Hannah Pischon
Free University of Berlin
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hannah Pischon.
Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2017
Hannah Pischon; Moritz Radbruch; Anja Ostrowski; Pierre Volz; Christian Gerecke; Michael Unbehauen; Stefan Hönzke; Sarah Hedtrich; Joachim W. Fluhr; Rainer Haag; Burkhard Kleuser; Ulrike Alexiev; Achim D. Gruber; Lars Mundhenk
Inflammatory disorders of the skin pose particular therapeutic challenges due to complex structural and functional alterations of the skin barrier. Penetration of several anti-inflammatory drugs is particularly problematic in psoriasis, a common dermatitis condition with epidermal hyperplasia and hyperkeratosis. Here, we tested in vivo dermal penetration and biological effects of dendritic core-multishell-nanocarriers (CMS) in a murine skin model of psoriasis and compared it to healthy skin. In both groups, CMS exclusively localized to the stratum corneum of the epidermis with only very sporadic uptake by Langerhans cells. Furthermore, penetration into the viable epidermis of nile red as a model for lipophilic compounds was enhanced by CMS. CMS proved fully biocompatible in several in vitro assays and on normal and psoriatic mouse skin. The observations support the concept of CMS as promising candidates for drug delivery in inflammatory hyperkeratotic skin disorders in vivo.
Nanoscale Research Letters | 2017
Moritz Radbruch; Hannah Pischon; Anja Ostrowski; Pierre Volz; Robert Brodwolf; Falko Neumann; Michael Unbehauen; Burkhard Kleuser; Rainer Haag; Nan Ma; Ulrike Alexiev; Lars Mundhenk; Achim D. Gruber
Dendritic hPG-amid-C18-mPEG core-multishell nanocarriers (CMS) represent a novel class of unimolecular micelles that hold great potential as drug transporters, e.g., to facilitate topical therapy in skin diseases. Atopic dermatitis is among the most common inflammatory skin disorders with complex barrier alterations which may affect the efficacy of topical treatment.Here, we tested the penetration behavior and identified target structures of unloaded CMS after topical administration in healthy mice and in mice with oxazolone-induced atopic dermatitis. We further examined whole body distribution and possible systemic side effects after simulating high dosage dermal penetration by subcutaneous injection.Following topical administration, CMS accumulated in the stratum corneum without penetration into deeper viable epidermal layers. The same was observed in atopic dermatitis mice, indicating that barrier alterations in atopic dermatitis had no influence on the penetration of CMS. Following subcutaneous injection, CMS were deposited in the regional lymph nodes as well as in liver, spleen, lung, and kidney. However, in vitro toxicity tests, clinical data, and morphometry-assisted histopathological analyses yielded no evidence of any toxic or otherwise adverse local or systemic effects of CMS, nor did they affect the severity or course of atopic dermatitis.Taken together, CMS accumulate in the stratum corneum in both healthy and inflammatory skin and appear to be highly biocompatible in the mouse even under conditions of atopic dermatitis and thus could potentially serve to create a depot for anti-inflammatory drugs in the skin.
Veterinary Pathology | 2018
Christof A. Bertram; Corinne Gurtner; Martina Dettwiler; Olivia Kershaw; Kristina Dietert; Laura Pieper; Hannah Pischon; Achim D. Gruber; Robert Klopfleisch
Integration of new technologies, such as digital microscopy, into a highly standardized laboratory routine requires the validation of its performance in terms of reliability, specificity, and sensitivity. However, a validation study of digital microscopy is currently lacking in veterinary pathology. The aim of the current study was to validate the usability of digital microscopy in terms of diagnostic accuracy, speed, and confidence for diagnosing and differentiating common canine cutaneous tumor types and to compare it to classical light microscopy. Therefore, 80 histologic sections including 17 different skin tumor types were examined twice as glass slides and twice as digital whole-slide images by 6 pathologists with different levels of experience at 4 time points. Comparison of both methods found digital microscopy to be noninferior for differentiating individual tumor types within the category epithelial and mesenchymal tumors, but diagnostic concordance was slightly lower for differentiating individual round cell tumor types by digital microscopy. In addition, digital microscopy was associated with significantly shorter diagnostic time, but diagnostic confidence was lower and technical quality was considered inferior for whole-slide images compared with glass slides. Of note, diagnostic performance for whole-slide images scanned at 200× magnification was noninferior in diagnostic performance for slides scanned at 400×. In conclusion, digital microscopy differs only minimally from light microscopy in few aspects of diagnostic performance and overall appears adequate for the diagnosis of individual canine cutaneous tumors with minor limitations for differentiating individual round cell tumor types and grading of mast cell tumors.
Veterinary Pathology | 2018
Hannah Pischon; Anne Petrick; Matthias Müller; Nils Köster; Jörg Pietsch; Lars Mundhenk
Contaminated honey is a common cause of grayanotoxin intoxication in humans. Intoxication of animals, especially cattle, is usually due to ingestion of plants of the Ericaceae family, such as Rhododendron. Here, we report the ingestion of Pieris japonica as the cause of grayanotoxin I intoxication in 2 miniature pigs that were kept as pets. The pigs showed sudden onset of pale oral mucosa, tachycardia, tachypnea, hypersalivation, tremor, and ataxia that progressed to lateral recumbency. The pathological examination of one pig revealed no specific indications for intoxication except for the finding of plant material of Pieris japonica in the intestine. Grayanotoxin I was identified in the ingested plant, gastric content, blood, liver, bile, kidney, urine, lung, and skeletal muscle via HPLC-MS/MS. Grayanotoxin I should be considered as a differential etiological diagnosis in pigs with unspecific signs and discovery of ingested plant material as the only indication in the pathologic examination.
Small | 2018
Jens Balke; Pierre Volz; Falko Neumann; Robert Brodwolf; Alexander Wolf; Hannah Pischon; Moritz Radbruch; Lars Mundhenk; Achim D. Gruber; Nan Ma; Ulrike Alexiev
Nanoparticles hold a great promise in biomedical science. However, due to their unique physical and chemical properties they can lead to overproduction of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS). As an important mechanism of nanotoxicity, there is a great need for sensitive and high-throughput adaptable single-cell ROS detection methods. Here, fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) is employed for single-cell ROS detection (FLIM-ROX) providing increased sensitivity and enabling high-throughput analysis in fixed and live cells. FLIM-ROX owes its sensitivity to the discrimination of autofluorescence from the unique fluorescence lifetime of the ROS reporter dye. The effect of subcytotoxic amounts of cationic gold nanoparticles in J774A.1 cells and primary human macrophages on ROS generation is investigated. FLIM-ROX measures very low ROS levels upon gold nanoparticle exposure, which is undetectable by the conventional method. It is demonstrated that cellular morphology changes, elevated senescence, and DNA damage link the resulting low-level oxidative stress to cellular adverse effects and thus nanotoxicity. Multiphoton FLIM-ROX enables the quantification of spatial ROS distribution in vivo, which is shown for skin tissue as a target for nanoparticle exposure. Thus, this innovative method allows identifying of low-level ROS in vitro and in vivo and, subsequently, promotes understanding of ROS-associated nanotoxicity.
Small | 2018
Jens Balke; Pierre Volz; Falko Neumann; Robert Brodwolf; Alexander Wolf; Hannah Pischon; Moritz Radbruch; Lars Mundhenk; Achim D. Gruber; Nan Ma; Ulrike Alexiev
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2018
Hannah Pischon; Moritz Radbruch; F. Du; M. Guilbudagian; Marcelo Calderón; Michael Unbehauen; Rainer Haag; Achim D. Gruber; Lars Mundhenk
Archive | 2017
Moritz Radbruch; Hannah Pischon; Anja Ostrowski; Pierre Volz; Robert Brodwolf; Falko Neumann; Michael Unbehauen; Burkhard Kleuser; Rainer Haag; Nan Ma; Ulrike Alexiev; Lars Mundhenk; Achim D. Gruber
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2017
Hannah Pischon; Moritz Radbruch; Anja Ostrowski; Fabian Schumacher; Stefan Hönzke; Burkhard Kleuser; Sarah Hedtrich; Joachim W. Fluhr; Achim D. Gruber; Lars Mundhenk
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2017
J. Fürstenau; Hannah Pischon; Kristina Dietert; Moritz Radbruch; Achim D. Gruber; Lars Mundhenk