16 results on '"Petra, Müller"'
Search Results
2. <scp>Euphresco</scp> inter‐laboratory comparison (2009–2012) on detection of Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus and Ralstonia solanacearum in potato tubers: proposal to include TaqMan ® real‐time <scp>PCR</scp> as a primary (core) screening test in <scp>EU</scp> / <scp>EPPO</scp> standard methods
- Author
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Petra Müller, J. Vaerenbergh, Jaap D. Janse, John G. Elphinstone, and R. A. M. Vreeburg
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0106 biological sciences ,Ralstonia solanacearum ,biology ,Screening test ,business.industry ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,Standard methods ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Biotechnology ,010602 entomology ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,TaqMan ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,business ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Clavibacter michiganensis ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Phytosanitary certification ,media_common - Abstract
In the European Union (EU) potato production is surveyed for Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus (potato ring rot) and Ralstonia solanacearum (potato brown rot) under Commission Directives 93/85/EEC with its amendment 2006/56/EC and 98/57/EEC with its amendment 2006/63/EC. A regular update of the Directives is required in view of developments in understanding of the biology of these organisms and the diagnostics recommended for their detection and identification. Three inter-laboratory tests (ILT1, ILT2 and ILT3) were performed from 2009 to 2012 as part of a Euphresco Phytosanitary ERA-NET project to assess performance of current official methods for C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus and R. solanacearum. A major aim of the ILTs was to generate data on the performance of real-time PCR protocols to support their introduction as primary (core) screening tests for both pathogens. In ILT1, 29 laboratories from 23 countries participated, in ILT2, 23 laboratories from 18 countries and in ILT3 42 laboratories from 24 countries. Relative accuracies for real-time PCR tests averaged 92% for R. solanacearum and 96% for C. michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus) and compared with existing primary (core) screening tests (immunofluorescence, conventional PCR, semi-selective plating and bioassay) in terms of analytical sensitivity, analytical specificity and robustness. It was concluded that all methods tested, including real-time PCR, can be considered as equivalent. Therefore TaqMan® real-time PCR is recommended for inclusion in EU Directives and EPPO Standards as a reliable primary (core) screening method.
- Published
- 2017
3. Mechanical integrin stress and magnetic forces induce biological responses in mesenchymal stem cells which depend on environmental factors
- Author
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Gustav Steinhoff, Petra Müller, Martin Möller, Ulrich Beck, Annika Kasten, Joachim Rychly, Kristina Bruellhoff, Jürgen Groll, and Ulrike Bulnheim
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Male ,Integrins ,Angiogenesis ,Morpholines ,Blotting, Western ,Integrin ,Biochemistry ,Regenerative medicine ,Magnetics ,Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,Cell Adhesion ,Humans ,Cell adhesion ,Molecular Biology ,Cells, Cultured ,Aged ,Phosphoinositide-3 Kinase Inhibitors ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Chemistry ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Cell Biology ,Adhesion ,Middle Aged ,Flow Cytometry ,Chondrogenesis ,Cell biology ,Fibronectin ,Chromones ,Immunology ,Microscopy, Electron, Scanning ,biology.protein ,Female ,Stress, Mechanical - Abstract
The control of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) by physical cues is of great interest in regenerative medicine. Because integrin receptors function as mechanotransducers, we applied drag forces to β1 integrins on the apical surface of adherent human MSC. In addition to mechanical forces, the technique we used involved also the exposure of the cells to an inhomogeneous magnetic field. In order to assess the influence of the substrate on cell adhesion, cells were cultured on plain tissue culture polystyrene (TCP) or on coated well plates, which allowed only adhesion to embedded fibronectin or RGD peptides. We found that the expression of collagen I, which is involved in osteogenesis, and VEGF, a factor which stimulates angiogenesis, increased as a result of short-term mechanical integrin stress. Whereas, collagen I expression was stimulated by mechanical forces when the cells were cultured on fibronectin and RGD peptides but not on TCP, VEGF expression was enhanced by physical stimulation on TCP. The study further revealed that magnetic forces enhanced Sox 9 expression, a marker of chondrogenesis, and reduced the expression of ALP. Concerning the intracellular mechanisms involved, we found that the expression of VEGF induced by physical forces depended on Akt activation. Together, the results implicate that biological functions of MSC can be stimulated by integrin-mediated mechanical forces and a magnetic field. However, the responses of cells depend strongly on the substrate to which they adhere and on the cross-talk between integrin-mediated signals and soluble factors.
- Published
- 2010
4. Calcium phosphate surfaces promote osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells
- Author
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Marianne Teller, Ernst-Dieter Klinkenberg, Andreas Liebold, Barbara Nebe, Gustav Steinhoff, Ulrike Bulnheim, Hans-Georg Neumann, Petra Müller, Joachim Rychly, Annette Diener, and Frank Lüthen
- Subjects
Calcium Phosphates ,Cellular differentiation ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Osteocalcin ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Bone Marrow Cells ,Calcium ,Focal adhesion ,Tissue culture ,calcium phosphate surface ,Cell Movement ,Osteogenesis ,Cell Adhesion ,medicine ,Humans ,In Focus ,focal adhesion ,Bone regeneration ,Cells, Cultured ,mesenchymal stem cells ,Osteoblasts ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,Cell Differentiation ,Osteoblast ,Cell Biology ,Alkaline Phosphatase ,Silicon Dioxide ,Vinculin ,Cell biology ,Durapatite ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,osteoblast ,Molecular Medicine ,Alkaline phosphatase - Abstract
Although studies in vivo revealed promising results in bone regeneration after implantation of scaffolds together with osteogenic progenitor cells, basic questions remain how material surfaces control the biology of mesenchymal stem cells (MSC). We used human MSC derived from bone marrow and studied the osteogenic differentiation on calcium phosphate surfaces. In osteogenic differentiation medium MSC differentiated to osteoblasts on hydroxyapatite and BONITmatrix®, a degradable xerogel composite, within 14 days. Cells revealed a higher alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity and increased RNA expression of collagen I and osteocalcin using real-time RTPCR compared with cells on tissue culture plastic. To test whether material surface characteristics alone are able to stimulate osteogenic differentiation, MSC were cultured on the materials in expansion medium without soluble additives for osteogenic differentiation. Indeed, cells on calcium phosphate without osteogenic differentiation additives developed to osteoblasts as shown by increased ALP activity and expression of osteogenic genes, which was not the case on tissue culture plastic. Because we reasoned that the stimulating effect on osteogenesis by calcium phosphate surfaces depends on an altered cell–extracellular matrix interaction we studied the dynamic behaviour of focal adhesions using cells transfected with GFP labelled vinculin. On BONITmatrix®, an increased mobility of focal adhesions was observed compared with cells on tissue culture plastic. In conclusion, calcium phosphate surfaces are able to drive MSC to osteoblasts in the absence of osteogenic differentiation supplements in the medium. An altered dynamic behaviour of focal adhesions on calcium phosphate surfaces might be involved in the molecular mechanisms which promote osteogenic differentiation.
- Published
- 2007
5. Functional Dissection of SseF, a Type III Effector Protein Involved in Positioning the Salmonella-Containing Vacuole
- Author
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Petra Müller, Garth L. Abrahams, and Michael Hensel
- Subjects
Effector ,Dynein ,Cell Biology ,Vacuole ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Transmembrane protein ,Cell biology ,Type three secretion system ,Motor protein ,Structural Biology ,Microtubule ,Organelle ,Genetics ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Intracellular replication of Salmonella enterica requires the formation of a unique organelle termed Salmonella-containing vacuole (SCV). The type III secretion system (T3SS) encoded by Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 2 (SPI2-T3SS) has a crucial role in the formation and maintenance of the SCV. The SPI2-T3SS translocates a large number of effector proteins that interfere with host cell functions such as microtubule-dependent transport. We investigated the function of the effector SseF and observed that this protein is required to maintain the SCV in a juxtanuclear position in infected epithelial cells. The formation of juxtanuclear clusters of replicating Salmonella required the recruitment of dynein to the SCV but SseF-deficient strains were highly reduced in dynein recruitment to the SCV. We performed a functional dissection of SseF and defined domains that were important for translocation and the specific effector functions of this protein. Of particular importance was a hydrophobic domain in the C-terminal half that contains three putative transmembrane (TM) helices. Deletion of one of these TM helices ablated the effector functions of SseF. We observed that this domain was essential for the proper intracellular positioning of the SCV to a juxtanuclear, Golgi-associated localization. These data show that SseF, in concert with the effector proteins SifA and SseG mediate the precise positioning of the SCV by differentially modulating the recruitment of microtubule motor proteins to the SCV.
- Published
- 2006
6. Clavibacter michiganensis subsp. sepedonicus
- Author
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Petra Müller
- Subjects
biology ,Plant Science ,Horticulture ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Clavibacter michiganensis ,Microbiology - Published
- 2006
7. Fate of Clavibacter michiganensis ssp. sepedonicus, the Causal Organism of Bacterial Ring Rot of Potato, in Weeds and Field Crops
- Author
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Petra Müller, J.R.C.M. van Beckhoven, A. Hukkanen, J.M. van der Wolf, and R. Karjalainen
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biology ,Physiology ,fungi ,Viola arvensis ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,biology.organism_classification ,food.food ,food ,Agronomy ,Stellaria media ,Genetics ,Sugar beet ,Hordeum vulgare ,Cultivar ,Elymus repens ,Weed ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Clavibacter michiganensis ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Crops and weeds were tested for their ability to host Clavibacter michiganensis ssp. sepedonicus (Cms), the causal agent of bacterial ring rot in potato. Ten crops grown in rotation with potato in Europe, namely maize, wheat, barley, oat, bush bean, broad bean, rape, pea and onion and five cultivars of sugar beet were tested by stem and root inoculation. About 6-8 weeks after inoculation, Cms could be detected in most crops except onion and sugar beet, in larger numbers in stems (105-106 cells/g of tissue) than in roots (?103 cells/g of tissue) in immunofluorescence cell-staining (IF). Cms was successfully re-isolated only from IF-positive stem samples of maize, bush bean, broad bean, rape and pea, but not from roots. Twelve solanaceous weeds and 13 other weeds, most commonly found in potato fields in Europe, were tested in IF as hosts of Cms by stem and root inoculations. Only in Solanum rostratum, a weed present in northern America, Cms persisted in high numbers (108 cells/g tissue) in stems and leaves, where it caused symptoms. In the other solanaceous weeds, Cms persisted at low numbers (approximately 105 cells/g of tissue) in stems but less so in roots. The bacteria could be frequently re-isolated from stem but not from root tissues. In 2 consecutive years, plants from 14 different weed species were collected from Cms-contaminated potato field plots and tested for the presence of Cms by dilution plating or immunofluorescence colony-staining (IFC), and by AmpliDet RNA, a nucleic acid-based amplification method. Cms was detected in roots but not in stems of Elymus repens plants growing through rotten potato tubers, and in some Viola arvensis and Stellaria media plants, where they were detected both in stems and roots, but more frequently by AmpliDet RNA than by IFC.
- Published
- 2005
8. Helicobacter pyloriand the risk of benign and malignant biliary tract disease
- Author
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Matthias Löhr, Bojan Stimec, Petra Müller, Wulf Schneider-Brachert, Milutin Bulajic, Norbert Lehn, Udo Reischl, Albert B. Lowenfels, and Patrick Maisonneuve
- Subjects
Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Cancer ,Gallstones ,Helicobacter pylori ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biliary tract ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cholecystitis ,Carcinoma ,Adenocarcinoma ,business - Abstract
BACKGROUND The etiology of tumors arising in the biliary tract remains unclear. Several previous studies have detected Helicobacter pylori organisms in bile from patients with gallstones or cholecystitis. The objective of this study was to determine whether there is an association between H. pylori in bile and biliary tract carcinoma. METHODS The authors used polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays to detect the presence of H. pylori in the stomach and bile from 89 patients: Sixty-three disease free patients had biliary calculi, 15 patients had carcinoma of the biliary tract, and 11 patients had neither gallstones nor carcinoma. Bile was considered to contain H. pylori only if the results of PCR determinations were positive in two or more samples assayed independently in two separate laboratories. RESULTS There was a strong association between the presence of H. pylori in the stomach and in the bile (P ≤ 0.01). Biliary H. pylori was associated with age but not with gender, and it was associated strongly with the clinical diagnosis. Patients with gallstones were 3.5 times as likely to have H. pylori in the bile compared with patients in a control group (95% confidence interval [95%CI], 0.8–15.8; P = 0.100), and H. pylori was 9.9 times more frequent in patients with biliary tract carcinoma compared with patients in the control group (95%CI, 1.4–70.5; P = 0.022). CONCLUSIONS There is a strong association between biliary tract carcinoma and H. pylori in bile. If these results are confirmed by prospective studies, H. pylori may be responsible for a significant proportion of malignant biliary tract disease. Cancer 2002;95:1946–53. © 2002 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.10893
- Published
- 2002
9. The Mode of Mechanical Integrin Stressing Controls Intracellular Signaling in Osteoblasts
- Author
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Hagen Pommerenke, Frank Lüthen, Christian Schmidt, Barbara Nebe, Petra Müller, Frieda Dürr, and Joachim Rychly
- Subjects
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Integrin ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Calcium ,Calcium in biology ,Focal adhesion ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Phosphorylation ,Mechanotransduction ,Cytoskeleton ,Cells, Cultured ,Osteoblasts ,biology ,Chemistry ,Integrin beta1 ,Proteins ,Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,Cell biology ,Biochemistry ,Focal Adhesion Kinase 1 ,Focal Adhesion Protein-Tyrosine Kinases ,biology.protein ,Tyrosine ,Stress, Mechanical ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinases ,Signal transduction ,Intracellular ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Following the idea that integrin receptors function as mechanotransducers, we applied defined physical forces to integrins in osteoblastic cells using a magnetic drag force device to show how cells sense different modes of physical forces. Application of mechanical stress to the beta1-integrin subunit revealed that cyclic forces of 1 Hz were more effective to stimulate the cellular calcium response than continuous load. Cyclic forces also induced an enhanced cytoskeletal anchorage of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins and increased activation of the focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and mitogen activated protein (MAP) kinase. These events were dependent on an intact cytoskeleton and the presence of intracellular calcium. Analyses of the intracellular spatial organization of the calcium responses revealed that calcium signals originate in a restricted region in the vicinity of the stressed receptors, which indicates that cells are able to sense locally applied stress on the cell surface via integrins. The calcium signals can spread throughout the cell including the nucleus, which shows that calcium also is a candidate to transmit mechanically induced information into different cellular compartments.
- Published
- 2002
10. Low frequency of p53 and ras mutations in bile of patients with hepato-biliary disease: a prospective study in more than 100 patients
- Author
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Jens-Christian Kröger, J. M. Löhr, S. Liebe, F Plath, Horst Nizze, Christiane Ostwald, Petra Müller, B. Brinkmann, Katrin Püschel, Wolfgang Schareck, M. Barten, and Karlheinz Hauenstein
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cirrhosis ,Bile duct ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Hepatobiliary disease ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography ,Biochemistry ,Gastroenterology ,Biliary disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Cytology ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Pancreatitis ,business - Abstract
Background The diagnosis of biliary disease, namely malignant disorders, is frequently hampered by the inconclusive cytology. We investigated prospectively the frequency of molecular changes in p53 and ras compared with cytology in patients with primary or secondary hepato-biliary disease. Material and methods We investigated 118 consecutive patients, aged 24-89 with the following clincal diagnoses: choledocho/cholecystolithiasis (28), cholangiocellular carcinoma (21), gall bladder tumor (8), liver metastasis (3), autoimmune disease (8), chronic pancreatitis (16), pancreatic carcinoma (11), papillary disease (4), hepatic cirrhosis (6), cholangitis (2), anomalies (2), and normal (9). Bile was aspirated during routine endoscopic retrograde cholangio pancreatography (ERCP) or percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (PTC). DNA was prepared freshly from a native aliquot, p53 mutations were detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for exons 5 through 8 followed by TGGE. PCR for ras mutations was performed as RFLP-PCR with sequencing. Results In four cases, mutations in p53 could be found in exons 6 and 7. Twenty-two samples showed ras mutations; ras mutations were found in choledocholithiasis (4/28), bile duct (5/21), gall bladder (3/8) and pancreatic (1/11) carcinoma, liver metastasis (3/3), ulcerative colitis (2/3), PSC (1/2), and chronic pancreatitis (1/16). Cytology was clearly positive in seven cases, suspicious in three other, inconclusive in six, and negative in the rest. The molecular analysis resulted in a sensitivity of 33% and specificity of 87%, respectively, for the diagnosis of a malignant condition. Conclusion PCR for p53 and ras mutations may aid the diagnosis of primary and secondary (metastatic) hepatobiliary disease if a malignant condition of the bile ducts and the liver is suspected and cytology is inconclusive or negative. However, the incidence of p53 and ras mutations in bile seems less frequent than in other malignant conditions of the gastrointestinal tract and the pancreas and lower than in tissue, leaving a poor sensitiviy and specificity. Nevertheless, the presence of a p53 and/or ras mutation per se supports a clinical suspicion of malignancy, even when the conventional cytology is negative or inconclusive.
- Published
- 2001
11. Injection of Encapsulated Cells Producing an Ifosfamide-Activating Cytochrome P450 for Targeted Chemotherapy to Pancreatic Tumors
- Author
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Hartmut Stein, Peter Karle, Horst Nizze, Brian Salmons, Stefan Liebe, Thomas E. Wagner, Matthias Löhr, Walter H. Günzburg, Katrin Püschel, Petra Müller, Kerstin von Rombs, Regina Renz, Ralf Jesnowski, and Robert Michael Saller
- Subjects
Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genetic enhancement ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gene Expression ,Mice, Nude ,Capsules ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell Line ,Injections ,Mice ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Pancreatic tumor ,Pancreatic cancer ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Prodrugs ,Ifosfamide ,Antineoplastic Agents, Alkylating ,Chemotherapy ,General Neuroscience ,Genetic Therapy ,Phosphoramide Mustard ,medicine.disease ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Disease Models, Animal ,Cell culture ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP2B1 ,Cancer research ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The prognosis of pancreatic cancer is poor, and current medical treatment is mostly ineffective. The aim of this study was to design a new treatment modality in an animal model system. We describe here a novel treatment strategy employing a mouse model system for pancreatic carcinoma. Embryonal kidney epithelial cells were genetically modified to express the cytochrome P450 subenzyme 2B1 under the control of a cytomegalovirus (CMV) immediate early promoter. This CYP2B1 gene converts ifosfamide to its active cytotoxic compounds, phosphoramide mustard, which alkylates DNA, and acrolein, which alkylates proteins. The cells were then encapsulated in a cellulose sulphate formulation and implanted into preestablished tumors derived from a human pancreatic tumor cell line. Intraperitoneal administration of low-dose ifosfamide to tumor bearing mice that received the encapsulated cells results in partial or even complete tumor ablation. Such an in situ chemotherapy strategy utilizing genetically modified cells in an immunoprotected environment may prove useful for solid tumor therapy in man.
- Published
- 1999
12. Development of Cellulose Sulfate‐based Polyelectrolyte Complex Microcapsules for Medical Applications
- Author
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Gerd Grasnick, Horst Dr Dautzenberg, Peter Karle, Matthias Löhr, Mireia Pelegrin, Kerstin von Rombs, Brian Salmons, Robert Michael Saller, Petra Müller, Walter H. Günzburg, Marc Piechaczyk, and Ute Schuldt
- Subjects
Male ,Alginates ,Mice, Nude ,Capsules ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell Line ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glucuronic Acid ,History and Philosophy of Science ,In vivo ,Animals ,Humans ,Polylysine ,Cellulose ,Hybridomas ,Molecular Structure ,business.industry ,Hexuronic Acids ,General Neuroscience ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Glucuronic acid ,In vitro ,Polyelectrolyte ,Biotechnology ,chemistry ,Cell culture ,Biophysics ,Female ,Ammonium chloride ,business - Abstract
Microencapsulation, as a tool for immunoisolation for allogenic or xenogenic implants, is a rapidly growing field. However most of the approaches are based on alginate/polylysine capsules, despite this system's obvious disadvantages such as its pyrogenicity. Here we report a different encapsulation system based on sodium cellulose sulfate and polydiallyldimethyl ammonium chloride for the encapsulation of mammalian cells. We have characterized this system regarding capsule formation, strength and size of the capsules as well as viability of the cells after encapsulation. In addition, we demonstrate the efficacy of these capsules as a "microfactory" in vitro and in vivo. Using encapsulated hybridoma cells we were able to demonstrate long-term release of antibodies up to four months in vivo. In another application we could show the therapeutic relevance of encapsulated genetically modified cells as an in vivo activation center for cytostatic drugs during tumor therapy.
- Published
- 1999
13. Development of National Reference Laboratories in the European Union1
- Author
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Petra Müller
- Subjects
Environmental protection ,Priority list ,Political science ,Member states ,National level ,Plant Science ,Commission ,Horticulture ,Public administration ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Since 2004 discussions on the need for greater international co-operation and coordination between diagnostic laboratories have taken place at several meetings of the EU Heads of National Plant Protection Organisations (NPPOs) and of the European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization (EPPO). Technical discussions on criteria for, and tasks and responsibilities of, National Reference Laboratories (NRLs) took place in a Commission Expert Working Group in September 2007. The meeting was attended by representatives from 13 Member States. The experts discussed the issues broadly and very actively and it was possible to elaborate an agreed Guidance Paper containing the main elements for the establishment of NRLs, including a priority list of individual pests for which such laboratories are needed. At their meeting in December 2007, the EU Heads of the NPPOs supported the establishment of NRLs as far as possible and where necessary. It was agreed that the Guidance Paper is a suitable common basis for the establishment of NRLs in the Member States and that it should be reviewed on the basis of the experience gained at national level.
- Published
- 2008
14. Differential immunosuppressive activity of monoclonal CD2 antibodies on allograft rejection versus specific antibody production
- Author
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Rainer Zimmermann, Stefan Meuer, Thomas J. Dengler, Petra Müller, Gerd Otto, and Bernd Sido
- Subjects
Graft Rejection ,Male ,medicine.drug_class ,T-Lymphocytes ,T cell ,Immunology ,CD2 Antigens ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Monoclonal antibody ,Epitope ,Mice ,Immune system ,Antigen ,In vivo ,medicine ,Animals ,Transplantation, Homologous ,Immunology and Allergy ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,biology ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Rats, Inbred Lew ,biology.protein ,Heart Transplantation ,Antibody ,Keyhole limpet hemocyanin - Abstract
CD2 is a co-stimulatory receptor involved in T cell activation. Here we report on immunosuppressive effects of three mouse CD2 monoclonal antibodies (OX34, OX54, OX55) directed against non-overlapping epitopes of the rat CD2 receptor on various modes of T cell activation in vitro and in vivo. Although non-ligand-blocking OX54 and OX55, in concert, activated T cells through CD2 in vitro, they individually suppressed the mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) and significantly prolonged allograft survival after rat heart transplantation in vivo. Phenotype analysis revealed that OX55 significantly down-modulated CD2 in vivo, whereas OX54 depleted T cells. Graft rejection coincided with re-expression of CD2 and clearance of OX55 from serum, whereas T cell depletion by OX54 outlasted the period of graft survival. The most suppressive antibody, OX34, down-modulated CD2 and inhibited T cell activation through the TCR or CD2 and the MLR and prolonged median allograft survival time from 7 days in controls to 45 days in the absence of any additional treatment. Graft survival was clearly dose dependent and correlated with the duration of CD2 down-modulation and the presence of circulating CD2 antibody in serum. Importantly, the specific antibody production to a T cell-dependent antigen as demonstrated by immunization with keyhole limpet hemocyanin in vivo remained unaffected after treatment with OX34. These results demonstrate the pivotal role of CD2 signaling in mediating allogeneic immune reactions after vascularized organ transplantation while allowing specific humoral immune responses in vivo.
- Published
- 1998
15. [Untitled]
- Author
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Detlef Joel, Petra Müller, and Rosemarie Ahl
- Subjects
Solvent ,Hydrolysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Reaction mechanism ,chemistry ,Organic chemistry ,General Materials Science ,Reactivity (chemistry) ,Isocyanate ,Phenylisocyanate ,Catalysis ,Polyurethane - Abstract
Solutions of phenylisocyanate (I) in DMF were stored at different temperatures in the presence of both polyurethane catalysts and 1,3-diphenylurea (II). The reaction products were determined by HPLC. Beside the hydrolysis of I to II, a significant reaction of I with II to 1,3,5-triphenylbiuret (III) was observed at 20°C. Above 60°C, I reacted with the solvent to form N,N-dimethyl-N′-phenylformamidine (V). In DMF, III dissociated to I and II already at temperatures >40°C.
- Published
- 1992
16. Histological diagnosis ofHelicobacter pylori gastritis is predictive of a high risk of gastric carcinoma
- Author
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E Bayerdörffer, Ulrike von Arnim, Andreas Hackelsberger, Peter Malfertheiner, Manfred Stolte, Norbert Lehn, S Miehlke, Petra Müller, Thomas Ochsenkühn, and A. Meining
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Risk ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Autoimmune Gastritis ,Matched-Pair Analysis ,Gastroenterology ,Helicobacter Infections ,Sex Factors ,Stomach Neoplasms ,Internal medicine ,Odds Ratio ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Risk factor ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Stomach ,Age Factors ,Odds ratio ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,Gastritis ,Relative risk ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Chronic Helicobacter pylori infection has been identified as a major risk factor for the subsequent development of gastric carcinoma On the basis of seroepidemiological studies the relative risk for infected persons was estimated to range between 3 and 6. Our study attempted to determine the relative risk of gastric carcinoma in H. pylori-infected individuals based on the histological evaluation of gastritis in gastric carcinoma patients in the light of a declining prevalence of H. pylori infection in Western countries. We histologically determined the H. pylori infection rate in 215 patients with early gastric carcinoma (tumor stage pT1), and compared it with that of 215 asymptomatic persons matched by age and sex who were tested by the 13C urea breath test. On the basis of these data an odds ratio of 16.7 (CI 9.6-29.1) was calculated for the relative risk of developing gastric carcinoma in H. pylori-infected people. The histological diagnosis of gastritis permits a separate risk assessment for patients with autoimmune gastritis, and by excluding these patients from the analysis we calculated an odds ratio for H. pylori-infected persons of 150 (CI 36.4-622.9). The endoscopic-histological diagnosis of H. pylori infection is associated with an increased risk of the subsequent development of gastric carcinoma of approximately 150-fold compared with H. pylori-negative patients who do not have chronic atrophic corpus gastritis of the autoimmune type (type A gastritis).
- Published
- 1997
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