Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2913906524> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 items per page.
- W2913906524 abstract "In multiples sclerosis (MS), an immune-mediated disease of the central nervous system (CNS), inflammation, demyelination and axonal degeneration are responsible for the variety of neurological disabilities. The basis for the disease progression is ongoing myelin destruction and a failure of remyelination resulting in progressive axonal damage with limited capacity to regenerate. Therefore, one of the main objectives in multiples sclerosis research is to identify the molecular mechanisms leading to a failure of remyelination and to identify potential targets for future therapeutic approaches. Transcriptional profiling has become a powerful tool in exploratory research and led to essential insights in the complex pathomechanisms of demyelinating diseases. Transcriptional analysis in demyelinating diseases suggested an involvement of cholesterol metabolism as a possible cause for inadequate remyelination in progressive demyelinating diseases. Therefore, the first part of this study addresses the possible interaction of dyslipidemia or disturbances of the cholesterol metabolism in Theiler's murine encephalomyelitis (TME), an experimentally, virus-induced, inflammatory, demyelinating disease of the spinal cord in susceptible mouse strains. Consequently, expression of genes associated to cholesterol biosynthesis and metabolism, composition of the body's major lipid repositories and diet-induced, systemic hypercholesterolemia were examined in TME using histology, immunohistochemistry, serum clinical chemistry, microarray analysis and high-performance thin layer chromatography. TME-virus (TMEV)-infected mice showed progressive loss of motor performance and demyelinating leukomyelitis. Gene expression associated with cholesterol biosynthesis was overall down-regulated in the spinal cord of TMEV-infected animals. Spinal cord levels of galactocerebroside and sphingomyelin were reduced on day 196 post TMEV infection. Paigen diet induced serum hypercholesterolemia and hepatic lipidosis. However, high dietary fat and cholesterol intake led to no significant differences in clinical course, inflammatory response, astrocytosis, and the amount of demyelination and remyelination in the spinal cord of TMEV-infected animals. The results suggest that down-regulation of cholesterol biosynthesis is a transcriptional marker for demyelination, quantitative loss of myelin-specific lipids, but not cholesterol occurs late in chronic demyelination, and serum hypercholesterolemia exhibited no significant effect on TMEV infection. As the results of the first part of this thesis have shown, gene expression profiling using microarray technology represents a potent method to discover novel relationships and interactions in complex diseases. The large-scale data sets generated by microarrays help to understand complex signaling pathways and pathomechanistic processes in different somatic cell types and tissues, under various extrinsic and intrinsic conditions. Because microarray analysis became a sensitive, reliable and robust method during the last few years a vast amount of microarray gene expression data sets were produced and are available through public repositories. New possibilities lay in the re-analysis or combination of the freely and easily accessible information. To explore the potential of this data, a basic knowledge of possible methods and applications is crucial. Therefore, the second part of the study presents an application-oriented introduction to microarray data analysis techniques for users without detailed bioinformatic knowledge from the point of few of a veterinary pathologist. In particular, the present report aims to clarify, which data analysis techniques are available and what are the most appropriate methods for a specific research purpose. A main goal of the second part of the study is to assist the reader in the transformation of the huge amount of information obtained by a single experiment into biological knowledge and to point out important challenges and pitfalls by presenting real representative data that illustrate common problems in data analysis. Both parts of this thesis highlight the great potential of novel high-throughput technologies in both, data-driven analysis for the generation of new hypothesis, and hypothesis-driven approaches to study particular signaling pathways and regulatory interactions. By means of these methodologies an interesting novel association of cholesterol metabolism and demyelination was found." @default.
- W2913906524 created "2019-02-21" @default.
- W2913906524 creator A5041378711 @default.
- W2913906524 date "2016-01-01" @default.
- W2913906524 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W2913906524 title "Influence of a dietary-induced hypercholesterolemia on the pathogenesis of Theiler´s murine encephalomyelitis with special emphasis on transcriptional changes" @default.
- W2913906524 hasPublicationYear "2016" @default.
- W2913906524 type Work @default.
- W2913906524 sameAs 2913906524 @default.
- W2913906524 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2913906524 crossrefType "dissertation" @default.
- W2913906524 hasAuthorship W2913906524A5041378711 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C203014093 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2776985911 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2777619251 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2777899865 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2778531937 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2778609137 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2780640218 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C2781017270 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C529278444 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C169760540 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C203014093 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2776985911 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2777619251 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2777899865 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2778531937 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2778609137 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2780640218 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C2781017270 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C529278444 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C71924100 @default.
- W2913906524 hasConceptScore W2913906524C86803240 @default.
- W2913906524 hasLocation W29139065241 @default.
- W2913906524 hasOpenAccess W2913906524 @default.
- W2913906524 hasPrimaryLocation W29139065241 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W1006645997 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W111977046 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W1517510044 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W1983074248 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W1998008055 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2041220907 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2048791523 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2068353403 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2096738896 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2131463176 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2145415973 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2148433210 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2581477543 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2896451922 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2979370096 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W3042597692 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W3095773178 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W3153190779 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W60425281 @default.
- W2913906524 hasRelatedWork W2186255149 @default.
- W2913906524 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2913906524 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2913906524 magId "2913906524" @default.
- W2913906524 workType "dissertation" @default.