Publications by authors named "Stefan Kauschke"

Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates cellular senescence and its impact on aging and disease, focusing on the roles of different cell types, particularly in the context of liver injury and repair.
  • Researchers created a set of genetic tools to trace and manipulate p16 cell types in vivo, revealing that macrophages and endothelial cells (ECs) have unique roles and outcomes in liver fibrosis and regeneration.
  • Findings show that removing senescent macrophages helps reduce liver damage, while clearing senescent ECs worsens it; additionally, enhancing EC function through a specific gene reduces fibrosis, suggesting potential strategies for targeted therapies.
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Article Synopsis
  • Cirrhosis creates a proinflammatory environment, and the study aims to analyze specific inflammation patterns across various causes of compensated cirrhosis in both animal models and human patients.
  • In rat models, inflammation differed based on the cirrhosis cause, with choline-deficient high-fat diet rats showing the highest proinflammatory gene expression, while in humans, different liver diseases exhibited varying levels of inflammatory markers.
  • Despite common upregulation of proinflammatory pathways in all types of liver disease, the impact on fibrosis and portal hypertension varied based on the specific etiology of the disease.
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Persistent liver injury triggers a fibrogenic program that causes pathologic remodeling of the hepatic microenvironment (i.e., liver fibrosis) and portal hypertension.

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Overeating disorders largely contribute to worldwide incidences of obesity. Available treatments are limited. Here, we discovered that long-term chemogenetic activation of ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (vlPAG) GABAergic cells rescue obesity of high-fat diet-induced obesity (DIO) mice.

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There is a high need for predictive human ex vivo models for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). About a decade ago, precision-cut liver slices (PCLSs) have been established as an ex vivo assay for humans and other organisms. In the present study, we use transcriptomics by RNASeq to profile a new human and mouse PCLSs based assay for steatosis in NAFLD.

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The therapeutic potential of pluripotent stem cells is great as they promise to usher in a new era of medicine where cells or organs may be prescribed to replace dysfunctional tissue. At the forefront are efforts in the eye to develop this technology as it lends itself to monitoring and sophisticated non-invasive imaging modalities. In the retina, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is the most promising replacement cell as it has a single layer, is relatively simple to transplant, and is associated with several eye diseases.

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Gene therapies using adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) are among the most promising strategies to treat or even cure hereditary and acquired retinal diseases. However, the development of new efficient AAV vectors is slow and costly, largely because of the lack of suitable non-clinical models. By faithfully recreating structure and function of human tissues, human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived retinal organoids could become an essential part of the test cascade addressing translational aspects.

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GPBAR1 is a G protein-coupled receptor that is activated by certain bile acids and plays an important role in the regulation of bile acid synthesis, lipid metabolism, and energy homeostasis. Recent evidence suggests that GPBAR1 may also have important effects in reducing the inflammatory response through its expression on monocytes and macrophages. To further understand the role of GPBAR1 in inflammation, we generated a novel, selective, proprietary GPBAR1 agonist and tested its effectiveness at reducing monocyte and macrophage activation in vitro and in vivo.

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Glucokinase (GK) plays a major role in the regulation of blood glucose homeostasis in both the liver and the pancreas. In the liver, GK is controlled by the GK regulatory protein (GKRP). GKRP in turn is activated by fructose 6-phosphate (F6P) and inactivated by fructose 1-phosphate (F1P).

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In the liver, glucokinase (GK) regulatory protein (GKRP) negatively modulates the metabolic enzyme GK by locking it in an inactive state in the nucleus. Here, the authors established a high content screening assay in the 384-well microplate format to measure the nucleus-to-cytoplasm translocation of GK by reagents that destabilize the interaction between GK and GKRP. As a cellular model system, primary rat hepatocytes endogenously expressing both GK and GKRP at physiological levels were used.

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In Type 2 diabetes, increased glycogenolysis contributes to the hyperglycaemic state, therefore the inhibition of GP (glycogen phosphorylase), a key glycogenolytic enzyme, is one of the possibilities to lower plasma glucose levels. Following this strategy, a number of GPis (GP inhibitors) have been described. However, certain critical issues are associated with their mode of action, e.

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In the course of our screening to identify novel PPAR-gamma modulators for the potential treatment of type 2 diabetes, four new chlorinated angucyclinones, chlorocyclinones A-D ( 1- 4), were isolated from the mycelium of Streptomyces sp. strain DSM 17045. Their structures were established by spectroscopic methods.

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