

The standard of care for gastroesophageal cancer patients with hepatic or pulmonary metastases is best supportive care or palliative chemotherapy. Occasionally, patients can be selected for curative treatment instead. This study aimed to evaluate patients who underwent a resection of hepatic or pulmonary metastasis with curative intent. The Dutch national registry for histo- and cytopathology was used to identify these patients. Data were retrieved from the individual patient files. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was performed. Between 1991 and 2016, 32,057 patients received a gastrectomy or esophagectomy for gastroesophageal cancer in the Netherlands. Of these patients, 34 selected patients received a resection of hepatic metastasis (n = 19) or pulmonary metastasis (n = 15) in 21 different hospitals. Only 4 patients received neoadjuvant therapy before metastasectomy. The majority of patients had solitary, metachronous metastases. After metastasectomy, grade 3 (Clavien-Dindo) complications occurred in 7 patients and mortality in 1 patient. After resection of hepatic metastases, the median potential follow-up time was 54 months. Median overall survival (OS) was 28 months and the 1-, 3-, and 5- year OS was 84%, 41%, and 31%, respectively. After pulmonary metastases resection, the median potential follow-up time was 80 months. The median OS was not reached and the 1-, 3-, and 5- year OS was 67%, 53%, and 53%, respectively. In selected patients with gastroesophageal cancer with hepatic or pulmonary metastases, metastasectomy was performed with limited morbidity and mortality and offered a 5-year OS of 31-53%. Further prospective studies are required.

Authors: M. F. J. Seesing, A. van der Veen, H. J. F. Brenkman, H. B. A. C. Stockmann, G. A. P. Nieuwenhuijzen, C. Rosman, F. J. H. van den Wildenberg, M. I. van Berge Henegouwen, P. van Duijvendijk, B. P. L. Wijnhoven, J. H. M. B. Stoot, M. Lacle, J. P. Ruurda, R. van Hillegersberg

Date Published: 31st Dec 2019

Publication Type: Not specified

Abstract (Expand)

Can three-dimensional, microvasculature networks still ensure blood supply if individual links fail? We address this question in the sinusoidal network, a plexus-like microvasculature network, which transports nutrient-rich blood to every hepatocyte in liver tissue, by building on recent advances in high-resolution imaging and digital reconstruction of adult mice liver tissue. We find that the topology of the three-dimensional sinusoidal network reflects its two design requirements of a space-filling network that connects all hepatocytes, while using shortest transport routes: sinusoidal networks are sub-graphs of the Delaunay graph of their set of branching points, and also contain the corresponding minimum spanning tree, both to good approximation. To overcome the spatial limitations of experimental samples and generate arbitrarily-sized networks, we developed a network generation algorithm that reproduces the statistical features of 0.3-mm-sized samples of sinusoidal networks, using multi-objective optimization for node degree and edge length distribution. Nematic order in these simulated networks implies anisotropic transport properties, characterized by an empirical linear relation between a nematic order parameter and the anisotropy of the permeability tensor. Under the assumption that all sinusoid tubes have a constant and equal flow resistance, we predict that the distribution of currents in the network is very inhomogeneous, with a small number of edges carrying a substantial part of the flow-a feature known for hierarchical networks, but unexpected for plexus-like networks. We quantify network resilience in terms of a permeability-at-risk, i.e., permeability as function of the fraction of removed edges. We find that sinusoidal networks are resilient to random removal of edges, but vulnerable to the removal of high-current edges. Our findings suggest the existence of a mechanism counteracting flow inhomogeneity to balance metabolic load on the liver.

Authors: J. Karschau, A. Scholich, J. Wise, H. Morales-Navarrete, Y. Kalaidzidis, M. Zerial, B. M. Friedrich

Date Published: 1st Jul 2020

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

Upon stimulation of cells with transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta), Smad proteins form trimeric complexes and activate a broad spectrum of target genes. It remains unresolved which of the possible Smad complexes are formed in cellular contexts and how these contribute to gene expression. By combining quantitative mass spectrometry with a computational selection strategy, we predict and provide experimental evidence for the three most relevant Smad complexes in the mouse hepatoma cell line Hepa1-6. Utilizing dynamic pathway modeling, we specify the contribution of each Smad complex to the expression of representative Smad target genes, and show that these contributions are conserved in human hepatoma cell lines and primary hepatocytes. We predict, based on gene expression data of patient samples, increased amounts of Smad2/3/4 proteins and Smad2 phosphorylation as hallmarks of hepatocellular carcinoma and experimentally verify this prediction. Our findings demonstrate that modeling approaches can disentangle the complexity of transcription factor complex formation and its impact on gene expression.

Authors: P. Lucarelli, M. Schilling, C. Kreutz, A. Vlasov, M. E. Boehm, N. Iwamoto, B. Steiert, S. Lattermann, M. Wasch, M. Stepath, M. S. Matter, M. Heikenwalder, K. Hoffmann, D. Deharde, G. Damm, D. Seehofer, M. Muciek, N. Gretz, W. D. Lehmann, J. Timmer, U. Klingmuller

Date Published: 19th Feb 2018

Publication Type: Not specified

Abstract

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Authors: Sai Wang, Frederik Link, Rilu Feng, Stefan Munker, Yujia Li, Roman Liebe, Matthias P. Ebert, Steven Dooley, Huiguo Ding, Shanshan Wang, Honglei Weng

Date Published: 2023

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract

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Authors: Steven Dooley, Jonel Trebicka, Sebastian Mueller

Date Published: 18th Jan 2022

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract

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Authors: Rodrigo Rojas-Moraleda, Wei Xiong, Niels Halama, Katja Breitkopf-Heinlein, Steven Dooley, Luis Salinas, Dieter W. Heermann, Nektarios A. Valous

Date Published: 1st May 2017

Publication Type: Not specified

Abstract (Expand)

Background Many functional analysis tools have been developed to extract functional and mechanistic insight from bulk transcriptome data. With the advent of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), it is in principle possible to do such an analysis for single cells. However, scRNA-seq data has characteristics such as drop-out events and low library sizes. It is thus not clear if functional TF and pathway analysis tools established for bulk sequencing can be applied to scRNA-seq in a meaningful way. Results To address this question, we perform benchmark studies on simulated and real scRNA-seq data. We include the bulk-RNA tools PROGENy, GO enrichment, and DoRothEA that estimate pathway and transcription factor (TF) activities, respectively, and compare them against the tools SCENIC/AUCell and metaVIPER, designed for scRNA-seq. For the in silico study, we simulate single cells from TF/pathway perturbation bulk RNA-seq experiments. We complement the simulated data with real scRNA-seq data upon CRISPR-mediated knock-out. Our benchmarks on simulated and real data reveal comparable performance to the original bulk data. Additionally, we show that the TF and pathway activities preserve cell type-specific variability by analyzing a mixture sample sequenced with 13 scRNA-seq protocols. We also provide the benchmark data for further use by the community. Conclusions Our analyses suggest that bulk-based functional analysis tools that use manually curated footprint gene sets can be applied to scRNA-seq data, partially outperforming dedicated single-cell tools. Furthermore, we find that the performance of functional analysis tools is more sensitive to the gene sets than to the statistic used.

Authors: Christian H. Holland, Jovan Tanevski, Javier Perales-Patón, Jan Gleixner, Manu P. Kumar, Elisabetta Mereu, Brian A. Joughin, Oliver Stegle, Douglas A. Lauffenburger, Holger Heyn, Bence Szalai, Julio Saez-Rodriguez

Date Published: 1st Dec 2020

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

BACKGROUND & AIMS: A common genetic variant near MBOAT7 (rs641738C>T) has been previously associated with hepatic fat and advanced histology in NAFLD; however, these findings have not been consistently replicated in the literature. We aimed to establish whether rs641738C>T is a risk factor across the spectrum of NAFLD and to characterise its role in the regulation of related metabolic phenotypes through a meta-analysis. METHODS: We performed a meta-analysis of studies with data on the association between rs641738C>T genotype and liver fat, NAFLD histology, and serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT), lipids or insulin. These included directly genotyped studies and population-level data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We performed a random effects meta-analysis using recessive, additive and dominant genetic models. RESULTS: Data from 1,066,175 participants (9,688 with liver biopsies) across 42 studies were included in the meta-analysis. rs641738C>T was associated with higher liver fat on CT/MRI (+0.03 standard deviations [95% CI 0.02-0.05], pz = 4.8x10(-5)) and diagnosis of NAFLD (odds ratio [OR] 1.17 [95% CI 1.05-1.3], pz = 0.003) in Caucasian adults. The variant was also positively associated with presence of advanced fibrosis (OR 1.22 [95% CI 1.03-1.45], pz = 0.021) in Caucasian adults using a recessive model of inheritance (CC + CT vs. TT). Meta-analysis of data from previous GWAS found the variant to be associated with higher ALT (pz = 0.002) and lower serum triglycerides (pz = 1.5x10(-4)). rs641738C>T was not associated with fasting insulin and no effect was observed in children with NAFLD. CONCLUSIONS: Our study validates rs641738C>T near MBOAT7 as a risk factor for the presence and severity of NAFLD in individuals of European descent. LAY SUMMARY: Fatty liver disease is a common condition where fat builds up in the liver, which can cause liver inflammation and scarring (including 'cirrhosis'). It is closely linked to obesity and diabetes, but some genes are also thought to be important. We did this study to see whether one specific change ('variant') in one gene ('MBOAT7') was linked to fatty liver disease. We took data from over 40 published studies and found that this variant near MBOAT7 is linked to more severe fatty liver disease. This means that drugs designed to work on MBOAT7 could be useful for treating fatty liver disease.

Authors: K. Teo, K. W. M. Abeysekera, L. Adams, E. Aigner, Q. M. Anstee, J. M. Banales, R. Banerjee, P. Basu, T. Berg, P. Bhatnagar, S. Buch, A. Canbay, S. Caprio, A. Chatterjee, Y. D. Ida Chen, A. Chowdhury, A. K. Daly, C. Datz, D. de Gracia Hahn, J. K. DiStefano, J. Dong, A. Duret, C. Emdin, M. Fairey, G. S. Gerhard, X. Guo, J. Hampe, M. Hickman, L. Heintz, C. Hudert, H. Hunter, M. Kelly, J. Kozlitina, M. Krawczyk, F. Lammert, C. Langenberg, J. Lavine, L. Li, H. K. Lim, R. Loomba, P. K. Luukkonen, P. E. Melton, T. A. Mori, N. D. Palmer, C. A. Parisinos, S. G. Pillai, F. Qayyum, M. C. Reichert, S. Romeo, J. I. Rotter, Y. R. Im, N. Santoro, C. Schafmayer, E. K. Speliotes, S. Stender, F. Stickel, C. D. Still, P. Strnad, K. D. Taylor, A. Tybjaerg-Hansen, G. R. Umano, M. Utukuri, L. Valenti, L. E. Wagenknecht, N. J. Wareham, R. M. Watanabe, J. Wattacheril, H. Yaghootkar, H. Yki-Jarvinen, K. A. Young, J. P. Mann

Date Published: 4th Sep 2020

Publication Type: Journal

Abstract (Expand)

BACKGROUND & AIMS: A common genetic variant near MBOAT7 (rs641738C>T) has been previously associated with hepatic fat and advanced histology in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), however, these findings have not been consistently replicated in the literature. We aimed to establish whether rs641738C>T is a risk factor across the spectrum of NAFLD and characterize its role in the regulation of related metabolic phenotypes through meta-analysis. METHODS: We performed meta-analysis of studies with data on the association between rs641738C>T genotype and: liver fat, NAFLD histology, and serum ALT, lipids, or insulin. These included directly genotyped studies and population-level data from genome-wide association studies (GWAS). We performed random effects meta-analysis using recessive, additive, and dominant genetic models. RESULTS: Data from 1,066,175 participants (9,688 with liver biopsies) across 42 studies were included in the meta-analysis. rs641738C>T was associated with higher liver fat on CT/MRI (+0.03 standard deviations [95% CI: 0.02 - 0.05], pz=4.8x10(-5)) and diagnosis of NAFLD (OR 1.17 [95% CI 1.05 - 1.3], pz=0.003) in Caucasian adults. The variant was also positively associated with presence of advanced fibrosis (OR 1.22 [95% CI: 1.03 - 1.45], pz=0.021) in Caucasian adults using a recessive model of inheritance (CC+CT vs. TT). Meta-analysis of data from previous GWAS found the variant to be associated with higher ALT (pz=0.002) and lower serum triglycerides (pz=1.5x10(-4)). rs641738C>T was not associated with fasting insulin and no effect was observed in children with NAFLD. CONCLUSION: Our study validates rs641738C>T near MBOAT7 as a risk factor for the presence and severity of NAFLD in individuals of European descent.

Authors: K. Teo, K. W. M. Abeysekera, L. Adams, E. Aigner, Q. M. Anstee, J. M. Banales, R. Banerjee, P. Basu, T. Berg, P. Bhatnagar, S. Buch, A. Canbay, S. Caprio, A. Chatterjee, Y. D. Ida Chen, A. Chowdhury, A. K. Daly, C. Datz, D. de Gracia Hahn, J. K. DiStefano, J. Dong, A. Duret, C. Emdin, M. Fairey, G. S. Gerhard, X. Guo, J. Hampe, M. Hickman, L. Heintz, C. Hudert, H. Hunter, M. Kelly, J. Kozlitina, M. Krawczyk, F. Lammert, C. Langenberg, J. Lavine, L. Li, H. K. Lim, R. Loomba, P. K. Luukkonen, P. E. Melton, T. A. Mori, N. D. Palmer, C. A. Parisinos, S. G. Pillai, F. Qayyum, M. C. Reichert, S. Romeo, J. I. Rotter, Y. R. Im, N. Santoro, C. Schafmayer, E. K. Speliotes, S. Stender, F. Stickel, C. D. Still, P. Strnad, K. D. Taylor, A. Tybjaerg-Hansen, G. R. Umano, M. Utukuri, L. Valenti, L. E. Wagenknecht, N. J. Wareham, R. M. Watanabe, J. Wattacheril, H. Yaghootkar, H. Yki-Jarvinen, K. A. Young, J. P. Mann

Date Published: 31st Aug 2020

Publication Type: Journal

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