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Browsing by Author "Scheller, C."

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
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    Biostatistical analysis of gene microarrays reveals diverse expression clusters between macaque subspecies in brain SIV infection
    (Springer, 2007)
    Kneitz, S.
    ;
    Meisner, F.
    ;
    Sopper, S.
    ;
    Kaiser, F.
    ;
    Grünblatt, E.
    ;
    Scheller, C.
    ;
    Riederer, P.
    ;
    ter Meulen, V.
    ;
    Koutsilieri, E.
    ;
    Gerlach, Manfred
    In this study we investigated differences in the gene expression profiling of the brains of rhesus macaques that were uninfected or infected with SIV in the asymptomatic stage or AIDS. The main aim was to use biostatistical methods to classify brain gene expression following SIV infection, without consideration of the biological significance of the individual genes. We also used data from animals treated with different pharmacological substances such as dopaminergic drugs, N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists or antioxidants during the early stage of infection as these animals exhibited an accelerated or attenuated neuropsychiatric disease progression. We found macaque subspecies to be a more important factor for disease classification based on gene expression profiling than clinical symptoms or neuropathological findings. It is noteworthy that SIV-infected pharmacologically-treated. Chinese animals clustered near uninfected animals independent on the outcome of the treatment, whereas untreated SIV infected animals were clustered in a separate subtree. It is clear from this study that NeuroAIDS is a diverse disease entity and that SIV brain genes can be differentially regulated, depending on the disease type as well as changed dependent on the monkey subspecies.
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    Caspase inhibition in apoptotic T cells triggers necrotic cell death depending on the cell type and the proapoptotic stimulus
    (Wiley-liss, 2006)
    Scheller, C.
    ;
    Knoferle, J.  
    ;
    Ullrich, A.
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    Prottengeier, J.
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    Racek, T.
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    Sopper, S.
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    Jassoy, C.
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    Rethwilm, A.
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    Koutsilieri, E.
    CD95 (Fas/Apo-1) triggers apoptotic cell death via a caspase-dependent pathway. Inhibition of caspase activation blocks proapoptotic signaling and thus, prevents execution of apoptosis. Besides induction of apoptotic cell death, CD95 has been reported to trigger necrotic cell death in Susceptible cells. In this study, we investigated the interplay between apoptotic and necrotic cell death signaling in T cells. Using the agonistic CD95 antibody, 7C11, we found that caspase inhibition mediated by the pancaspase inhibitor, zVAD-fmk, prevented CD95-triggered cell death in Jurkat T cells but not in A3.01 Tcells, although typical hallmarks of apoptosis, such as DNA fragmentation or caspase activation were blocked. Moreover, the caspase-independent cell death in A3.01 cells exhibited typical signs of necrosis as detected by a rapid loss of cell membrane integrity and could be prevented by treatment with the radical scavenger butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA). Similar to CD95-induced cell death, apoptosis triggered by the DNA topoisomerase inhibitors, camptothecin or etoposide was shifted to necrosis when capsase activation was inhibited. In contrast to this, ZVAD was fully protective when apoptosis was triggered by the serpase inhibitor, N alpha-tosyl-phenyl-chlorotmethyl ketone (TPCK). TPCK was not protective when administered to anti-CD95/ZVAD-treated A3.01 cells, indicating that TPCK does not possess anti-necrotic activity but fails to activate the necrotic death pathway. Our findings show (a) that caspase inhibition does not always protect apoptotic T cells from dying but merely activates a caspase-independent mode of cell death that results in necrosis and (b) that the caspase-inhibitor-induced shift from apoptotic to necrotic cell death is dependent on the cell type and the proapoptotic stimulus.
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    Increased dopaminergic neurotransmission in therapy-naïve asymptomatic HIV patients is not associated with adaptive changes at the dopaminergic synapses
    (2010)
    Scheller, C.
    ;
    Arendt, G.
    ;
    Nolting, T.  
    ;
    Antke, C.
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    Sopper, S.
    ;
    Maschke, M.
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    Obermann, M.
    ;
    Angerer, A.
    ;
    Husstedt, I. W.
    ;
    Meisner, F.  
    ;
    Koutsilieri, E.

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