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Dive into the research topics where Berthold Streubel is active.

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Featured researches published by Berthold Streubel.


Anatomy and Embryology | 1999

Recruitment of bone-marrow-derived cells by skeletal and cardiac muscle in adult dystrophic mdx mice.

Reginald E. Bittner; Christian Schöfer; Klara Weipoltshammer; Silva Ivanova; Berthold Streubel; Erwin Hauser; Michael Freilinger; H. Höger; Adelheid Elbe-Bürger; F. Wachtler

 It is commonly accepted, that regenerative capacity of striated muscle is confined to skeletal muscle by activation of satellite cells that normally reside quiescent between the plasmalemma and the basement membrane of muscle fibers. Muscular dystrophies are characterized by repetitive cycles of de- and regeneration of skeletal muscle fibers and by the frequent involvement of the cardiac muscle. Since during the longstanding course of muscular dystrophies there is a permanent demand of myogenic progenitors we hypothesized that this may necessitate a recruitment of additional myogenic precursors from an undifferentiated, permanently renewed cell pool, such as bone marrow (BM) cells. To this end normal and dystrophic (mdx) female mice received bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from normal congenic male donor mice. After 70 days, histological sections of skeletal and cardiac muscle from BMT mice were probed for the donor-derived Y chromosomes. In normal BMT recipients, no Y chromosome-containing myonuclei were detected, either in skeletal or in cardiac muscle. However, in all samples from dystrophic mdx skeletal muscles Y chromosome-specific signals were detected within muscle fiber nuclei, which additionally were found to express the myoregulatory proteins myogenin and myf-5. Moreover, in the hearts of BMT-mdx mice single cardiomyocytes with donor derived nuclei were identified, indicating, that even cardiac muscle cells are able to regenerate by recruitment of circulating BM-derived progenitors. Our findings suggest that further characterization and identification of the BM cells capable of undergoing myogenic differentiation may have an outstanding impact on therapeutic strategies for diseases of skeletal and cardiac muscle.


The Lancet | 2012

Neonatal screening for lysosomal storage disorders: feasibility and incidence from a nationwide study in Austria

Thomas P. Mechtler; Susanne Stary; Thomas F. Metz; Víctor R. De Jesús; Susanne Greber-Platzer; Arnold Pollak; Kurt R. Herkner; Berthold Streubel; David C. Kasper

BACKGROUND The interest in neonatal screening for lysosomal storage disorders has increased substantially because of newly developed enzyme replacement therapies, the need for early diagnosis, and technical advances. We tested for Gauchers disease, Pompes disease, Fabrys disease, and Niemann-Pick disease types A and B in an anonymous prospective nationwide screening study that included genetic mutation analysis to assess the practicality and appropriateness of including these disorders in neonatal screening panels. METHODS Specimens from dried blood spots of 34,736 newborn babies were collected consecutively from January, 2010 to July, 2010, as part of the national routine Austrian newborn screening programme. Anonymised samples were analysed for enzyme activities of acid β-glucocerebrosidase, α-galactosidase, α-glucosidase, and acid sphingomyelinase by electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry. Genetic mutation analyses were done in samples with suspected enzyme deficiency. FINDINGS All 34,736 samples were analysed successfully by the multiplex screening assay. Low enzyme activities were detected in 38 babies. Mutation analysis confirmed lysosomal storage disorders in 15 of them. The most frequent mutations were found for Fabrys disease (1 per 3859 births), followed by Pompes disease (1 per 8684), and Gauchers disease (1 per 17,368). The positive predictive values were 32% (95% CI 16-52), 80% (28-99), and 50% (7-93), respectively. Mutational analysis detected predominantly missense mutations associated with a late-onset phenotype. INTERPRETATION The combined overall proportion of infants carrying a mutation for lysosomal storage disorders was higher than expected. Neonatal screening for lysosomal storage disorders is likely to raise challenges for primary health-care providers. Furthermore, the high frequency of late-onset mutations makes lysosomal storage disorders a broad health problem beyond childhood. FUNDING Austrian Ministry of Health, Family, and Women.


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2008

hTERT alone immortalizes epithelial cells of renal proximal tubules without changing their functional characteristics

Matthias Wieser; Guido Stadler; Paul Jennings; Berthold Streubel; Walter Pfaller; Peter Ambros; Claus R. Riedl; Hermann Katinger; Johannes Grillari; Regina Grillari-Voglauer

Telomere-dependent replicative senescence is one of the mechanisms that limit the number of population doublings of normal human cells. By overexpression of telomerase, cells of various origins have been successfully immortalized without changing the phenotype. While a limited number of telomerase-immortalized cells of epithelial origin are available, none of renal origin has been reported so far. Here we have established simple and safe conditions that allow serial passaging of renal proximal tubule epithelial cells (RPTECs) until entry into telomere-dependent replicative senescence. As reported for other cells, senescence of RPTECs is characterized by arrest in G1 phase, shortened telomeres, staining for senescence-associated beta-galactosidase, and accumulation of gamma-H2AX foci. Furthermore, ectopic expression of the catalytic subunit of telomerase (TERT) was sufficient to immortalize these cells. Characterization of immortalized RPTEC/TERT1 cells shows characteristic morphological and functional properties like formation of tight junctions and domes, expression of aminopeptidase N, cAMP induction by parathyroid hormone, sodium-dependent phosphate uptake, and the megalin/cubilin transport system. No genomic instability within up to 90 population doublings has been observed. Therefore, these cells are proposed as a valuable model system not only for cell biology but also for toxicology, drug screening, biogerontology, as well as tissue engineering approaches.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2006

Assessment of Disease Dissemination in Gastric Compared With Extragastric Mucosa-Associated Lymphoid Tissue Lymphoma Using Extensive Staging: A Single-Center Experience

Markus Raderer; Stefan Wöhrer; Berthold Streubel; Marlene Troch; K. Turetschek; Ulrich Jäger; Cathrin Skrabs; Alexander Gaiger; Johannes Drach; Andreas Puespoek; Michael Formanek; Martha Hoffmann; Wolfgang Hauff; Andreas Chott

PURPOSE Molecular data and preliminary clinical findings have suggested mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma as a multifocal disease in a high percentage of patients. We report our findings with an extensive staging routine applied in patients diagnosed with MALT lymphoma at our institution. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 140 consecutive patients (61 with gastric and 79 with extragastric MALT lymphoma) underwent staging according to a standardized protocol. Staging included gastroscopy with multiple biopsies, endosonography of the upper GI tract, computed tomography of thorax and abdomen, lymph node sonography, colonoscopy with multiple biopsies, otorhinolaryngologic assessment, magnetic resonance imaging of salivary and lacrimal glands, and bone marrow biopsy. All lesions suggestive of lymphoma involvement were subjected to biopsy, if accessible, and biopsies were evaluated for MALT lymphoma-specific genetic aberrations by means of reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and/or fluorescent in situ hybridization. RESULTS Fifteen (25%) of 61 patients with gastric MALT lymphoma had multiorgan involvement, with dissemination beyond the GI tract in six patients. By contrast, significantly more patients with extragastric MALT lymphoma had dissemination to another MALT organ (37 of 79 patients, 46%; P = .045). Nine of these 37 patients had dissemination to the stomach. Only three (2%) of 140 patients had bone marrow involvement. Multifocality was significantly associated with t(11;18)(q21;q21) in gastric lymphomas (P = .045) and with trisomy 18 in extragastric lymphomas (P = .011). CONCLUSION Our findings suggest that MALT lymphoma frequently presents as a multifocal disease. Extragastric MALT lymphomas are significantly more prone to dissemination than gastric MALT lymphomas.


The Journal of Pathology | 2005

MALT lymphoma with t(14;18)(q32;q21)/IGH-MALT1 is characterized by strong cytoplasmic MALT1 and BCL10 expression

Hongtao Ye; Liping Gong; Hongxiang Liu; Rifat Hamoudi; Sima Shirali; Liza Ho; Andreas Chott; Berthold Streubel; Reiner Siebert; Stefan Gesk; José I. Martín-Subero; John Radford; Sankar Banerjee; Andrew G. Nicholson; Renzo Ranaldi; Ellen D. Remstein; Zifen Gao; Jie Zheng; Peter G. Isaacson; Ahmet Dogan; Ming-Qing Du

Mucosa‐associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma is specifically associated with t(11;18)(q21;q21), t(1;14)(p22;q32) and t(14;18)(q32;q21). t(11;18)(q21;q21) fuses the N‐terminus of the API2 gene to the C‐terminus of the MALT1 gene and generates a functional API2‐MALT1 product. t(1;14)(p22;q32) and t(14;18)(q32;q21) bring the BCL10 and MALT1 genes respectively to the IGH locus and deregulate their expression. The oncogenic activity of the three chromosomal translocations is linked by the physiological role of BCL10 and MALT1 in antigen receptor‐mediated NFκB activation. In this study, MALT1 and BCL10 expression was examined in normal lymphoid tissues and 423 cases of MALT lymphoma from eight sites, and their expression was correlated with the above translocations, which were detected by molecular and molecular cytogenetic methods. In normal B‐cell follicles, both MALT1 and BCL10 were expressed predominantly in the cytoplasm, high in centroblasts, moderate in centrocytes and weak/negative in mantle zone B‐cells. In MALT lymphoma, MALT1 and BCL10 expression varied among cases with different chromosomal translocations. In 9/9 MALT lymphomas with t(14;18)(q32;q21), tumour cells showed strong homogeneous cytoplasmic expression of both MALT1 and BCL10. In 12/12 cases with evidence of t(1;14)(p22;q32) or variants, tumour cells expressed MALT1 weakly in the cytoplasm but BCL10 strongly in the nuclei. In all 67 MALT lymphomas with t(11;18)(q21;q21), tumour cells expressed weak cytoplasmic MALT1 and moderate nuclear BCL10. In MALT lymphomas without the above translocations, both MALT1 and BCL10, in general, were expressed weakly in the cytoplasm. Real‐time quantitative RT‐PCR showed a good correlation between MALT1 and BCL10 mRNA expression and underlining genetic changes, with t(14;18)(q32;q21)‐ and t(1;14)(p22;q32)‐positive cases displaying the highest MALT1 and BCL10 mRNA expression respectively. These results show that MALT1 expression pattern is identical to that of BCL10 in normal lymphoid tissues but varies in MALT lymphomas, with high cytoplasmic expression of both MALT1 and BCL10 characterizing those with t(14;18)(q32;q21). Copyright


Clinical Cancer Research | 2005

High Relapse Rate in Patients with MALT Lymphoma Warrants Lifelong Follow-up

Markus Raderer; Berthold Streubel; Stefan Woehrer; Andreas Puespoek; Ulrich Jaeger; Michael Formanek; Andreas Chott

Background: B-cell lymphoma of the mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT lymphoma) is thought to be an indolent disease, with a good prognosis following various forms of treatment. Little, however, is known about the rate and pattern of relapse following successful treatment. Patients and Methods: We have analyzed time to and pattern of relapse in patients with MALT lymphoma, along with investigation of t(11;18)(q21;q21), t(1;14)(p22;q32), and t(14;18)(q32;q21) involving IGH/MALT1, trisomy 3, and trisomy 18. Eighty-six patients achieving complete remission (CR) after initial therapy with sufficient follow-up data were available. Primary site of disease was the stomach (n = 36), salivary gland (n = 19), ocular adnexa/orbit (n = 12), lung (n = 8), thyroid (n = 5), breast (n = 3), liver (n = 2), and skin (n = 1). Results: Thirty-two patients (37%) relapsed between 14 and 307 months (median 47 months) after initial CR. Ten relapses were local, whereas the remaining patients relapsed in a distant organ. Eight of 36 gastric versus 24 of 50 nongastric MALT lymphomas (P = 0.02) relapsed. Five patients had a second recurrence 26 to 56 months after a second CR. Relapse rates were not related to forms of initial treatment. Chromosomal aberrations were detected in 14 of 28 (50%) relapsing patients, and chromosomal alterations were identical at diagnosis and relapse. No significant association of any of the genetic changes investigated with relapse was found. Interestingly, patients with t(11;18)(q21;q21) had a significantly longer median time to relapse (76 months) than patients without this translocation (29 months; P = 0.012). Conclusions: In view of the late relapses seen in our series, lifelong observation of all patients treated for MALT lymphoma seems to be required.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2009

Peripheral T-cell lymphomas with a follicular growth pattern are derived from follicular helper T cells (TFH) and may show overlapping features with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphomas.

Yenlin Huang; Anne Moreau; Jehan Dupuis; Berthold Streubel; Barbara Petit; Steven Le Gouill; Nadine Martin-Garcia; Christiane Copie-Bergman; Fanny Gaillard; Marwan Qubaja; Bettina Fabiani; Giovanna Roncador; Corinne Haioun; Marie-Hélène Delfau-Larue; Teresa Marafioti; Andreas Chott; Philippe Gaulard

Rare cases of peripheral T-cell lymphomas with follicular growth pattern (PTCL-F) have been recently reported, and their association with t(5;9)(q33;q22) involving ITK and SYK has been suggested. However, the clinicopathologic aspects of PTCL-F are poorly described and the normal cell counterpart of this subgroup of lymphoma is still unknown. Therefore, we analyzed the pathologic, phenotypic, and cytogenetic features of a series of 30 patients (range: 33 to 88 y) that showed histopathologic features of PTCL-F in at least 1 biopsy (n=30), either at initial presentation (n=26) or at relapse (n=4). Neoplastic cells were medium-sized clear cells that were CD4+ (24/27, 89%), CD10+ (21/29, 72%), BCL-6+ (14/19, 74%), and expressed programed death-1 (27/27, 100%), CXCL13 (23/27, 85%), and ICOS (11/11, 100%), markers of follicular helper T cells (TFH). Four of 22 patients (18%) had t(5;9)(q33;q22) detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization. Patients with clinical data available had multiple lymphadenopathies (25/28, 89%), stage III to IV diseases (17/26, 65%), B symptoms (7/27, 26%), and skin lesions (6/23, 26%). Three patients with sequential biopsies disclosed clinical and histopathologic features of angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma at initial presentation. Our results show that this rare form of PTCL-F (1) has an immunophenotype indicative of derivation from TFH cells, (2) is associated with t(5;9) in a proportion of cases, and (3) shows some overlapping features with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, raising the question of a possible relationship.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2011

Primary Follicular Lymphoma of the Duodenum Is a Distinct Mucosal/Submucosal Variant of Follicular Lymphoma: A Retrospective Study of 63 Cases

Ana-Iris Schmatz; Berthold Streubel; Elisabeth Kretschmer-Chott; Andreas Püspök; Ulrich Jäger; Christine Mannhalter; Markus Tiemann; German Ott; Wolfgang Fischbach; Peter Herzog; Gerhard Seitz; Manfred Stolte; Markus Raderer; Andreas Chott

PURPOSE Small series with limited follow-up have suggested primary follicular lymphoma of the duodenum (FL-D) to be an indolent disease. We report our experience on a large series of patients followed for a median time period of longer than 6 years. PATIENTS AND METHODS The study comprised 63 patients with primary FL-D defined as stage I disease. Endoscopy and detailed pathologic work-up was performed at diagnosis and at restaging to monitor the behavior of the neoplastic process. RESULTS Histologically, all 63 patients had FL, low grade (1 to 2). Duodenal endosonography demonstrated lesions confined to mucosa/submucosa in 19 of 20 patients. At an overall median follow-up of 77 months (range, 12 to 177 months), only two untreated patients had developed nodal disease, the remaining 61 patients never experienced extrasmall intestinal disease and large cell transformation did not occur at all. Among 24 patients followed by watch and wait strategy, seven showed spontaneous complete regression and 17 had stable disease; radiotherapy resulted in complete regression in all 19 patients; anti-CD20 antibody monotherapy achieved complete regression in four patients and stable disease in one patient. Various chemotherapy protocols in eight patients caused complete regression in all of them, but local relapses occurred in three. No patients required surgery or died of disease. CONCLUSION These findings characterize primary FL-D as a remarkably indolent FL variant, which, even left untreated, does not develop tumorous growth, very rarely disseminates (two of 63 patients) and does not transform to high grade disease. A watch and wait approach appears to be the most sensible strategy.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma: novel translocations including rearrangements of ODZ2, JMJD2C, and CNN3.

Ursula Vinatzer; Michaela Gollinger; Leonhard Müllauer; Markus Raderer; Andreas Chott; Berthold Streubel

Purpose: The well-known translocations identified in MALT lymphomas include t(11;18)/API2-MALT1, t(1;14)/IGH-BCL10, and t(14;18)/IGH-MALT1. Molecular investigations have suggested that these three disparate translocations affect a common pathway, resulting in the constitutive activation of nuclear factor-κB. However, the vast majority of MALT lymphomas are negative for any of the above-mentioned translocations and the underlying pathogenesis is unclear. Experimental Design: Fresh tissue of 29 gastric and extragastric MALT lymphomas was studied for genetic aberrations by conventional karyotyping, long-distance inverse PCR (LDI-PCR), fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR), and real-time quantitative RT-PCR (QRT-PCR). Results: Conventional cytogenetics, FISH, and RT-PCR identified aberrations in 26 of 29 MALT lymphoma. Balanced translocations were found in 21 cases. IGH was rearranged in the majority of cases with balanced translocations (n = 17/21); 3 cases had t(11;18)/API2-MALT1 and 1 case had novel t(6;7)(q25;q11), respectively. IGH partner genes involved MALT1, FOXP1, BCL6, and four new chromosomal regions on chromosome arms 1p, 1q, 5q, and 9p. LDI-PCR identified three novel partner genes on 1p (CNN3), 5q (ODZ2), and 9p (JMJD2C). FISH assays were established and confirmed LDI-PCR results. QRT-PCR showed deregulation of the novel genes in the translocation-positive cases. Conclusions: Our study expands the knowledge on the genetic heterogeneity of MALT lymphomas.


Gut | 2006

Successful antibiotic treatment of Helicobacter pylori negative gastric mucosa associated lymphoid tissue lymphomas

Markus Raderer; Berthold Streubel; Stefan Wöhrer; Michael Häfner; Andreas Chott

Background and aims: The role of antibiotic treatment in early stage gastric mucosa associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma not associated with Helicobacter pylori infection has not been investigated. Patients and methods: Six patients with localised gastric MALT lymphoma underwent antibiotic treatment with clarithromycin, metronidazole, and pantoprazole. Staging, including endosonography plus gastroscopy, computed tomography of the thorax and abdomen, colonoscopy, magnetic resonance imaging of the salivary glands, and bone marrow biopsy were performed to rule out distant spread of the disease. In addition, MALT specific genetic changes, including reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction for t(11;18)(q21;q21), were tested in all patients. H pylori infection was ruled out by histology, urease breath test, serology, and stool antigen testing. Results: All six patients had MALT lymphoma restricted to the stomach, and no evidence of infection with H pylori was found. Only one patient tested positive for t(11;18)(q21;q21) while the remaining five displayed no genetic aberrations. Following antibiotic treatment, endoscopic controls were performed every three months. Five patients responded with lymphoma regression between three and nine months following antibiotic treatment (one partial remission and four complete responses). One patient had stable disease for 12 months and was then referred for chemotherapy. Conclusions: Patients with early stage gastric MALT lymphoma negative for H pylori might still benefit from antibiotic treatment as the sole treatment modality.

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Peter Birner

Medical University of Vienna

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Christa Fonatsch

Medical University of Vienna

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Peter Valent

Medical University of Vienna

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Stefan Wöhrer

Medical University of Vienna

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Matthias Preusser

Medical University of Vienna

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Leonhard Müllauer

Medical University of Vienna

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Anna Sophie Berghoff

Medical University of Vienna

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