Publications by authors named "Tim Trobisch"

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system. Inflammation is gradually compartmentalized and restricted to specific tissue niches such as the lesion rim. However, the precise cell type composition of such niches, their interactions and changes between chronic active and inactive stages are incompletely understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • Inclusion body myositis (IBM) is a common inflammatory muscle disease in older adults that currently has no effective treatment and presents a mix of inflammatory and degenerative characteristics.
  • Researchers used advanced sequencing techniques to analyze muscle biopsies from IBM patients, finding unique patterns of cellular changes compared to other muscle diseases and non-inflammatory muscles.
  • Key findings reveal a loss of specific muscle fibers, increased immune cell presence, and markers of cell stress and protein degradation, highlighting potential mechanisms behind muscle degeneration in IBM and pointing to vulnerabilities in type 2 muscle fibers.
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Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a multifocal and progressive inflammatory disease of the central nervous system (CNS). However, the compartmentalized pathology of the disease affecting various anatomical regions including gray and white matter and lack of appropriate disease models impede understanding of the disease. Utilizing single-nucleus RNA-sequencing and multiplex spatial RNA mapping, we generated an integrated transcriptomic map comprising leukocortical, cerebellar and spinal cord areas in normal and MS tissues that captures regional subtype diversity of various cell types with an emphasis on astrocytes and oligodendrocytes.

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The dynamics and phenotypes of intratumoral myeloid cells during tumor progression are poorly understood. Here we define myeloid cellular states in gliomas by longitudinal single-cell profiling and demonstrate their strict control by the tumor genotype: in isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-mutant tumors, differentiation of infiltrating myeloid cells is blocked, resulting in an immature phenotype. In late-stage gliomas, monocyte-derived macrophages drive tolerogenic alignment of the microenvironment, thus preventing T cell response.

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