👤 Roger Walz

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3
Articles
3
Name variants
Also published as: C Walz, Christoph Walz,
articles
Henrik Schinke, Theresa Heider, Timm Herkommer +20 more · 2021 · Molecular oncology · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) have poor clinical outcome owing to therapy resistance and frequent recurrences that are among others attributable to tumor cells in partial epithelial- Show more
Head and neck squamous cell carcinomas (HNSCCs) have poor clinical outcome owing to therapy resistance and frequent recurrences that are among others attributable to tumor cells in partial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (pEMT). We compared side-by-side software-based and visual quantification of immunohistochemistry (IHC) staining of epithelial marker EpCAM and EMT regulator Slug in n = 102 primary HNSCC to assess optimal analysis protocols. IHC scores incorporated expression levels and percentages of positive cells. Digital and visual evaluation of membrane-associated EpCAM yielded correlating scorings, whereas visual evaluation of nuclear Slug resulted in significantly higher overall scores. Multivariable Cox proportional hazard analysis defined the median EpCAM expression levels resulting from visual quantification as an independent prognostic factor of overall survival. Slug expression levels resulting from digital quantification were an independent prognostic factor of recurrence-free survival, locoregional recurrence-free survival, and disease-specific survival. Hence, we propose to use visual assessment for the membrane-associated EpCAM protein, whereas nuclear protein Slug assessment was more accurate following digital measurement. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.12886
SNAI1
Cláudia P Figueiredo, Victor L S Antunes, Eduardo L G Moreira +9 more · 2011 · Peptides · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
The glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide receptor (GIPR) has been implicated with neuroplasticity and may be related to epilepsy. GIPR expression was analyzed by immunohistochemistry in the hippoc Show more
The glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide receptor (GIPR) has been implicated with neuroplasticity and may be related to epilepsy. GIPR expression was analyzed by immunohistochemistry in the hippocampus (HIP) and neocortex (Cx) of rats undergoing pilocarpine induced status epilepticus (Pilo-SE), and in three young male patients with left mesial temporal lobe epilepsy related to hippocampal sclerosis (MTLE-HS) treated surgically. A combined GIPR immunohistochemistry and Fluoro-Jade staining was carried out to investigate the association between the GIPR expression and neuronal degeneration induced by Pilo-SE. GIPR was expressed in the cytoplasm of neurons from the HIP CA subfields, dentate gyrus (DG) and Cx of animals and human samples. The GIPR expression after the Pilo-SE induction increases significantly in the HIP after 1h and 5 days, but not after 12h or 50 days. In the Cx, the GIPR expression increases after 1h, 12h and 5 days, but not 50 days after the Pilo-SE. The expression of GIPR 12h after Pilo-SE was inversely proportional to the Fluoro-Jade staining intensity. In the human tissue, GIPR expression patterns were similar to those observed in chronic Pilo-SE animals. No Fluoro-Jade stained cells were observed in the human sample. GIPR is expressed in human HIP and Cx. There was a time and region dependent increase of GIPR expression in the HIP and Cx after Pilo-SE that was inversely associated to neuronal degeneration. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.peptides.2010.12.010
GIPR
M Schwerin, C Kuehn, S Wimmers +2 more · 2006 · Journal of animal breeding and genetics = Zeitschrift fur Tierzuchtung und Zuchtungsbiologie · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-24
The present study aimed at identifying bovine hepatic and intestinal DNA sequences expressed breed specifically as potential functional candidate genes for nutrient transformation. Transcript levels o Show more
The present study aimed at identifying bovine hepatic and intestinal DNA sequences expressed breed specifically as potential functional candidate genes for nutrient transformation. Transcript levels of 29 expressed sequence tags (ESTs) were analysed comparatively in the liver and intestine of growing Charolais and German Holstein bulls by real-time RT-PCR. In previous studies, these ESTs were characterized as differentially displayed in mRNA differential display of cows varying in metabolic type and harbouring single nucleotide polymorphisms. Breed-specific gene expression levels indicate significantly increased hepatic metabolic activity in Charolais and increased intestinal metabolic activity in German Holstein bulls. Transcript levels of six functional genes measured in liver (NDUFB8, NACA, UAP1, SAH) and intestine (FUS/TLS, APOC3), respectively, support this assumption. The observed coincidence of metabolic type-specific expressed ESTs with variant ESTs showing breed-specific allele distribution points to functional genetic variants located in the vicinity of the analysed sequences. In addition, location of most of the breed specifically expressed ESTs within chromosome regions known to be affecting carcass and growth traits in cattle supports the putative candidate gene character of the ESTs identified. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0388.2006.00601.x
APOC3