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Sander Bekeschus

Sander Bekeschus
  • PhD / Dr. rer. nat.
  • Head of Department at Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology (INP)

About

372
Publications
106,321
Reads
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9,863
Citations
Current institution
Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology (INP)
Current position
  • Head of Department
Additional affiliations
January 2016 - December 2020
Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology
Position
  • Group Leader
July 2011 - present
Leibniz Institute for Plasma Science and Technology
Position
  • PhD Student
August 2010 - June 2011
Universität Greifswald
Position
  • Diploma Thesis
Description
  • scientific work, including - non-thermal plasma - human PBMC - staph. aureus - viability assays - cytokines

Publications

Publications (372)
Article
Full-text available
Plasma medicine is an exciting new scientific field due to recent developments in nonthermal physical plasmas operating at atmospheric pressure. In the present study, the effect of an argon-operated plasma jet (kINPen) using either humidified or dry argon as the working gas was investigated on human keratinocytes with respect to changes in the cell...
Article
Abstract Plasma medicine is an interdisciplinary field and recent clinical studies showed benefits of topical plasma application to chronic wounds. Whereas most investigations have focused on plasma-skin cell interaction, immune cells are omnipresent in most tissues as well. They not only elicit specific immune responses but also regulate inflammat...
Article
Full-text available
Because of its antimicrobial properties, nonthermal plasma could serve as an alternative to chemical antisepsis in wound treatment. Therefore, this study investigated the inactivation of biofilm-embedded Pseudomonas aeruginosa SG81 by a surface barrier-discharged (SBD) plasma for 30, 60, 150 and 300 s. In order to optimize the efficacy of the plasm...
Article
Cold plasma has become a promising application in the fields of biology and medicine. Its anti-microbial effects and stimulating properties on eukaryotic cells make plasma an encouraging option in treatment of chronic wounds. Apart from fibroblasts or keratinocytes, immune cells have a major contribution in wound healing. In this study, human perip...
Article
Journal of Hospital Infection j o u r n a l h o m e p a g e : w w w . e l s e v i e r h e a l t h . c o m / j o u r n a l s / j h i n Maintaining health by balancing microbial exposure and prevention of infection: the hygiene hypothesis versus the hypothesis of early immune challenge The human immune system is inseparably bonded to an individual's...
Article
Full-text available
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are clusters of thin-walled enlarged blood vessels in the central nervous system that are prone to recurrent hemorrhage and can occur in both sporadic and familial forms. The familial form results from loss-of-function variants in the CCM1, CCM2, or CCM3 gene. Despite a better understanding of CCM pathogenesi...
Article
Introduction: Diabetes mellitus is a chronic disease that can disrupt physiologic wound healing. Medical gas plasma technology produces therapeutic reactive species that support wound healing. Objective: Previous studies have shown that increasing the transcriptional activity of the redox regulator nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2)...
Article
Full-text available
The TME is a critical niche for determining the fate of cancer therapy. Tumor cells often polarize nontumor cells, including immune cells, in the TME to favor cancer growth. In pancreatic cancer, macrophages are associated with poor therapy outcomes and unfavorable survival, especially when rendered into M2 macrophages. The latter show features als...
Article
The recent pandemic has highlighted the urgent need to elucidate the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying viral effects in humans and is driving the search for innovative antiviral therapies. Several studies have investigated the ability of gas plasma, a partially ionized gas that simultaneously generates several reactive species, to be a new a...
Article
Full-text available
Skin cancer affects millions of patients worldwide, and its incidence is increasing. Current therapies targeting skin tumour subtypes, such as basal cell carcinoma, cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, melanoma and actinic keratosis, vary in their degree of effectiveness and tolerability, motivating new research avenues on complementing treatment str...
Article
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Cancer is the second-leading cause of death in developed societies. Specifically, cancers of the spine and brain come with significant therapeutic challenges. Chordomas are semi-malignant tumors that develop from embryonic residuals at the skull base (clival) or coccyx (sacral). Small tumor fragments can remain in the operation cavities during surg...
Article
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Biomimetic hydrogels enable biochemical, cell biology, and tissue‐like studies in the third dimension. Smart hydrogels are also frequently used in tissue engineering and as drug carriers for intra‐ or extracutaneous regenerative medicine. They have also been studied in bio‐sensor development, 3D cell culture, and organoid growth optimization. Yet,...
Article
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Background A significant number of platelet concentrates (PCs) is discarded daily in blood banks due to limited shelf life. Human platelet lysate (HPL), derived from expired PCs, has gained attention as an ethical and sustainable cell culture media supplement in biomedical research and cell therapy production. However, HPL is subject to decisive di...
Article
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Oxidative stress is universal to all cell types, including cancer. It is elicited by a surplus of reactive oxygen species (ROS) or a reduced cellular ability to defend against those. At low levels (oxidative eustress), this induces altered cellular signaling, while at higher levels (oxidative distress), cellular toxicity and non-specific redox sign...
Article
In a narrow definition, plasma medicine is the application of body‐temperature cold plasma devices for medical purposes. If considering the more general application of plasma devices in medicine, independent of the operating temperature, electrosurgical argon plasma devices have been successfully applied in medicine for decades for cutting and coag...
Article
Plasma‐treated liquids and their medical application have gained momentum in the fields of plasma science in recent years. Most research has been done in the field of cancer treatment. Another new and promising special field of CAP−liquid interaction is hydrogels, which can serve as localized reservoirs for the delivery of long‐lived reactive oxyge...
Article
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Background Human glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a highly aggressive tumor with insufficient therapies available. Especially, novel concepts of immune therapies fail due to a complex immunosuppressive microenvironment, high mutational rates, and inter-patient variations. The intratumoral heterogeneity is currently not sufficiently investigated. M...
Article
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The European Wound Management Association (EWMA) believes that cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) for wound treatment potentially represents a new, sustainable, advanced therapy, while CAP on the other hand may still have to reach its full potential. The general awareness level about CAP among healthcare professionals (HCPs) is relatively modest, which...
Article
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Background/Objective Endoprostheses might fail due to complications such as implant loosening or periprosthetic infections. The surface topography of implant materials is known to influence osseointegration and attachment of pathogenic bacteria. Laser-Induced Periodic Surface Structures (LIPSS) can improve the surface topography of orthopedic impla...
Article
Full-text available
Cancer remains a major global health challenge, with the persistence of cancer stem cells (CSCs) contributing to treatment resistance and relapse. Despite advancements in cancer therapy, targeting CSCs presents a significant hurdle. Non-thermal gas plasma, also known as CAP, represents an innovative cancer treatment. It has recently gained attentio...
Article
Insulin participates in glucose homeostasis in the body and regulates glucose, protein, and lipid metabolism. Chronic hyperglycemia triggers oxidative stress and the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), leading to oxidized insulin variants. Oxidative protein modifications can cause functional changes or altered immunogenicity as known from...
Article
Full-text available
Background Plants are designed to endure stress, but increasingly extreme weather events are testing the limits. Events like flooding result in submergence of plant organs, triggering an energy crisis due to hypoxia and threaten plant growth and productivity. Lipids are relevant as building blocks and energy vault and are substantially intertwined...
Preprint
Scratch wound healing assays remain one of the most commonly used 2D migration assay to obtain a broad overview of the migration behavior of cultured cells. They are easy to perform and cost effective, but yet not standardized in terms of the geometric dimensions of the scratch, e.g. consistency of the scratch width and straightness of the line, es...
Article
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Inflammasome activation occurs in various diseases, including rare diseases that require multicenter studies for investigation. Flow cytometric analysis of ASC speck⁺ cells in patient samples can be used to detect cell type-specific inflammasome activation. However, this requires standardized sample processing and the ability to compare data from d...
Article
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Lipids, possessing unsaturated fatty acid chains and polar regions with nucleophilic heteroatoms, represent suitable oxidation targets for autologous and heterologous reactive species. Lipid peroxidation products (LPPs) are highly heterogeneous, including hydroperoxides, alkenals, chlorination, or glycation. Accordingly, delineation of lipid target...
Article
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Introduction: Hippo is a signaling pathway that is evolutionarily conserved and plays critical roles in wound healing and tissue regeneration. Disruption of the transcriptional activity of both Hippo-associated factors, the yes-associated protein (YAP), and the transcriptional co-activator with PDZ binding motif (TAZ) has been associated with cardi...
Article
Spurred by global COVID‐19, work in recent years has demonstrated that various devices based on technology generating cold plasma are capable of reducing the infectivity of virus particles. There is great potential in this approach, which is, however, hampered by the ability of most cold plasma science laboratories to test for antiviral effects of...
Article
Full-text available
Increasing evidence suggests the role of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) in regulating antitumor immune effects and immunosuppression. RONS modify biomolecules and induce oxidative post‐translational modifications (oxPTM) on proteins that can alarm phagocytes. However, it is unclear if and how protein oxidation by technical means could...
Article
Cold physical plasma, a partially ionized gas, has been shown to be effective in treating chronic wounds and cancer. However, there is limited research on plasma exposure of leukemia cell lines, such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and cytotoxic CD8 ⁺ T cells. To investigate the potential proimmunogenic effects of plasma‐derived reactive oxyg...
Article
Cold physical plasma shows promising preclinical results as an anticancer strategy. The technology generates a variety of reactive oxygen species (ROS) mediating gas plasma-induced effects in cells and tissues. On the cellular level, ROS can trigger oxidative stress-related responses. On the biomolecular level, ROS can introduce oxidative modificat...
Article
Full-text available
Background/aim: Cold physical plasma (CPP) has emerged as an effective therapy in oncology by inducing cytotoxic effects in various cancer cells, including chondrosarcoma (CS), Ewing's sarcoma (ES), and osteosarcoma (OS). The current study investigated the impact of CPP on cell motility in CS (CAL-78), ES (A673), and OS (U2-OS) cell lines, focusin...
Article
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Chondrosarcoma (CS) is a rare malignant bone sarcoma that primarily affects cartilage cells in the femur and pelvis. While most subtypes exhibit slow growth with a very good prognosis, some aggressive subtypes have a poorer overall survival. CS is known for its resistance to chemotherapy and radiotherapy, leaving surgery as the sole effective thera...
Article
Full-text available
Simple Summary Medical gas plasma is a new modality in cancer treatment showing favorable results in preclinical and clinical trials; however, the cascade of molecular events underlying selective killing of cancer cells has not been fully elucidated. This study examines the hypothesis that cell death induced by gas plasma is mediated by a universal...
Chapter
The principal aim of this chapter is to provide a comprehensive overview of medical gas plasma technology for wound healing in animal models, veterinary medicine, and humans. Impaired or defective wound healing in skin injuries substantially burdens patients and the whole healthcare system. In recent years, the novel reactive oxygen and nitrogen sp...
Chapter
New therapies such as medical gas plasma treatment command a safety assessment, regardless of their efficacy. This includes, for instance, electrical safety of plasma devices, a reproducible plasma generation to apply similar dosages, appropriate UV generation profiles, and therefore also the absence of genotoxic effects. This last feature is impor...
Article
Full-text available
Epidermal melanin synthesis determines an individual’s skin color. In humans, melanin is formed by melanocytes within the epidermis. The process of melanin synthesis strongly depends on a range of cellular factors, including the fine-tuned interplay with reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this context, a role of cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) on mela...
Article
The environmental presence of nano- and micro-plastic particles (NMPs) is suspected to have a negative impact on human health. Environmental NMPs are difficult to sample and use in life science research, while commercially available plastic particles are too morphologically uniform. Additionally, this NMPs exposure exhibited biological effects, inc...
Article
Full-text available
Cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) has shown promising potential in promoting wound healing. This case report presents the successful application of CAP in a 42-year-old female patient with extensive wound healing disorders and superinfections following the excision of an abscess in the left thoracic region. After several failed split skin graft attempt...
Article
The main aim of the present study was to produce uncontaminated flour that preserves its quality without undergoing any alterations. The present study investigated the effects of cold plasma treatment, carboxymethyl cellulose/polyvinyl alcohol/nanoclay (CMC/PVA/nanoclay-CPN) packaging, and the combined treatment of cold plasma and cellulose nanocom...
Article
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Ewing's sarcoma (ES) is the second most common bone tumor in children and adolescents and is highly malignant. Although the new chemotherapy has significantly improved the survival rate for ES from about 10 to 75%, the survival rate for metastatic tumors remains around 30%. This treatment is often associated with various side effects that contribut...
Article
Full-text available
Cancer treatment often causes adverse effects and toxicity, as chemotherapy drugs affect both cancerous and healthy cells. Scientists seek to target tumor cells specifically and minimize harm to normal cells. Smart nanoparticles (NPs) are a modern technique that can release drugs when triggered by internal or external stimuli, such as temperature,...
Article
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During the development of new therapeutic devices, comprehensive experimental investigations are necessary in all phases of the process. This requires the provision of device prototypes with reproducible and comparable operating parameters. In the current study, such miniature neon plasma jet prototypes designated for medical applications have been...
Article
Imaging flow cytometry is an attractive method to investigate individual cells by optical properties. However, imaging flow cytometry applications with clinical relevance are scarce so far. Platelet aggregation naturally occurs during blood coagulation to form a clot. However, aberrant platelet aggregation is associated with cardiovascular disease...
Article
Cancer remains a formidable challenge, continually revealing its intricate nature and demanding novel treatment approaches. Within this intricate landscape, the tumor microenvironment and its dynamic components have gained prominence, particularly macrophages that can adopt diverse polarization states, exerting a profound influence on cancer pro...
Article
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This paper focuses on the synthesis of nano-oxali-palladium coated with turmeric extract (PdNPs) using a green chemistry technique based on the reduction in the Pd (II) complex by phytochemicals inherent in turmeric extract. PdNPs were examined and characterized using Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscopy (FESEM), Dynamic Light Scattering (DL...
Article
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β-Caryophyllene (BCP), a bicyclic sesquiterpene that is a component of the essential oils of various spice and food plants, has been described as a selective CB2 cannabinoid receptor agonist. In the present study, the effect of BCP on angiogenesis was investigated. It was found that conditioned media (CM) from BCP-treated hypoxic A549 lung cancer c...
Article
Full-text available
Diabetes can disrupt physiological wound healing, caused by decreased levels or impaired activity of angiogenic factors. This can contribute to chronic inflammation, poor formation of new blood vessels, and delayed re-epithelialization. The present study describes the preclinical application of medical gas plasma to treat a dermal, full-thickness e...
Article
Full-text available
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is the most prevalent hematological cancer, with various medical interventions. In the recent decade, cold physical plasma has become an interesting agent for future cancer therapy. The goal of this study was to see whether cold physical plasma or cold physical plasma-treated liquid (PTL) affected integrin beta 3...
Article
Full-text available
Colorectal cancer (CRC) continues to pose a significant challenge to healthcare systems, despite considerable advancements in the fields of medicine and pharmaceuticals. Palladium complexes, considered potential alternatives to platinum-based drugs for treating CRC, are being explored. Additionally, green chemistry, which enables the safe, reproduc...
Article
Physical plasma is one consequence of gas ionization, i.e. its dissociation of electrons and ions. If operated in ambient air containing oxygen and nitrogen, its high reactivity produces various reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) simultaneously. Technology leap innovations in the early 2010s facilitated the generation of gas plasmas aimed...
Article
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In musculoskeletal surgery, the treatment of large bone defects is challenging and can require the use of bone graft substitutes to restore mechanical stability and promote host-mediated regeneration. The use of bone allografts is well-established in many bone regenerative procedures, but is associated with low rates of ingrowth due to pre-therapeu...
Article
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Background Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells (BM-MSCs) are used in regenerative medicine and related research involving immunomodulatory, anti-inflammatory, anti-fibrotic and regenerative functions. Isolation of BM-MSCs from samples obtained during total hip arthroplasty (THA) is routinely possible. Advanced age and comorbidities of the...
Article
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Tissue inflammation drives the infiltration of innate immune cells that generate reactive species to kill bacteria and recruit adaptive immune cells. Neutrophil activation fosters the release of myeloperoxidase (MPO) enzyme, a heme-containing protein generating hypochlorous acid (HOCl) from hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and chloride ions. MPO-dependent...
Article
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A multiferroic nanostructure of manganese ferrite barium-titanate called magneto-electric nanoparticles (MENs) was synthesized by a co-precipitation method. FTIR, Raman spectroscopy, TEM, and X-ray diffraction confirmed the presence of spinel core and perovskite shell phases with average crystallite sizes of 70–90 nm. Magnetic, optical, and magneto...
Article
Background Oral leukoplakia (OL) is an unfavorable oral disease often resistant to therapy. To this end, cold physical plasma technology was explored as a novel therapeutic agent in an experimental setup. Methods Biopsies with a diameter of 3 mm were obtained from non‐diseased and OL tissues. Subsequently, cold atmospheric pressure plasma (CAP) ex...
Article
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JZL184, an inhibitor of monoacylglycerol lipase (MAGL) and thus of the degradation of the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), mediates various anticancer effects in preclinical studies. However, studies on the effect of this or other MAGL inhibitors under hypoxia, an important factor in tumor biology and response to cancer therapy, have...
Article
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(1) Background: In dentistry, a reduction in surface roughness is established mostly by conventional mechanical polishing to hinder biofilm adhesion. This is time- and labor-intensive. Plasma electrolytic polishing is believed to be an effective finishing method due to the reduced treatment time and materials used for applications in dentistry. (2)...
Article
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Plastic waste is a global issue leaving no continents unaffected. In the environment, ultraviolet radiation and shear forces in water and land contribute to generating micro- and nanoplastic particles (MNPP), which organisms can easily take up. Plastic particles enter the human food chain, and the accumulation of particles within the human body is...
Article
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Background Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are implicated in cancer therapy and as drivers of microenvironmental tumour cell adaptations. Medical gas plasma is a multi-ROS generating technology that has been shown effective for palliative tumour control in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients before tumour cells adapted to the oxidative stress and gro...
Article
Surgical-induced hemostasis is a critical step in the closure of incisions, which is frequently achieved via electrocauterization and subsequent tissue necrotization. The latter is associated with postoperative complications. Recent in vivo work suggested reactive species-producing gas plasma technology as a pro-homeostatic agent acting via platele...
Article
Environmental pollution by microplastics (MPs) is a growing concern regarding their impact on aquatic and terrestrial systems and human health. Typical exposure routes of MPs are dermal contact, digestion, and inhalation. Recent in vitro and in vivo studies observed alterations in immunity after MPs exposure, but systemic studies using primary huma...
Article
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Diabetes mellitus currently affects ∼10% of the population worldwide, with Type 2 predominating, and this incidence is increasing steadily. Both Type 1 and 2 are complex diseases, involving β-cell death and chronic inflammation, but the pathways involved are unresolved. Chronic inflammation is characterized by increased oxidant formation, with this...
Article
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Introduction: Skin cancer is often fatal, which motivates new therapy avenues. Recent advances in cancer treatment are indicative of the importance of combination treatments in oncology. Previous studies have identified small molecule-based therapies and redox-based technologies, including photodynamic therapy or medical gas plasma, as promising c...
Article
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Cold physical plasma is a partially ionized gas operated at body temperature and utilized for heat-sensitive technical and medical purposes. Physical plasma is a multi-component system consisting of, e.g., reactive species, ions and electrons, electric fields, and UV light. Therefore, cold plasma technology is an interesting tool for introducing bi...
Article
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Cold physical plasma (CPP) technology is of high promise for various medical applications. The interplay of specific components of physical plasma with living cells, tissues and organs on a structural and functional level is of paramount interest with the aim to induce therapeutic effects in a controlled and replicable fashion. In contrast to other...
Article
Despite continuous therapeutic progress, cancer remains an often fatal disease. In the early 2010s, first evidence in rodent models suggested promising antitumor action of gas plasma technology. Medical gas plasma is a partially ionized gas depositing multiple physico-chemical effectors onto tissues, especially reactive oxygen and nitrogen species...
Article
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Breast cancer (BC) and oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) are among the most common types of cancer, but current clinical outcomes remain unsatisfactory. Available therapies have limitations in terms of efficacy and may also cause severe side effects. Cold physical plasma is a promising approach for selectively eliminating cancer cells while avoid...
Article
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Pancreatic cancer is known for its tumor microenvironment (TME), which is rich in stromal and immune cells supporting cancer growth and therapy resistance. In particular, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are known for their angiogenesis- and metastasis-promoting properties, which lead to the failure of conventional therapies for pancreatic cance...
Article
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Gas plasma jet technology was recently identified as a potential adjuvant in the fight against cancer. Here, the partial ionization of gas yields the local formation of an exceptional variety of highly reactive oxygen (ROS) and nitrogen (RNS) species, which are considered the main actors of plasma-induced antitumor effects. Yet, fundamental knowled...
Article
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Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory joint disorder that causes systemic inflammation, autoimmunity, and joint abnormalities that result in permanent disability. Exosomes are nanosized extracellular particles found in mammals (40–100 nm). They are a transporter of lipids, proteins, and genetic material involved in mammalian cell–cell...
Article
Full-text available
Cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) is a neurovascular disease that can lead to seizures and stroke-like symptoms. The familial form is caused by a heterozygous germline mutation in either the CCM1, CCM2, or CCM3 gene. While the importance of a second-hit mechanism in CCM development is well established, it is still unclear whether it immediately...
Article
Full-text available
Medical gas plasma is an experimental technology for anticancer therapy. Here, partial gas ionization yielded reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, placing the technique at the heart of applied redox biomedicine. Especially with the gas plasma jet kINPen, anti-tumor efficacy was demonstrated. This study aimed to examine the potential of using passi...
Article
Full-text available
Simple Summary Non-invasive physical plasma can be used in various medical applications. As the name suggests, this treatment is non-invasive, as the plasma device is placed over the area to be treated and cold plasma is applied. The main effect of plasma treatment is achieved by reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species which induce oxidative...
Chapter
Many cancer treatment modalities have been developed and explored over time. In addition to surgery, radiation therapy, classical chemotherapy, and targeted therapy, immunotherapy has been established as the fifth mainstay in cancer treatment. This book chapter presents the immune-modulating effects of cold physical plasma as innovative and promisi...
Article
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Simple Summary We investigated the effects of chemotherapeutics used for the frontline treatment of newly diagnosed high-risk neuroblastoma patients in combination with anti-GD2 antibody ch14.18/CHO (dinutuximab beta, DB) in the presence of immune cells in preclinical models of neuroblastoma. The combined treatment showed an up-to-17-fold-stronger...
Article
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Polystyrene nano- and micro-sized plastic particles (NMP) are one of the common plastic materials produced that dramatically pollute the environment, water, and oceanic habitats worldwide. NMP are continuously absorbed by the body through a number of routes, especially via intestinal ingestion, dermal uptake, and inhalation into the lung. Several s...
Article
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Gas plasma is a medical technology with antimicrobial properties. Its main mode of action is oxidative damage via reactive species production. The clinical efficacy of gas plasma-reduced bacterial burden has been shown to be hampered in some cases. Since the reactive species profile produced by gas plasma jets, such as the kINPen used in this study...
Article
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Peri-implantitis-associated inflammation can lead to bone loss and implant failure. Current decontamination measures are ineffective due to the implants’ complex geometry and rough surfaces providing niches for microbial biofilms. A modified water jet system (WaterJet) was combined with cold plasma technology (CAP) to achieve superior antimicrobial...
Article
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Survival rates among patients with pancreatic cancer, the most lethal gastrointestinal cancer, have not improved compared to other malignancies. Early tumor dissemination and a supportive, cancer-promoting tumor microenvironment (TME) limit therapeutic options and consequently impede tumor remission, outlining an acute need for effective treatments...
Article
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Background/aim: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and most lethal type of cancer of the central nervous system in adults. Despite aggressive treatment, which is based on surgical resection, if possible, followed by radiation and chemotherapy, a high recurrence rate and therapy resistance is observed. Thus, additional innovative therapies are u...

Questions

Questions (2)
Question
What is your favorite method of quantifying DNA release of neutrophils? Is anybody using a plate reader approach? I have read about counting cells in fluorescence images but this might not only be tedious but also not always very exact or you'll need to have software that calculates the fluorescence intensity of the spots (but maybe someone knows a nice imageJ macro?).
I have tried DAPI and plate reader in 24° well plates and it worked some but maybe I overlooked why I could not use this method in general. I know about picogreen but its quite pricey.
I also know that DAPI also enters living cells and that it also binds RNA etc pp, but maybe its a question of timing and precision?

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