Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (810) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (810)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (810)
Keywords
- Molekularbiologie (5)
- Computational chemistry (4)
- Elektrophysiologie (4)
- Genexpression (4)
- Metabolic Engineering (4)
- Mitochondrium (4)
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae (4)
- Altern (3)
- Apoptosis (3)
- Arzneimitteldesign (3)
Institute
- Biowissenschaften (810) (remove)
Die Physiologie des Schmerzes umfasst komplexe immunologische, sensorische und inflammatorische Prozesse im Rückenmark, im Gehirn und in der Peripherie. Wiederholte nozizeptive Stimulation induziert pathophysiologische Veränderungen bei der Schmerzweiterleitung, aus denen eine periphere oder zentrale Sensibilisierung resultiert. Diese kann bei dafür anfälligen Patienten zu der Ausbildung von chronischen Schmerzzuständen führen. Obwohl das Wissen über die genauen molekularen Vorgänge der Schmerz-Chronifizierung noch immer unvollständig ist, sind die Identifizierung von Risikofaktoren vernünftige Schritte, um die individuelle Anfälligkeit für die Entwicklung chronischer Schmerzen zu bestimmen. Das Hauptziel dieser Doktorarbeit bestand daher in der Identifikation humaner genetischer Biomarker für chronische Schmerzzustände.
The fungal interaction with plants is a 400 million years old phenomenon, which presumably assisted in the plants’ establishment on land. In a natural ecosystem, all plant-ranging from large trees to sea-grasses-are colonized by fungal endophytes, which can be detected inter- and intracellularly within the tissues of apparently healthy plants, without causing obvious negative effects on their host. These ubiquitous and diverse microorganisms are likely playing important roles in plant fitness and development. However, the knowledge on the ecological functions of fungal root endophytes is scarce. Among possible functions of endophytes, they are implicated in mutualisms with plants, which may increase plant resistance to biotic stressors like herbivores and pathogens, and/or to abiotic factors like soil salinity and drought. Also, endophytes are fascinating microorganisms in regard to their high potential to produce a great spectrum of secondary metabolites with expected ecological functions. However, evidences suggest that the interactions between host plants and endophytes are not static and endophytes express different symbiotic lifestyles ranging from mutualism to parasitism, which makes difficult to predict the ecological roles of these cryptic microorganisms. To reveal the ecological function of fungal root endophytes, this doctoral thesis aims at assessing fungal root endophytes interactions with different plants and their effects on plant fitness, based on their phylogeny, traits, and competition potential in settings encompassing different abiotic contexts. To understand the cryptic implication of nonmycorrhizal endophytes in ecosystem processes, we isolated a diverse spectrum of fungal endophytes from roots of several plant species growing in different natural contexts and tested their effects on different model plants under axenic laboratory conditions. Additionally,we aimed at investigating the effect of abiotic and biotic variables on the outcome of interactions between fungal root endophytes and plants.
In summary, the morphological and physiological traits of 128 fungal endophyte strains within ten fungal orders were studied and artificial experimental systems were used to reproduce their interactions with three plant species under laboratory conditions. Under defined axenic conditions, most endophytes behaved as weak parasites, but their performance varied across plant species and fungal taxa. The variation in the interactions was partly explained by convergent fungal traits that separate groups of endophytes with potentially different niche preferences. According to my findings, I predict that the functional complementarity of strains is essential in structuring natural root endophytic communities. Additionally, the responses of plant-endophyte interactions to different abiotic factors, namely nutrient availability, light intensity, and substrate’s pH, indicate that the outcome of plant-fungus relationships may be robust to changes in the abiotic environment. The assessment of the responses of plant endophyte interactions to biotic context, as combinations of selected dominant root fungal endophytes with different degrees of trait similarity and shared evolutionary history, indicates that frequently coexisting root-colonizing fungi may avoid competition in inter-specific interactions by occupying specific niches, and that their interactions likely define the structure of root-associated fungal communities and influence the microbiome impacts on plant fitness.
In conclusion, my findings suggest that dominant fungal lineages display different ecological preferences and complementary sets of functional traits, with different niche preferences within root tissues to avoid competition. Also, their diverse effects on plant fitness is likely host-isolate dependent and robust to changes in the abiotic environment when these encompass the tolerance range of either symbiont.
The experiments presented in my thesis were performed to resolve the following major questions: i. Initial experiments are based on the systematic characterization of the C-terminal domains of all 21 HSFs of Arabidopsis with respect to their transactivation potential as well as intracellular localization. This led to the identification of a signature motif for class A HSFs, that consists of an AHA motif (essential for activator potential), and a C-treminal NES (nuclear export signal). With this signature motif, we could identify homologues sequences of more than 90 HSFs in various plant species. ii. Analysis of developmental expression profiles of HSFs using AtGenExpress microarray data led to the identification of the unique expression of HsfA9 during late seed developmental stages. This was the starting point for the investigation of the regulation of HsfA9 as well as its function during seed development. iii. The seed specific transcription factor ABI3 was identified to be responsible for the regulation of HsfA9 by using knock out mutant lines and ectopically expressing transgenic lines for ABI3 gene. Furthermore, the importance of a RY/Sph motif, as binding site for ABI3 on HsfA9 promoter has been analyzed with transient GUS reporter assays. In addition, contribution of component(s) of ABA (abscisic acid) signaling cascade as a functional interacting partner of ABI3 on HsfA9 promoter has been shown and discussed. iv. The essential role of HsfA9 as master regulator for the expression of seed specific members of of HSP encoding genes and GolS1 was shown by analyzing transgenic plants ectopically expressing HsfA9 as well as, by carrying out transient GUS reporter assays. Correlating with this, transgenic plants with ectopic expression of HsfA9 showed a thermotolerent phenotype. Furthermore, a model where HsfA9 plays a key function for the regulation of seed expressed genes which might involved in providing dessication tolerance during seed maturation has been proposed.
Many hominin species are best physically represented and understood by the sum of their dental morphologies. Generally, taxonomic affinities and evolutionary trends in development (ontogeny) and morphology (phylogeny) can be deduced from dental analyses. More specifically, the study of dental remains can yield a wealth of information on many facets of hominin evolution, life history, physiology and ecological adaptation; in short, the organisms paleobiomics. Functionally, teeth present information about dietary preferences, that is, the dietary niche in ecological context and, in turn, masticatory function. As the amount and types of information that can be gleaned from 2-dimensional tooth measurement exhaust themselves, 3-dimensional microscopic modeling and analysis presents a largely fertile ground for reexamination and reinterpretation of dental characteristics (Bromage et al., 2005). As such, a novel, non-destructive approach has been developed which combines the work of two established technologies (confocal microscopy and 3D modeling) adapted specifically for the purpose of mineralized tissue imaging. Through this method, 3D functional masticatory and therefore occlusal molar microwear is able to be visualized, quantified and comparatively analyzed to assess dietary preference in Javanese Homo erectus. This method differs from other microwear investigative techniques (defining 'pits'- vs- 'scratches', microtexture analysis etc.) in that it defines a molars masticatory microwear functional interactions in 3-dimensions as its baseline dataset for further interpretations and analyses. Due to poor specimen collection techniques employed during the first half of the 20th century, the very complex geologic nature of the Sangiran Dome and disagreements over its chronostratigraphy, only very few scientific works have addressed the Sangiran 7 (S7) Homo erectus molar collection (n=25) (e.g. Grine and Franzen, 1994; Kaifu, 2006). Grine and Franzen's (1994) work was a predominantly qualitative initial assessment of the specimens and identified five specimens that might better be ascribed to a fossil pongid rather than H. erectus. They also noted several molars to which tooth position (M1 or M2) was unable to be ascribed (Grine and Franzen, 1994). Kaifu (2006) comparatively examined crown sizes in several S7 molars.
The Sangiran 7 collection originates from two distinct geologic horizons: ten from the older Sangiran Formation (S7a, ~1.7 to 1.0mya) and fifteen from the younger, overlying Bapang Formation (S7b, ~1.0 to .7mya). During this million year period, Java was connected to the mainland during various glacio-eustatic low-stands in sea level. These mainland connections varied in size, extent, climatic condition and therefore in faunal and floral composition. As the S7 sample may be representative of the earliest Homo erectus migrants into Java and spans long durations of occupation, its investigation yields potential to understand the various influences climatic and ecogeographic fluctuations had on these populations. Since the sample consists only of teeth, an ecodietary approach has been deemed the most logical and appropriate investigative approach. Questions regarding the intra- and inter- S7 sample
relationships will also be addressed.
By comparing various aspects of the H. erectus dentition against that of hunter/ gatherer's (H/G) whose diet is known, functional dietary similarity can be directly correlated. Thus a comparative molar sample consisting of the below historic hunter/ gather's (n=63) has been included in order to assess H. erectus's diet in ecological context: Inuit (n=9), Pacific Northwest Tribes (n=11), Fuegians (n=11), Australian Aborigines (n=12) and Bushman (n=20). Methodologically, this approach produces a 3D facet microwear vector (fmv) signature for each molar which can then be compared for statistical similarity.
Microwear (and, as such, the fmv signatures) was defined by the regular, parallel striations found on specific cusp facets known to arise from patterned, directional masticatory movements. This differs significantly from post-mortem or taphonomic microwear which produces striations at irregular angles on multiple, non-masticatory surfaces (Peuch et al.1985, Teaford, 1988). A 'match value' is produced to determine the similarity of two molars fmv's. The 'match values' are ranked (high to low) and these rankings are used to statistically analyze and infer dietary preference: between Sangiran 7 (as an entire sample) compared against that of the historic hunter/ gatherer H. sapiens whose diet and ecogeography is known; within S7a and S7b and then among the S7 sample (eg. S7a-vs-S7b); whether the purported Pongo molars actually affiliate well with H. erectus, the hunter-gatherer's or if they demonstrate distinctly different fmv signatures altogether; whether fmv signatures are useful in distinguishing molars whose tooth position is in doubt (eg. M1 or M2).
When compared against individual H/G molars, the results show that Sangiran 7 H. erectus most closely correlates with Bushmen across all areas of fmv signature analysis. However, within broader dietary categories (yearly reliant on proteinaceous foods; seasonally reliant on proteinaceous foods; not reliant on proteinaceous foods), it was found that H. erectus most closely allied with the two hunter/ gatherer subpopulations associated with the 'Seasonally reliant on proteinaceous foods' (Australian Aboriginals and Pacific Northwest Tribes). There was also evidence for dietary change or specialization over time. As the environment changed during occupation by the earlier Sangiran to the later Bapang individuals, the dietary preference shifted from a focus on vegetative foods to a diet much more inclusive of proteinaceous resources.
These results are considered logical within the larger ecogeographic and chronostratigraphic context of the Sangiran Dome during the Pleistocene. However, a larger sample would be needed to confirm this. Although general dietary preferences can be drawn from this method, it is not possible at present to define specific foods consumed on a daily basis (eg. tubers or tortoise meat).
Out of the five specimens possibly allied with Pongo, S7-14 matched at the 'high' designation with a hunter/ gatherer, S7-62 matched 'moderately', S7-20 matched 'low' while the remaining two were not able to be matched with any other teeth for various reasons. Although designation to Pongo cannot be ruled on at this time using this method, it does demonstrate that at least two of the teeth correlate well with various hunter/ gatherer's who do not share dietary similarity with Pongo. This suggests their designation as Pongo should be more closely reevaluated. As for the four specimens whose tooth position was unsure, S7-14 matched 'highly' with 1st molars, S7-62 and S7-78 matched 'moderately' with 2nd and 1st molars respectively while S7-20 only matched at the 'low' designation. Although this approach is still exploratory, it adds another analytical tool for use in defining tooth position.
In sum, this method has demonstrated its usefulness in defining and functionally analyzing a novel 3D molar microwear dataset to interpret dietary preference. Future work would include a pan- H. erectus molar sample in order to illuminate broader populational, taxonomic and dietary correlations within and amoung all H. erectus specimens. A larger, more heterogenous historic H/G sample would also be included in order to provide a wider dietary comparative population. This method can be further extended to include and compare any and all hominins as well as any organism which produces micro wear upon it molars. Also, the data obtained and resultant fmv signature diagrams have the potential to be incorporated into 3D VR reconstructions of mandibular movement thus recreating mastication in extinct organisms and leading to more robust anatomical and physiological investigations especially when viewed in the context of larger environmental conditions or changes.
A novel role for mutant mRNA degradation in triggering transcriptional adaptation to mutations
(2020)
Robustness to mutations promotes organisms’ well-being and fitness. The increasing number of mutants in various model organisms, and humans, showing no obvious phenotype (Bouche and Bouchez, 2001; Chen et al., 2016b; Giaever et al., 2002; Kok et al., 2015) has renewed interest into how organisms adapt to gene loss. In the presence of deleterious mutations, genetic compensation by transcriptional upregulation of related gene(s) (also known as transcriptional adaptation) has been reported in numerous systems (El-Brolosy and Stainier, 2017; Rossi et al., 2015; Tondeleir et al., 2012); however, the molecular mechanisms underlying this response remained unclear. To investigate this phenomenon, I develop and study multiple models of transcriptional adaptation in zebrafish and mouse cell lines. I first show that transcriptional adaptation is not caused by loss of protein function, indicating that the trigger lies upstream, and find that the response involves enhanced transcription of the related gene(s). Furthermore, I observe a correlation between levels of mutant mRNA degradation and upregulation of related genes. To investigate the role of mutant mRNA degradation in triggering the response, I generate mutant alleles that do not transcribe the mutated gene and find that they fail to induce a transcriptional response and display stronger phenotypes. Transcriptome analysis of alleles displaying mutant mRNA degradation revealed upregulation of a significant proportion of genes displaying sequence similarity with the mutated gene’s mRNA, suggesting a model whereby mRNA degradation intermediates induce transcriptional adaptation via sequence similarity. Further mechanistic analyses suggested RNA-decay factors-dependent chromatin remodeling, and repression of antisense RNAs to be implicated in the response. These results identify a novel role for mutant mRNA degradation in buffering against mutations. Besides, they hold huge implications on understanding disease-causing mutations and shall help in designing mutations that lead to minimal transcriptional adaptation-induced compensation, facilitating studying gene function in model organisms.
One of the key functions of blood vessels is to transport nutrients and oxygen to distant tissues and organs in the body. When blood supply is insufficient, new vessels form to meet the metabolic tissue demands and to re-establish cellular homeostasis. Expansion of the vascular network through sprouting angiogenesis requires the specification of ECs into leading (sprouting) tip and following (non-sprouting) stalk cells. Attracted by guidance cues tip cells dynamically extend and retract filopodia to navigate the nascent vessel sprout, whereas trailing stalk cells proliferate to form the extending vascular tube. All of these processes are under the control of environmental signals (e.g. hypoxia, metabolism) and numerous cytokines and peptide growth factors. The Dll4/Notch pathway coordinates several critical steps of angiogenic blood vessel growth. Even subtle alterations in Notch activity can profoundly influence endothelial cell behavior and blood vessel formation, yet little is known about the intrinsic regulation and dynamics of Notch signaling in endothelial cells. In addition, it remains an open question, how different growth factor signals impinging on sprouting ECs are coordinated with local environmental cues originating from nutrient-deprived, hypoxic tissue to achieve a balanced endothelial cell response. Acetylation of lysines is a critical posttranslational modification of histones, which acts as an important regulatory mechanism to control chromatin structure and gene transcription. In addition to histones, several non-histone proteins are targeted for acetylation reversible acetylation is emerging as a fundamental regulatory mechanism to control protein function, interaction and stability. Previous studies from our group identified the NAD+-dependent deacetylase SIRT1 as a key regulator of blood vessel growth controlling endothelial angiogenic responses. These studies revealed that SIRT1 is highly expressed in the vascular endothelium during blood vessel development, where it controls the angiogenic activity of endothelial cells. Moreover, in this work SIRT1 has been shown to control the activity of key regulators of cardiovascular homeostasis such as eNOS, Foxo1 and p53. The present study describes that SIRT1 antagonizes Notch signaling by deacetylating the Notch intracellular domain (NICD). We showed that loss of SIRT1 enhances DLL4-induced endothelial Notch responses as assessed by different luciferase responsive elements as well as transcriptional analysis of Notch endogenous target genes activation. Conversely, SIRT1 gain of function by overexpression of pharmacological activation decreases induction of Notch targets in response to DLL4 stimulation. We also showed that the NICD can be directly acetylated by PC AF and p300 and that SIRT1 promotes deacetylation of NICD. We have identified 14 lysines that are targeted for acetylation and their mutation abolishes the effects of SIRT1 of Notch responses. Furthermore, over-expression or activation of SIRT1 significantly reduces the levels of NICD protein. Moreover, SIRT1-mediated NICD degradation can be reversed by blockade of the proteasome suggesting a mechanism resulting from ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis. Indeed, we have shown that SIRT1 knockdown or pharmacological inhibition decreased NICD ubiquitination. We propose a novel molecular mechanism of modulation of the amplitude and duration of Notch responses in which acetylation increases NICD stability and therefore permanence at the promoters, while SIRT1, by inducing NICD degradation through its deacetylation, shortens Notch responses. In order to evaluate the physiological relevance of our findings we used different models in which the Notch functions during blood vessel formation have been extensively characterized. First, retinal angiogenesis in mice lacking SIRT1 activity shows decreased branching and reduced endothelial proliferation, similar to what happens after Notch gain of function mutations. ECs from these mice exhibit increased expression of Notch target genes. Second, these results were reproducible during intersomitic vessel growth in sirt1-deficient zebrafish. In both models, the defects could be partially rescued by inhibition of Notch activation. Third, we used an in vitro model of vessel sprouting from differentiating embryonic bodies in response to VEGF in a collagen matrix. Our results showed that Sirt1-deficient cells shows impaired sprouting which correlated with increased NICD levels. In addition, when in competition with wild-type cells in this assay, Sirt1-deficient cells are more prone to occupy the stalk cell position. Taken together, our study identifies reversible acetylation of NICD as a novel molecular mechanism to adapt the dynamics of Notch signaling and suggest that SIRT1 acts as a rheostat to fine-tune endothelial Notch responses. The NAD+-dependent feature of SIRT1 activity possibly links endothelial Notch responses to environmental cues and metabolic changes during nutrient deprivation in ischemic environments or upon other cellular stresses.
Echolocation allows bats to orientate in darkness without using visual information. Bats emit spatially directed high frequency calls and infer spatial information from echoes coming from call reflections in objects (Simmons 2012; Moss and Surlykke 2001, 2010). The echoes provide momentary snapshots, which have to be integrated to create an acoustic image of the surroundings. The spatial resolution of the computed image increases with the quantity of received echoes. Thus, a high call rate is required for a detailed representation of the surroundings.
One important parameter that the bats extract from the echoes is an object’s distance. The distance is inferred from the echo delay, which represents the duration between call emission and echo arrival (Kössl et al. 2014). The echo delay decreases with decreasing distance and delay-tuned neurons have been characterized in the ascending auditory pathway, which runs from the inferior colliculus (Wenstrup et al. 2012; Macías et al. 2016; Wenstrup and Portfors 2011; Dear and Suga 1995) to the auditory cortex (Hagemann et al. 2010; Suga and O'Neill 1979; O'Neill and Suga 1982).
Electrophysiological studies usually characterize neuronal processing by using artificial and simplified versions of the echolocation signals as stimuli (Hagemann et al. 2010; Hagemann et al. 2011; Hechavarría and Kössl 2014; Hechavarría et al. 2013). The high controllability of artificial stimuli simplifies the inference of the neuronal mechanisms underlying distance processing. But, it remains largely unexplored how the neurons process delay information from echolocation sequences. The main purpose of the thesis is to investigate how natural echolocation sequences are processed in the brain of the bat Carollia perspicillata. Bats actively control the sensory information that it gathers during echolocation. This allows experimenters to easily identify and record the acoustic stimuli that are behaviorally relevant for orientation. For recording echolocation sequences, a bat was placed in the mass of a swinging pendulum (Kobler et al. 1985; Beetz et al. 2016b). During the swing the bat emitted echolocation calls that were reflected in surrounding objects. An ultrasound sensitive microphone traveling with the bat and positioned above the bat’s head recorded the echolocation sequence. The echolocation sequence carried delay information of an approach flight and was used as stimulus for neuronal recordings from the auditory cortex and inferior colliculus of the bats.
Presentation of high stimulus rates to other species, such as rats, guinea pigs, suppresses cortical neuron activity (Wehr and Zador 2005; Creutzfeldt et al. 1980). Therefore, I tested if neurons of bats are suppressed when they are stimulated with high acoustic rates represented in echolocation sequences (sequence situation). Additionally, the bats were stimulated with randomized call echo elements of the sequence and an interstimulus time interval of 400 ms (element situation). To quantify neuronal suppression induced by the sequence, I compared the response pattern to the sequence situation with the concatenated response patterns to the element situation. Surprisingly, although the bats should be adapted for processing high acoustic rates, their cortical neurons are vastly suppressed in the sequence situation (Beetz et al. 2016b). However, instead of being completely suppressed during the sequence situation, the neurons partially recover from suppression at a unit specific call echo element. Multi-electrode recordings from the cortex allow assessment of the representation of echo delays along the cortical surface. At the cortical level, delay-tuned neurons are topographically organized. Cortical suppression improves sharpness of neuronal tuning and decreases the blurriness of the topographic map. With neuronal recordings from the inferior colliculus, I tested whether the echolocation sequence also induced neuronal suppression at subcortical level. The sequence induced suppression was weaker in the inferior colliculus than in the cortex. The collicular response makes the neurons able to track the acoustic events in the echolocation sequence. Collicular suppression mainly improves the signal-to-noise ratio. In conclusion, the results demonstrate that cortical suppression is not necessarily a shortcoming for temporal processing of rapidly occurring stimuli as it has previously been interpreted.
Natural environments are usually composed of multiple objects. Thus, each echolocation call reflects off multiple objects resulting in multiple echoes following the calls. At present, it is largely unexplored how neurons process echolocation sequences containing echo information from more than one object (multi-object sequences). Therefore, I stimulated bats with a multi-object sequence which contained echo information from three objects. The objects were different distances away from each other. I tested the influence of each object on the neuronal tuning by stimulating the bats with different sequences created from filtering object specific echoes from the multi-object sequence. The cortex most reliably processes echo information from the nearest object whereas echo information from distant objects is not processed due to neuronal suppression. Collicular neurons process less selectively echo information from certain objects and respond to each echo.
For proper echolocation, bats have to distinguish between own biosonar signals and the signals coming from conspecifics. This can be quite challenging when many bats echolocate adjacent to each other. In behavioral experiments, the echolocation performance of C. perspicillata was tested in the presence of potentially interfering sounds. In the presence of acoustic noise, the bats increase the sensory acquisition rate which may increase the update rate of sensory processing. Neuronal recordings from the auditory cortex and inferior colliculus could strengthen the hypothesis. Although there were signs of acoustic interference or jamming at neuronal level, the neurons were not completely suppressed and responded to the rest of the echolocation sequence.
Diese Dissertation befasst sich mit den Auswirkungen von nicht letalen Dosen von Neonikotinoiden auf Bienen. Neonikotinoide stellen eine Klasse von Insektiziden dar, die auf den nikotinischen Acetylcholin Rezeptor wirken. In dieser Dissertation wurden die Neonikotinoide Imidacloprid, Clothianidin und Thiacloprid benutzt. Die beiden erst genannten unterliegen zum Zeitpunkt des Verfassens dieser Arbeit einem temporären Verkaufs- und Ausbringungs-Stopp. Damit sind die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit wichtig für die Bewertung der Gefahren von Neonikotinoiden. Neonikotinoide werden im großen Maße in der Landwirtschaft als Spritzmittel und Saatgutbeize eingesetzt. Dabei können sie in Rückständen von Bienen beim Sammeln von Nektar und Pollen aufgenommen und zum Stock gebracht werden. Um einen weiten Blick auf die Auswirkungen der Stoffe zu werfen wurden deshalb Experimente an einzelnen Sammlerinnen durchgeführt, ebenso wie an Bienenvölkern, bei denen die Substanzen verfüttert wurden. Als neuronal aktive Substanzen können sie die normale Funktion des Nervensystems von Bienen beeinflussen, was Veränderungen im Verhalten hervorrufen kann. Dies zeigt sich in Veränderungen in der Bewegung, Orientierung oder auch Interaktion mit anderen Bienen. Die Wirkung am Rezeptor variiert, trotz gleichen molekularen Ziels, stark zwischen den verwendeten Neonikotinoiden. Clothianidin wurde als Agonist beschrieben, der sogar stärkere Ströme als Acetylcholin bei gleicher Konzentration hervorrufen kann. Imidacloprid dagegen wurde bereits als partieller Agonist beschrieben, der geringere Ströme über den Rezeptor auslöst. In dieser Arbeit wurde ein erster Versuch durchgeführt um Thiacloprid ebenfalls als Agonist am nikotinischen Acetylcholin Rezeptor der Biene zu beschreiben. Hierbei wurde an einer Zelle in Kultur ein geringerer Strom ausgelöst.
Bienenvölker wurden unter kontrollierten Bedingungen gehalten, bei denen je eins der Neonikotinoide Clothianidin, Imidacloprid oder Thiacloprid in das Futter gemischt wurden. Hierfür wurden Dosen gewählt, bei denen davon ausgegangen werden konnte, dass keine akute Beeinflussung der Sammlerinnen bestand. Es konnte festgestellt werden, dass chronisches Füttern mit einer Zuckerlösung mit 8,876 mg/kg Thiacloprid zu einer verringerten Sammelleistung führte. Ebenso wurde die Entwicklung der Eier stark eingeschränkt, wobei die Königin weiterhin Eier legte. Es konnten nur vereinzelte verdeckelte Brutzellen, die ein spätes Entwicklungsstadium der Bienen darstellen, gefunden werden. Damit konnte gezeigt werden, dass geringe Dosen die Larval-Entwicklung von Bienen beeinflussen, eventuell durch Einflüsse auf die Kommunikation zwischen Ammenbienen und der Brut.
Um Auswirkungen auf einzelne Tiere zu zeigen, wurden unterschiedliche Parameter im Heimflug von Bienen nach Fütterung mit je einem der Neonikotinoide analysiert. Bienen mussten sich nach der Fütterung orientieren und von einer neuen Position den Heimweg zum Stock finden. Der Heimflug wurde per Radar verfolgt und so ein Flugprofil erstellt, das aus zwei Flugphasen bestand. Diese wurden durch die Navigation nach Vektorintegration und durch Landmarken unterteilt. Aus dem Flugprofil konnte abgelesen werden, wie lange die Bienen für die Phasen des Flugs benötigten, in welchem Hauptflugwinkel sie die erste Flugphase absolvierten, in welche Richtung sie am Ende der ersten Flugphase flogen und wie gerichtet der Flug war. Auch wurde erfasst, ob die Bienen überhaupt in der Lage waren zum Stock zurückzukehren. Hier zeigte sich, dass die Fütterung mit Zuckerwasser mit 0,6 µM und 0,9 µM Imidacloprid, ebenso wie mit 0,1 mM Thiacloprid zu einer verringerten Heimkehrwahrscheinlichkeit führte. In der ersten Flugphase konnte auch gezeigt werden, dass 0,2 µM Clothianidin im Zuckerwasser zu einem schnelleren Flug führte und dass der Flugwinkel im Vergleich zur Kontrolle in Richtung der wahren Position des Stocks verschoben war. Beide Imidacloprid-Gruppen zeigten eine ähnliche, signifikante Verschiebung des Flugwinkels, ebenso konnte im Flug selbst eine häufige Änderung der Richtung festgestellt werden. In der zweiten Flugphase zeigte sich, dass Bienen, welche mit Thiacloprid behandelt wurden häufiger eine inkorrekte Heimflugrichtung wählten, was in längeren Heimflügen resultierte. Die mit Clothianidin behandelten Bienen legten eine längere Flugstrecke zurück. Bienen, welche Imidacloprid beider Konzentrationen konsumierten, zeigten einen häufigen Wechsel ihrer Flugrichtung. Damit konnten bei allen drei gewählten Neonikotinoiden Einflüsse auf spezifische Komponenten der Navigation von Bienen gefunden und Einschränkungen im Heimkehr- und Orientierungsverhalten einzelner Sammlerinnen gezeigt werden. Somit konnten die eingehenden Fragen zumindest teilweise beantwortet werden und die Datenlage zur Frage der Schädlichkeit der, auch politisch umstrittenen, Substanzen erweitert werden.
ADAM15, which belongs to the family of the disintegrin and metalloproteinases, is a multi-domain transmembrane protein. A strongly upregulated expression of ADAM15 is found in inflamed synovial membranes from articular joints affected by osteoarthritis and especially rheumatoid arthritis (RA). During the chronic inflammatory process in RA the synovial membrane gets hyperplastic, resulting eventually in the formation of a pannus tissue, which can invade into the adjacent cartilage and bone thereby destroying their integrity. Previously, the expression of ADAM15 in fibroblasts of the RA synovial membrane was found to confer a significant anti-apoptotic response upon triggering of the Fas receptor, which resulted in the activation of two survival kinases, focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and Src. The Fas receptor, also named CD95, belongs to the death receptor family of the tumor necrosis factor receptors and stimulation of Fas/CD95 by its ligand FasL results in the execution of apoptotic cell death in synovial membranes of RA patients. However, the occurrence of apoptotic cell death in vivo in RA synovial tissues is considerably low despite the presence of FasL at high concentrations in the chronically inflamed joint. Accordingly, a general apoptosis resistance is a characteristic of RA-synovial fibroblasts that contributes considerably to the formation the hyperplastic aggressive pannus tissue. The objective of this study was to investigate the mechanisms underlying the capability of ADAM15 to transform FasL-mediated death- inducing signals into pro-survival activation of Src and FAK in rheumatoid arthritis fibroblasts (RASFs).
In the present study, the down-regulation of ADAM15 by RNA interference resulted in a significant increase of caspase 3/7 activity upon stimulation of the Fas receptor in RASFs. Likewise, chondrocytes expressing a deletion mutant of ADAM15 (ΔC), lacking the cytoplasmic domain, revealed increased caspase activities upon Fas ligation in comparison to cells transfected with full-length ADAM15, clearly demonstrating the importance of the cytoplasmic domain for an increased apoptosis resistance. Furthermore, activation of the Fas receptor triggered the phosphorylation of Src at Y416, which results in the active conformation of Src, as well as the phosphorylation of FAK at Y576/577 and Y861 – the target tyrosines phosphorylated by Src - in full-length ADAM15-transfected chondrocytes. However, cells transfected with ADAM15 mutant (ΔC) or with vector control did not exhibit any activation of Src and FAK upon Fas ligation. This suggested the presence of an as yet unknown protein interaction mediating the Fas triggered activation of the two kinases.
In order to identify this mechanism, the application of signal transduction inhibitors interfering with Calcium signaling either by inhibiting calmodulin with trifluoperazine (TFP) or the Calcium release-activated channel (CRAC/Orai1) with BTP-2 efficiently inhibited the phosphorylation of FAK and Src, revealing a role of calmodulin, the major Ca2+ sensor in cells, in ADAM15-dependent and Fas-elicited activation of the two survival kinases. Also, a direct Ca2+ -dependent binding of calmodulin to ADAM15 could be demonstrated by pull-down assays using calmodulin-conjugated sepharose and by protein binding assays using the recombinant cytoplasmic domain of ADAM15 and calmodulin.
Furthermore, it could be demonstrated in living synovial fibroblasts by double immunofluorescence stainings that triggering the Fas receptor by its ligand FasL or a Fas-activating antibody resulted in the recruitment of calmodulin to ADAM15 as well as to the Fas receptor in patch-like structures at the cell membrane. Simultaneously, Src associated with calmodulin was shown to become engaged in an ADAM15 complex, also containing cytoplasmic-bound FAK, by co-immunoprecipitations.
Additional studies were performed to analyze the efficacy of TFP and BTP-2 on apoptosis induction in synovial fibroblasts from 10 RA patients. Using caspase 3/7 and annexin V stainings for determining apoptosis, it could be shown that both inhibitors did not possess any apoptosis inducing capacity. However, when co-incubated with FasL both compounds synergistically enhanced apoptosis rates in the RASFs. Moreover, an additional silencing of ADAM15 revealed a further significant rise in apoptosis rates upon incubation with FasL/TFP or FasL/BTP-2, providing unequivocal evidence for an involvement of ADAM15 in facilitating apoptosis resistance in RASFs.
Taken together, these results demonstrate that ADAM15 provides a scaffold for the formation of calmodulin-dependent pro-survival signaling complexes upon CRAC/Orai1 coactivation by Fas ligation, which provides a new potential therapeutic target to break the apoptosis resistance in RASFs that critically contributes to joint destruction in RA.
This thesis describes the adaptation of Acinetobacter species to dry environments with the soil bacterium A. baylyi and the opportunistic hospital pathogen A. baumanii in its focus. The adaptation of A. baylyi and A. baumannii to osmotic stress was investigated. Compatible solutes that were uptaken from the environment or synthesized de novo to cope with the loss of water at high salinity were identified. The corresponding transporters and enzymes involved were characzerized. In addition, the desiccation resistance of A. baumannii was analyzed to elucidate its survival in hospital environments. The usage of compatible solutes during desiccation stress was analyzed and proteins that were produced were identified.
The availability of water is essential for bacterial life and if environmental conditions are awkward, bacteria have to cope with high salinitiy to prevent loss of water. In this thesis it was shown that A. baylyi synthesizes glutamate and mannitol de novo as compatible solutes in response to osmotic stress to balance the osmotic potential. The pathway for mannitol biosynthesis from Fructose-6-Phosphate (F-6-P) via Mannitol-1-Phosphate (Mtl-1-P) was elucidated and the isolation and characterization of a novel type of biofunctional enzyme was described. Interestingly, the unique bifunctional enzyme MtlD, acting as dehydrogenase and phosphatase, mediates both steps of the mannitol biosynthesis pathway. This enzyme catalyzes the reduction of F-6-P to Mtl-1-P with NADPH as reducing equivalent. The dehydrogenase activity of MtlD was salt dependent and the phosphatase activity was dependent on Mg2+ as cofactor. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that MtlD is broadly distributed among other Acinetobacter strains but not in other phylogenetic tribes.
In this thesis it is also described that, besides de novo synthesis of compatible solutes, A. baylyi takes up glycine betaine (GB) or its precursor choline by different transport systems and uses this solutes as osmoprotectants. The uptake of GB occurs via a secondary transporter (ACIAD3460) of the BCCT family. Choline is taken up as precursor and oxidized to GB by two dehydrogenases. The uptake and use of choline as GB precursor involves two transporters, whose genes are encoded in the bet cluster (BetT1, BetT2), two dehydrogenases (BetA, BetB) and a regulatory protein (BetI). Both transporters differ from each other in structure and function: BetT1 is osmo-independent and active independently of osmotic stress. BetT2 contains - in contrast to BetT1 - a long C-terminal domain for osmo-sensing and its activity highly increases in the presence of high osmolarity. The oxidation of choline occurs independently of the osmolarity of the medium but in the absence of salt stress, GB is exported. In contrast, in the presence of high salinity, GB is accumulated in the cytoplasm to balance the osmotic potential in order to prevent loss of water. The regulation of both transporters, the uptake of choline independently of the osmolarity and the export of GB under isoosmotic conditions are regulated by the transcriptional regulator BetI.
A. baumannii ATCC 19606 was also shown to cope with high salinity. Analogously to A. baylyi, A. baumannii ATCC19606 synthesizes glutamate and mannitol de novo in response to osmotic stress. The genes for the synthesis of these compatible solutes are identical to those found in A. baylyi. This suggests that the solute biosynthesis pathways of A. baumannii and A. baylyi are identical. A. baumannii was also able to take up GB and choline in response to osmotic stress and growth at high salinity was restored upon addition of GB and its precursor choline. The bet cluster was also present in the genome A. baumannii and also contains the two different choline transporters BetT1 and BetT2.
Our suggestion that choline or GB or the utilization of phosphatidylcholine as carbon source led to an increase in the survival under desiccation stress was not confirmed. However, 2D analysis of proteins produced during desiccation stress in A. baumannii led to elevated amounts of proteins implicated in biofilm formation, regulation, cell morphology and general stress response, such as Hsp60 or superoxide dismutase, both might play a role in general stress protection.