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Trait-dependent effects of biotic and abiotic filters on plant regeneration in Southern Ecuador
(2024)
Tropical forests have always fascinated scientists due to their unique biodiversity. However, our understanding of ecological processes shaping the complexity of tropical rainforests is still relatively poor. Plant regeneration is one of the processes that remain understudied in the tropics although this is a key process defining the structure, diversity and assembly of tropical plant communities. In my dissertation, I combine experimental, observational and trait-based approaches to identify processes shaping the assembly of seedling communities and compare associations between environmental conditions and plant traits across plant life stages. By working along a steep environmental gradient in the tropical mountains of Southern Ecuador, I was able to investigate how processes of plant regeneration vary in response to biotic and abiotic factors in tropical montane forests.
My dissertation comprises three complementary chapters, each addressing an individual research question. First, I studied how trait composition in plant communities varies in relation to the broad- and local-scale environmental conditions and across the plant life cycle. I measured key traits reflecting different ecological strategies of plants that correspond to three stages of the plant life cycle (i.e., adult trees, seed rain and recruiting seedlings). I worked on 81 subplots along an elevational gradient covering a large climatic gradient at three different elevations (1000, 2000 and 3000 m a.s.l.). In addition, I measured soil and light conditions at the local spatial scale within each subplot. My findings show that the trait composition of leaves, seeds and seedlings changed similarly across the elevational gradient, but that the different life stages responded differently to the local gradients in soil nutrients and light availability. Consequently, my findings highlight that trait-environment associations in plant communities differ between large and small spatial scales and across plant life stages.
Second, I investigated how seed size affects seedling recruitment in natural forests and in pastures in relation to abiotic and biotic factors. I set up a seed sowing experiment in both habitat types and sowed over 8,000 seeds belonging to seven tree species differing in seed size. I found that large-seeded species had higher proportions of recruitment in the forests compared to small-seeded species. However, small-seeded species tended to recruit better in pastures compared to large-seeded species. I showed that high surface temperature was the main driver of differences in seedling recruitment between habitats, because it limited seedling recruitment of large-seeded species. The results from this experiment show that pasture restoration requires seed addition of large-seeded species and active protection of recruiting seedlings in order to mitigate harmful conditions associated with high temperatures in deforested areas.
Third, I examined the associations between seedling beta-diversity and different abiotic and biotic factors between and within elevations. I applied beta-diversity partitioning to obtain two components of beta-diversity: species turnover and species richness differences. I associated these components of beta-diversity with biotic pressures by herbivores and fungal pathogens and environmental heterogeneity in light and soil conditions. I found that species turnover in seedling communities was positively associated with the dissimilarity in biotic pressures within elevations and with environmental heterogeneity between elevations. Further, I found that species richness differences increased primarily with increasing environmental heterogeneity within elevations. My findings show that the associations between beta-diversity of seedling communities and abiotic and biotic factors are scale-dependent, most likely due to differences in species sorting in response to biotic pressures and species coexistence in response to environmental heterogeneity.
My dissertation reveals that studying processes of community assembly at different plant life stages and spatial scales can yield new insights into patterns and processes of plant regeneration in tropical forests. I investigated how community assembly processes are governed by abiotic and biotic filtering across and within elevations. I also experimentally explored how the process of seedling recruitment depends on seed size-dependent interactions, and verified how these effects are associated with abiotic and biotic filtering. Identifying such processes is crucial to inform predictive models of environmental change on plant regeneration and successful forest restoration. Further exploration of plant functional traits and their associations with local-scale environmental conditions could effectively support local conservation efforts needed to enhance forest cover in the future and halt the accelerating loss of biodiversity.
The role of Apelin signaling and endocardial protrusions during cardiac development in zebrafish
(2023)
During cardiac development, cardiomyocytes (CMs) are delaminated from the compact muscle wall to increase the muscle mass of the heart. This process is also known as cardiac trabeculation. It has been shown that growth factors produced by endocardial cells (EdCs) are required for myocardial morphogenesis and growth. In particular, Neuregulin produced by EdCs promotes myocardial trabeculation. The deficiency of Neuregulin signaling leads to hypotrabeculation. Endocardial protrusions project from the endocardium to the myocardium are also essential for the trabeculae onset. Yet current studies only introduce the function of endocardial sprouts descriptively. This article first reports the mechanisms of endocardial sprouting during myocardial trabeculation. By living imaging, we first demonstrate that EdCs interact with CMs through membrane protrusions in zebrafish embryos. More interestingly, these protrusions stay in close contact with their target CMs in spite of the cardiac contraction. We utilize loss-of-function strategies to report the importance of myocardial apelin, which induces endocardial protrusion formation. Zebrafish lacking Apelin signaling exhibit defects in endocardial protrusion formation as well as excessive deposition of cardiac jelly and hypotrabeculation. Notably, we also present data that blocking protrusion formation in endocardial cells phenocopies the trabeculation defects in apelin mutants. Mechanistically, endocardial-derived Neuregulin requires Apelin signaling mediated endocardial protrusions, and Neuregulin dependent pERK expression is attenuated in the condition of reduced endocardial protrusion formation. Together, our data suggest that endocardial-myocardial communication through endocardial protrusions acts as an underlying principle allowing myocardial growth.
Influenza is a contagious respiratory disease caused by influenza A and influenza B viruses. The World Health Organisation (WHO) reports that annual influenza epidemics result in approximately 1 billion infections, 3 to 5 million severe cases, and 300 to 650 thousand deaths. Understanding hidden mechanisms that lead to optimal vaccine efficacy and improvement antiviral treatment strategies remain continuous and central tasks. First, regarding the immune response to vaccines and natural infections, the antibody response echoes the dynamics of diverse immune elements such as B-cells, and plasma cells. Also, responses reflect the processes for B-cells to gain and adapt affinity for the virus. Antibodies (Abs) that respond to the virus surface proteins, particularly to the hemagglutinin (HA), have been identified to protect against infection. The Abs responses binding to HA can be broadly protective as this protein is considerably accessible on the virion. When following sequential infections with similar influenza strains, i.e. two infections with different strains of a subtype, an enhanced breadth and magnitude of Abs response is developed, mainly after the second infection. The effect of being effective to new strains is called Abs cross-reaction.
On the other hand, as for antiviral treatment, the WHO currently approves the use of neuraminidase inhibitors (NIs) such as zanamivir and oseltamivir. Diverse research areas such as system biology, learning-based methods, control theory, and systems pharmacology have guided the development of modern treatment schemes. To do so, mathematical models are used to describe a wide range of phenomena such as viral pathogenesis, immune responses, and the drug's dynamics in the body. Drug dynamics are usually expressed in two phases, pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD) - the PK/PD approach. These schemes leverage pre-clinical and clinical data through modeling and simulation of infection and drug effects at diverse levels. Under such a framework, control-based scheduling systems seek to tailor optimal antiviral treatment for infectious diseases. Thus, influenza treatment can be theoretically studied as a control-based optimization duty (about systems stability, bounded inputs, and optimality). Finally, towards real-world implementation, learning-based methods such as neural networks (NNs) can guide solving issues on the control-based performance. Using NNs as identifiers provide a setting to deal with infrequent measures and uncertain parameters for the control systems.
This thesis theoretically explores central mechanisms in influenza infection via modeling and control approaches. In the first project, we explore how and to what extent antibody-antigen affinity flexibility could guide the Abs cross-reaction in two sequential infections using a hypothetical family of antigens. The set of antigens generally represent strains of influenza, such as those of a subtype. Each antigen is composed of a variable and a conserved area, generically representing the structures of the HA, head, and stalk, respectively. We test diverse scenarios of affinity thresholds in the conserved and variable areas of the antigens. The Abs response reaches a high magnitude when using equivalent affinity thresholds in the conserved and variable areas during the first infection. However, improved cross-reaction is developed when slightly increasing the affinity threshold of the variable area for the second infection. Key mutations via affinity maturation is a feature that, together with affinity flexibility between infections, guides Abs cross-reaction in the model outcome. These results could correlate with studies pointing out that broad responses might be dependent on reaching specific mutations for getting affinity to a newly presented antigen while broadly reaching related antigens. The general platform may serve as a proof-of-concept for exploring fundamental mechanisms that favor the Abs cross-reaction.
In a second project, theoretical schemes are developed to combine impulsive and inverse optimal control strategies to address antiviral treatment scheduling. We present results regarding stability, passivity, bounded inputs, and optimality using impulsive action. The study is founded on mathematical models of the influenza virus (target-cell limited model) adjusted to data from clinical trials. In these studies, participants were experimentally infected with influenza H1N1 and treated with NIs. Results show that control-based strategies could tailor dosage and reduce the amount of medication by up to 44%. Also, control-based treatment reaches the efficacy (98%) of the current treatment recommendations by the WHO. Monte Carlo simulations (MCS) disclose the robustness of the proposed control-based techniques. Using MCS, we also explore the applicability to the individualized treatment of infectious diseases through virtual clinical trials. Furthermore, bounded control strategies are applied directly in drug dose estimation accounting for overdose prevention. Finally, due to the limitations of the available technology intended for clinical practice, we emphasize the necessity of developing system identifiers and observers for real-world applications.
In the third project, the problem of data scarcity and infrequent measures in the real world is handled by means of learning-based methods. System identification is derived using a Recurrent High Order Neural Network (RHONN) trained with the Extended Kalman filter (EKF). Lessons learned from impulsive control frameworks are taken to develop a neural inverse optimal impulsive control --neurocontrol. The treatment efficacy is tested for early (one day post-infection) and late (2 to 3 days post-infection) treatment initiation. The neurocontrol reaches an efficacy of up to 95% while saving almost 40% of the total drug in the early treatment. Robustness is tested via virtual clinical trials using MCS.
Lastly, taking all together, the schemes developed in this thesis for modeling the Abs cross-reaction and control-based treatment tailoring can be extended and adapted to explore similar phenomena in different respiratory pathogens, such as SARS-CoV-2.
Get3 in Arabidopsis
(2021)
Der guided entry of tail-anchored proteins (GET) Biogenese-Weg vermittelt den Transport und die Insertion von tail-anchor (TA) Proteinen in die Doppellipidschicht des Endoplasmatischen Retikulums (ER). TA Proteine sind dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass sie eine Transmembran Domäne (TMD) in den letzten 50 Aminosäuren ihrer Sequenz beherbergen. Diese TMD enthält die notwendigen Informationen, mit denen die Proteine an ihren jeweiligen subzellulären Zielort transportiert werden können. TA Proteine erfüllen eine Vielzahl von essentiellen biologischen Prozessen, sie fungieren zum Beispiel als Rezeptoren, sind maßgeblich an der Fusion von Vesikeln beteiligt sowie an der Initiation von Apoptose. Durch ihren modularen Aufbau können TA Proteine nicht mit dem Signalerkennungspartikel interagieren und müssen deshalb posttranslational zum ER geleitet werden. Im Modellorganismus Bäckerhefe (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) ist der GET Biogenese-Weg am besten beschrieben und läuft wie folgt ab: Nach der Termination der Translation bindet das Protein SgtA das TA Protein und händigt es über den Adapter-Komplex, bestehend aus Get4 und Get5, an die zytosolische ATPase Get3 aus. Get3 ist der zentrale Zielsteuerungsfaktor des GET Biogenese-Weges. Sobald sich ein Komplex aus Zeilsteuerungsfaktor und TA Protein gebildet hat, wird dieses zur Membran des ERs überführt. Dort wird das TA Protein an den Rezeptorkomplex bestehend aus Get1 und Get2 übergeben, welcher anschließend die Insertion des TA Proteins in die Doppellipidschicht des ERs initiiert.
Get3 hat im zellulären Kontext noch eine weitere Funktion. Unter oxidativem Stress oder Energie depletierenden Bedingungen wird Get3 zu spezifischen Foci rekrutiert, an denen sich noch weitere durch Stress -induzierbare Proteine, wie z.B. die der Familie der Hitze Stress Proteine (HSPs) versammeln. Analysen haben gezeigt, dass Get3 unter den oben genannten Bedingungen, Konformationsänderungen durchläuft und dann als ATP unabhängige Holdase fungiert. Diese kann die exponierten, hydrophoben Anteile von Proteinen binden, um dadurch die Proteostasis aufrechtzuhalten.
Durch die Bedeutsamkeit der TA Proteinen ist die zentrale ATPase Get3 in allen Domänen des Lebens hochgradig konserviert. Phylogenetische Analysen ergaben, dass sich Get3 im Allgemeinen in eine „A“ Gruppe sowie eine „BC“ Gruppe aufspaltet. Im Modellorganismus Arabidopsis thaliana (Ackerschmalwand) wurden drei Orthologe zu Get3 identifiziert. Eins davon gehört zu der „A“ Gruppe und befindet sich im Zytoplasma. Die anderen zwei Orthologe befinden sich in den Organellen endo-symbiotischen Ursprungs und gehören der „BC“ Gruppe an. Untersuchungen an verschiedenen Deletionsmutanten in A. thaliana haben gezeigt, dass die Mutationen einzelner GET Komponenten zu einer signifikanten Verkürzung der Haarwurzeln führen, obwohl der restliche Habitus der Pflanze unverändert bleibt. Diesbezüglich wurde SYP123 als einziges TA Proteine identifiziert, dessen Abundanz durch die Deletion von GET Komponenten beeinflusst werden kann. Von den anderen beiden Orthologen organellären Ursprungs ist, abgesehen von ihrer Lokalisation nichts weiter bekannt
Vier Orthologe Gruppen in Pflanzen
Da bislang nicht mehr als zehn Pflanzenarten für phylogenetische Analysen herangezogen wurden, wurden in dieser Arbeit die taxonomischen Beziehungen von Get3 zu einander in 50 Spezies der Viridiplantae auf Basis der Orthologie sowie Homologie untersucht. Dies führte zur Identifizierung einer zytolischen (AtGet3a), einer plastidären (AtGet3b), einer mitochondriellen (AtGet3c) sowie einer Monokotyledone spezifischen Gruppe (SBGet3). Die Lokalisation der ersten drei Gruppen wurde in selektierten Pflanzen, sowohl homolog als auch heterolog, der unterschiedlichen Spezies mittels saGFP untersucht, und es konnte gezeigt werden, dass mehrere Get3 Orthologe mit unterschiedlichen subzellulären Lokalisationen eine unter Pflanze häufig auftretende Eigenschaft ist. Das Weitern konnte gezeigt werden, dass manche Komponenten des Präzielsteuerungskomplexes (SgtA und Get4) sowie des Rezeptorkomplexes (Get1) in fast allen der 50 untersuchten Pflanzenarten vorhanden sind. Dies weist auf eine Konservierung des gesamten GET Biogenese-Weges in Pflanzen hin.
Get3a in Arabidopsis thaliana
Da die molekulare Zusammensetzung des Präzielsteuerungskomplexes für AtGet3a in A. thaliana nicht bekannt ist, habe ich Co-Immunpräzipitationen mit Zellextrakten aus weißer Zellkultur und einen von mir selbst aufgereinigten Antikörper gegen AtGet3a durchgeführt. Nach anschließender Gelelektrophorese und einer Anfärbung mit Coomassie Brilliant Blue ließ sich ein reproduzierbares Muster aus Proteinbanden erkennen, welche ausgeschnitten und mittels LC-MS/MS analysiert wurden. Dadurch wurde ein putativer Kandidat für Get5 identifiziert sowie eine Assoziation mit Chaperonen und proteasomalen Untereinheiten.
Um die Zielsteuerungseffizienz und Topologie von ER-Membranproteinen zu analysieren habe ich (i) die rekombinante Synthese eines Modell-TA Proteins mit glykosylierbarem opsin bovine glycosylation Tag (OPG) etabliert sowie (ii) eine Methode etabliert um in isolierten Protoplasten die Richtigkeit der Insertion zu überprüfen. Mit Hilfe dieser Methoden können nun verschiedene Mutanten auf ihre Insertions-Wirksamkeit untersucht werden. Desweitern können durch Mutationsanalysen die notwendigen physikochemischen Eigenschaften für die Erkennung des Substrates ermittelt werden.
Eine weit verbreitete Methode im GET Feld ist die tail-anchor translocation (TAT). Bei dieser Methode werden isolierte mikrosomale Fraktionen des rauen ERs mit rekombinanten Komplexen bestehend aus Zielsteuerungsfaktor und TA Protein inkubiert. Durch einen rekombinanten OPG, der im Lumen des ERs post-translational modifiziert werden kann, ist die Beobachtung einer zeitabhängigen Kinetik der Glykosylierung möglich. Dieses System wurde bislang nur für Komponenten aus Säugern oder Hefen benutzt, aber noch nie mit einem System auf pflanzlicher Basis. Um dies zu verwirklichen, habe ich die rekombinante Proteinexpression soweit optimiert, dass der Großteil des synthetisierten Proteins sich im löslichen Anteil des Lysats statt in den Inclusion Bodies befand. Mittels dieser Optimierung konnte ich die Ko-Expression von Zielsteuerungsfaktor mit TA Protein als löslichen Komplex etablieren. Ergänzend zu den löslichen Komplexen habe ich eine geeignete Methode etabliert um mittels Saccharosegradienten mikrosomale Fraktionen aufzutrennen in denen AtGet3a angereichert ist. Leider müssen noch die Parameter der Reaktion optimiert werden, aber die Akquirierung alle nötigen Bestandteile ist etabliert.
Anthropogenic interventions have altered all ecosystems around the world. One of those ecosystems are forests, the main resource for timber. They have been strongly transformed in their structure with large consequences on forest biodiversity. Especially the decrease in dead-wood volume due to the timber extraction and alternation of natural forest structures with even-aged stands of less diverse tree species composition has put especially saproxylic, i.e., dead-wood dependent species, under threat, which comprise about 20% of all forest species. Beetles, fungi and bacteria are three functional important groups for decomposition processes but we still lack much information about their sampling and the drivers of their diversity, thus it is difficult to comprehensively protect their diversity. Saproxylic fungi are a highly diverse species group and the main drivers of dead-wood decomposition; hence they play a major role in the global carbon cycle. Due to their cryptic lifestyle, many species are still unknown, but the recent advances in environmental DNA barcoding methods (metabarcoding) shed light on the formerly underestimated diversity. Yet, this method's accuracy and suitability in detecting specific species have not been assessed so far, limiting its current usefulness for species conservation. On the other hand, these methods are a convenient tool to study highly diverse areas with high numbers of unknown species, enabling the study of global diversity and its drivers, which are unknown for saproxylic fungi, but important to assess to predict the future impacts of global change. Since nature conservation concepts are usually not applied on a global scale, the drivers of diversity must also be assessed on smaller scales. Besides understanding the drivers of diversity, to identify focus scales to create comprehensive, evidence-based conservation concepts must utilize multi-taxonomic studies since saproxylic species are differently sensitive towards environmental variables and closely interact with each other. Filling these knowledge gaps is utterly needed to protect the high saproxylic diversity and ensure the functional continuity of decomposition processes, especially regarding the global change.
To address the usefulness of metabarcoding for fungal species conservation, I compared the traditional method of fruit body sampling with metabarcoding and their efficiency in detecting threatened fungal species in the first chapter of this thesis. Both methods have advantages and disadvantages. Their ability to detect threatened saproxylic fungal species and their dependencies on detecting specific fungal groups have not been compared, albeit they are important to inform species conservation like Red Lists properly. I found metabarcoding to generally detect more threatened fungal species than fruit body sampling with a higher frequency than fruit body sampling. Moreover, fruit body sampling detected a unique set of species, while fruit body sampling missed large parts of fungal diversity due to species-specific fruiting characteristics. Metabarcoding with high sampling intensity is thus a viable method to assess threatened saproxylic fungal diversity and inform nature conservation like Red Lists about distribution and abundances. Nevertheless, a complementary approach with fruit body sampling is indispensable for assessing all threatened fungal species.
In order to analyse the global diversity of saproxylic fungi and its drivers, I examined whether fungal species richness increases from the poles towards the equator and thus follows the latitudinal diversity gradient already found in many other species groups. I further investigated whether such an increase is caused by increasing ecological specialisation, i.e., niche partitioning, or local tree diversity, i.e., niche space. Gamma diversity per biome increased from the boreal, over the temperate to the tropics and thus confirmed the latitudinal diversity for saproxylic fungi. Contrastingly, alpha diversity at the log level did not significantly increase towards the tropics, suggesting a grain size dependency of the observed pattern and an equal niche space within dead-wood across latitudes. Ecological specialisation on the plot level was globally on a high level but did not increase significantly towards the equator. Additionally, I found local tree species richness to drive plot-based fungal diversity. Further analysis of gamma diversity against the total number of sampled tree species strengthened the assumption that tree species diversity and not increased ecological specialisation was the main driver of the latitudinal diversity gradient, as there was no significant difference between the gamma diversity of the temperate and tropical biome. Nonetheless, as the gamma diversity of the boreal biome was still significantly smaller, my results do not allow a complete neglection of the ecological specialisation hypothesis. The overall results indicate a strong dependency of saproxylic fungi diversity with host tree species diversity and that the global loss of tree species threatens saproxylic fungi with an unpredictable impact on carbon and nutrient cycling.
To support saproxylic conservation, I conducted two analyses. First, I compared the beta diversity of the three main decomposer groups (beetles, fungal fruit bodies, mycelial fungi (metabarcoding), and bacteria (metabarcoding)) across different scales to assess the impact of different environmental variables on their overall diversity. I used an experimental design to disentangle two different spatial scales, influenced by differences in macroclimate, forest microclimate and spatial distance, and two host scales, driven by differences between tree lineages and tree species. I set these beta diversities in relation to the gamma diversity of the three main decomposer groups to identify whether a unified conservation concept could be applied to one scale to optimally protect the diversity of all three species groups. Second, I identified whether diversity and community composition of fungi and bacteria differed among climate and land use gradients. Further I explored whether specialisation and niche packing could explain the expected pattern. To do so I used an experimental design disentangling climate and land use across a large gradient in Germany. The results differed among the species groups, denying a unified conservation concept focusing on one scale. Saproxylic beetle and fruit body beta diversity was equally high on each scale, as they are more sensitive towards environmental factors like macro- and microclimate. On the other hand, mycelial fungi and bacteria beta diversity was highest on the host scale, especially the host tree scale, indicating a high host specificity of the two groups. The second study also identified tree species as the main driver of diversity and community composition of these two study groups. Specialisation of fungi was not influenced by land use or climate. Bacterial specialisation and diversity were under a strong influence of mean precipitation. Comprehensive conservation of multi-taxonomic diversity across regions thus requires the integration of several scales. Within different macroclimatic regions, forests of varying microclimates, i.e., forest management, must be implemented. In these forests, dead-wood of different tree lineages, i.e., angio- and gymnosperms and tree species, must be provided.
Taken together, I could demonstrate that metabarcoding is an efficient method to sample threatened fungal species and identify differing drivers of fungal diversity present as fruit bodies or mycelium. Its usefulness will further increase due to the ongoing improvement of sequencing databases and thus better inform conservation concepts. Using metabarcoding, I could demonstrate that high host specialisation of saproxylic fungi is not a European but a global phenomenon and identify tree species loss under global change as one major concern for saproxylic diversity. My dissertation further highlighted the importance of multi-taxonomic studies for evidence-based nature conservation, as different species groups require varying concepts. These results were especially important for saproxylic bacteria as the drivers of their diversity are still largely unknown. Howbeit, large research gaps still exist regarding the impacts of global change on species and processes. Moreover, the spatial coverage of studies is needed to confirm or neglect the generality of current research especially concerning the highly diverse tropical areas. An increased focus on the drivers of diversity in these areas is crucial to ensure a globally comprehensive saproxylic conservation and the various ecosystem functions they control.
Seed dispersal is a key ecosystem function for plant regeneration, as it involves the movement of seeds away from the parental plants to particular habitats where they can germinate and transition to seedlings and ultimately adult plants. Seed dispersal is shaped by a diversity of abiotic and biotic factors, particularly by associations between plants and climate and between plants and other species. Due to the ongoing loss of biodiversity and changing global conditions, such interactions are prone to change and pose a severe threat to plant regeneration. One way to address this challenge is to study associations between plant traits and abiotic and biotic factors to understand the potential impacts of global change on plant regeneration. Plant communities have long been analyzed through the lens of vegetative traits, mainly ignoring how other traits interact and respond to the environment. For instance, while associations between vegetative traits (e.g., specific leaf area, leaf nitrogen content) and climate are well studied, there are few case studies of reproductive traits in relation to trait-environment associations in the context of global change.
Thus, the overarching aim of this dissertation is to explore how trait-environment associations, with a special focus on reproductive traits, can improve our understanding of the effect that global change may have on seed dispersal, and ultimately on plant regeneration. To this end, my research focuses on studying associations between plant traits and abiotic and biotic factors along an elevational gradient in both forests and deforested areas of tropical mountains. This dissertation addresses three principal research objectives.
First, I investigate the extent to which reproductive (seed and fruit traits) and vegetative traits (leaf traits) are related to abiotic and biotic factors for communities of fleshy-fruited plants in the Ecuadorian Andes. I used multivariate analyses to test associations between four (a)biotic factors and seven reproductive traits and five vegetative traits measured on 18 and 33 fleshy fruited plant species respectively. My analyses demonstrate that climate and soil conditions are strongly associated with the distribution of both reproductive and vegetative traits in tropical tree communities. The production of “costly” vs. “cheap” seeds, fruits and leaves, i.e., the production of few rewarding fruits and acquisitive leaves versus the production of many less-rewarding fruits and conservative leaves, is primarily limited by temperature, whereas the size of plant organs is more related to variation in precipitation and soil conditions. My findings suggest that associations between reproductive and vegetative traits and the abiotic environment follow similar principles in tropical tree communities.
Second, I assess how climate and microhabitat conditions affect the prevalence of endozoochorous plant species in the seed rain of tropical montane forests in southern Ecuador. I analyzed seed rain data for an entire year from 162 traps located across an elevational gradient spanning of 2000 m. I documented the microhabitat conditions (leaf area index and soil moisture next to each seed trap) at small spatial scale as well as the climatic conditions (mean annual temperature and rainfall in each plot) at large spatial scale. After a one-year of sampling, I counted 331,838 seeds of 323 species/morphospecies. My analyses demonstrate that the prevalence of endozoochorous plant species in the seed rain increases with temperature across elevations and with leaf area index within elevations. These results show that the prevalence of endozoochory is shaped by the interplay of both abiotic and biotic factors at large and small spatial scales.
Third, I examine the potential of seed rain to restore deforested tropical areas along an elevational gradient in southern Ecuador. For this chapter, I collected seed rain using 324 seed traps installed in 18 1-ha plots in forests (nine forest plots) and in pastures (nine deforested plots) along an elevational gradient of 2000 m. After a sampling period of three months, I collected a total of 123,039 seeds of 255 species/morphospecies from both forests and pastures along the elevational gradient. I did not find a consistent decrease in the amount and richness of seed rain between forests and pastures, but I detected a systematic change in the type of dispersed seeds, as heavier seeds and a higher proportion of endozoochorous species were found in forests compared to pastures at all elevations. This finding suggests that deforestation acts as a strong filter selecting seed traits that are vital for plant regeneration.
Understanding the role that trait-environment associations play in how plant communities regenerate today could serve as a basis for predicting changes in regeneration processes of plant communities under changing global conditions in the near future. Here, I show how informative the measurement of reproductive traits and trait environment associations are in facilitating the conservation of forest habitats and the restoration of deforested areas in the context of global change.
Brain development is a complex and highly organized process that relies on the coordinated interaction between neurons and vessels. These cell systems form a neurovascular link that involves the exchange of oxygen, ions, and other physiological components necessary for proper neuronal and vascular function. This physiologically coupled process is executed through analogous structural and molecular signaling mechanisms shared by both cell types. At the neurovascular interface, the cellular crosstalk via these shared signaling mechanisms allows for the synchronized expansion and integration of neurons and vessels into complex cellular networks. This study investigated the role of VEGFR2, a receptor for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), during postnatal neuronal development in the mouse hippocampus. Prior studies have revealed physiological roles of VEGF, a pro-angiogenic morphogen, in nervous system development. However, it was unclear if VEGF signaling had a direct effect on neuronal physiology and function through neuronal-expressing receptors. In this investigative work, we identified a previously unknown function of VEGFR2, whereby VEGF-induced signaling coordinates the development and circuitry integration of CA3 pyramidal neurons in the early postnatal mouse hippocampus. Mechanistically, we found that VEGFR2 signaling requires receptor endocytosis, a process mediated by ephrinB2. We also found that VEGF-induced cooperative signaling between VEGFR2 and ephrinB2 is functionally required for the dendritic arborization and spine maturation of developing CA3 neurons during the first few postnatal weeks. Moreover, in a collaborative effort with the research group of Carmen Ruiz de Almodovar, formerly at the University of Heidelberg, we simultaneously studied VEGF-induced VEGFR2 signaling in CA3 axonal development. Together, we aimed to gain a comprehensive understanding of the complex interplay between VEGF and VEGFR2 signaling during the early postnatal development of CA3 neurons. Ruiz de Almodovar’s research group found that, unlike the branch and spine development of CA3 dendrites, VEGF-VEGFR2 signaling promotes axonal development through mechanisms that are independent of ephrinB2 function. Our findings on CA3 dendritic development are reported in the published manuscript, Harde et al. (2019), and the complementary work on CA3 axonal development from Ruiz de Almodovar's group is presented in the co-published manuscript, Luck et al. (2019). Although the totality of Ruiz de Almodovar's group's work on CA3 axons is not fully discussed here, it is referenced where noted to provide biological context for our findings on CA3 dendritic development.
VEGFR2 signaling within neurovascular niches is known to play a role in the neurogenesis of neural progenitor cells during embryonic development and within the adult brain. However, the precise localization of neuronal VEGFR2 expression and functional role within the nervous system during postnatal brain development was unknown. To investigate this, we used immunohistochemistry to identify the spatial expression of VEGFR2 within the mouse hippocampus during the first few weeks after birth. Our results showed that VEGFR2 was predominantly expressed within the hippocampal vasculature, consistent with prior studies. However, we also observed localized VEGFR2 expression in pyramidal cell neurons of the hippocampal CA3 region by postnatal day 10 (P10). This spatially restricted postnatal expression of VEGFR2 in CA3 neurons suggested a potential role in the development of these neurons during this developmental stage.
The first two weeks after birth in the mouse hippocampus is a critical period for the development of neuronal circuits, as neurons undergo extensive dendritic arborization and spine formation. To explore the role of VEGFR2 in the postnatal nervous system, we used a Nes-cre VEGFR2lox/- mouse line to target the deletion of VEGFR2 expression within the nervous system while preserving normal receptor expression in all other cell types. We also generated corresponding control mice that were negative for Nes-cre. By breeding these mice with Thy1-GFP reporter mice, we could analyze the functional consequences of VEGFR2 by assessing the morphologies of CA3 dendritic trees and spine density and maturation at P10 and P15, respectively. Our analysis showed that CA3 neurons in Nes-cre VEGFR2lox/- mice had less complex dendritic arbors compared to control mice. There were significant reductions in total length and branch points, particularly in areas located 100-250 μm from the cell soma within the stratum radiatum layer. Additionally, Nes-cre VEGFR2lox/- mice exhibited a significant decrease in spine density accompanied by an increased proportion of immature spines. These findings suggest that VEGFR2 plays a crucial role in the proper development of CA3 dendrites and spines during the early postnatal weeks.
In view of a growing world population and the finite nature of fossil resources, the development of eco-friendly production processes is essential for the transition towards a sustainable industry. Methanol, which can be produced both petrochemically and from renewable resources, offers itself as bridging technology and attractive alternative raw material for biotechnological processes. This work describes developments for the progress of the well-studied methylotrophic α proteobacterium Methylorubrum extorquens AM1 towards an efficient methylotrophic cell factory. Although many homologous and heterologous production routes have already been described and realized for M. extorquens in a laboratory scale, no industrial process has yet been realized. Three major reasons can be identified for this: (1) A limited choice of tools for genetic modifications, (2) a lack of understanding of carbon fluxes and side reactions occurring in modified strains, such as product reimports, and (3) the lack of tailored production strains for profitable target products and optimized bioprocessing protocols. The aim of the present work was to achieve developments for the mentioned areas. As a model application, the high-level production of chiral dicarboxylic acids from the substrate methanol was chosen. Enantiomerically pure chiral compounds are of great interest, e.g., as building blocks for chiral drugs. The ethylmalonyl CoA metabolic pathway (EMCP) which is part of the primary metabolism of M. extorquens, harbors unique chiral CoA-ester intermediates. Their acid derivatives can be released by cleavage of the CoA-moiety using heterologous enzymes. The dicarboxylic acids 2 methylsuccinic acid and mesaconic acid were produced in a previous study by introducing the heterologous thioesterase YciA into M. extorquens. In the said study, a combined product titer of 0.65 g/L was obtained in shake flask experiments. These results serve as the basis for the developments in the present work.
First, the previously described reuptake of products was thoroughly investigated and dctA2, a gene encoding for an acid transporter, was identified as target for reducing the product reuptake. In addition, reuptake of mesaconic acid was prevented by converting it to (S)-citramalic acid, a product not metabolizable by M. extorquens, by the introduction of a heterologous mesaconase. Together with 2-methylsuccinic acid, for which a high enantiomeric excess of (S)-2-methylsuccinic acid was determined, a second chiral molecule was thus added to the product spectrum. For the release of dicarboxylic acid products, YciA, a broad-range thioesterase that accepts a variety of CoA-esters with different chain lengths as substrates, was chosen. The enzyme should theoretically be able to hydrolyze all CoA-esters of interest present in the EMCP. However, in culture supernatants of M. extorquens strains that were overexpressing the corresponding yciA gene, only mesaconic acid and 2 methylsuccinic acid could be detected. To expand the substrate spectrum of YciA thioesterase with respect to other EMCP intermediates, semi-rational enzyme engineering was attempted. Screening of the corresponding strains carrying the respective YciA variants did not result in strains capable of producing new dicarboxylic acid products. However, the experiments revealed an amino acid position that strongly affected the production of mesaconic acid and 2-methylsuccinic acid in vivo. By substituting the according amino acid in YciA, the maximum titers of mesaconic acid and 2-methylsuccinic acid could be increased substantially. Application of an improved thioesterase variant in a second E. coli-based process confirmed the enhanced activity of the enzyme. The desired extension of the product spectrum by another chiral molecule (2-hydroxy-3-methylsuccinic acid, presumably the (2S,3R)-form) was finally achieved by using an alternative thioesterase. Tailored fermentation strategies were developed for the high-level production of the above-mentioned products.
As second part of the work, two novel genetic tools for M. extorquens were developed and characterized. The pBBR1-derived plasmid pMis1_1B was shown to be stably maintained in M. extorquens cells. In addition, its suitability for co-transformations with other plasmids was demonstrated. The second tool, the cumate-inducible promoter Ps6, is tailored for expression of pathways with toxic products, as the transcription of genes controlled by Ps6 is strongly repressed in the absence of an inducer.
Overall, the present work demonstrates the enormous potential of using M. extorquens as a methylotrophic cell factory. In the applications shown, the biotechnological production of high-priced chiral molecules is combined with the use of an attractive alternative substrate. In addition, new achievements and approaches are presented to facilitate the development of future M. extorquens production strains.
For thousands of years, S. cerevisiae has been employed by humans in brewing and baking. Nowadays, this budding yeast is more than that: it is a well investigated model organism and an established workhorse in biotechnology. S. cerevisiae serves as a production host for various applications such as i) bioethanol production ii) the biosynthesis of hormones including insulin or iii) cannabinoid biosynthesis. Hereby, the robustness of S. cerevisiae and its high tolerances regarding pH and salt concentrations qualifies it for a wide range of industrial applications. Moreover, products of S. cerevisiae are generally recognised as safe (GRAS), enabling diverse biotechnological applications. Various mechanisms for genetic engineering of S. cerevisiae are applicable and the engineering process itself is straightforward since methods are established and widely known. Due to the wide range of industrial applications of S. cerevisiae, this organism is an ideal candidate for applied research and implementation of the recombinant biosynthesis of tocochromanols in this study.
Tocochromanols encompass tocotrienols and tocopherols, which are lipid-soluble compounds that are commonly associated with vitamin E activity. Hereby, α-tocopherol is the most prevalent form, as it is an essential nutrient in the diet of humans and animals. Naturally, tocochromanols are almost exclusively synthesised by photoautotrophic organisms such as plants or cyanobacteria. They consist of an aromatic head group and a polyprenyl side chain which is saturated in tocopherols and 3-fold unsaturated in tocotrienols. The methylation status of the chromanol ring distinguishes α-, β-, γ- and δ-tocochromanol. All forms of tocochromanols represent a group of powerful antioxidants, scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS) and preventing the propagation of lipid oxidation in lipophilic environments. Recently, attention has been drawn to tocotrienols, due to their benefits in neuroprotection as well as cholesterol-lowering and anti-cancer properties. Consequently, tocochromanols are valuable additives in the food, feed, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries.
The metabolic engineering strategy of S. cerevisiae to enable tocochromanol biosynthesis was started in a preceding master thesis with the provision of the aromatic moiety, homogentisic acid (HGA), from the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis. Hereby, the upregulation and redirection of the native pathway was essential. Therefore, a strain with an engineered aromatic amino acid pathway for improved 4 hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) production (MRY33) was utilised from Reifenrath and Boles (2018). Furthermore, a heterologous hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) was required to convert HPP into HGA. Thus, several heterologous HPPDs were expressed and characterised regarding their HGA production within the previous study. The best variant originated from Yarrowia lipolytica, YlHPPD, and was integrated into the genome of MRY33. The resulting strain JBY2, produced 435 mg/L HGA in a shake flask fermentation.
This work was started with the genetically highly modified strain JBY2, whose genome already contained a large number of genes artificially expressed behind strong promoters. For further strain development, it was advantageous to maintain a high degree of sequence variability in order to prevent genomic instabilities due to sequence homologies. Thus, 17 artificial promoters (AP1-AP17) were characterised regarding their strength of expression by the yellow fluorescent protein (YFP). These sequences were also part of a patent that was filed during this work (WO2023094429A1).
The key point of this study was the development of a metabolic engineering strategy for the strain JBY2. First, the sufficient supply of the second precursor, the polyprenyl side chain, was investigated. Natively, S. cerevisiae produces the precursor, geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP), from the isopentenyl diphosphate pathway. However, without further engineering, GGPP was barely detectable in JBY2 (< 0.1 mg/L). Thus, engineering of the isopentenyl diphosphate biosynthesis was necessary. The limiting enzyme of the mevalonate pathway was the 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR), which is encoded by HMG1. Therefore, a truncation for feedback-resistance and its overexpression by a promoter exchange was performed. Furthermore, the promoter of the gene for the squalene synthase (pERG9) was exchanged by the ergosterol sensitive promoter pERG1 to limit the metabolic flux of the mevalonate pathway into the ergosterol pathway. The native GGPP synthase (BTS1) was another limitation that was observed throughout this study. To overcome this bottleneck, plasmid-based and integrative overexpression of the native BTS1 and a codon optimised BTS1 were investigated. Other strategies to improve GGPP production were the deletion of the gene for the diacylglycerol pyrophosphate phosphatase (DPP1) to prevent excessive dephosphorylation of GGPP to geranylgeraniol (GGOH), and the overexpression of the farnesyl pyrophosphate synthetase, encoded by ERG20. However, the best improvements of the GGPP biosynthesis, inferred through GGOH measurements, were achieved from the screening of several heterologous GGPP synthases in S. cerevisiae. The best performing strain was JBY61 (JBY2, hmg1Δ::pTDH3-HMG1tr[1573–3165], pERG9Δ::pERG1, ChrIV-49293-49345Δ::pTDH3-XdcrtE-tSSA1_LEU2), bearing the heterologous GGPP synthase crtE of Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous and produced 64.23 mg/L GGOH. Consequently, this engineering strategy improved the GGOH production by a factor of 642 compared to the parent strain JBY2.
The capacity of pathogenic bacteria to adhere to host cells and to avoid subsequent clearance by the host´s immune response is the initial and most decisive step leading to infections. Human pathogenic bacteria circulating in the bloodstream need to find ways to interact with endothelial cells (ECs) lining the blood vessels to infect and colonise the host. The extracellular matrix (ECM) of ECs might represent an attractive initial target for bacterial interaction, as many bacterial adhesins have reported affinities to ECM proteins, particularly fibronectin (Fn). Trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAA) have been described as important pathogenicity factors of Gram-negative bacteria. The TAA from human pathogenic Bartonella henselae, Bartonella adhesin A (BadA), is one of the longest and best characterised adhesin and represents a prototypic TAA due to its domain architecture. B. henselae, the causative agent of cat scratch disease, endocarditis, and bacillary angiomatosis, adheres to ECs and ECM proteins via BadA interaction.
In this research, it was determined that the interaction between BadA and Fn is essential for B. henselae host cell adhesion. BadA interactions were identified within the heparin-binding domains of Fn, and the exact binding sites were revealed by mass spectrometry analysis of chemically crosslinked whole-cell bacteria and Fn. It turned out that specific BadA interactions with defined Fn regions represent the molecular basis for bacterial adhesion to ECs. These data were confirmed by using BadA-deficient bacteria and CRISPR-Cas FN1 knockout ECs. It was also identified that BadA binds to Fn from both cellular and plasma origin, suggesting that B. henselae binding to Fn might possibly take part in other infection processes apart from bacterial adherence, e.g. evasion from the host cell immune system.
Interactions between TAAs and Fn represent a key step for adherence of B. henselae to ECs. Still, Fn-mediated binding is of more significant importance for pathogenic bacteria than broadly recognised. Fn removal from the ECM environment of ECs, also reduced adherence of Staphylococcus aureus, Borrelia burgdorferi, and Acinetobacter baumannii to host cells Interactions between adhesins and Fn might therefore represent a crucial step for the adhesion of human-pathogenic Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria targeting the ECs as a niche of infection or as means for persistence.
This research demonstrated that combining large-scale analysis approaches to describe protein-protein interactions with supportive functional readouts (binding assays) allows for the discrimination of crucial interactions involved in bacterial adhesion to the host. The herein-described experimental approaches and tools might guide future research for other pathogenic bacteria and represent an initial point for the future generation of anti-virulence strategies to inhibit bacterial binding to host cells.