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Institution

University of Freiburg

EducationFreiburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
About: University of Freiburg is a education organization based out in Freiburg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Transplantation. The organization has 41992 authors who have published 77296 publications receiving 2896269 citations. The organization is also known as: alberto-ludoviciana & Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It has become clear that hydrophilic as well as hydrophobic preproteins use a common translocase in the outer mitochondrial membrane, but diverge to two distinct translocases in the inner membrane.
Abstract: The vast majority of mitochondrial proteins are synthesized in the cytosol and are imported into mitochondria by protein machineries located in the mitochondrial membranes. It has become clear that hydrophilic as well as hydrophobic preproteins use a common translocase in the outer mitochondrial membrane, but diverge to two distinct translocases in the inner membrane. The translocases are dynamic, high-molecular-weight complexes that have to provide specific means for the recognition of preproteins, channel formation and generation of import-driving forces.

528 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mouse experimental system that specifically targets microglia found TAK1 to be pivotal in CNS autoimmunity, and it is presented as a tool for future investigations of microglial function in the CNS.
Abstract: Microglia are brain macrophages and, as such, key immune-competent cells that can respond to environmental changes. Understanding the mechanisms of microglia-specific responses during pathologies is hence vital for reducing disease burden. The definition of microglial functions has so far been hampered by the lack of genetic in vivo approaches that allow discrimination of microglia from closely related peripheral macrophage populations in the body. Here we introduce a mouse experimental system that specifically targets microglia to examine the role of a mitogen-associated protein kinase kinase kinase (MAP3K), transforming growth factor (TGF)-β-activated kinase 1 (TAK1), during autoimmune inflammation. Conditional depletion of TAK1 in microglia only, not in neuroectodermal cells, suppressed disease, significantly reduced CNS inflammation and diminished axonal and myelin damage by cell-autonomous inhibition of the NF-κB, JNK and ERK1/2 pathways. Thus, we found TAK1 to be pivotal in CNS autoimmunity, and we present a tool for future investigations of microglial function in the CNS.

528 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the previously established regimen with an investigational regimen in which oxaliplatin was added to both preoperative chemoradiotherapy and postoperative chemotherapy.
Abstract: Summary Background Preoperative chemoradiotherapy with infusional fluorouracil, total mesorectal excision surgery, and postoperative chemotherapy with fluorouracil was established by the German CAO/ARO/AIO-94 trial as a standard combined modality treatment for locally advanced rectal cancer. Here we compare the previously established regimen with an investigational regimen in which oxaliplatin was added to both preoperative chemoradiotherapy and postoperative chemotherapy. Methods In this multicentre, open-label, randomised, phase 3 study we randomly assigned patients with rectal adenocarcinoma, clinically staged as cT3–4 or any node-positive disease, to two groups: a control group receiving standard fluorouracil-based combined modality treatment, consisting of preoperative radiotherapy of 50·4 Gy in 28 fractions plus infusional fluorouracil (1000 mg/m 2 on days 1–5 and 29–33), followed by surgery and four cycles of bolus fluorouracil (500 mg/m 2 on days 1–5 and 29); or to an investigational group receiving preoperative radiotherapy of 50·4 Gy in 28 fractions plus infusional fluorouracil (250 mg/m 2 on days 1–14 and 22–35) and oxaliplatin (50 mg/m 2 on days 1, 8, 22, and 29), followed by surgery and eight cycles of oxaliplatin (100 mg/m 2 on days 1 and 15), leucovorin (400 mg/m 2 on days 1 and 15), and infusional fluorouracil (2400 mg/m 2 on days 1–2 and 15–16). Randomisation was done with computer-generated block-randomisation codes stratified by centre, clinical T category (cT1–3 vs cT4), and clinical N category (cN0 vs cN1–2) without masking. The primary endpoint was disease-free survival, defined as the time between randomisation and non-radical surgery of the primary tumour (R2 resection), locoregional recurrence after R0/1 resection, metastatic disease or progression, or death from any cause, whichever occurred first. Survival and cumulative incidence of recurrence analyses followed the intention-to-treat principle; toxicity analyses included all patients treated. Enrolment of patients in this trial is completed and follow-up is ongoing. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00349076. Findings Of the 1265 patients initially enrolled, 1236 were assessable (613 in the investigational group and 623 in the control group). With a median follow-up of 50 months (IQR 38–61), disease-free survival at 3 years was 75·9% (95% CI 72·4–79·5) in the investigational group and 71·2% (95% CI 67·6–74·9) in the control group (hazard ratio [HR] 0·79, 95% CI 0·64–0·98; p=0·03). Preoperative grade 3–4 toxic effects occurred in 144 (24%) of 607 patients who actually received fluorouracil and oxaliplatin during chemoradiotherapy and in 128 (20%) of 625 patients who actually received fluorouracil chemoradiotherapy. Of 445 patients who actually received adjuvant fluorouracil and leucovorin and oxaliplatin, 158 (36%) had grade 3–4 toxic effects, as did 170 (36%) of 470 patients who actually received adjuvant fluorouracil. Late grade 3–4 adverse events in patients who received protocol-specified preoperative and postoperative treatment occurred in 112 (25%) of 445 patients in the investigational group, and in 100 (21%) of 470 patients in the control group. Interpretation Adding oxaliplatin to fluorouracil-based neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy and adjuvant chemotherapy (at the doses and intensities used in this trial) significantly improved disease-free survival of patients with clinically staged cT3–4 or cN1–2 rectal cancer compared with our former fluorouracil-based combined modality regimen (based on CAO/ARO/AIO-94). The regimen established by CAO/ARO/AIO-04 can be deemed a new treatment option for patients with locally advanced rectal cancer. Funding German Cancer Aid (Deutsche Krebshilfe).

528 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of this investigation make it unlikely that physiological and pathological changes in the cortical steady potential, or either separately, have a modulating or frequency determining influence on cortical neuronal activity.

527 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 Jan 2019-Science
TL;DR: A transcriptional atlas of myeloid subsets in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a mouse model of MS, shows that dendritic cells and monocyte-derived cells, but not resident macrophages, played a critical role by presenting antigen to pathogenic T cells, which may inform future therapeutic targeting strategies in MS.
Abstract: The innate immune cell compartment is highly diverse in the healthy central nervous system (CNS), including parenchymal and non-parenchymal macrophages. However, this complexity is increased in inflammatory settings by the recruitment of circulating myeloid cells. It is unclear which disease-specific myeloid subsets exist and what their transcriptional profiles and dynamics during CNS pathology are. Combining deep single-cell transcriptome analysis, fate mapping, in vivo imaging, clonal analysis, and transgenic mouse lines, we comprehensively characterized unappreciated myeloid subsets in several CNS compartments during neuroinflammation. During inflammation, CNS macrophage subsets undergo self-renewal, and random proliferation shifts toward clonal expansion. Last, functional studies demonstrated that endogenous CNS tissue macrophages are redundant for antigen presentation. Our results highlight myeloid cell diversity and provide insights into the brain's innate immune system.

526 citations


Authors

Showing all 42309 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Mark Hallett1861170123741
Tadamitsu Kishimoto1811067130860
Anders Björklund16576984268
Si Xie1481575120243
Kypros H. Nicolaides147130287091
Peter J. Schwartz147647107695
Michael E. Phelps14463777797
Martin Erdmann1441562100470
Holger J. Schünemann141810113169
Maksym Titov1391573128335
Karl Jakobs138137997670
Annette Peters1381114101640
Suman Bala Beri1371608104798
Bert Sakmann13728390979
Vipin Bhatnagar1371756104163
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023178
2022585
20214,552
20204,227
20193,825
20183,531