Linda Männ
University of Duisburg-Essen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Linda Männ.
Acta Neuropathologica | 2015
Jens Neumann; Monika Riek-Burchardt; Josephine Herz; Thorsten R. Doeppner; Rebecca König; Heiko Hütten; Eloho Etemire; Linda Männ; Anika Klingberg; Thomas Fischer; Michael Görtler; Hans-Jochen Heinze; Peter Reichardt; Burkhart Schraven; Dirk M. Hermann; Klaus G. Reymann; Matthias Gunzer
AbstractNeuronal injury from ischemic stroke is aggravated by invading peripheral immune cells. Early infiltrates of neutrophil granulocytes and T-cells influence the outcome of stroke. So far, however, neither the timing nor the cellular dynamics of neutrophil entry, its consequences for the invaded brain area, or the relative importance of T-cells has been extensively studied in an intravital setting. Here, we have used intravital two-photon microscopy to document neutrophils and brain-resident microglia in mice after induction of experimental stroke. We demonstrated that neutrophils immediately rolled, firmly adhered, and transmigrated at sites of endothelial activation in stroke-affected brain areas. The ensuing neutrophil invasion was associated with local blood–brain barrier breakdown and infarct formation. Brain-resident microglia recognized both endothelial damage and neutrophil invasion. In a cooperative manner, they formed cytoplasmic processes to physically shield activated endothelia and trap infiltrating neutrophils. Interestingly, the systemic blockade of very-late-antigen-4 immediately and very effectively inhibited the endothelial interaction and brain entry of neutrophils. This treatment thereby strongly reduced the ischemic tissue injury and effectively protected the mice from stroke-associated behavioral impairment. Behavioral preservation was also equally well achieved with the antibody-mediated depletion of myeloid cells or specifically neutrophils. In contrast, T-cell depletion more effectively reduced the infarct volume without improving the behavioral performance. Thus, neutrophil invasion of the ischemic brain is rapid, massive, and a key mediator of functional impairment, while peripheral T-cells promote brain damage. Acutely depleting T-cells and inhibiting brain infiltration of neutrophils might, therefore, be a powerful early stroke treatment.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Anna-Maria Rolle; Mike Hasenberg; Christopher R. Thornton; Djamschid Solouk-Saran; Linda Männ; Juliane Weski; Andreas Maurer; Eliane Fischer; Philipp R. Spycher; Roger Schibli; Frédéric Boschetti; Sabine Stegemann-Koniszewski; Dunja Bruder; Gregory Severin; Stella E. Autenrieth; Sven Krappmann; Genna Davies; Bernd J. Pichler; Matthias Gunzer; Stefan Wiehr
Significance Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) is a frequently fatal lung disease of immunocompromised patients, and is being increasingly reported in individuals with underlying respiratory diseases. Proven diagnosis of IPA currently relies on lung biopsy and detection of diagnostic biomarkers in serum, or in bronchoalveolar lavage fluids. This study supports the use of immunoPET/MR imaging for the diagnosis of IPA, which is so far not used for diagnosis. The antibody-guided imaging technique allows accurate, noninvasive and rapid detection of fungal lung infection and discrimination of IPA from bacterial lung infections and general inflammatory responses. This work demonstrates the applicability of molecular imaging for IPA detection and its potential for aiding clinical diagnosis and management of the disease in the neutropenic host. Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA) is a life-threatening lung disease caused by the fungus Aspergillus fumigatus, and is a leading cause of invasive fungal infection-related mortality and morbidity in patients with hematological malignancies and bone marrow transplants. We developed and tested a novel probe for noninvasive detection of A. fumigatus lung infection based on antibody-guided positron emission tomography and magnetic resonance (immunoPET/MR) imaging. Administration of a [64Cu]DOTA-labeled A. fumigatus-specific monoclonal antibody (mAb), JF5, to neutrophil-depleted A. fumigatus-infected mice allowed specific localization of lung infection when combined with PET. Optical imaging with a fluorochrome-labeled version of the mAb showed colocalization with invasive hyphae. The mAb-based newly developed PET tracer [64Cu]DOTA-JF5 distinguished IPA from bacterial lung infections and, in contrast to [18F]FDG-PET, discriminated IPA from a general increase in metabolic activity associated with lung inflammation. To our knowledge, this is the first time that antibody-guided in vivo imaging has been used for noninvasive diagnosis of a fungal lung disease (IPA) of humans, an approach with enormous potential for diagnosis of infectious diseases and with potential for clinical translation.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017
Anika Klingberg; Anja Hasenberg; Isis Ludwig-Portugall; Anna Medyukhina; Linda Männ; Alexandra Brenzel; Daniel R. Engel; Marc Thilo Figge; Christian Kurts; Matthias Gunzer
The total number of glomeruli is a fundamental parameter of kidney function but very difficult to determine using standard methodology. Here, we counted all individual glomeruli in murine kidneys and sized the capillary tufts by combining in vivo fluorescence labeling of endothelial cells, a novel tissue-clearing technique, lightsheet microscopy, and automated registration by image analysis. Total hands-on time per organ was <1 hour, and automated counting/sizing was finished in <3 hours. We also investigated the novel use of ethyl-3-phenylprop-2-enoate (ethyl cinnamate) as a nontoxic solvent-based clearing reagent that can be handled without specific safety measures. Ethyl cinnamate rapidly cleared all tested organs, including calcified bone, but the fluorescence of proteins and immunohistochemical labels was maintained over weeks. Using ethyl cinnamate-cleared kidneys, we also quantified the average creatinine clearance rate per glomerulus. This parameter decreased in the first week of experimental nephrotoxic nephritis, whereas reduction in glomerular numbers occurred much later. Our approach delivers fundamental parameters of renal function, and because of its ease of use and speed, it is suitable for high-throughput analysis and could greatly facilitate studies of the effect of kidney diseases on whole-organ physiology.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2016
Katrin Moses; Johanna C. Klein; Linda Männ; Anika Klingberg; Matthias Gunzer; Sven Brandau
Expansion of Ly‐6G+ myeloid cells has been reported in most murine cancer models. However, divergent findings exist regarding the role and effect of these cells on host immunity and tumor progression. Antibody‐mediated depletion of Ly‐6G+ cells is a common technique to assess the in vivo relevance of these cells. Interpretation of results crucially depends on the efficacy and course of depletion. We established murine head and neck cancer models and analyzed the efficacy of antibody‐mediated depletion by flow cytometry, conventional histology, and intravital imaging with a novel Ly‐6G–transgenic mouse model. The first phase of depletion was characterized by effective elimination of Ly‐6G+ cells from the peripheral blood. Nevertheless, viable, resistant cells were found to reside in the tumor tissue and spleen. This peripheral depletion phase was associated with high systemic levels of granulocyte colony‐stimulating factor and KC and enhanced splenic production of Ly‐6G+ cells. Even under sustained treatment with either αGr‐1 or αLy‐6G antibodies, peripheral blood depletion ended after approximately 1 wk and was followed by reappearance of immature Ly‐6G+ cells with an immunoregulatory phenotype. Reappearance of these depletion‐resistant immature cells was enhanced in tumor‐bearing, compared with naïve, control mice. Collectively, our data suggest that depletion of Ly‐6G+ myeloid cells in tumor‐bearing mice is counteracted by the persistence of intratumoral cells, enhanced extramedullary granulopoiesis, and accelerated reappearance of immature cells. Hence, extensive monitoring of in vivo kinetics and tissue distribution of Ly‐6G+ cells is required in depletion studies.
European Journal of Immunology | 2016
Linda Männ; Nora Kochupurakkal; Christian Martin; Eva Verjans; Anika Klingberg; Simon Sody; Andreas Kraus; Jill Dalimot; Eileen Bergmüller; Steffen Jung; Sylvia Voortman; Elke Winterhager; Sven Brandau; Natalio Garbi; Michael O. Kurrer; Urs Eriksson; Matthias Gunzer; Mike Hasenberg
To assess the role of alveolar macrophages (AMs) during a pulmonary Aspergillus fumigatus infection AMs were depleted by intratracheal application of diphtheria toxin (DTX) to transgenic CD11c.DTR mice prior to fungal infection. Unexpectedly, all CD11c.DTR mice treated with DTX died within 4–5 days, whether being infected with A. fumigatus or not. Despite measurable impact of DTX on lung functional parameters, these constrictions could not explain the high mortality rate. Instead, DTX‐treated CD11c.DTR animals developed fulminant myocarditis (FM) characterized by massive leukocyte infiltration and myocardial cell destruction, including central parts of the hearts stimulus transmission system. In fact, standard limb lead ECG recordings of diseased but not healthy mice showed a “Brugada”‐like pattern with an abnormally high ST segment pointing to enhanced susceptibility for potential lethal arrhythmias. While CD11c.DTR mice are extensively used for the characterization of CD11c+ cells, including dendritic cells, several studies have already mentioned adverse side effects following DTX treatment. Our results demonstrate that this limitation is based on severe myocarditis but not on the expected lung constrictions, and has to be taken into consideration if this animal model is used. Based on these properties, however, the CD11c.DTR mouse might serve as useful animal model for FM.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018
Dana Westmeier; Djamschid Solouk-Saran; Cecilia Vallet; Svenja Siemer; Dominic Docter; Hermann Götz; Linda Männ; Anja Hasenberg; Angelina Hahlbrock; Kathrin Erler; Christoph Reinhardt; Oliver Schilling; Sven Becker; Matthias Gunzer; Mike Hasenberg; Shirley K. Knauer; Roland H. Stauber
Significance In this work, we demonstrate that nanoparticles rapidly assemble on spores under physiologically and ecologically relevant conditions. We provide in vitro and in vivo evidence that nanoparticle coating of the clinically most relevant airborne fungal pathogen, Aspergillus fumigatus, can affect the pathobiological identity and fate of both fungal spores and nanoparticles. Our findings suggest that nanoparticle coating of bioaerosols may be relevant for ecology and human health. Airborne fungal pathogens, predominantly Aspergillus fumigatus, can cause severe respiratory tract diseases. Here we show that in environments, fungal spores can already be decorated with nanoparticles. Using representative controlled nanoparticle models, we demonstrate that various nanoparticles, but not microparticles, rapidly and stably associate with spores, without specific functionalization. Nanoparticle-spore complex formation was enhanced by small nanoparticle size rather than by material, charge, or “stealth” modifications and was concentration-dependently reduced by the formation of environmental or physiological biomolecule coronas. Assembly of nanoparticle-spore surface hybrid structures affected their pathobiology, including reduced sensitivity against defensins, uptake into phagocytes, lung cell toxicity, and TLR/cytokine-mediated inflammatory responses. Following infection of mice, nanoparticle-spore complexes were detectable in the lung and less efficiently eliminated by the pulmonary immune defense, thereby enhancing A. fumigatus infections in immunocompromised animals. Collectively, self-assembly of nanoparticle-fungal complexes affects their (patho)biological identity, which may impact human health and ecology.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2017
Linda Männ; Anika Klingberg; Matthias Gunzer; Mike Hasenberg
Light-sheet fluorescence microscopy (LSFM), in combination with chemical clearing protocols, has become the gold standard for analyzing fluorescently labelled structures in large biological specimens, and is down to cellular resolution. Meanwhile, the constant refinement of underlying protocols and the enhanced availability of specialized commercial systems enable us to investigate the microstructure of whole mouse organs and even allow for the characterization of cellular behavior in various live-cell imaging approaches. Here, we describe a protocol for the spatial whole-mount visualization and quantification of the CD45+ leukocyte population in inflamed mouse hearts. The method employs a transgenic mouse strain (CD11c.DTR)that has recently been shown to serve as a robust, inducible model for the study of the development of fulminant fatal myocarditis, characterized by lethal cardiac arrhythmias. This protocol includes myocarditis induction, intravital antibody-mediated cell staining, organ preparation, and LSFM with subsequent computer-assisted image post-processing. Although presented as a highly-adapted method for our particular scientific question, the protocol represents the blueprint of an easily adjustable system that can also target completely different fluorescent structures in other organs and even in other species.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Christopher N. Hahn; Maria del Pilar Martin; Xiao-Yan Zhou; Linda Männ; Alessandra d’Azzo
Nature Methods | 2015
Anja Hasenberg; Mike Hasenberg; Linda Männ; Franziska Neumann; Lars Borkenstein; Manuel Stecher; Andreas Kraus; Daniel R. Engel; Anika Klingberg; Pegah Seddigh; Zeinab Abdullah; Sabrina Klebow; Swen Engelmann; Annegret Reinhold; Sven Brandau; Michaela Seeling; Ari Waisman; Burkhart Schraven; Joachim R Göthert; Falk Nimmerjahn; Matthias Gunzer
/data/revues/00916749/unassign/S0091674917312824/ | 2017
Tristan Holland; Dirk Wohlleber; Samira Marx; Thomas Kreutzberg; Salvador Vento-Asturias; Christine Schmitt-Mbamunyo; Meike Welz; Marianne Janas; Karl Komander; Sarah Eickhoff; Anna Brewitz; Mike Hasenberg; Linda Männ; Matthias Gunzer; Christoph Wilhelm; Wolfgang Kastenmüller; Percy A. Knolle; Zeinab Abdullah; Christian Kurts; Natalio Garbi