Publications by authors named "K Kotitschke"

Three-dimensional spherical aggregates of cells, grown from a permanent human malignant glioma cell line (multicellular GaMG spheroids) and from a human glioma biopsy (fragment spheroids), were investigated by 1H NMR spectroscopy. In addition, 1H NMR spectra of biopsy specimens immediately after explantation and of cell monolayers from primary passage and passage 5 were acquired and compared to those of fragment spheroids. By allowing tumor cells to grow in a three-dimensional arrangement, many biological characteristics of the original tumor in vivo are preserved.

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In cancer research, tumor spheroids are a well established system to study tumor metabolism resembling the situation in vivo more closely cell monolayers. Spherical aggregates of malignant melanoma cells (MV3) and their invasion into rat brain aggregates have been investigated by quantitative NMR microscopy. Relaxation times (T1, T2) and diffusion parameter images were acquired with an in-plane resolution of 14 x 14 microns2.

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In recent years, 1H MRS has been used in a number of studies to measure the lactate content of brain, and it is generally assumed that the methyl resonance at 1.3 ppm reflects the total amount of lactate present in the tissue. However, reduced NMR visibility of lactate has recently been reported for blood, heart and skeletal muscle as well as for bacteria.

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Astrocytoma (WHO grade II, III), glioblastoma, malignant melanoma, and normal glial cell cultures, established from biopsies, were investigated by 1H MRS. At a 1H resonance frequency of 500 MHz (11.75 T) a high spectral resolution was achieved in 1D 1H spectra; in conjunction with 2D shift-correlated (COSY) MRS, resonances of alanine, aspartate, choline, creatine, glutamate, glutamine, hypotaurine, myo-inositol, phosphocreatine, phosphoryl-ethanolamine, phosphoryl-choline, lactate, lysine, N-acetylaspartate, taurine, threonine and valine could be identified.

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Experimental frequency, concentration, and temperature dependences of the deuteron relaxation times T(1) and T(2) of D(2)O solutions of bovine serum albumin are reported and theoretically described in a closed form without formal parameters. Crucial processes of the theoretical concept are material exchange, translational diffusion of water molecules on the rugged surfaces of proteins, and tumbling of the macromolecules. It is also concluded that, apart from averaging of the relaxation rates in the diverse deuteron phases, material exchange contributes to transverse relaxation by exchange modulation of the Larmor frequency.

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