14 results match your criteria: "and Max-Planck-Institute for Experimental Medicine[Affiliation]"

Surgeons rely almost completely on their own vision and palpation to recognize affected tissues during surgery. Consequently, they are often unable to distinguish between different cells and tissue types. This makes accurate and complete resection cumbersome.

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Circumvention of common labelling artefacts using secondary nanobodies.

Nanoscale

May 2020

Institute of Neuro- and Sensory Physiology, University Medical Center Göttingen, 37073 Göttingen, Germany. and Center for Biostructural Imaging of Neurodegeneration (BIN), University of Göttingen Medical Center, 37075 Göttingen, Germany and NanoTag Biotechnologies GmbH, 37079, Göttingen, Germany.

A standard procedure to study cellular elements is via immunostaining followed by optical imaging. This methodology typically requires target-specific primary antibodies (1.Abs), which are revealed by secondary antibodies (2.

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Background: Basal arginine vasopressin (AVP) plasma levels in alcoholic patients are persistently decreased over months of controlled alcohol abstinence. As a potential explanation of this phenomenon, a reduction of AVP immunoreactive neurons was described in the hypothalamus of alcohol-dependent humans and rodents. This study was therefore designed to examine whether long-term abstinent alcoholics have a compromised response of AVP to osmostimulation.

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It is far from clear how comorbidity changes during alcoholism treatment. This study investigates: (1) the course of comorbid Axis I disorders in chronic alcoholics over 2 years of controlled abstinence in the outpatient long-term intensive therapy for alcoholics (OLITA) and (2) the effect of comorbid Axis I and II disorders in this group of patients on subsequent drinking outcome over a four-year follow-up. This prospective treatment study evaluates psychiatric variables of 89 severely affected chronic alcohol dependent patients on admission (t(1)), month 6 (t(2)), 12 (t(3)) and 24 (t(4)).

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Aims: Testosterone synthesis in chronic alcoholics is affected by a variety of mechanisms. Little is known about the reversibility of these changes upon abstinence and available data on circulating hormone levels are incomplete and inconsistent.

Methods: Serum concentrations of free testosterone, total testosterone, and luteinizing hormone (LH) were determined in 18 male non-cirrhotic chronic alcoholics on days 2, 22, 82 and 127 of strictly controlled abstinence, as well as in a group of 20 healthy age-matched controls.

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Endothelin-1 plays an important role as a paracrine factor in the regulation of regional blood flow. Plasma levels may represent the net result of spill-over from local stimulation/release and elimination of endothelin-1. In order to compare changes in the concentration of endothelin-1 in the plasma of subjects performing different types of sports exercises we measured immunoreactive endothelin-1 in healthy volunteers ( n=20) performing in random order jogging on a treadmill and cycling on a bicycle ergometer, for 30 min each.

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The role of functional endothelin-B (ETB)-receptors on neuronal survival upon hypoxia-ischemia (HI) has been investigated in 14-day-old ETB-receptor-deficient spotting lethal (sl/sl) and wildtype (+/+) rats. Carotid ligation followed by exposure to 8% oxygen for 2 h produced distinct cortical and hippocampal neuronal damage. Damage severity 24 h after HI was mild to intermediate in +/+ rats whereas large cortical infarcts and profound apoptosis of the hippocampus evolved in sl/sl rats.

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We characterized the time-course, intensity of expression and cellular origin of components of the endothelin (ET) system in the rat brain after a standardized neurotrauma (cryogenic lesion of the parietal cortex). ET mRNAs were expressed at sham level after neurotrauma, whereas immunoreactivity for ET-1 was enhanced in glia and endothelium of the lesioned hemisphere and both hippocampi. The number of ET-3 positive mononuclear cells in the lesion perimeter increased starting at 24h after injury.

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Numerous reports exist on haematological pathology in alcoholism. However, no data are available regarding a potential involvement of haematopoietic growth factors in the recovery from alcohol-induced haematological abnormalities upon abstinence. Therefore, thrombopoietin (TPO) and erythropoietin (EPO) serum levels along with haematological and other routine laboratory parameters were closely followed in 14 thoroughly characterized male alcoholic patients over one to five months of controlled abstention from alcohol.

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The precise role of testosterone in regulating mood, especially in alleviating depression, remains unclear although converging evidence indicates that androgens may exert antidepressant action. A model that may potentially assist in the clarification of androgen-mediated effects on mood is the study of cryptorchid men who may grow up with varying degrees of testosterone deficiency depending on the time in their life when cryptorchism is corrected. In this report, we describe a rare case of bilateral cryptorchism that did not come to the attention of the physician to implement effective substitution with testosterone until much later in adult life.

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We used in situ hybridization, RT PCR and immunohistochemistry to study the time course of expression and the cellular localization of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) during the first 7 days after induction of a standardized cryogenic lesion on the right parietal cortex in male rats. Cryogenic lesion induced iNOS mRNA in the lesioned hemisphere after 6 to 72 h with a maximum (15+/-2 cells/mm2, n=4, p<0.01 vs.

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Vasopressin levels in plasma rise during migraine attacks. Vasopressin also induces endothelin-1 synthesis in endothelial cells, suggesting a role as a mediator of elevated plasma endothelin-1 in migraine. To explore a possible relationship between endothelin-1 and vasopressin in migraine, plasma concentrations of both peptides were monitored simultaneously throughout an attack and during two migraine-free intervals (control) in 20 patients.

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Astrocytes produce and bind endothelins (ETs), suggesting that these cells have ET autoregulatory and eliminatory functions. To further investigate these functions in primary rat astrocytes, ET-1 levels in the cell culture media (RIA/HPLC) and intracellular content of ET-1 mRNA (RT PCR) were measured under basal and stimulated (thrombin, 2.2 U/ml) conditions in the presence and absence of ETA and ETB selective antagonists (BQ123 or LU135252, and BQ788, respectively).

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Using a whole-cell binding procedure with long incubations at low temperature and subsequent acid stripping, we have characterized an atypical endothelin (ET) receptor in primary rat cortical astrocyte cultures. We found the following: (a) no competition for 125I-ET-1 binding by the ET(A) antagonists BQ-123 and LU 135252 or the ET(B) agonist IRL 1620; (b) weak competition by the ET(B) antagonist BQ-788 and by the predominant ET(B) ligand ET-3; (c) potent synergistic competition of ET(A) and ET(B) ligands in combination for 125I-ET-1 binding; (d) potent competition of ET-1 with any of the radioligands used, 125I-ET-1, 125I-IRL 1620, and [3H]BQ-123; (e) lack of competition of IRL 1620 and BQ-123 with the respective other radioligand; (f) shifting of the amount of acid-strippable 125I-ET-1 binding from 20 to 80% by ET(B) ligands and to 4% by ET(A) ligands; and (g) as a control, typical ET(A) and ET(B) binding characteristics of the RAT-1 fibroblast and the U373MG astrocytoma cell line, respectively, under our assay conditions. The unusual binding properties of astrocytic ET receptors described in this study appear to be the result of several binding sites in the receptor for different ET ligands or ligand epitopes.

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