321 research outputs found
Automated evaluation of autoantibodies on human epithelial-2 cells as an approach to standardize cell-based immunofluorescence tests
INTRODUCTION: Analysis of autoantibodies (AAB) by indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) is a basic tool for the serological diagnosis of systemic rheumatic disorders. Automation of autoantibody IIF reading including pattern recognition may improve intra- and inter-laboratory variability and meet the demand for cost-effective assessment of large numbers of samples. Comparing automated and visual interpretation, the usefulness for routine laboratory diagnostics was investigated. METHODS: Autoantibody detection by IIF on human epithelial-2 (HEp-2) cells was conducted in a total of 1222 consecutive sera of patients with suspected systemic rheumatic diseases from a university routine laboratory (n = 924) and a private referral laboratory (n = 298). IIF results from routine diagnostics were compared with a novel automated interpretation system. RESULTS: Both diagnostic procedures showed a very good agreement in detecting AAB (kappa = 0.828) and differentiating respective immunofluorescence patterns. Only 98 (8.0%) of 1222 sera demonstrated discrepant results in the differentiation of positive from negative samples. The contingency coefficients of chi-square statistics were 0.646 for the university laboratory cohort with an agreement of 93.0% and 0.695 for the private laboratory cohort with an agreement of 90.6%, P < 0.0001, respectively. Comparing immunofluorescence patterns, 111 (15.3%) sera yielded differing results. CONCLUSIONS: Automated assessment of AAB by IIF on HEp-2 cells using an automated interpretation system is a reliable and robust method for positive/negative differentiation. Employing novel mathematical algorithms, automated interpretation provides reproducible detection of specific immunofluorescence patterns on HEp-2 cells. Automated interpretation can reduce drawbacks of IIF for AAB detection in routine diagnostics providing more reliable data for clinicians
Bronchus-associated lymphoid tissue–resident Foxp3+ T lymphocytes prevent antibody-mediated lung rejection
Die nukleare Ordnung in der Krise: William Walkers »nukleare Aufklärung« und seine Kritiker
Wie kann die internationale Staatengemeinschaft der Bedrohung durch die Proliferation von Kernwaffen und deren Trägermitteln wirksam begegnen? Diese Frage wird seit Jahrzehnten aus unterschiedlichen Blickwinkeln lebhaft erörtert. Die Mai-Ausgabe der Zeitschrift »International Affairs« spiegelt den derzeitigen Stand der Diskussion über die politisch-normativen Fundamente und die Bedrohungen und Zerfallserscheinungen der nuklearen Ordnung in umfassender Weise wider. Im Mittelpunkt steht dabei William Walkers origineller und zugleich provozierender Aufsatz über das nukleare Nichtverbreitungsregime als »Projekt der nuklearen Aufklärung«. Eine Vielzahl namhafter europäischer und amerikanischer Autoren setzt sich kritisch mit Walker auseinander. (Autorenreferat
Virulence-associated genes, resistance genes and adhesion and probiotic activity tested by a new screening method
We established an automated screening method to characterize adhesion of
Escherichia coli to intestinal porcine epithelial cells (IPEC-J2) and their
probiotic activity against infection by enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC). 104
intestinal E. coli isolates from domestic pigs were tested by PCR for the
occurrence of virulence-associated genes, genes coding for resistances to
antimicrobial agents and metals, and for phylogenetic origin by PCR. Adhesion
rates and probiotic activity were examined for correlation with the presence
of these genes. Finally, data were compared with those from 93 E. coli
isolates from wild boars. Isolates from domestic pigs carried a broad variety
of all tested genes and showed great diversity in gene patterns. Adhesions
varied with a maximum of 18.3 or 24.2 mean bacteria adherence per epithelial
cell after 2 or 6 hours respectively. Most isolates from domestic pigs and
wild boars showed low adherence, with no correlation between
adhesion/probiotic activity and E. coli genes or gene clusters. The gene
sfa/foc, encoding for a subunit of F1C fimbriae did show a positive
correlative association with adherence and probiotic activity; however E. coli
isolates from wild boars with the sfa/foc gene showed less adhesion and
probiotic activity than E. coli with the sfa/foc gene isolated from domestic
pigs after 6 hour incubation. In conclusion, screening porcine E. coli for
virulence associated genes genes, adhesion to intestinal epithelial cells, and
probiotic activity revealed a single important adhesion factor, several
probiotic candidates, and showed important differences between E. coli of
domestic pigs and wild boars
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Das iranische Atomprogramm und der Westen: Bilanz und Ausblick der nuklearen Nichtverbreitung in europäischen Fachaufsätzen
Die Frage, ob und wie der Iran zu einem Verzicht auf ein militärisches Atomprogramm bewegt werden kann, ist für die Zukunft sowohl der internationalen Sicherheit als auch speziell des globalen Nichtverbreitungsregimes von großer Bedeutung. Am 31. August 2006 ließ Teheran das vom UN-Sicherheitsrat gestellte Ultimatum verstreichen und widersetzte sich damit der Forderung, die Entwicklung eines eigenen Brennstoffkreislaufs zumindest vorübergehend auszusetzen. Die internationale Staatengemeinschaft ist nun herausgefordert, auf die Verstöße des Iran wirksam und geschlossen zu reagieren. In den Beiträgen einschlägiger Fachzeitschriften wird unter anderem der Frage nachgegangen, welche Motive der Iran haben könnte, Nuklearwaffen zu entwickeln. Einige Autoren unterziehen die diplomatischen Bemühungen der EU-3 einer kritischen Analyse. Angesichts der Gefahr einer Erosion des Nichtverbreitungsregimes werden außerdem mögliche Handlungsoptionen der internationalen Gemeinschaft diskutiert. (Autorenreferat
Enhancement of Speed and Accuracy Trade-Off for Sports Ball Detection in Videos—Finding Fast Moving, Small Objects in Real Time
The detection and localization of the ball in sport videos is crucial to better understand events and actions occurring in those sports. Despite recent advances in the field of object detection, the automatic detection of balls remains a challenging task due to the unsteady nature of balls in images. In this paper, we address the detection of small, fast-moving balls in sport video data and introduce a real-time ball detection approach based on the YOLOv3 object detection model. We apply specific adjustments to the network architecture and training process in order to enhance the detection accuracy and speed: We facilitate an efficient integration of motion information, avoiding a complex modification of the network architecture. Furthermore, we present a customized detection approach that is designed to primarily focus on the detection of small objects. We integrate domain-specific knowledge to adapt image pre-processing and a data augmentation strategy that takes advantage of the special features of balls in images in order to improve the generalization ability of the detection network. We demonstrate that the general trade-off between detection speed and accuracy of the YOLOv3 model can be enhanced in consideration of domain-specific prior knowledge
Agrimonia procera Wallr. extract increases stress resistance and prolongs life span in Caenorhabditis elegans via transcription factor DAF-16 (FoxO orthologue)
Agrimonia procera is a pharmacologically interesting plant which is proposed to protect against various diseases due to its high amount of phytochemicals, e.g., polyphenols. However, in spite of the amount of postulated health benefits, studies concerning the mechanistic effects of Agrimonia procera are limited. Using the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, we were able to show that an ethanol extract of Agrimonia procera herba (eAE) mediates strong antioxidative effects in the nematode: Beside a strong radical-scavenging activity, eAE reduces accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulation and protects against paraquat-induced oxidative stress. The extract does not protect against amyloid-β-mediated toxicity, but efficiently increases the life span (up to 12.7%), as well as the resistance to thermal stress (prolongation of survival up to 22%), of this model organism. Using nematodes deficient in the forkhead box O (FoxO)-orthologue DAF-16, we were able to demonstrate that beneficial effects of eAE on stress resistance and life span were mediated via this transcription factor. We showed antioxidative, stress-reducing, and life-prolonging effects of eAE in vivo and were able to demonstrate a molecular mechanism of this extract. These results may be important for identifying further molecular targets of eAE in humans.Publikationsfond ML
Over-Expression of LEDGF/p75 in HEp-2 Cells Enhances Autoimmune IgG Response in Patients with Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia : A Novel Diagnostic Approach with Therapeutic Consequence?
Lens epithelium-derived growth factor splice variant of 75 kDa (LEDGF/p75) is an autoantigen over-expressed in solid tumors and acts as a stress-related transcriptional co-activator.
Participation of autoimmune responses in the pathophysiology of benign prostatic hyperplasia
(PBH) and a corresponding immunosuppressive therapy by TNFalpha antagonists has been recently
suggested. Thus, autoAb testing could aid in the diagnosis of BPH patients profiting from such therapy. We generated CRISPR/Cas9 modified HEp-2 LEDGF knock-out (KO) and HEp-2 LEDGF/p75
over-expressing (OE) cells and examined IgG autoantibody reactivity to LEDGF/p75 in patients
with prostate cancer (PCa, n = 89), bladder cancer (BCa, n = 116), benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH,
n = 103), and blood donors (BD, n = 60) by indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA). Surprisingly,
we could not detect elevated binding of autoAbs against LEDGF/p75 in cancer patients, but autoAb
reactivity to LEDGF/p75 OE cells in about 50% of patients with BPH was unexpectedly significantly
increased. Furthermore, a line immunoassay enabling the detection of 18 different autoAbs revealed a
significantly increased occurrence of anti-dsDNA autoAbs in 34% of BPH patients in contrast to tumor
patients and BD. This finding was confirmed by anti-mitochondrial (mDNA) autoAb detection with
the Crithidia luciliae immunofluorescence test, which also showed a significantly higher prevalence
(34%) of anti-mDNA autoAbs in BPH. In summary, our study provided further evidence for the
occurrence of autoimmune responses in BPH. Furthermore, LEDGF/p75 over-expression renders
HEp-2 cells more autoantigenic and an ideal target for autoAb analysis in BPH with a potential
therapy consequence
Species-specific and pathotype-specific binding of bacteria to zymogen granule membrane glycoprotein 2 (GP2)
With interest we read the paper by Juste et al 1 proposing the amount of zymogen-granule membrane glycoprotein 2 (GP2) on the surface of intestinal bacteria as a Crohn\u27s disease (CD) marker. Indeed, a decreased GP2 level was found on microbes in patients with CD as compared to those of healthy controls. GP2 is a homologue to the urinary Tamm–Horsefall protein demonstrating an antimicrobial function by binding type 1-fimbriated uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC). Likewise, GP2 seems to interact with intestinal bacteria as a specific receptor of bacterial type-1 fimbriae (FimH) on intestinal microfold cells that are partaking in immune responses against such microbes.2 GP2 is overexpressed in the inflamed intestine of patients with CD and has an immunomodulating role in innate and acquired immune responses.3 ,4Interestingly, GP2 was identified as autoantigen of pancreatic antibodies in CD.4 Altogether, these findings indicate two major GP2 sources (pancreatic/intestinal) and support a role for GP2 in the interaction between the immune system and intestinal microbiota.3 Thus, loss of tolerance to GP2 could play a role in CD\u27s pathophysiology supposed to be exacerbated by preceding intestinal infections. In general, the findings by Juste et al 1 may be explained by a lower pancreatic GP2 secretion, an impaired GP2 binding to bacteria, or by a higher prevalence of bacteria with poor or no GP2 binding in patients with CD
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