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Dive into the research topics where Matthias Lenk is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthias Lenk.


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2010

Susceptibility of koi × crucian carp and koi × goldfish hybrids to koi herpesvirus (KHV) and the development of KHV disease (KHVD)

Sven Bergmann; Jacek Sadowski; Maciej Kielpinski; M. Bartlomiejczyk; Dieter Fichtner; Roland Riebe; Matthias Lenk; Jolanta Kempter

Hybrids of koi, Cyprinus carpio x crucian carp, Carassius carassius and koi x goldfish, Carassius auratus, proved to be susceptible to koi herpesvirus (KHV, syn. CyHV-3) and developed KHV disease (KHVD). While hybrids of koi x goldfish were partly resistant to mortality following infection by immersion, most koi x crucian carp hybrids died after bath infection. KHV DNA was detected in dead fish but also in all surviving animals by different polymerase chain reactions (PCRs). According to these results, hybrid crossbreeding does not seem to prevent severe losses associated with KHV in terms of inducing KHVD. The present study showed severe losses after a waterborne KHV infection of between 35% and 100% in koi x goldfish and koi x crucian carp hybrids as well as in SPF carp.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2010

Rapid characterisation of cell cultures by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation mass spectrometric typing.

Axel Karger; Barbara Bettin; Matthias Lenk; Thomas C. Mettenleiter

Misidentification or cross-contamination of cultured cell lines used for scientific or diagnostic purposes are a continuing challenge for laboratories and tissue culture repositories. Institutions dedicated to veterinary virology are particularly affected since the variety of viruses under investigation often requires the parallel maintenance of numerous different cell lines from different host species. To provide rapid but yet exact characterisation of cell cultures, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometric typing was applied to 66 cell culture samples representing 34 species from insects to primates. A reference spectra library was generated that allows unambiguously the identification of all 66 cell lines. Spectrum-based phylogenetic analysis showed that clustering was mainly driven by taxonomy and allows the species determination of unknown samples.


PLOS ONE | 2012

A Novel Porcine In Vitro Model of the Blood-Cerebrospinal Fluid Barrier with Strong Barrier Function

Mira Schroten; Franz-Georg Hanisch; Natascha Quednau; Carolin Stump; Roland Riebe; Matthias Lenk; Hartwig Wolburg; Tobias Tenenbaum; Christian Schwerk

Epithelial cells of the plexus choroideus form the structural basis of the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCSFB). In vitro models of the BCSFB presenting characteristics of a functional barrier are of significant scientific interest as tools for examination of BCSFB function. Due to a lack of suitable cell lines as in vitro models, primary porcine plexus epithelial cells were subjected to a series of selective cultivation steps until a stable continuous subcultivatable epithelial cell line (PCP-R) was established. PCP-R cells grow in a regular polygonal pattern with a doubling time of 28–36 h. At a cell number of 1.5×105 in a 24-well plate confluence is reached in 56–72 h. Cells are cytokeratin positive and chromosomal analysis revealed 56 chromosomes at peak (84th subculture). Employing reverse transcription PCR mRNA expression of several transporters and components of cell junctions could be detected. The latter includes tight junction components like Claudin-1 and -3, ZO-1, and Occludin, and the adherens junction protein E-cadherin. Cellular localization studies of ZO-1, Occludin and Claudin-1 by immunofluorescence and morphological analysis by electron microscopy demonstrated formation of a dense tight junction structure. Importantly, when grown on cell culture inserts PCP-R developed typical characteristics of a functional BCSFB including high transepithelial electrical resistance above 600 Ω×cm2 as well as low permeability for macromolecules. In summary, our data suggest the PCP-R cell line as a suitable in vitro model of the porcine BCSFB.


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2014

Isolation and partial characterization of a novel virus from different carp species suffering gill necrosis – ultrastructure and morphogenesis

Harald Granzow; Dieter Fichtner; Heike Schütze; Matthias Lenk; B. Dresenkamp; H. Nieper; Thomas C. Mettenleiter

Two isolates of a novel enveloped RNA virus were obtained from carp and koi carp with gill necrosis. Both isolates behaved identically and could be propagated in different cyprinid cell lines forming large syncytia. The virus was sensitive to lipid solvents and neither exhibited haemadsorption/haemagglutination nor reverse transcriptase activity. Mature virus particles displayed a spherical shape with diameter of 100-350 nm after negative staining and 100-300 nm in ultrathin sections, covered by short projections of 8-10 nm in length. Maturation of virus progeny was shown to occur by budding and envelopment of the filamentous helical nucleocapsids at the cell surface. A detailed comparison of ultrastructure and morphogenesis of the novel virus isolates with selected arena-, ortho- and paramyxoviruses as possible candidates for evaluation of taxonomic classification yielded no consistency in all phenotypic features. Thus, on the basis of ultrastructure the novel virus isolates could not be assigned unequivocally to any established virus family.


PLOS ONE | 2015

A Bovine Cell Line That Can Be Infected by Natural Sheep Scrapie Prions

Anja M. Oelschlegel; Markus Geissen; Matthias Lenk; Roland Riebe; Marlies Angermann; Hermann Schaetzl; Martin H. Groschup

Cell culture systems represent a crucial part in basic prion research; yet, cell lines that are susceptible to prions, especially to field isolated prions that were not adapted to rodents, are very rare. The purpose of this study was to identify and characterize a cell line that was susceptible to ruminant-derived prions and to establish a stable prion infection within it. Based on species and tissue of origin as well as PrP expression rate, we pre-selected a total of 33 cell lines that were then challenged with natural and with mouse propagated BSE or scrapie inocula. Here, we report the successful infection of a non-transgenic bovine cell line, a sub-line of the bovine kidney cell line MDBK, with natural sheep scrapie prions. This cell line retained the scrapie infection for more than 200 passages. Selective cloning resulted in cell populations with increased accumulation of PrPres, although this treatment was not mandatory for retaining the infection. The infection remained stable, even under suboptimal culture conditions. The resulting infectivity of the cells was confirmed by mouse bioassay (Tgbov mice, Tgshp mice). We believe that PES cells used together with other prion permissive cell lines will prove a valuable tool for ongoing efforts to understand and defeat prions and prion diseases.


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2017

Validation of a KHV antibody enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)

Sven Bergmann; Qing Wang; Weiwei Zeng; Yingying Li; Yingying Wang; Marek Matras; Michal Reichert; Dieter Fichtner; Matthias Lenk; T. Morin; Niels Jørgen Olesen; Helle Frank Skall; P.-Y. Lee; Shuchen Zheng; Sean J. Monaghan; S. Reiche; W. Fuchs; M. Kotler; Keith Way; G. Bräuer; K. Böttcher; A. Kappe; Jolanta Kiełpińska

Koi herpesvirus (KHV) causes KHV disease (KHVD). The virus is highly contagious in carp or koi and can induce a high mortality. Latency and, in some cases, a lack of signs presents a challenge for virus detection. Appropriate immunological detection methods for anti-KHV antibodies have not yet been fully validated for KHV. Therefore, it was developed and validated an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect KHV antibodies. The assay was optimized with respect to plates, buffers, antigens and assay conditions. It demonstrated high diagnostic and analytical sensitivity and specificity and was particularly useful at the pond or farm levels. Considering the scale of the carp and koi industry worldwide, this assay represents an important practical tool for the indirect detection of KHV, also in the absence of clinical signs.


Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2001

Detection of European Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus in Porcine Alveolar Macrophages by Two-colour Immunofluorescence and In-situ Hybridization-immunohistochemistry Double Labelling☆

Jens Peter Teifke; Malte Dauber; Dieter Fichtner; Matthias Lenk; Ulf Polster; Emilie Weiland; Jörg Beyer


Immunogenetics | 2014

Identification of a gene for an ancient cytokine, interleukin 15-like, in mammals; interleukins 2 and 15 co-evolved with this third family member, all sharing binding motifs for IL-15Rα

Johannes Martinus Dijkstra; Fumio Takizawa; Uwe Fischer; Maik Friedrich; Verónica Soto-Lampe; Christophe Lefevre; Matthias Lenk; Axel Karger; Taei Matsui; Keiichiro Hashimoto


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2017

Detection of Herpesvirus anguillae (AngHV-1) in European eel Anguilla anguilla (L.) originating from northern Poland—assessment of suitability of selected diagnostic methods

Tuan Thuc Nguyen; Yeonhwa Jin; Jolanta Kiełpińska; Sven Bergmann; Matthias Lenk; Remigiusz Panicz


Archive | 2017

Validation of a KHV antibody enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) (Forthcoming)

Sven Bergmann; Qing Wang; Weiwei Zeng; Yingying Li; Yingying Wang; Marek Matras; Michal Reichert; Dieter Fichtner; Matthias Lenk; Thierry Morin; Niels Jørgen Olesen; Helle Frank Skall; Pei-Yu Lee; Shuchen Zheng; Sean J. Monaghan

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Dieter Fichtner

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Martin H. Groschup

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Sven Bergmann

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Jolanta Kiełpińska

West Pomeranian University of Technology

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Axel Karger

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Malte Dauber

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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