Publications by authors named "Hermanova Zuzana"

Article Synopsis
  • N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are crucial in various CNS disorders, with current treatments like memantine and ketamine having limitations and side effects.
  • Researchers aimed to create a new NMDAR open-channel blocker, K2060, which displays unique inhibitory properties and stronger effectiveness than existing drugs at inhibiting specific NMDAR subtypes.
  • K2060 showed promising results in a mouse model, reducing excitatory postsynaptic currents significantly and exhibiting a good safety profile, suggesting its potential as a treatment for NMDAR-related CNS disorders.
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Introduction: Astrocytic Transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels, together with Aquaporin 4 (AQP4), are suspected to be the key players in cellular volume regulation, and therefore may affect the development and severity of cerebral edema during ischemia. In this study, we examined astrocytic swelling/volume recovery in mice with TRPV4 and/or AQP4 deletion in response to ischemic conditions, to determine how the deletion of these channels can affect the development of cerebral edema.

Methods: We used three models of ischemia-related pathological conditions: hypoosmotic stress, hyperkalemia, and oxygenglucose deprivation (OGD), and observed their effect on astrocyte volume changes in acute brain slices of Aqp4, Trpv4 and double knockouts.

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Article Synopsis
  • Bcl-2 family proteins, particularly Bax and Bak, are known for regulating apoptosis but also exhibit less understood activities unrelated to cell death.
  • Research on Bax/Bak-deficient human cancer cells revealed that U87 glioblastoma cells showed enhanced respiratory function and faster proliferation, while HBL-2 B lymphoma cells experienced slight respiratory suppression.
  • The study indicates that the regulation of mitochondrial transcription elongation factor TEFM in Bax/Bak-deficient cells affects mitochondrial respiratory complex subunits, influencing metabolism and cell proliferation.
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Glial cells expressing neuron-glial antigen 2 (NG2), also known as oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs), play a critical role in maintaining brain health. However, their ability to differentiate after ischemic injury is poorly understood. The aim of this study was to investigate the properties and functions of NG2 glia in the ischemic brain.

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Transient receptor potential cation channels subfamily V member 4 (TRPV4) are non-selective cation channels expressed in different cell types of the central nervous system. These channels can be activated by diverse physical and chemical stimuli, including heat and mechanical stress. In astrocytes, they are involved in the modulation of neuronal excitability, control of blood flow, and brain edema formation.

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Introduction: Astrocytic Aquaporin 4 (AQP4) and Transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels form a functional complex that likely influences cell volume regulation, the development of brain edema, and the severity of the ischemic injury. However, it remains to be fully elucidated whether blocking these channels can serve as a therapeutic approach to alleviate the consequences of having a stroke.

Methods And Results: In this study, we used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to quantify the extent of brain lesions one day (D1) and seven days (D7) after permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (pMCAO) in AQP4 or TRPV4 knockouts and mice with simultaneous deletion of both channels.

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Systemic scleroderma (SSc) is a systemic immune-mediated connective tissue disease characterized by fibroproductive changes in connective tissue and microvascular disorders. The disease affects the skin, musculoskeletal system and internal organs. It is a disease with a significant rate of morbidity and mortality, significantly worsening the quality of life of patients.

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In this study, we aimed to disclose the impact of amyloid-β toxicity and tau pathology on astrocyte swelling, their volume recovery and extracellular space (ECS) diffusion parameters, namely volume fraction (α) and tortuosity (λ), in a triple transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease (3xTg-AD). Astrocyte volume changes, which reflect astrocyte ability to take up ions/neurotransmitters, were quantified during and after exposure to hypo-osmotic stress, or hyperkalemia in acute hippocampal slices, and were correlated with alterations in ECS diffusion parameters. Astrocyte volume and ECS diffusion parameters were monitored during physiological aging (controls) and during AD progression in 3-, 9-, 12- and 18-month-old mice.

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Ischemic brain injury and Alzheimer's disease (AD) both lead to cell death in the central nervous system (CNS) and thus negatively affect particularly the elderly population. Due to the lack of a definitive cure for brain ischemia and AD, it is advisable to carefully study, compare, and contrast the mechanisms that trigger, and are involved in, both neuropathologies. A deeper understanding of these mechanisms may help ameliorate, or even prevent, the destructive effects of neurodegenerative disorders.

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Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurological disease, which is characterized by the degeneration of motor neurons in the motor cortex and the spinal cord and subsequently by muscle atrophy. To date, numerous gene mutations have been linked to both sporadic and familial ALS, but the effort of many experimental groups to develop a suitable therapy has not, as of yet, proven successful. The original focus was on the degenerating motor neurons, when researchers tried to understand the pathological mechanisms that cause their slow death.

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The proper function of the nervous system is dependent on the balance of ions and water between the intracellular and extracellular space (ECS). It has been suggested that the interaction of aquaporin-4 (AQP4) and the transient receptor potential vaniloid isoform 4 (TRPV4) channels play a role in water balance and cell volume regulation, and indirectly, of the ECS volume. Using the real-time iontophoretic method, we studied the changes of the ECS diffusion parameters: ECS volume fraction α (α = ECS volume fraction/total tissue volume) and tortuosity λ (λ  = free/apparent diffusion coefficient) in mice with a genetic deficiency of AQP4 or TRPV4 channels, and in control animals.

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Transient receptor potential vanilloid type 4 (TRPV4) channels are involved in astrocyte volume regulation; however, only limited data exist about its mechanism in astrocytes in situ. We performed middle cerebral artery occlusion in adult mice, where we found twice larger edema 1 day after the insult in trpv4 mice compared to the controls, which was quantified using magnetic resonance imaging. This result suggests disrupted volume regulation in the brain cells in trpv4 mice leading to increased edema formation.

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Background: Several techniques for cell volume measurement using fluorescence microscopy have been established to date. In this study, we compare the performance of three different approaches which allow for estimations of the cell volume changes in biological samples containing individual fluorescently labeled cells either in culture or in the tissue context. The specific requirements, limitations and advantages of individual approaches are discussed.

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Background: Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic disease considerably affecting the quality of life of patients, their functional abilities and capability to work. In everyday clinical practice, the condition is commonly monitored by assessing the disease activity using a joint count and laboratory markers of inflammation with calculating the DAS28 or other systems for scoring the disease activity.

Objectives: This study is aimed to evaluate the benefit of ultrasound examination with a standardized instrument and correlate its results with the quality of life of patients and their functional abilities as assessed by standardized questionnaire methods.

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Aims: To evaluate the serum levels of matrix metalloproteinase-3 (MMP-3) as a potential marker of disease activity and joint damage in 92 patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), compared to 24 osteoarthritis (OA) patients and 26 healthy controls.

Methods: The concentrations of MMP-3 were measured by ELISA using the commercial kit AESKULISA DF MMP-3 (AESKU.Diagnostics, Germany) and compared with other laboratory parameters routinely used to assess the disease status, clinical score (DAS28) and radiographic stage in the group of RA patients.

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Using dedicated contrast agents high-quality X-ray imaging of soft tissue structures with isotropic micrometre resolution has become feasible. This technique is frequently titled as virtual histology as it allows production of slices of tissue without destroying the sample. The use of contrast agents is, however, often an irreversible time-consuming procedure and despite the non-destructive principle of X-ray imaging, the sample is usually no longer usable for other research methods.

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Aims: The aim of our study was to address the utility of serum levels of selected parameters of myeloma bone disease (MBD) signalling with regard to the pathogenesis of multiple myeloma (MM), activity, markers of bone turnover and extent of skeletal changes.

Patients And Methods: We assessed prospectively 77 individuals with monoclonal gammopathies - 46 patients with active MM (AMM), 12 patients with smouldering MM (SMM) and 19 individuals with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) to determine the role of HGF, MIP-1α, Syndecan-1, osteoprotegerin, Activin A, DKK1, Annexin A2 and NF-κB.

Results: We found significant differences of most of the parameters between MGUS and AMM, and with respect to the activity of MM assessed by International Staging System.

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Ultrasound elastography (sonoelastography, USE) is a relatively new, rapidly evolving area of imaging that measures elasticity of tissues. Its development started in the last decade of the 20th century and was accelerated after devices allowing real-time imaging and quantification (shear wave elastography, SWE) became broadly available for clinical practise. First results suggest that combination of sonoelastography and conventional ultrasound gives more precise results than ultrasound alone in certain areas.

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Purpose: The aim of our study was to assess incomplete and accessory interlobar fissures using volumetric thin-section high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT).

Materials And Methods: Retrospective assessment of HRCT examinations of 250 patients was performed. We assessed the localization, extension, and type of the incompleteness of fissures as well as the presence and localization of accessory fissures.

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Aim: Accelerated atherosclerosis in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an important cause of morbidity and mortality. The pathophysiology of accelerated atherosclerosis in SLE is mediated by factors such as inflammatory processes in the vascular wall, specific antibodies, dyslipoproteinemia, endothelial dysfunction and the high prevalence of traditional risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. In this context, we evaluated the clinical significance of ultrasound examination of the carotic arteries in the early diagnosis of atherosclerosis.

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SLE is characterized by overproduction of various types of autoantibodies. Under certain circumstances, antibodies targeting some of the neoepitopes of the complement system can be seen. The most studied among antibodies directed against a component of the complement system is anti-C1q.

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The aim of our study was to describe the surface anatomy of the interlobar fissures using volumetric thin-section high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT). Retrospective assessment of HRCT examinations of 250 patients was performed. The localization of the oblique fissures was marked at three sites: posteriorly at its most superior medial limit, laterally in the midaxillary line, and inferiorly at the junction of the middle and lateral thirds of the hemithorax; posteriorly and laterally, this was to the nearest rib whilst inferiorly the position was described in relation to the diaphragm or chest wall.

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CD30/CD30L and CD40/CD40L are molecules from the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) superfamily. They have a major effect on communications between the B and T cells, which leads to control of maturation, proliferation, and apoptosis of those cells. The aim of this study was to compare the levels of a soluble form of CD30 (sCD30) and a soluble ligand CD40 (sCD40L) in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) (n=65) and healthy controls (sCD30 n=20, sCD40L n=10) with other parameters of SLE activity.

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Background: Chemokine-driven migration of inflammatory cells has been implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerotic conditions including peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) is elevated in patients with coronary artery disease and in hypertensive patients. This study therefore investigated MCP-1 in patients with PAD.

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