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Dive into the research topics where Kirsti Witter is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirsti Witter.


Parasite Immunology | 2010

Changes in lymphocyte populations in suckling piglets during primary infections with Isospora suis.

Hanna Lucia Worliczek; Marc Buggelsheim; R. Alexandrowicz; Kirsti Witter; P. Schmidt; Wilhelm Gerner; Armin Saalmüller; Anja Joachim

Isospora suis, a common intestinal parasite of piglets, causes neonatal porcine coccidiosis, which results in reduced and uneven weaning weights and economic losses in pig production. Nevertheless, there are no detailed studies available on the immune response to I. suis. The aim of this study was to carry out phenotypical characterization of lymphocytes during primary infections on day 3 after birth. Infected and noninfected piglets were investigated between days 7 and 16 after birth. Lymphocytes from the blood, spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes (flow cytometry) and of the jejunal mucosa (immunohistochemistry) were analysed. A decrease in T cells, especially with the phenotype of resting T‐helper cells, T‐cell receptor‐γδ‐T cells, and regulatory T cells in the blood, spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes was noticeable. An increase in cells with the phenotype of natural killer cells in the spleen of infected animals was found, and the subset of TcR‐γδ‐T cells was strongly increased in the gut mucosa. Our findings suggest an accelerated migration of those cells into the gut. This study provides a strong indication for the involvement of adaptive and innate immune response mechanisms in the primary immune response to I. suis, especially of TcR‐γδ‐T cells as a linkage between innate and adaptive immunity.


Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2012

Porcine CD27: identification, expression and functional aspects in lymphocyte subsets in swine.

Katharina Reutner; Judith Leitner; Sabine E. Essler; Kirsti Witter; Martina Patzl; Peter Steinberger; Armin Saalmüller; Wilhelm Gerner

Up to now for Swine Workshop Cluster 2 (SWC2) the orthologous human CD molecule was unknown. By use of the SWC2-specific mAb b30c7 and a retroviral cDNA expression library derived from stimulated porcine peripheral blood mononuclear cells we could identify SWC2 as porcine CD27. Phenotypic analyses of lymphocytes isolated from blood and lymphatic organs revealed that mature T cells in thymus and T cells in the periphery with a naïve phenotype were CD27(+). However, within CD8α(+) T helper and CD8α(+) γδ T cells also CD27(-) cells were present, indicating a down-regulation after antigen contact in vivo. B cells lacked CD27 expression, whereas NK cells expressed intermediate levels. Furthermore, plate-bound mAb b30c7 showed a costimulatory capacity on CD3-activated T cells for proliferation, IFN-γ and TNF-α production. Hence, our data indicate an important role of porcine CD27 for T-cell differentiation and activation as described for humans and mice.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Isospora suis in an Epithelial Cell Culture System – An In Vitro Model for Sexual Development in Coccidia

Hanna Lucia Worliczek; Bärbel Ruttkowski; Lukas Schwarz; Kirsti Witter; Waltraud Tschulenk; Anja Joachim

Coccidian parasites are of major importance in animal production, public health and food safety. The most frequently used representative in basic research on this group is Toxoplasma gondii. Although this parasite is well investigated there is no adequate in vitro model for its sexual development available and knowledge on this important life cycle phase is therefore scarce. The use of Isospora suis , a sister taxon to T. gondii and the causative agent of piglet coccidiosis, could provide a solution for this. In the present study an in vitro model for neonatal porcine coccidiosis in cells representative for the in vivo situation in the piglet gut was developed and evaluated. The parasite development was investigated by light and transmission electron microscopy and optimum culture conditions were evaluated. Intestinal porcine epithelial cells (IPEC-J2) adequately representing the natural host cells supported the development of all endogenous life cycle stages of I . suis , including gametocytes and oocysts. A concentration of 5% fetal calf serum in the culture medium led to highest gametocyte densities on day 12 post infection. Low infection doses (≤1 sporozoite for 100 host cells) were best for oocyst and gametocyte development. The presented system can also be used for immunostaining with established antibodies developed against T. gondii (in our case, anti-TgIMC3 antibodies directed against the inner membrane complex 3). The complete life cycle of I . suis in a cell line representing the natural host cell type and species provides a unique model among coccidian parasites and can be used to address a wide range of topics, especially with regard to the sexual development of coccidia.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2012

Angiogenic markers in canine lymphoma tissues do not predict survival times in chemotherapy treated dogs

Birgitt Wolfesberger; Zbyněk Tonar; Andrea Fuchs-Baumgartinger; Ingrid Walter; Monika Skalicky; Kirsti Witter; Johann G. Thalhammer; M. Pagitz; Miriam Kleiter

Angiogenesis, which is essential for malignancies to progress, depends on various signalling proteins including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and vascular endothelial growth factor receptors 1 and 2 (VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2). Microvessel density (MVD) is frequently used to evaluate angiogenesis. This study assessed the relationship between expression of VEGF, VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2, MVD and the survival time in dogs with lymphoma. VEGF, VEGFR-1 and VEGFR-2 expression was evaluated immunohistochemically and microvessel profiles were counted in 34 lymphoma samples. Seventy-nine percent of the samples showed high VEGF expression and 62% were highly positive for VEGFR-1; VEGFR-2 immunoreactivity was mostly negative. Dogs treated with chemotherapy had a median survival time of 266days, but no significant relationships were found between overall survival time, MVD and expression of VEGF, VEGFR-1 or VEGFR-2. In this study, VEGF its receptors and the MVD were no prognostic factors in dogs with lymphoma.


Pathobiology | 2013

Asymptomatic Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms Show Histological Signs of Progression: A Quantitative Histochemical Analysis

Lada Eberlová; Zbyněk Tonar; Kirsti Witter; Věra Křížková; Lukáš Nedorost; Marie Korabecna; Pavel Tolinger; Kocová J; Ludmila Boudova; Vladislav Třeška; Karel Houdek; Jiří Moláček; Jindra Vrzalova; Martin Pesta; Ondřej Topolčan; Jiří Valenta

Objective: Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a serious disease due to its covert nature, relatively high prevalence and fatal prognosis in the case of rupture. To obtain new insights into AAA pathogenesis, we examined the relationships between histopathology, multiplex in vitro immunoassay data, diameter and symptomatology. Methods: In a prospective, non-randomised study, we evaluated samples from 6 normal infrarenal aortae and 65 AAA patients (65 walls, 55 thrombi). The AAA patients were either asymptomatic (n = 44), symptomatic (n = 7) or with ruptured AAA (n = 14). The AAA diameter was classified as small (<5 cm, n = 18), medium (5–7 cm, n = 26) and large (>7 cm, n = 21). We quantified the histopathology of the AAA wall and the adjacent thrombus. We assessed the expression of proteins in the same samples. Results: Asymptomatic AAAs had walls with more abundant inflammatory infiltrates, lower amounts of PAI-1, a higher number of tPA-positive elements, a tendency towards decreased collagen content, whereas the adjacent thrombi had a greater concentration of VCAM-1 and MMP-2 when compared with symptomatic AAAs. Compared with the aneurysmatic aorta, the normal aorta contained less collagen and more elastin, actin, desmin and PAI-1-positive elements; in addition, it was more vascular. Medium-sized AAAs were the most actin and vimentin rich, and large AAAs were the most vascular. Conclusion: Our results show that asymptomatic AAA walls often have more potentially deleterious histopathological alterations than symptomatic AAA walls. This result indicates that a progression from an asymptomatic AAA to rupture can be expected and screening patients who are at risk of rupture could be beneficial.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 2008

Quantification of microvessels in canine lymph nodes

Zbyněk Tonar; Gunter F. Egger; Kirsti Witter; Birgitt Wolfesberger

Quantification of microvessels in tumors is mostly based on counts of vessel profiles in tumor hot spots. Drawbacks of this method include low reproducibility and large interobserver variance, mainly as a result of individual differences in sampling of image fields for analysis. Our aim was to test an unbiased method for quantifying microvessels in healthy and tumorous lymph nodes of dogs. The endothelium of blood vessels was detected in paraffin sections by a combination of immunohistochemistry (von Willebrand factor) and lectin histochemistry (wheat germ agglutinin) in comparison with detection of basal laminae by laminin immunohistochemistry or silver impregnation. Systematic uniform random sampling of 50 image fields was performed during photo‐documentation. An unbiased counting frame (area 113,600 μm2) was applied to each micrograph. The total area sampled from each node was 5.68 mm2. Vessel profiles were counted according to stereological counting rules. Inter‐ and intraobserver variabilities were tested. The application of systematic uniform random sampling was compared with the counting of vessel profiles in hot spots. The unbiased estimate of the number of vessel profiles per unit area ranged from 100.5 ± 44.0/mm2 to 442.6 ± 102.5/mm2 in contrast to 264 ± 72.2/mm2 to 771.0 ± 108.2/mm2 in hot spots. The advantage of using systematic uniform random sampling is its reproducibility, with reasonable interobserver and low intraobserver variance. This method also allows for the possibility of using archival material, because staining quality is not limiting as it is for image analysis, and artifacts can easily be excluded. However, this method is comparatively time‐consuming. Microsc. Res. Tech., 2008.


Connective Tissue Research | 2002

Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA) Expression in Tooth Primordia in the Field Vole (Microtus agrestis, Rodentia)

Petra Matulová; Kirsti Witter; Ivan Míšek

Cell proliferation in developing tooth germs has been studied particularly using bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation into growing tooth primordia and by counting and three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of mitoses in serial sections of developing teeth. PCNA has been proposed as an alternative marker of proliferation activity. The aim of our study was to detect immunohistochemically locations of PCNA-positive cells in developing tooth germs of Microtus agrestis (Rodentia). PCNA expression could be distinguished in oral epithelium and mesenchyme before first signs of dental lamina elevation. During bud, cap, and bell stages, positive immunostaining could be observed at defined sites in enamel organ, tooth papilla, and dental follicle. Rudimental tooth germs of the upper diastema, enamel knots, and inner enamel epithelium at day of ontogeny 18 and 19 showed negative reaction. PCNA marks cycling and early G0 cells and can be used successfully as a proliferation marker even in collection material.


Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2011

How to asses, visualize and compare the anisotropy of linear structures reconstructed from optical sections—A study based on histopathological quantification of human brain microvessels

Petra Kochová; Robert Cimrman; Jiří Janáček; Kirsti Witter; Zbyněk Tonar

Three-dimensional analyses of the spatial arrangement, spatial orientation and preferential directions of systems of fibers are frequent tasks in many scientific fields, including the textile industry, plant biology and tissue modeling. In biology, systems of oriented and branching lines are often used to represent the three-dimensional directionality and topology of microscopic blood vessels supplying various organs. In our study, we present a novel p(χ²) (chi-square) method for evaluating the anisotropy of line systems that involves comparing the observed length densities of lines with the discrete uniform distribution of an isotropic line system with the χ²-test. Using this method in our open source software, we determined the rose of directions, preferential directions and level of anisotropy of linear systems representing the microscopic blood vessels in samples of various regions from human brains (cortex, subcortical gray matter and white matter). The novel method was compared with two other methods used for anisotropy quantification (ellipsoidal and fractional anisotropy). All three methods detected different levels of anisotropy of blood microvessels in human brain. The microvascular bed in the cortex was closer to an isotropic network, while the microvessels supplying the white matter appeared to be an anisotropic and direction-sensitive system. All three methods were able to determine the differences between various brain regions. The advantage of our p(χ²) method is its high correlation with the number of preferential directions of the line system. However, the software, named esofspy, is able to calculate all three of the measures of anisotropy compared and documented in this paper, thus making the methods freely available to the scientific community.


Annals of Anatomy-anatomischer Anzeiger | 2015

Segmental and age differences in the elastin network, collagen, and smooth muscle phenotype in the tunica media of the porcine aorta

Zbyněk Tonar; Tereza Kubíková; Claudia Prior; Erna Demjen; Vaclav Liska; Milena Kralickova; Kirsti Witter

The porcine aorta is often used in studies on morphology, pathology, transplantation surgery, vascular and endovascular surgery, and biomechanics of the large arteries. Using quantitative histology and stereology, we estimated the area fraction of elastin, collagen, alpha-smooth muscle actin, vimentin, and desmin within the tunica media in 123 tissue samples collected from five segments (thoracic ascending aorta; aortic arch; thoracic descending aorta; suprarenal abdominal aorta; and infrarenal abdominal aorta) of porcine aortae from growing domestic pigs (n=25), ranging in age from 0 to 230 days. The descending thoracic aorta had the greatest elastin fraction, which decreased proximally toward the aortic arch as well as distally toward the abdominal aorta. Abdominal aortic segments had the highest fraction of actin, desmin, and vimentin positivity and all of these vascular smooth muscle markers were lower in the thoracic aortic segments. No quantitative differences were found when comparing the suprarenal abdominal segments with the infrarenal abdominal segments. The area fraction of actin within the media was comparable in all age groups and it was proportional to the postnatal growth. Thicker aortic segments had more elastin and collagen with fewer contractile cells. The collagen fraction decreased from ascending aorta and aortic arch toward the descending aorta. By revealing the variability of the quantitative composition of the porcine aorta, the results are suitable for planning experiments with the porcine aorta as a model, i.e. power test analyses and estimating the number of samples necessary to achieving a desirable level of precision. The complete primary morphometric data, in the form of continuous variables, are made publicly available for biomechanical modeling of site-dependent distensibility and compliance of the porcine aorta.


Annals of Anatomy-anatomischer Anzeiger | 2012

Vasa vasorum quantification in human varicose great and small saphenous veins

Zbyněk Tonar; Tomáš Kural; Petra Kochová; Lukáš Nedorost; Kirsti Witter

Recent research regarding saphenous vasa vasorum (VV) has focused on two main topics: the VV during varicogenesis in chronic venous insufficiency and the VV in saphenous grafts used in reconstructive vascular surgery. Our aim has been (i) to establish a technique for the histological quantification of the VV in human varicose great and small saphenous veins and (ii) to describe the density and distribution of the vasa vasorum within varicose veins. Great (n=11) and small (n=5) saphenous veins (length, 15-40cm) were collected from 12 patients who were undergoing venous stripping due to chronic venous insufficiency (Clinical-Etiology-Anatomy-Pathophysiology class 2-3). The veins were divided into 5-cm long segments. In total, 92 tissue blocks were collected to trace the variability of the density and distribution of the vasa vasorum in the proximo-distal direction. The endothelium was detected by immunohistochemistry using the von Willebrand factor. We quantified the number of microvessel profiles per section area and the relative distance of the microvessels from the outer border of the adventitia. The VV did not exhibit a preferential orientation in the varicose veins. VV density profiles were highest in the middle third of the venous wall and lowest in the inner third of the venous wall. Both the density and distribution of VV were uniform along the veins, and no differences were observed between the great and small saphenous veins. The VV density was statistically independent of the relative distance from the adventitia. The usability of this technique for perioperative frozen sections remains to be tested.

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Zbyněk Tonar

Charles University in Prague

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Petra Kochová

University of West Bohemia

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Ivan Míšek

University of Veterinary and Pharmaceutical Sciences Brno

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Petra Matulová

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Robert Cimrman

University of West Bohemia

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Gunter F. Egger

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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Milena Kralickova

Charles University in Prague

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Anja Joachim

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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Armin Saalmüller

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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Hanna Lucia Worliczek

University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna

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