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Dive into the research topics where Manfred Reinacher is active.

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Featured researches published by Manfred Reinacher.


Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine | 2003

Comparison of different tests to diagnose feline infectious peritonitis.

Katrin Hartmann; Christina Binder; Johannes Hirschberger; Dana Cole; Manfred Reinacher; Simone Schroo; Jens Frost; Herman Egberink; Hans Lutz; W. Hermanns

Clinical data from 488 cats (1979–2000) with histopathologically confirmed feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) and 620 comparable controls were evaluated retrospectively to assess the value of several diagnostic tests frequently used in the evaluation of cats with suspected FIP. Diagnostic utility of serum albumin to globulin ratio for the diagnosis of FIP was greater than of the utility of serum total protein and ‐/‐globulin concentrations. Diagnostic utility of these variables was higher when performed on effusion. On effusion, positive and negative predictive values of Rivaltas test, a test that distinguishes between exudates and transudates (0.86 and 0.97), anti‐coronavirus antibody detection (0.90 and 0.79), and immunofluorescence staining of coronavirus antigen in macrophages (1.00 and 0.57) were investigated. The positive and negative predictive values of presence of anti‐coronavirus antibodies were 0.44 and 0.90, respectively, antibody concentrations (1:1,600) were 0.94 and 0.88, presence of immune complexes measured by a competitive enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay were 0.67 and 0.84, and detection of viral RNA by serum reverse‐transcrip‐tase polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) were 0.90 and 0.47. Effusion RT‐PCR was performed in 6 cats; it was positive in all 5 cats with FIP and negative in the cat with another disease. Diagnostic assays on the fluid in cats with body effusion had good predictive values. Definitive diagnosis of FIP on the basis of measurement of various variables in serum was not possible. Serum tests can only be used to facilitate the decision for more invasive diagnostic methods.


Veterinary Pathology | 2005

Morphologic Features and Development of Granulomatous Vasculitis in Feline Infectious Peritonitis

Anja Kipar; H. May; S. Menger; M. Weber; W. Leukert; Manfred Reinacher

Feline infectious peritonitis (FIP) is a fatal, Coronavirus (CoV)-induced systemic disease in cats, characterized by granulomas in organs and granulomatous vasculitis. This study describes the morphologic features of granulomatous vasculitis in FIP as well as its development in the course of monocyte-associated feline CoV (FCoV) viremia in five naturally infected Domestic Shorthair cats with FIP. Monocyte-associated FCoV viremia was demonstrated by immunohistology, RNA in situ hybridization, and electron micropscopy. Granulomatous phlebitis at different stages of development was observed. Vasculitic processes ranged from attachment and emigration of FCoV-infected monocytes to vascular/perivascular granulomatous infiltrates with destruction of the vascular basal lamina. Monocytes as well as perivascular macrophages were activated because they were strongly positive for CD18 and expressed cytokines (tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-1β) and matrix metalloproteinase-9. In addition, general activation of endothelial cells, represented by major histocompatibility complex II upregulation, was observed in all cases. These results confirm FIP as a monocyte-triggered systemic disease and demonstrate the central role of activated monocytes in FIP vasculitis.


FEBS Letters | 1988

Pyruvate kinase type M2 is phosphorylated at tyrosine residues in cells transformed by Rous sarcoma virus

Peter Presek; Manfred Reinacher; Erich Eigenbrodt

Chicken embryo cells (CECs) contain pyruvate kinase (PK) type M2 (M2‐PK). Transformation of CECs by Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) leads to a reduction in the affinity of PK for the substrate phosphoenolpyruvate. In vitro, M2‐PK can be phosphorylated at tyrosine residues by pp60v‐src, the transforming protein of RSV. To study tyrosine phosphorylation of M2‐PK in intact RSV‐transformed cells, the protein was immunoprecipitated from 32P‐labeled normal and RSV‐SR‐A‐transformed CECs. Phosphoamino acid analysis of immunoprecipitated M2‐PK revealed that M2‐PK of both normal and transformed CECs contained phosphoserine and small amounts of phosphothreonine. Only M2‐PK of transformed CECs contained phosphotyrosine in addition. For enzyme kinetic studies M2‐PK was partially purified by chromatography upon DEAE‐Sephacel and hydroxyapatite. A decreased affinity for phosphoenolpyruvate was observed 3 h after the onset of transformation using the temperature‐sensitive mutant of RSV, ts‐NY 68. The kinetic changes were correlated with tyrosine phosphorylation of M2‐PK, but there is no direct evidence that they are caused by post‐translational modification of the enzyme.


Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery | 2004

High viral loads despite absence of clinical and pathological findings in cats experimentally infected with feline coronavirus (FCoV) type I and in naturally FCoV-infected cats

Marina L. Meli; Anja Kipar; C Müller; K Jenal; Enikő Gönczi; Nicole Borel; Danielle Gunn-Moore; S Chalmers; F Lin; Manfred Reinacher; Hans Lutz

Specified pathogen-free cats were naturally infected with FCoV or experimentally infected with FCoV type I. Seroconversion was determined and the course of infection was monitored by measuring the FCoV loads in faeces, whole blood, plasma and/or monocytes. Tissue samples collected at necropsy were examined for viral load and histopathological changes. Experimentally infected animals started shedding virus as soon as 2 days after infection. They generally displayed the highest viral loads in colon, ileum and mesenteric lymph nodes. Seroconversion occurred 3–4 weeks post infection. Naturally infected cats were positive for FCoV antibodies and monocyte-associated FCoV viraemia prior to death. At necropsy, most animals tested positive for viral shedding and FCoV RNA was found in spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes and bone marrow. Both experimentally and naturally infected cats remained clinically healthy. Pathological findings were restricted to generalized lymphatic hyperplasia. These findings demonstrate the presence of systemic FCoV infection with high viral loads in the absence of clinical and pathological signs.


Virchows Archiv B Cell Pathology Including Molecular Pathology | 1981

Immunohistological demonstration of the same type of pyruvate kinase isoenzyme (M2-Pk) in tumors of chicken and rat

Manfred Reinacher; Erich Eigenbrodt

SummaryTumors of chicken and rat contain the M2-type of pyruvate kinase isoenzyme. The amount of this isoenzyme is significantly higher in malignant tumors compared with benign tumors. No alteration of the normal pyruvate kinase isoenzyme pattern was found in hyperplastic tissue.


Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 1989

Diseases associated with spontaneous feline leukemia virus (FeLV) infection in cats

Manfred Reinacher

Abstract More than 2000 cats sent for necropsy in order to provide a diagnosis were investigated immunohistologically using paraffin sections for the presence of a persistent infection with feline leukemia virus (FeLV). The spectrum of neoplastic and non-neoplastic diseases associated significantly with FeLV infection was determined statistically. Three-quarters of the cats with persistent FeLV infections died of non-neoplastic diseases and about 23% died of tumors, nearly exclusively those of the leukemia/lymphoma disease complex. A strong association with liver degeneration, icterus and a FeLV-associated enteritis was found in addition to the known association with non-neoplastic diseases and conditions such as anemia, bacterial secondary infections and respiratory tract inflammations due to the immunosuppressive effect of FeLV, hemorrhages and feline infectious peritonitis. Surprisingly, diseases and conditions like feline infectious panleukopenia, enteritis (of other types than FeLV-associated enteritis and feline infectious panleukopenia), glomerulonephritis, uremia and hemorrhagic cystitis were not associated with persistent FeLV infection. Another unexpected finding was that most pathogenic infectious agents demonstrated in the cats were not FeLV-associated either. Thus, immunosuppression due to FeLV infection seems to make the animals susceptible to certain pathogenic infectious agents, but not to the majority.


Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery | 2006

Natural FCoV infection: cats with FIP exhibit significantly higher viral loads than healthy infected cats.

Anja Kipar; Keith E. Baptiste; Andreas Barth; Manfred Reinacher

Natural feline coronavirus (FCoV) infection has been shown to not only induce intestinal infection with viral shedding, but also systemic infection which either remains without clinical signs or leads to feline infectious peritonitis (FIP). As systemic infection is not the key event in the development of FIP, the question arises as to whether a potential difference in viral load might be of importance. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to quantitatively assess feline coronavirus (FCoV) RNA loads in haemolymphatic tissues of healthy, long-term FCoV-infected cats and cats with FIP. In cats that died from FIP, viral loads were significantly higher, indicating a higher rate of viral replication or a reduced capacity for viral clearance in cats developing and/or suffering from FIP.


Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2001

Cytokine mRNA levels in isolated feline monocytes.

Anja Kipar; Christian M. Leutenegger; U. Hetzel; Margarete K. Akens; Caroline N. Mislin; Manfred Reinacher; Hans Lutz

Real-time PCR systems were developed to quantitate cytokine expression in short-time cultivated feline monocytes. Feline-specific interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) primers as well as TaqMan probes were designed and were adapted to a quantitative PCR system which had been previously established for feline IL-10 and IL-12 p40. Quantitative analysis of cytokine messenger RNA (mRNA) transcription based on the comparison of the cytokine with the housekeeping gene feline glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), providing universally expressed mRNA. GAPDH mRNA was readily detectable in cDNA prepared from short-time cultivated peripheral blood monocytes. Cytokine mRNA was demonstrated in all samples at variable amounts. IL-1beta and TNF-alpha mRNA was constitutively expressed whereas IL-6, IL-10 and IL-12 p40 mRNA was generally expressed at a lower level and was occasionally not detected. There was a great variability of cytokine production between individual cats and at different time points in the same cat.


Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 2008

Efficacy of a continuous, multiagent chemotherapeutic protocol versus a short-term single-agent protocol in dogs with lymphoma

Daniela Simon; Sol Naranjo Moreno; Johannes Hirschberger; Andreas Moritz; Barbara Kohn; Stephan Neumann; Konrad Jurina; Stefan Scharvogel; Claudia Schwedes; Manfred Reinacher; Martin Beyerbach; Ingo Nolte

OBJECTIVE To compare response rates and remission and survival times in dogs with lymphoma treated with a continuous, multiagent, doxorubicin-based chemotherapeutic protocol or with a short-term single-agent protocol incorporating doxorubicin. DESIGN Nonrandomized controlled clinical trial. ANIMALS 114 dogs with lymphoma. PROCEDURES Dogs were treated with a chemotherapeutic protocol consisting of L-asparaginase, vincristine, cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, methotrexate, and prednisolone (n=87) or doxorubicin alone (27). RESULTS 63 of 86 (73%) dogs treated with the multiagent protocol (data on response was unavailable for 1 dog) and 14 of 27 (52%) dogs treated with the single-agent protocol had a complete remission. Dogs with lymphoma classified as substage<or=and dogs with a high BUN concentration at the time of initial diagnosis were significantly less likely to have a complete remission. No significant difference in remission or survival time could be demonstrated between treatment groups. Incidence of hematologic and gastrointestinal tract toxicoses did not differ between treatment groups, with the exception that vomiting was more common among dogs treated with the multiagent protocol. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE In this population of dogs, we were not able to identify any significant difference in remission or survival times between dogs with lymphoma treated with a continuous, multiagent chemotherapeutic protocol and dogs treated with a short-term single-agent protocol involving doxorubicin.


Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2006

Natural feline coronavirus infection : Differences in cytokine patterns in association with the outcome of infection

Anja Kipar; Marina L. Meli; Klaus Failing; Tatjana Euler; Maria Alice Gomes-Keller; Dirk Schwartz; Hans Lutz; Manfred Reinacher

Abstract Natural and experimental feline coronavirus (FCoV) infection leads to systemic viral spread via monocyte-associated viraemia and induces systemic proliferation of monocytes/macrophages. In the majority of naturally infected animals, FCoV infection remains subclinical and is associated with generalised B and T cell hyperplasia, but no other pathological findings. A minority of cats, however, develop feline infectious peritonitis (FIP), a fatal systemic granulomatous disease. This is generally accompanied by B and T cell depletion. The obvious functional differences of lymphatic tissues in FCoV-infected cats with and without FIP suggest that they contribute to the outcome of FCoV infection. This study attempted to evaluate the functional changes in haemolymphatic tissues after natural FCoV infection, with special emphasis on the magnitude, phenotype and function of the monocyte/macrophage population. The spleen, mesenteric lymph nodes and bone marrow from naturally FCoV-infected cats with and without FIP and specific pathogen-free (SPF) control cats were examined for the quantity and activation state of monocytes/macrophages both by immunohistology and by quantitative real time PCR for the transcription of interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12 p40, tumour necrosis factor (TNF), granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF), macrophage-CSF (M-CSF) and GM-CSF. Compared to cats with FIP, FCoV-infected cats without FIP exhibited significantly higher IL-10 levels in the spleen and significantly lower levels of IL-6, G- and M-CSF in mesenteric lymph nodes. In cats with FIP, however, IL-12 p40 levels were significantly lower in lymphatic tissues in comparison to both SPF cats and FCoV-infected cats without FIP. In comparison to SPF cats, FIP cats had significantly higher IL-1β levels and lower TNF levels in mesenteric lymph nodes and lower M-CSF levels in the spleen. Findings indicate that FCoV-infected cats which do not develop FIP are able to mount an effective FCoV-specific immune response and can avoid excessive macrophage activation and FIP, possibly by upregulation of IL-10 production. Development of FIP, however, might be due to a lack of IL-12 which inhibits an effective cellular immune response and allows for monocyte/macrophage activation and the development of FIP.

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