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Dive into the research topics where Anna Jaworska is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Jaworska.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2016

Glial Activation and Glucose Metabolism in a Transgenic Amyloid Mouse Model: A Triple-Tracer PET Study

Matthias Brendel; Federico Probst; Anna Jaworska; Felix Overhoff; Viktoria Korzhova; Nathalie L. Albert; Roswitha Beck; Simon Lindner; Franz-Josef Gildehaus; Karlheinz Baumann; Peter Bartenstein; Gernot Kleinberger; Christian Haass; Jochen Herms; Axel Rominger

Amyloid imaging by small-animal PET in models of Alzheimer disease (AD) offers the possibility to track amyloidogenesis and brain energy metabolism. Because microglial activation is thought to contribute to AD pathology, we undertook a triple-tracer small-animal PET study to assess microglial activation and glucose metabolism in association with amyloid plaque load in a transgenic AD mouse model. Methods: Groups of PS2APP and C57BL/6 wild-type mice of various ages were examined by small-animal PET. We acquired 90-min dynamic emission data with 18F-GE180 for imaging activated microglia (18-kD translocator protein ligand [TSPO]) and static 30- to 60-min recordings with 18F-FDG for energy metabolism and 18F-florbetaben for amyloidosis. Optimal fusion of PET data was obtained through automatic nonlinear spatial normalization, and SUVRs were calculated. For the novel TSPO tracer 18F-GE180, we then calculated distribution volume ratios after establishing a suitable reference region. Immunohistochemical analyses with TSPO antisera, methoxy-X04 staining for fibrillary β-amyloid, and ex vivo autoradiography served as terminal gold standard assessments. Results: SUVR at 60–90 min after injection gave robust quantitation of 18F-GE180, which correlated well with distribution volume ratios calculated from the entire recording and using a white matter reference region. Relative to age-matched wild-type, 18F-GE180 SUVR was slightly elevated in PS2APP mice at 5 mo (+9%; P < 0.01) and distinctly increased at 16 mo (+25%; P < 0.001). Over this age range, there was a high positive correlation between small-animal PET findings of microglial activation with amyloid load (R = 0.85; P < 0.001) and likewise with metabolism (R = 0.61; P < 0.005). Immunohistochemical and autoradiographic findings confirmed the in vivo small-animal PET data. Conclusion: In this first triple-tracer small-animal PET in a well-established AD mouse model, we found evidence for age-dependent microglial activation. This activation, correlating positively with the amyloid load, implies a relationship between amyloidosis and inflammation in the PS2APP AD mouse model.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Cross-sectional comparison of small animal [18F]-florbetaben amyloid-PET between transgenic AD mouse models.

Matthias Brendel; Anna Jaworska; Eric Grießinger; Christina Rötzer; Steffen Burgold; Franz-Josef Gildehaus; Janette Carlsen; Paul Cumming; Karlheinz Baumann; Christian Haass; Harald Steiner; Peter Bartenstein; Jochen Herms; Axel Rominger

We aimed to compare [18F]-florbetaben PET imaging in four transgenic mouse strains modelling Alzheimer’s disease (AD), with the main focus on APPswe/PS2 mice and C57Bl/6 mice serving as controls (WT). A consistent PET protocol (N = 82 PET scans) was used, with cortical standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) relative to cerebellum as the endpoint. We correlated methoxy-X04 staining of β-amyloid with PET results, and undertook ex vivo autoradiography for further validation of a partial volume effect correction (PVEC) of PET data. The SUVR in APPswe/PS2 increased from 0.95±0.04 at five months (N = 5) and 1.04±0.03 (p<0.05) at eight months (N = 7) to 1.07±0.04 (p<0.005) at ten months (N = 6), 1.28±0.06 (p<0.001) at 16 months (N = 6) and 1.39±0.09 (p<0.001) at 19 months (N = 6). SUVR was 0.95±0.03 in WT mice of all ages (N = 22). In APPswe/PS1G384A mice, the SUVR was 0.93/0.98 at five months (N = 2) and 1.11 at 16 months (N = 1). In APPswe/PS1dE9 mice, the SUVR declined from 0.96/0.96 at 12 months (N = 2) to 0.91/0.92 at 24 months (N = 2), due to β-amyloid plaques in cerebellum. PVEC reduced the discrepancy between SUVR-PET and autoradiography from −22% to +2% and increased the differences between young and aged transgenic animals. SUVR and plaque load correlated highly between strains for uncorrected (R = 0.94, p<0.001) and PVE-corrected (R = 0.95, p<0.001) data. We find that APPswe/PS2 mice may be optimal for longitudinal amyloid-PET monitoring in planned interventions studies.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2016

Automated Spatial Brain Normalization and Hindbrain White Matter Reference Tissue Give Improved [18F]-Florbetaben PET Quantitation in Alzheimer's Model Mice

Felix Overhoff; Matthias Brendel; Anna Jaworska; Viktoria Korzhova; Andreas Delker; Federico Probst; Carola Focke; Franz-Josef Gildehaus; Janette Carlsen; Karlheinz Baumann; Christian Haass; Peter Bartenstein; Jochen Herms; Axel Rominger

Preclinical PET studies of β-amyloid (Aβ) accumulation are of growing importance, but comparisons between research sites require standardized and optimized methods for quantitation. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate systematically the (1) impact of an automated algorithm for spatial brain normalization, and (2) intensity scaling methods of different reference regions for Aβ-PET in a large dataset of transgenic mice. PS2APP mice in a 6 week longitudinal setting (N = 37) and another set of PS2APP mice at a histologically assessed narrow range of Aβ burden (N = 40) were investigated by [18F]-florbetaben PET. Manual spatial normalization by three readers at different training levels was performed prior to application of an automated brain spatial normalization and inter-reader agreement was assessed by Fleiss Kappa (κ). For this method the impact of templates at different pathology stages was investigated. Four different reference regions on brain uptake normalization were used to calculate frontal cortical standardized uptake value ratios (SUVRCTX∕REF), relative to raw SUVCTX. Results were compared on the basis of longitudinal stability (Cohens d), and in reference to gold standard histopathological quantitation (Pearsons R). Application of an automated brain spatial normalization resulted in nearly perfect agreement (all κ≥0.99) between different readers, with constant or improved correlation with histology. Templates based on inappropriate pathology stage resulted in up to 2.9% systematic bias for SUVRCTX∕REF. All SUVRCTX∕REF methods performed better than SUVCTX both with regard to longitudinal stability (d≥1.21 vs. d = 0.23) and histological gold standard agreement (R≥0.66 vs. R≥0.31). Voxel-wise analysis suggested a physiologically implausible longitudinal decrease by global mean scaling. The hindbrain white matter reference (Rmean = 0.75) was slightly superior to the brainstem (Rmean = 0.74) and the cerebellum (Rmean = 0.73). Automated brain normalization with reference region templates presents an excellent method to avoid the inter-reader variability in preclinical Aβ-PET scans. Intracerebral reference regions lacking Aβ pathology serve for precise longitudinal in vivo quantification of [18F]-florbetaben PET. Hindbrain white matter reference performed best when considering the composite of quality criteria.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2017

Increase of TREM2 during Aging of an Alzheimer’s Disease Mouse Model Is Paralleled by Microglial Activation and Amyloidosis

Matthias Brendel; Gernot Kleinberger; Federico Probst; Anna Jaworska; Felix Overhoff; Tanja Blume; Nathalie L. Albert; Janette Carlsen; Simon Lindner; Franz Josef Gildehaus; Laurence Ozmen; Marc Suárez-Calvet; Peter Bartenstein; Karlheinz Baumann; Michael Ewers; Jochen Herms; Christian Haass; Axel Rominger

Heterozygous missense mutations in the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) have been reported to significantly increase the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Since TREM2 is specifically expressed by microglia in the brain, we hypothesized that soluble TREM2 (sTREM2) levels may increase together with in vivo biomarkers of microglial activity and amyloidosis in an AD mouse model as assessed by small animal positron-emission-tomography (μPET). In this cross-sectional study, we examined a strong amyloid mouse model (PS2APP) of four age groups by μPET with [18F]-GE180 (glial activation) and [18F]-florbetaben (amyloidosis), followed by measurement of sTREM2 levels and amyloid levels in the brain. Pathology affected brain regions were compared between tracers (dice similarity coefficients) and pseudo-longitudinally. μPET results of both tracers were correlated with terminal TREM2 levels. The brain sTREM2 levels strongly increased with age of PS2APP mice (5 vs. 16 months: +211%, p < 0.001), and correlated highly with μPET signals of microglial activity (R = 0.89, p < 0.001) and amyloidosis (R = 0.92, p < 0.001). Dual μPET enabled regional mapping of glial activation and amyloidosis in the mouse brain, which progressed concertedly leading to a high overlap in aged PS2APP mice (dice similarity 67%). Together, these results substantiate the use of in vivo μPET measurements in conjunction with post mortem sTREM2 in future anti-inflammatory treatment trials. Taking human data into account sTREM2 may increase during active amyloid deposition.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2016

Small-Animal PET Imaging of Tau Pathology with 18F-THK5117 in 2 Transgenic Mouse Models

Matthias Brendel; Anna Jaworska; Federico Probst; Felix Overhoff; Viktoria Korzhova; Simon Lindner; Janette Carlsen; Peter Bartenstein; Ryuichi Harada; Yukitsuka Kudo; Christian Haass; Fred Van Leuven; Nobuyuki Okamura; Jochen Herms; Axel Rominger

Abnormal accumulation of tau aggregates in the brain is one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer disease neuropathology. We visualized tau deposition in vivo with the previously developed 2-arylquinoline derivative 18F-THK5117 using small-animal PET in conjunction with autoradiography and immunohistochemistry gold standard assessment in 2 transgenic mouse models expressing hyperphosphorylated tau. Small-animal PET recordings were obtained in groups of P301S (n = 11) and biGT mice (n = 16) of different ages, with age-matched wild-type (WT) serving as controls. After intravenous administration of 16 ± 2 MBq of 18F-THK5117, a dynamic 90-min emission recording was initiated for P301S mice and during 20–50 min after injection for biGT mice, followed by a 15-min transmission scan. After coregistration to the MRI atlas and scaling to the cerebellum, we performed volume-of-interest–based analysis (SUV ratio [SUVR]) and statistical parametric mapping. Small-animal PET results were compared with autoradiography ex vivo and in vitro and further validated with AT8 staining for neurofibrillary tangles. SUVRs calculated from static recordings during the interval of 20–50 min after tracer injection correlated highly with estimates of binding potential based on the entire dynamic emission recordings (R = 0.85). SUVR increases were detected in the brain stem of aged P301S mice (+11%; P < 0.001) and in entorhinal/amygdaloidal areas (+15%; P < 0.001) of biGT mice when compared with WT, whereas aged WT mice did not show increased tracer uptake. Immunohistochemical tau loads correlated with small-animal PET SUVR for both P301S (R = 0.8; P < 0.001) and biGT (R = 0.7; P < 0.001) mice, and distribution patterns of AT8-positive neurons matched voxelwise statistical parametric mapping analysis. Saturable binding of the tracer was verified by autoradiographic blocking studies. In the first dedicated small-animal PET study in 2 different transgenic tauopathy mouse models using the tau tracer 18F-THK5117, the temporal and spatial progression could be visualized in good correlation with gold standard assessments of tau accumulation. The serial small-animal PET method could afford the means for preclinical testing of novel therapeutic approaches by accommodating interanimal variability at baseline, while detection thresholds in young animals have to be considered.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Monitoring of chronic γ-secretase modulator treatment by serial amyloid-PET.

Matthias Brendel; Anna Jaworska; Jochen Herms; Johannes Trambauer; Christina Rötzer; Franz-Josef Gildehaus; Janette Carlsen; Paul Cumming; Bylund J; Thomas Luebbers; Peter Bartenstein; Harald Steiner; Christian Haass; Karlheinz Baumann; Axel Rominger

Horizontal slices of serial β-amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) images of representative APP-Swe mice aged 12 months at baseline prior treatment (BL), as well as 4 months (FU1) and 6 months upon treatment initiation (FU2); uptake images are superimposed on a magnetic resonance imaging atlas. Treatment with the γ-secretase modulator RO5506284 (30 mg kg 1 per day) or vehicle continued until study termination. The first row depicts results for an RO5506284-treated animal with high baseline amyloid level, which turned out to be less effectively treated, as indicated by the increased PET signal at FU2. In this case, the SUVRCTX/CBL after partial volume effect correction (PVEC) increased from 1.11 at baseline to 1.12 at FU1 and 1.20 at study termination. The second row depicts results for an RO5506284-treated animal with low baseline amyloid level, which did not progress during follow-up. In this case the serial SUVRCTX/CBL with PVEC was 0.95 at baseline, 0.94 at first follow-up, and 0.91 six months after treatment initiation, suggesting good response to RO5506284 treatment. Notably, this responding animal developed a histologically verified large plaque during treatment, indicated by the hotspot in FU2-PET, whereas the surrounding brain remained nearly plaque-free. A primary effect of RO5506284 on de novo amyloidogenesis is suggested by development of only a few but rather large plaques. The third row depicts the results for an untreated animal, in which serial PET revealed a steady increase from a low baseline amyloid level. Serial SUVRCTX/CBL with PVEC increased from 0.93 at baseline to 1.09 four months and 1.18 six months later. For more information on this topic, please refer to the article by Brendel et al. on pages 1179–1187.


Theranostics | 2018

Efficacy of chronic BACE1 inhibition in PS2APP mice depends on the regional Aβ deposition rate and plaque burden at treatment initiation

Matthias Brendel; Anna Jaworska; Felix Overhoff; Tanja Blume; Federico Probst; Franz-Josef Gildehaus; Peter Bartenstein; Christian Haass; Bernd Bohrmann; Jochen Herms; Michael Willem; Axel Rominger

Beta secretase (BACE) inhibitors are promising therapeutic compounds currently in clinical phase II/III trials. Preclinical [18F]-florbetaben (FBB) amyloid PET imaging facilitates longitudinal monitoring of amyloidosis in Alzheimers disease (AD) mouse models. Therefore, we applied this theranostic concept to investigate, by serial FBB PET, the efficacy of a novel BACE1 inhibitor in the PS2APP mouse, which is characterized by early and massive amyloid deposition. Methods: PS2APP and C57BL/6 (WT) mice were assigned to treatment (PS2APP: N=13; WT: N=11) and vehicle control (PS2APP: N=13; WT: N=11) groups at the age of 9.5 months. All animals had a baseline PET scan and follow-up scans at two months and after completion of the four-month treatment period. In addition to this longitudinal analysis of cerebral amyloidosis by PET, we undertook biochemical amyloid peptide quantification and histological amyloid plaque analyses after the final PET session. Results: BACE1 inhibitor-treated transgenic mice revealed a progression of the frontal cortical amyloid signal by 8.4 ± 2.2% during the whole treatment period, which was distinctly lower when compared to vehicle-treated mice (15.3 ± 4.4%, p<0.001). A full inhibition of progression was evident in regions with <3.7% of the increase in controls, whereas regions with >10% of the increase in controls showed only 40% attenuation with BACE1 inhibition. BACE1 inhibition in mice with lower amyloidosis at treatment initiation showed a higher efficacy in attenuating progression to PET. A predominant reduction of small plaques in treated mice indicated a main effect of BACE1 on inhibition of de novo amyloidogenesis. Conclusions: This theranostic study with BACE1 treatment in a transgenic AD model together with amyloid PET monitoring indicated that progression of amyloidosis is more effectively reduced in regions with low initial plaque development and revealed the need of an early treatment initiation during amyloidogenesis.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2018

BACE1 Inhibitor MK-8931 Alters Formation but Not Stability of Dendritic Spines

Tanja Blume; Severin Filser; Anna Jaworska; Jean-Francois Blain; Gerhard Koenig; Katrin Moschke; Stefan F. Lichtenthaler; Jochen Herms

Beta-site amyloid-precursor-protein cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) is the rate limiting protease in the production of the amyloid-beta peptide (Aβ), which is considered to be the causative agent in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). Therefore, the therapeutic potential of pharmacological BACE1 inhibitors is currently tested in clinical trials for AD treatment. To ensure a positive clinical outcome it is crucial to identify and evaluate adverse effects associated with BACE1 inhibition. Preclinical studies show that chronic blockade of BACE1 activity alters synaptic functions and leads to loss of dendritic spines. To assess the mechanism of synapse loss, dendritic spine dynamics of pyramidal layer V cells were monitored by in vivo two-photon microscopy in the somatosensory cortex of mice, treated with the BACE1 inhibitor MK-8931. MK-8931 treatment significantly reduced levels of Aβ40 and density of dendritic spines in the brain. However, the steady decline in dendritic spine density specifically resulted from a diminished formation of new spines and not from a loss of stable spines. Furthermore, the described effects on spine formation were transient and recovered after inhibitor withdrawal. Since MK-8931 inhibition did not completely abolish spine formation, our findings suggest that carefully dosed inhibitors might be therapeutically effective without affecting the structural integrity of excitatory synapses if given at an early disease stage.


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2015

PET Imaging of Tau Pathology in Transgenic Mouse Models using [18F]THK-5117

Matthias Brendel; Anna Jaworska; Federico Probst; Felix Overhoff; Simon Lindner; Janette Carlsen; Peter Bartenstein; Nobuyuki Okamura; Jochen Herms; Axel Rominger


The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2015

Glucose Metabolism and Glial Activation in a Transgenic AD Mouse Model: A Triple Tracer PET Study

Matthias Brendel; Federico Probst; Anna Jaworska; Felix Overhoff; Roswitha Beck; Nathalie Jansen; Simon Lindner; Franz Josef Gildehaus; Peter Bartenstein; Axel Rominger

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Jochen Herms

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Paul Cumming

Queensland University of Technology

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Viktoria Korzhova

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Eric Grießinger

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Katrin Moschke

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Michael Ewers

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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Severin Filser

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases

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