Johannes Boltze
University of Lübeck
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Featured researches published by Johannes Boltze.
Circulation Research | 2012
Nicole A. Terpolilli; Seong-Woong Kim; Serge C. Thal; Hiroharu Kataoka; Vilia Zeisig; Bjoern Nitzsche; Benjamin Klaesner; Changlian Zhu; Susanne M. Schwarzmaier; Lilja Meissner; Uta Mamrak; Doortje C. Engel; Alexander Drzezga; Rakesh P. Patel; Klas Blomgren; Henryk Barthel; Johannes Boltze; Wolfgang M. Kuebler; Nikolaus Plesnila
Rationale: Stroke is the third most common cause of death in industrialized countries. The main therapeutic target is the ischemic penumbra, potentially salvageable brain tissue that dies within the first few hours after blood flow cessation. Hence, strategies to keep the penumbra alive until reperfusion occurs are needed. Objective: To study the effect of inhaled nitric oxide on cerebral vessels and cerebral perfusion under physiological conditions and in different models of cerebral ischemia. Methods and Results: This experimental study demonstrates that inhaled nitric oxide (applied in 30% oxygen/70% air mixture) leads to the formation of nitric oxide carriers in blood that distribute throughout the body. This was ascertained by in vivo microscopy in adult mice. Although under normal conditions inhaled nitric oxide does not affect cerebral blood flow, after experimental cerebral ischemia induced by transient middle cerebral artery occlusion it selectively dilates arterioles in the ischemic penumbra, thereby increasing collateral blood flow and significantly reducing ischemic brain damage. This translates into significantly improved neurological outcome. These findings were validated in independent laboratories using two different mouse models of cerebral ischemia and in a clinically relevant large animal model of stroke. Conclusions: Inhaled nitric oxide thus may provide a completely novel strategy to improve penumbral blood flow and neuronal survival in stroke or other ischemic conditions.
Brain Research | 2010
Alexander Kranz; Daniel-Christoph Wagner; Manja Kamprad; Markus Scholz; Uwe Schmidt; Franziska Nitzsche; Zami Aberman; Frank Emmrich; Ute-Maria Riegelsberger; Johannes Boltze
The beneficial effects of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cell (MSC) administration following experimental stroke have already been described. Despite several promising characteristics, placenta-derived MSC have not been used in models of focal ischemia. The aim of the current study is to investigate the impact of intravenously transplanted placenta-derived MSC on post-stroke recovery. Permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery was induced in spontaneously hypertensive rats. MSC were obtained from the human maternal or fetal placenta and intravenously administered after 24 h (single transplantation) or after 8 h and 24 h (dual transplantation). Sensorimotor deficits were quantified for 60 days using the beam walk test and the modified Neurological Severity Score system. Infarct volume was determined in vivo by means of magnetic resonance imaging on days 1, 8, 29 and 60. Astroglial reactivity was semiquantitatively ascertained within a small and a broad region adjacent to the lesion border. The double infusion of placental MSC was superior to single transplantation in the functional tests. However, a significant difference to the control group in all outcome parameters was observed only for maternally derived MSC. These findings suggest that placental tissue constitutes a promising source for experimental stroke therapies.
Stroke | 2014
Sean I. Savitz; Steven C. Cramer; Lawrence R. Wechsler; Jaroslaw Aronowski; Johannes Boltze; Cesar V. Borlongan; Casey C. Case; Thomas Chase; Michael Chopp; S. Thomas Carmichael; Pam Duncan; Seth P. Finklestein; Steven Fischkoff; Raphael Guzman; David C. Hess; David Y. Huang; Jim Hinson; Steven A. Kautz; Douglas Kondziolka; Robert W. Mays; Vivek Misra; Panos Mitsias; Michael Modo; Keith W. Muir; John Sinden; Evan Y. Snyder; Gary K. Steinberg; Farhaan Vahidy; Alison E. Willing; Steven L. Wolf
Cell-based therapy continues to grow as a new field to explore investigational treatments for stroke. Leaders from academia and industry convened an inaugural meeting in 2007 with members of the National Institutes of Health and Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to generate consensus-based guidelines on the development of cell therapies for stroke, entitled “Stem Cells as an Emerging Paradigm in Stroke” (STEPS).1 These guidelines focused on preclinical studies that are considered important as part of a development program to support clinical testing of cell therapies. The STEPS meeting also provided recommendations on the conduct of early-stage clinical trials. Given the rapid advances in the field, a second meeting was held in 2009 to update and expand these guidelines, which were published as STEPS 2.2 In December 2011, investigators in academia, industry leaders, and members of the National Institutes of Health and FDA gathered at a third meeting, STEPS 3, to discuss emerging data on the mechanisms of action of cell therapy, the barriers to successful translation from animal models to patients, and the design of current clinical trials for acute and chronic stroke. Since the prior STEPS meeting, there are now several active cell therapy platforms for stroke and other neurological disorders, in stages that range from preclinical to clinical trials, and with sponsors that include industry, the National Institutes of Health, and the California Institute of Regenerative Medicine. As the field continues to progress and as pilot clinical studies are starting to show safety for some cell types, it has become necessary to formulate a new set of guidelines that address topics not covered in prior STEPS publications. Specifically, the current document reflects a compilation of recommendations that focus on more advanced stages of clinical testing, as well as the testing of cell therapies in a broader …
PLOS ONE | 2012
Claudia Pösel; Karoline Möller; Wenke Fröhlich; Isabell Schulz; Johannes Boltze; Daniel-Christoph Wagner
Bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMNCs) are widely used in regenerative medicine, but recent data suggests that the isolation of BMNCs by commonly used Ficoll-Paque density gradient centrifugation (DGC) causes significant cell loss and influences graft function. The objective of this study was to determine in an animal study whether and how Ficoll-Paque DGC affects the yield and composition of BMNCs compared to alternative isolation methods such as adjusted Percoll DGC or immunomagnetic separation of polymorphonuclear cells (PMNs). Each isolation procedure was confounded by a significant loss of BMNCs that was maximal after Ficoll-Paque DGC, moderate after adjusted Percoll DGC and least after immunomagnetic PMN depletion (25.6±5.8%, 51.5±2.3 and 72.3±6.7% recovery of total BMNCs in lysed bone marrow). Interestingly, proportions of BMNC subpopulations resembled those of lysed bone marrow indicating symmetric BMNC loss independent from the isolation protocol. Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) content, determined by colony-forming units for granulocytes-macrophages (CFU-GM), was significantly reduced after Ficoll-Paque DGC compared to Percoll DGC and immunomagnetic PMN depletion. Finally, in a proof-of-concept study, we successfully applied the protocol for BMNC isolation by immunodepletion to fresh human bone marrow aspirates. Our findings indicate that the common method to isolate BMNCs in both preclinical and clinical research can be considerably improved by replacing Ficoll-Paque DGC with adapted Percoll DGC, or particularly by immunodepletion of PMNs.
Annals of Dyslexia | 2009
Arndt Wilcke; Jana Weissfuss; Holger Kirsten; Grit Wolfram; Johannes Boltze; Peter Ahnert
Dyslexia is a complex reading and writing disorder with a strong genetic component. In a German case-control cohort, we studied the influence of the suspected dyslexia-associated gene DCDC2. For the first time in a German cohort, we describe association of a 2445 basepair deletion, first identified in an American study. Evidence of association for three DCDC2 single nucleotide polymorphisms (rs807724, rs793862, rs807701), previously identified in German or American cohorts, was replicated. A haplotype of these polymorphisms showed evidence for association as well. Thus, our data further corroborate association of DCDC2 with dyslexia. Analysis of functional subgroups suggests association of investigated DCDC2 variants mainly with nondysphonetic, nonsevere, but probably dyseidetic (surface) dyslexia. Based on the presumed function of DCDC2, our findings point to a role of impaired neuronal migration in the etiology of the disease.
Stroke | 2013
Ulrich Dirnagl; Antoine M. Hakim; Malcolm R. Macleod; Marc Fisher; David W. Howells; Stuart M. Alan; Gary K. Steinberg; Anna Maria Fernàndez Planas; Johannes Boltze; Sean I. Savitz; Costantino Iadecola; Stephen Meairs
> Despite dramatic advances in the molecular pathogenesis of disease, translation of basic biomedical research into safe and effective clinical applications remains a slow, expensive, and failure-prone endeavor. > > Francis S. Collins1 The global burden of stroke on patients, their relatives, health systems, and the economies that support them is tremendous. In an unprecedented move, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nations have responded to this challenge by declaring the fight against stroke a top priority in their drive to prevent and to control noncommunicable diseases.2 Indeed, great progress has been made in our understanding of stroke pathophysiology. This has led to the development of thrombolysis, a highly efficient therapy for a subset of patients with acute ischemic stroke. We came to realize that the responses of brain tissue to substrate deprivation are complex, and that not only neurons need to be considered but also glial and vascular cells, as well as local or blood-derived cells of the immune system.3–5 We now know that ischemia triggers a multitude of endogenous protective mechanisms in the brain which help to contain the ischemic lesion evolution and protect the brain from further damage.6 The brain has a tremendous capacity to overcome functional deficits, and as we begin to understand how brain plasticity works, we are actually finding evidence for tissue repair.7 We are also beginning to appreciate the interaction between the ischemic brain and the other organ systems, such as the immune system,8 the cardiovascular system, or systemic metabolism, a multidirectional signaling with tremendous impact on the outcome of patients with stroke.9 Taken together, research during the past few decades has suggested numerous targets for therapeutic intervention to restore perfusion, block mechanisms of damage, or induce endogenous mechanisms of protection, intercept deleterious signaling to …
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2008
Johannes Boltze; Annette Förschler; Björn Nitzsche; Daniela Waldmin; Anke Hoffmann; Christiane M Boltze; Antje Y. Dreyer; Axel Goldammer; Anne Reischauer; Wolfgang Härtig; Kathrin Geiger; Henryk Barthel; Frank Emmrich; Uwe Gille
As effective stroke treatment by thrombolysis is bound to a narrow time window excluding most patients, numerous experimental treatment strategies have been developed to gain new options for stroke treatment. However, all approaches using neuroprotective agents that have been successfully evaluated in rodents have subsequently failed in clinical trials. Existing large animal models are of significant scientific value, but sometimes limited by ethical drawbacks and mostly do not allow for long-term observation. In this study, we are introducing a simple, but reliable stroke model using permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion in sheep. This model allows for control of ischemic lesion size and subsequent neurofunctional impact, and it is monitored by behavioral phenotyping, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography. Neuropathologic and (immuno)-histologic investigations showed typical ischemic lesion patterns whereas commercially available antibodies against vascular, neuronal, astroglial, and microglial antigens were feasible for ovine brain specimens. Based on absent mortality in this study and uncomplicated species-appropriate housing, long-term studies can be realized with comparatively low expenditures. This model could be used as an alternative to existing large animal models, especially for longitudinal analyses of the safety and therapeutic impact of novel therapies in the field of translational stroke research.
Cell Transplantation | 2012
Johannes Boltze; Uwe Schmidt; Doreen Reich; Alexander Kranz; Klaus G. Reymann; Maria Strassburger; Donald Lobsien; Daniel-Christoph Wagner; Annette Förschler; Wolf-Rüdiger Schäbitz
Experimental treatment strategies using human umbilical cord blood mononuclear cells (hUCB MNCs) represent a promising option for alternative stroke therapies. An important point for clinical translation of such treatment approaches is knowledge on the therapeutic time window. Although expected to be wider than for thrombolysis, the exact time window for hUCB MNC therapy is not known. Our study aimed to determine the time window of intravenous hUCB MNC administration after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). Male spontaneously hypertensive rats underwent MCAO and were randomly assigned to hUCB MNC administration at 4, 24, 72, and 120 or 14 days. Influence of cell treatment was observed by magnetic resonance imaging on days 1, 8, and 29 following MCAO and by assessment of functional neurological recovery. On day 30, brains were screened for glial scar development and presence of hUCB MNCs. Further, influence of hUCB MNCs on necrosis and apoptosis in postischemic neural tissue was investigated in hippocampal slices cultures. Transplantation within a 72-h time window resulted in an early improvement of functional recovery, paralleled by a reduction of brain atrophy and diminished glial scarring. Cell transplantation 120 h post-MCAO only induced minor functional recovery without changes in the brain atrophy rate and glial reactivity. Later transplantation (14 days) did not show any benefit. No evidence for intracerebrally localized hUCB MNCs was found in any treatment group. In vitro hUCB MNCs were able to significantly reduce postischemic neural necrosis and apoptosis. Our results for the first time indicate a time window of therapeutic hUCB MNC application of at least 72 h. The time window is limited, but wider than compared to conventional pharmacological approaches. The data furthermore confirms that differentiation and integration of administered cells is not a prerequisite for poststroke functional improvement and lesion size reduction.
BMC Neuroscience | 2008
Susann Hau; Doreen Reich; Markus Scholz; Wilfried Naumann; Frank Emmrich; Manja Kamprad; Johannes Boltze
BackgroundOne of the most promising options for treatment of stroke using adult stem cells are human umbilical cord blood (HUCB) cells that were already approved for therapeutic efficacy in vivo. However, complexity of animal models has thus far limited the understanding of beneficial cellular mechanisms. To address the influence of HUCB cells on neuronal tissue after stroke we established and employed a human in vitro model of neuronal hypoxia using fully differentiated vulnerable SH-SY5Y cells. These cells were incubated under an oxygen-reduced atmosphere (O2< 1%) for 48 hours. Subsequently, HUCB mononuclear cells (MNC) were added to post-hypoxic neuronal cultures. These cultures were characterized regarding to the development of apoptosis and necrosis over three days. Based on this we investigated the therapeutic influence of HUCB MNC on the progression of apoptotic cell death. The impact of HUCB cells and hypoxia on secretion of neuroprotective and inflammatory cytokines, chemokines and expression of adhesion molecules was proved.ResultsHypoxic cultivation of neurons initially induced a rate of 26% ± 13% of apoptosis. Hypoxia also caused an enhanced expression of Caspase-3 and cleaved poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). Necrosis was only detected in low amounts. Within the next three days rate of apoptosis in untreated hypoxic cultures cumulated to 85% ± 11% (p ≤ 0.001). Specific cytokine (VEGF) patterns also suggest anti-apoptotic strategies of neuronal cells. Remarkably, the administration of MNC showed a noticeable reduction of apoptosis rates to levels of normoxic control cultures (7% ± 3%; p ≤ 0.001). In parallel, clustering of administered MNC next to axons and somata of neuronal cells was observed. Furthermore, MNC caused a pronounced increase of chemokines (CCL5; CCL3 and CXCL10).ConclusionWe established an in vitro model of neuronal hypoxia that affords the possibility to investigate both, apoptotic neuronal cell death and neuroprotective therapies. Here we employed the therapeutic model to study neuroprotective properties of HUCB cells.We hypothesize that the neuroprotective effect of MNC was due to anti-apoptotic mechanisms related to direct cell-cell contacts with injured neuronal cells and distinct changes in neuroprotective, inflammatory cytokines as well as to the upregulation of chemokines within the co-cultures.
Acta neuropathologica communications | 2014
Daniel Kaiser; Gesa Weise; Karoline Möller; Johanna Scheibe; Claudia Pösel; Sebastian Baasch; Matthias Gawlitza; Donald Lobsien; Kai Diederich; Jens Minnerup; Alexander Kranz; Johannes Boltze; Daniel-Christoph Wagner
IntroductionCerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) is one of the most prevalent neurological disorders. The progressive remodeling of brain microvessels due to arterial hypertension or other vascular risk factors causes subtle, but constant cognitive decline through to manifest dementia and substantially increases the risk for stroke. Preliminary evidence suggests the contribution of the immune system to disease initiation and progression, but a more detailed understanding is impaired by the unavailability of appropriate animal models. Here, we introduce the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) as a model for early onset cSVD and unveiled substantial immune changes in conjunction with brain abnormalities that resemble clinical findings.ResultsIn contrast to age-matched normotensive Wistar Kyoto (WKY) rats, male SHR exhibited non-spatial memory deficits. Magnetic resonance imaging showed brain atrophy and a reduction of white matter volumes in SHR. Histological analyses confirmed white matter demyelination and unveiled a circumscribed blood brain barrier dysfunction in conjunction with micro- and macrogliosis in deep cortical regions. Flow cytometry and histological analyses further revealed substantial disparities in cerebral CD45high leukocyte counts and distribution patterns between SHR and WKY. SHR showed lower counts of T cells in the choroid plexus and meningeal spaces as well as decreased interleukin-10 levels in the cerebrospinal fluid. On the other hand, both T and NK cells were significantly augmented in the SHR brain microvasculature.ConclusionsOur results indicate that SHR share behavioral and neuropathological characteristics with human cSVD patients and further undergird the relevance of immune responses for the initiation and progression of cSVD.