Inês Brandão
University of Mainz
4 Papers
Inês Brandão is an academic researcher from University of Mainz. The author has contributed to research in topics: Immune system & Neutrophil extracellular traps. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Dietary tryptophan links encephalogenicity of autoreactive T cells with gut microbial ecology
Jana K. Sonner,Jana K. Sonner,Jana K. Sonner,Melanie Keil,Maren Falk-Paulsen,Neha Mishra,Ateequr Rehman,Magdalena Kramer,Magdalena Kramer,Katrin Deumelandt,Katrin Deumelandt,Julian Röwe,Khwab Sanghvi,Khwab Sanghvi,Lara Wolf,Lara Wolf,Anna von Landenberg,Anna von Landenberg,Hendrik Wolff,Richa Bharti,Iris Oezen,Tobias V. Lanz,Tobias V. Lanz,Florian Wanke,Florian Wanke,Yilang Tang,Yilang Tang,Inês Brandão,Soumya R. Mohapatra,Lisa Epping,Alexandra Grill,Ralph Röth,Beate Niesler,Sven G. Meuth,Christiane A. Opitz,Christiane A. Opitz,Jürgen G. Okun,Christoph Reinhardt,Florian C. Kurschus,Florian C. Kurschus,Wolfgang Wick,Helge B. Bode,Philip Rosenstiel,Michael Platten,Michael Platten +44 more
TL;DR: It is shown that dietary tryptophan restriction (DTR) protects mice from subsequent autoimmune neuropathology challenge by altering intestinal microbiota, highlighting the potential of diet-regulated microbiota to prevent immune pathology.
Gut Microbiota Restricts NETosis in Acute Mesenteric Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury
Stefanie Ascher,Eivor Wilms,Giulia Pontarollo,Henning Formes,Franziska Bayer,Maria Müller,Frano Malinarich,Alexandra Grill,Markus Bosmann,Markus Bosmann,Mona Saffarzadeh,Inês Brandão,Kathrin Groß,Klytaimnistra Kiouptsi,Jens M. Kittner,Karl J. Lackner,Kerstin Jurk,Christoph Reinhardt +17 more
TL;DR: The results identified that the gut microbiota suppresses NETing neutrophil hyperreactivity in mesenteric I/R injury, while ensuring immunovigilance by enhancing neutrophIL recruitment.
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α-Linolenic Acid-Rich Diet Influences Microbiota Composition and Villus Morphology of the Mouse Small Intestine.
Hristo Todorov,Bettina Kollar,Franziska Bayer,Inês Brandão,Amrit Mann,Julia Mohr,Giulia Pontarollo,Henning Formes,Roland H. Stauber,Jens M. Kittner,Kristina Endres,Bernhard Watzer,Wolfgang Andreas Nockher,Felix Sommer,Susanne Gerber,Christoph Reinhardt +15 more
TL;DR: The impact of ALA is demonstrated on the gut microbiome and the nutritional regulation of gut morphology is revealed and high-fat Western-type diet feeding resulted in a comparable adaptation of the small intestine.
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Protease-activated receptor signaling in intestinal permeability regulation.
TL;DR: An overview on the implication of PARs in intestinal permeability regulation under physiologic and disease conditions is provided and selective regulation of intestinal PARs represents an interesting therapeutic strategy.