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In this study I analysed past and recent Daphnia populations from Lake Constance and Greifensee. Herefore, I first established a set of microsatellite markers applicable to European Hyalodaphnia species (chapter 1). Primers were also identified for species specific fragment lengths. 32 markers were then available to characterize the resting egg banks of Daphnia galeata and D. hyalina. Chapter 2 presents the reconstruction of the taxonomic composition in these two ecologically different lakes. This part of my work shows that the eutrophication that occurred in both lakes in the mid of the last century has strongly influenced the Daphnia populations. In both lakes Daphnia galeata established and hybridized with the indigenous D. hyalina. Interspecific hybridization resulted in introgression on the mitochondrial and nuclear level. In chapter 3 resting eggs from the sediments of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and 2000s were characterized with microsatellite markers. The aim was to specify the extent of interspecific hybridization and nuclear introgression assuming that the genetic exchange between both species has an impact on their adaptation to their habitat. In life history experiments D. galeata and D. galeata x hyalina clones hatched from different time periods showed significant differential responses to food quality. Therefore, the question had to be answered how the Daphnia resting egg bank and the planktonic population are connected. In chapter 4 hatching experiments were conducted to bridge this gap of scientific knowledge in the life cycle of cyclic parthenogenetic waterfleas. Only D. galeata individuals were able to establish a clonal lineage after maturity. All observed recombinant individuals did not reproduce at all or firstly went through another sexual phase of reproduction i.e. produced resting eggs. In order to compare the findings of chapter 4 with the taxon composition of the recent planktonic population of Daphnia in Lake Constance, samples were taken over one season (between May 2005 and September 2006). During the season, the taxonomic composition of Daphnia changes severely with D. galeata being most abundant during the warm season and D. hyalina in the cold season. Moreover, some individuals were detected, that did not follow this pattern. With mitochondrial analysis those individuals were identified as mitochondrial introgressants and processed to life history experiments. Significant differences in the somatic growth rate under different temperatures (5°C, 12.5°C and 20°C) were related to the origin of the mitochondrial genome rather than the nuclear taxonomic assignment of the individual.
The findings of this study show that all organisms exposed to rapid ecological changes and their microevolutionary reaction to those.
The increasing resistance of almost all pathogenic bacteria to antibiotics (multidrug resistance) causes a severe threat to public health. The mechanisms underlying multidrug resistance include the induced over expression of multidrug transporters which extrude a variety of lipophilic and toxic substrates in an energy dependent fashion through the membrane out of the cell. These proteins are found in all transporter families. The work described in this thesis is dedicated to drug-proton antiporters from the small multidrug resistance (SMR) family. These efflux pumps with just four transmembrane helices per monomer are so far the smallest transporters discovered. Their oligomeric state, topology, three dimensional structure, catalytic cycle and transport mechanism are still rather controversial. Therefore, the aim of this thesis was to directly address these questions for the small multidrug resistance proteins Halobacterium salinarium Hsmr and Escherichia coli (E. coli) EmrE using a number of biophysical methods such as NMR, transport assays, mass spectrometry and analytical ultracentrifugation. Especially the work on Hsmr has been challenging due to the halophilic nature of this protein. In Chapter 1, key questions and the most important biophysical techniques are introduced followed by Material and Methods in Chapter 2. Depending on experimental requirements, cell free or ‘classical’ in vivo expression has been used for this thesis. Cell free expression as an option for the production of small multidrug transporters has been explored in Chapter 3. It has been possible to produce the SMR family members Hsmr, EmrE, TBsmr and YdgF in vitro. The expression of Hsmr was investigated in more detail under different experimental conditions. Hsmr was either refolded from precipitate or maintained in a soluble form during expression in the presence of detergents and liposomes. Furthermore, amino acids for which no auxotrophic strains were available could be labelled successfully. This expression system has been also used for preparing labelled samples of EmrE as described in Chapter 9. In vivo in E. coli expression of Hsmr, as described in Chapter 4, provided large amounts of proteins if fermenter production was used. Uniform labelling and selective unlabelling with stable isotopes (13C, 15N) for NMR spectroscopy was achieved in vivo in a more efficient and cost effective manner than using the cell free approach for this protein. Hsmr could be purified successfully from both in vitro and in vivo expression media. Hsmr is expressed in vivo and in vitro with N-terminal formylation. The Nterminal formylation is unstable and Hsmr in the presence of low salt concentrations was amenable to N-terminal degradation. It was found that Hsmr shows longest stability in Fos-ß-choline® 12 and sodium dodecyl sulphate, but best reconstitution conditions were found, when dodecyl maltoside is used and exchanged with Escherichia coli lipids. A molar protein lipid ratio of 1 to 100, amenable to solid state nuclear magnetic resonance, has been achieved. Sample homogeneity was shown by freeze fracture electron microscopy. The oligomeric state of Hsmr in detergent has been assessed by SDS PAGE, blue native PAGE, size exclusion chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation and laser induced liquid bead ion desorption mass spectrometry (LILBID) as described in Chapter 5. A concentration and detergent dependent monomer-oligomer equilibrium has been found by all methods. The activity of Hsmr under the sample preparation conditions used here was shown using radioactive and fluorescence binding as well as fluorescence and electrochemical transport assays (Chapter 6). For transport studies, a stable pH gradient was generated by co-reconstitution of Hsmr with bacteriorhodopsin and subsequent sample illumination. Based on the observed long term stability of Hsmr in Fos-ß-choline® 12 and sodium dodecyl sulphate, liquid state NMR experiments were attempted in order to assess the correct folding of Hsmr in detergent micelles (Chapter 7). 1D proton and 2D HSQC spectra of U-15N Hsmr revealed a poor spectral dispersion, low resolution and only a small number of peaks. These are at least partly due to long rotational correlation times of the large protein detergent complex. This problem has been overcome by applying solid-state NMR to Hsmr reconstituted into E. coli lipids (Chapter 8). Uniform 13C labelled samples were prepared and two dimensional proton-driven spin diffusion and double quantum-single quantum correlation spectra were acquired successfully. Unfortunately, the spectral resolution was not yet sufficient for further structural studies. Reasons for the observed linebroadening could be structural heterogeneity or molecular motions which interfere with the NMR timescale. Therefore, the protein mobility has been probed using static 2H solid state NMR on Ala-d3-Hsmr. It could be shown, that parts of Hsmr are remarkably mobile in the membrane and that this mobility can be limited by the addition of the substrate ethidium bromide. Ethidium bromide as well as tetraphenylphosphonium (TPP+) is typical multidrug transporter substrates. The membrane interaction of TPP+ in DMPC membranes has been resolved by 1H MAS NMR. It was found that it penetrates into the interface region of the lipid bilayers and therefore behaves like many other transporter substrates adding to the hypothesis that the membrane could act as a pre-sorting filter. Finally, Chapter 9 is dedicated to the characterisation of the essential and highly conserved residue Glu-14 in EmrE by solid-state NMR. In order to avoid spectral overlap, the single Glu EmrE E25A mutant was chosen instead of the wildtype. The protein has been produced in vitro to take advantage of reduced isotope scrambling in the cell free expression system as verified by analytical NMR spectroscopy. Correct labelling of EmrE was tested by MALDI-TOF and solid-state NMR. The dimeric state of DDM solubilised EmrE has been probed by LILBID. The labelled protein was reconstituted into E. coli lipids to ensure a native membrane environment. Activity was determined by measuring ethidium bromide transport. Freeze fracture EM revealed very homogeneous protein incorporation even after many days of MAS NMR experiments. 2D 13C double quantum filtered experiments were used to obtain chemical shift and lineshape information of Glu-14 in EmrE. Two distinct populations were found with backbone chemical shift differences of 4 - 6 ppm which change upon substrate binding. These findings indicate a structural asymmetry at the assumed dimerisation interface and are discussed in the context of a model for shared substrate/proton binding. These studies represent the first successful use of cell free expression to prepare labelled membrane proteins for solid-state NMR and allow for the first time an NMR insight into the binding pocket of a multidrug efflux pump.
Cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), also called Complex IV of the aerobic respiratory chain, is located in the plasma membrane of prokaryotes and in the inner mitochondrial membrane of eukaryotes. The redox energy of dioxygen reduction is used to translocate protons across the membrane resulting in an electrochemical proton gradient. The generated proton gradient is exploited by the adenosine-5’-triphosphate synthase. In this work, bacterial four-subunit aa3-Type CcO from Paracoccus denitrificans (ATCC 13543, 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO) was used for analyses. 1) The recombinant homologously produced 4 SU-wt CcO (4 SU-wt rec CcO) was functionally compared with the native 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO. The 4 SU-wt rec CcO showed functional deficiencies as determined by UV-vis spectroscopy and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies. Total X-ray Reflection Fluorescence measurements show in both wild type CcOs the same ratio of the redoxactive Fe and Cu (2 Fe : 3 Cu) indicating full complement of the functional metals. If CcO contains only subunit I and II, it loses its functional integrity during continuous turnover activity. The importance of subunit III for integrity of CcO was demonstrated using 2 SU-wt rec CcO. Crystallisation trials of suicide inactivated 2 SU-wt rec CcOs have been ineffective using standard crystallisation conditions. Crystals of active 2 SU-wt rec CcO (positive control) have been obtained under these conditions and this result indicates possible structural changes in suicide inactivated 2 SU-wt rec CcO. The structure of active 2 SU-wt rec CcO was determined to 2.25 Å resolution. 2) Terminal oxidases require four electrons for the cleavage of the dioxygen bond (O=O). In general, the catalytic cycle of CcO is described by the electron input and thus by the different redox states of the metal centres: the O, E, R, P and F state. The two-electron reduced R intermediate is able to donate four electrons for dioxygen reduction forming the P state. The P intermediate is an oxoferryl state implying the lack of an electron for the R -> P transition, because the metal centres can only provide three electrons (Fe+II forms Fe+IV and Cu+II forms Cu+I). The P state, where the dioxygen bond is already broken, shows an oxoferryl state (FeIV=O2-) and a nearby tyrosine is proposed to form a tyrosyl radical representing the donor of the missing electron. H2O2-induced artificial intermediates provide the opportunity to investigated different catalytic intermediates in detail. Mixing equimolar amounts of H2O2 to CcO in the O state induces the "two-electron" reduced PH state at high pH and the electronically equal "two-electron" reduced F• H state at low pH. The addition of an excess amount of H2O2 leads to the three-electron reduced FH state. Functional studies using the 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO have demonstrated a bound peroxide (O- - O-) intermediate during the catalytic cycle. Using EPR it was previously shown that Y167 hosts a radical species in PH/F• H state which suggests that Y167 could provide this "missing electron". While X-ray structural models of CcO and Fourier-transformed infrared (FTIR) measurements of oxygenated ("pulsed") 4 SU-wt ATCC CcO suggest a bound peroxide in the O state, UV-vis and EPR spectroscopic studies indicate that other intermediates may also contain such peroxide species. Equimolar and excess amounts of H2O2 induce the PH/F• H and FH states, respectively and catalase treatment of the FH state leads, contrary to the natural direction of the catalytic cycle, to the apparent transition of the FH -> PH/F• H states, which is accompanied by reappearance of an EPR signal from the Y167• radical. The novel PFH/F• FH states are presented here and we postulate that the FH state hosts a superoxide (or peroxide) adduct at CuB in the binuclear site. In addition, the novel P10 state is also introduced having a maximum at lambda = 612 nm in the difference absorption spectrum (minus the O state). The P10 state is induced by mixing CcO in the O state with a pH 10 buffer. This pH 10 induced state resembles standard P states such as PCO, PH and PR. However, the P10 state evolves out of the O state without addition of reduction equivalents. Using EPR spectroscopy it was shown that Y167 hosts a radical species in the P10 state such as in the PH state. In summary, all functional data presented here provide evidence for a peroxide bound during the O state. Finally, a new model for the natural catalytic cycle is proposed. If the O state contains a peroxide, it is also likely that the E and R state contain this species. Even the oxoferryl intermediates P and F states may complex a peroxide at CuB in the binuclear site. 3) The amino acid residue Y167, which hosts the radical in the PH/F•H states, is not directly part of the binuclear site of CcO. For identification of the primary electron donor, two tryptophan variants of CcO, W272F and W164F, which are located nearby the binuclear site, were produced. Evidence is provided that W272 is a kinetically fast electron donor for the O2 molecule. The electron is replenished by Y167, or probably by Y280 in the natural cycle. The Y167 radical is detectable by EPR spectroscopy after treatment with equimolar amounts of H2O2 in the active variant W164F, but is absent in the inactive variant W272F. 4) CcO contains two proton conducting pathways, the D- and the K-pathway. Proteoliposomes of the variants H28A and D30N, mutations located at the entrance of the D-pathway, both show the identical proton pumping activity as the 4 SU-wt rec CcO (pumped H+/e- = 1). The variant N113D shows abolished proton pumping (pumped H+/e- = 0), but a relative high cytochrome c oxidation activity (63 %). G196D displays no cytochrome c oxidation and proton pumping activity. Overall, the addition or removal of a negative charge within the D-pathway such as in D124N, N131D, N113D and G196D leads to a decoupled phenotype indicating the high degree of electrostatic coupling in CcO.
ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment), is the dedicated heavy-ion experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. It is optimised to reconstruct and identify the particles created in a lead-lead collision with a centre of mass energy of 5.5TeV. The main tracking detector is a large-volume time-projection chamber (TPC). With an active volume of about 88m^3 and a total readout area of 32.5m^2 it is the most challenging TPC ever build. A central electrode divides the 5m long detector into two drift regions. Each readout side is subdivided into 18 inner and 18 outer multi-wire proportional read-out chambers. The readout area is subdivide into 557568 pads, where each pad is read out by and electronics chanin. A complex calibration is needed in order to reach the design position-resolution of the reconstructed particle tracks of about 200um. One part of the calibration lies in understanding the electronic-response. The work at hand presents results of the pedestal and noise behaviour of the front-end electronics (FEE), measurements of the pulse-shaping properties of the FEE using results obtained with a calibration pulser and measurements performed with the laser-calibration system. The data concerned were taken during two phases of the TPC commissioning. First measurements were performed in the clean room where the TPC was built. After the TPC was moved underground and built into the experiment, a second round of commissioning took place. Noise measurements in the clean room revealed a very large fraction of pads with noise values larger than the design specifications. The unexpected high noise values could be explained by the 'ground bounce' effect. Two modifications helped to reduce this effect: A desynchronisation in the the start of the readout of groups of channels and a modification in the grounding scheme of the FEE. Further noise measurements were carried out after the TPC has been moved to the experimental area underground. Here even a larger fraction of channels showed too large noise values. This could be traced back to a common mode current injected by the electronics power supplies. To study the shaping properties of the FEE a calibration pulser was used. To generate signals in the FEE a pulse is injected to the cathode wires of the read-out chambers. Due to manufacturing tolerances slight channel-by-channel variations of the shaping properties are expected. This effects the determination of the arrival time as well as the measured integral signal of the induced charge and has to be corrected. The measured arrival time variations follow a Gaussian distribution with a width (sigma) of 6.2ns. This corresponds to an error of the cluster position of about 170um. The charge variations are on the level of 2.8%. In order to reach the intrinsic resolution on the measurement of the specific energy loss of the particles (6%) those variations have to be taken into account. The photons of the laser-calibration system are energetic enough to emit photo electrons off metallic surfaces. Most interesting for the detector calibration are photo electrons from the central electrode. The laser light is intense enough to get a signal in all readout channels of the TPC. Since the central electrode is a smooth surface, differences in the arrival time between sectors reveal mechanical displacements of the readout sectors and can be used to correct for this effect. In addition the measurements can be used to determine the electron drift velocity in the TPC gas. The drift velocity measurements have shown a vertical as well as a radial gradient. The first can be explained by the temperature gradient, which naturally builds up in the 5m high detector. The second gradient is most probably caused by a relative conical deformation of the readout plane and the central electrode.
Plastids are complex plant organelles fulfilling essential physiological functions, such as photosynthesis and amino acid metabolism. The majority of proteins required for these functions are encoded in the nuclear genome and synthesized on cytosolic ribosomes as precursors, which are subsequently translocated across the outer and inner membrane of the organelle. Their targeting to the organelle is ensured by a so called transit peptide, which is specifically recognized by GTP-dependent receptors Toc159 and Toc34 at the cytosolic side of outer envelope. They cooperatively regulate the insertion of the precursor protein into the channel protein Toc75, thereby initiating the translocation process. Toc34 is regarded as the primary receptor, while Toc159 probably provides the driving force for the insertion. Precursor transfer is achieved by the physical interaction between both receptors in the GTP loaded state. One translocon unit, also called the Toc core complex, is formed by four molecules Toc34, four molecules Toc75 and one molecule Toc159. In the GDP-loaded state, Toc34 preferably forms homodimers, whose physiological function was investigated in the presented study. It could be shown that the dissociation of GDP and therefore the nucleotide exchange are inhibited by the homodimeric state of Toc34. Dissociation of the homodimer is induced by the recognition of a precursor protein, which renders the binding of GTP and subsequent interaction with Toc159 possible. Thus, the homodimeric conformation could reflect an inactive state of the translocon, preventing GTP consumption in the absence of a precursor protein. Both homodimerization as well as heterodimerization of the receptor are regulated by phosphorylation, which could be demonstrated by in vitro and in vivo approaches using atToc33 from Arabidopsis thaliana as a model system. Since the phosphorylated form of Toc34 cannot be assembled with the Toc core complex, it can be concluded that the interactions between GTPase domains not only regulate the transfer of precursor proteins, but also warrant the integrity of the translocon.
Platelets are anucleate cells that play a major role in hemostasis and thrombosis in the vasculature. During primary hemostasis platelets adhere to sites of vascular damage and the initial platelet coat is reinforced by additional platelets forming a stable aggregate. At the same time platelets secrete their intracellular granules containing substances that further activate platelets in an autocrine and paracrine fashion and affect local coagulation and endothelial smooth muscle cell function. The small guanine nucleotide binding protein Rap1 regulates the activity of the platelet integrin alphaIIbbeta3 and thus platelet aggregation. Rap1 activity is controlled by guanine nucleotide exchange factors and GTPase activating proteins. In platelets, Rap1GAP2 is the only GTPase activating protein of Rap1. In order to identify Rap1GAP2-associated proteins, a genetic two-hybrid screening in yeast was performed and synaptotagmin-like protein 1 (Slp1, also called JFC1) was found as a new putative binding partner of Rap1GAP2. Slp1 is a tandem C2 domain containing protein and is known to bind to Rab27, a small GTPase involved in platelet dense granule secretion. The direct interaction between Rap1GAP2 and Slp1 was confirmed in yeast and in transfected cells. More importantly, Slp1 is expressed in platelets and binding of endogenous Rap1GAP2 and Slp1 was verified in these cells. The Rap1GAP2 and Slp1 interaction sites were mapped by mutational analysis. Rap1GAP2 binds through the -TKXT- motif within its C-terminus to the C2A domain of Slp1. Moreover, the Slp1 binding -TKXT- motif of Rap1GAP2 was confirmed by complementary approaches using short synthetic Rap1GAP2 peptides. The C2A domain of Slp1 is a phospholipid binding domain and thus mediates binding of Slp1 to the plasma membrane. Phospholipid overlay assays revealed that simultaneous binding of Slp1 via its C2A domain to Rap1GAP2 and to phospholipids can occur. In addition, the interaction between Rap1GAP2 and Slp1 is regulated by cAMP-dependent protein kinase (cAK or PKA), and kinase activation in platelets enhanced binding of endogenous Rap1GAP2 to Slp1. In-vitro phosphorylation assays revealed that Slp1 is a substrate of PKA, and serine 111 was identified as phosphorylation site. Since Slp1 is a Rab27 binding protein, a trimeric complex of Slp1, Rab27 and Rap1GAP2 is conceivable. The association of Slp1, Rab27 and Rap1GAP2 was investigated by immunofluorescence and co-immuno-precipitation experiments in both, transfected cells and platelets. By Slp1 affinity chromatography and subsequent mass spectrometric analysis additional Slp1 binding proteins were identified in platelets, and binding of Slp1 to Rab8 was confirmed in pull-down assays. To investigate the functional significance of the interaction between Rap1GAP2 and Slp1, an assay system was established to determine serotonin secretion of streptolysin-O permeabilized platelets. Addition of recombinant Slp1 protein to permeabilized platelets strongly inhibited platelet dense granule secretion, whereas addition of recombinant Rap1GAP2 protein or synthetic Rap1GAP2 peptide enhanced secretion. Deleting the Slp1 binding -TKXT- motif abolished the stimulatory effect of Rap1GAP2 on secretion. Addition of Rap1 to permeabilized platelets had no effect on secretion. These findings indicate that the Rap1GAP2 effect on platelet secretion does not depend on the GTPase activating function of Rap1GAP2, but is rather dependent on the -TKXT- mediated interaction of Rap1GAP2 with Slp1. In addition, in-vitro GAP assays revealed that Slp1 binding to Rap1GAP2 does not affect the Rap1GAP activity of Rap1GAP2, and adhesion assays excluded a role for the Rap1GAP2/Slp1 interaction in cell adhesion. Altogether, the results of the present study demonstrate that besides its function in platelet aggregation by controlling the activity of the small guanine nucleotide binding protein Rap1, Rap1GAP2 is involved in platelet dense granule secretion by the new -TKXT- mediated interaction with the Rab27 and membrane binding protein Slp1. In addition, the interaction between Rap1GAP2 and Slp1 is embedded into an elaborate network of protein-protein interactions in platelets which appear to be regulated by phosphorylation. Future studies will in particular aim to dissect the molecular details of Rap1GAP2 and Slp1 action in platelet secretion and investigate the potential biochemical and pharmacological value of the unique protein binding -TKXT- motif of Rap1GAP2.
The crude oil constituents benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and the three xylene isomers (BTEX) are the dominating groundwater contaminants originating from surface spill accidents by oil production facilities and with gasoline and jet fuel. Thereby BTEX posing a threat to the world´s scarce drinking water resources due to their water solubility and toxicity. An active remediation cleanup involving a BTEX event proves not only to be very expensive but almost impossible when it comes to the complete removal of contaminants from the subsurface. A favoured and common practice is combining an active remediation process focussing on the source of contamination coupled together with the monitoring of the residual contamination in the subsurface (monitored natural attenuation; MNA). MNA include all naturally occuring biological, chemical and physical processes in the subsurface. The general goal of this work was to improve the knowledge of biodegradation of aromatic hydrocarbons under anaerobic conditions in groundwater. For this groundwater and soil at the former military underground storage tank (UST) site Schäferhof – Süd near Nienburg/Weser (Niedersachsen, Germany) were sampled and analysed. The investigations were done in collaboration of the Umweltbundesamt, the universitys of Frankfurt and Bremen and the alphacon GmbH Ganderkesee. To investigate the extent of groundwater contamination, the terminal electron acceptor processes (TEAPs) and the metabolites of BTEX degradation in groundwater, six observation wells were sampled at regular intervals between January 2002 and September 2004. The wells were positioned in order to cover the upstream, the source area and the downstream of the presumed contamination source. Additionally, vertical sediment profiles were sampled and investigated with respect to spreading and concentration of BTEX in the subsurface. A large residual contamination involving BTEX is present in soil and groundwater at the studied locality. Maximum BTEX concentration values of 17 mg/kg were recorded in analysing sediment in the unsaturated zone. In the capillary fringe, values of 450 mg/kg were recorded (October 2004) and in the saturated zone maximum values of 6.7 mg/kg BTEX were detected. The groundwater samples indicate increasing BTEX concentrations in the groundwater flow direction (from 532 µg/l up to 3300 µg/l (mean values)). Biodegradation of aromatic hydrocarbons under anaerobic conditions in the sub surface at contaminated sites is characterised by generation of metabolites. From the monoaromatic hydrocarbons BTEX metabolites such as benzoic acid (BA) and the methylated homologs and C1-and C2-benzyl-succinic acids (BSA) are generated as intermediates. A solid-phase extraction method based on octadecyl-bonded silica sorbent has been developed to concentrate such metabolite compounds from water samples followed by derivatization and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) of the extracts. The recovery rate range between 75 and 97%. The method detection limit was 0.8 µg/l. Organic acids were identified as metabolic by-products of biodegradation. Benzoic acid, C1-, C2- and C3-benzoic acid were determined in all contaminated wells with considerable concentrations. Furthermore, the depletion of the dominant terminal electron acceptors (TEAs) oxygen, nitrate, and sulphate and the production of dissolved ferrous iron and methane in groundwater indicate biological mediated processes in the plume evidently proving the occurrence of NA. A large overlap of different redox zones at the studied part of the plume has been observed. A important finding in this study is the strong influence of groundwater level fluctuations on the BTEX concentration in groundwater. A very dry summer in 2003 was recorded during the monitoring period, resulting on site in a drop of the groundwater level to 1.7 m and a concomitant increase of BTEX concentrations from 240 µg/l to 1300 µg/l. The groundwater level fluctuations, natural degradation and retention processes essentially influence BTEX concentrations in the groundwater. Groundwater level fluctuations have by far a stronger influence than the influence of biological degradation. Increasing BTEX concentrations are hence not a consequence of limited biological degradation. Another part of the study was to observe the isotopic fractionation of the electron acceptor Fe(III), due to biologically mediated reduction of Fe(III) to the watersoluble Fe(II) at the site and first field data are presented. Both groundwater and sediment samples were analysed with respect to their Fe isotopic compositions using high mass resolution Multi Collector-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (MC-ICP-MS). The delta56Fe -values of groundwater samples taken from observation wells located downstream of the source area were isotopically lighter than delta56Fe -values obtained from groundwater in the uncontaminated well. The Fe isotopic composition of most parts of the sediment profile was similar to the Fe isotopic composition of uncontaminated groundwater. Thus, a significant iron isotope fractionation can be observed between sediment and groundwater downstream of the BTEX contamination.
Whether minorities such as the Māori in Aotearoa New Zealand, the San across Southern Africa and the Métis in Canada, or native majority peoples such as the Aymara and Quechua in South America: indigenous peoples" lifeworlds have been transfigured by the difficulties originating from a history of conquest, settlement and suppression. The imperialist strife of European empires and the atrocities committed by their gang of "explorers" – including "this person Cook" in the South Pacific, Columbus in North America, Cortéz in Mexico, Gomes in West Africa, or van Riebeeck in South Africa – was aimed at enforcing European values and institutions, destroying, silencing or marginalizing indigenous cultures and societies as inferior "others." Unsurprisingly, the disruption of formal colonialism in the second half of the 20th century held no inherent improvement for the concerns of formerly colonized peoples. ...
CHAPTER A: THE INVESTMENT BEHAVIOR OF PRIVATE EQUITY FUND MANAGERS I The Bright and Dark Side of Staging: Investment Performance and the Varying Motivations of Private Equity Firms II The Liquidation Dilemma of Money Losing Investments – The Impact of Investment Experience and Window Dressing of Private Equity and Venture Capital Funds CHAPTER B: THE ASSESSMENT OF RISK AND RETURN OF PRIVATE EQUITY I Venture Capital Performance Projection: A Simulation Approach II Modeling Default Risk of Private Equity Funds – A Market-based Framework
A novel experimental approach for studying exotic transitions in few-electron high-Z ions was developed. In this approach, few-electron ions with selectively produced single K-shell holes are used for the investigation of the transition modes that follow the decay of the excited ions. The feasibility of the developed approach was confirmed by an experimental study of the production of low-lying excited states in He-like uranium, produced by K-shell ionization of initially Li-like species. It was found that K-shell ionization is a very selective process that leads to the production of only two excited states, namely the 1s2s 21S0 and 1s2s 23S1. This high level of selectivity stays undisturbed by the rearrangement processes. These experimental findings can be explained using perturbation theory and an independent-particle model, and are a result of the very different impact parameter dependencies of K-shell ionization and L- intrashell excitation. The L-shell electron can be assumed to stay passive in the collision, whereas the K-shell electron is ionized. It was stressed that the current result might directly be applied to accurate studies of the two-photon decay in He-like ions. Up to now, the experimental challenge in conventional 2E1 experiments has been the photon-photon coincidence technique, which is required to separate the true 2E1 events from the x-ray background associated with single photon transitions. In contrast, by exploiting K-shell ionization, the spectral distribution of the two-photon decay could be obtained simply by a measurement of the photon emission, using only a single x-ray detector in coincidence with projectile ionization. One further particular advantage arises from the fact that the 1s2p 3P0 state is not populated, and does not contribute to the continuum distribution of the two-photon emission. At high Z, this state also undergoes a two-photon E1M1 decay, which would be indistinguishable from the 2E1 decay of the 1s2s 1S0. The first measurement of the two-photon energy distribution from the decay of 1s2s 1S0 level in He-like tin was performed by adopting the technique developed in this thesis. In this technique, excited He-like heavy ions were formed by K-shell ionization of initially Li-like species in collisions with a low-Z gas target, and x-ray spectra following the decay of the He-like ions were measured in coincidence with the up-charged tin ions. The observed intense production of the 2E1 transitions, and a very high level of selectivity, make this process particularly suited for the study of the two-photon continuum, and thus for a detailed investigation of the structure of high-Z He-like systems. The method allowed for a background-free measurement of the distribution of the two-photon decay (21S0 -> 11S0) in He-like tin. The measured distribution could also be discriminated from that of other He-like ions, and confirmed, for the first time, the fully relativistic calculations. In addition, the feasibility of the method was confirmed by studying another exotic transition, namely the two-electron one-photon transition (TEOP) in Li-like high-Z ions. An experimental investigation of the radiative decay modes of the 1s2s2 state in Li-like heavy ions has been started. In the first dedicated beam time at the ESR, selective population of this state via K-shell ionization of initially Be-like species was achieved. The x-rays produced in this process were measured by a multitude of x-ray detectors, each placed under different observation angles with respect to the ion beam direction. The spectra associated with projectile electron loss consist (in all cases) of one single x-ray transition, which was attributed to the TEOP decay to the 1s2 2p1/2 level, possibly contaminated by the M1 decay to the 1s22s. Thus it was proven that, by adopting the developed approach, one can indeed produce the desired initial state. This makes this method perfectly suited for studies of TEOP transitions in high-Z systems. An extension of this study, by the inclusion of an electron spectrometer, would also allow for measurements of the autoionization channel, which would provide complete information on the various decay modes of the 1s2s2 state.
This dissertation analyzes tax policy, corporations, and capital market effects. First, the Savings Directive, which has left a loophole by providing grandfathering for some securities, is examined. It can be shown that investors are not willing to pay a premium for bonds that are exempt from the withholding rate, so it may be concluded that the supply of existing loopholes is large enough to allow tax evaders to continue evasion at no additional cost. Second, tax neutrality towards alternative financing instruments for corporate investment is a ubiquitous demand in the political debate. However, the magnitude of possible efficiency costs of a departure from tax neutrality is hardly discussed. Against this background, this dissertation discusses the theory of capital structure and provides back-ofthe-envelope calculations of the possible efficiency cost of a tax distortion of the debt-equity decision. Third, the ex-dividend-day effect in relation to the Gennan tax reform of 2000/2001 is discussed. The abolishment of the imputation system allows reinvestigating the size of the exdividend- day effect. I find no structural break in the size of the German ex-dividend-day effect and no evidence of an ex-dividend-day price drop that exceeds the dividend paid. Fourth, an account of the quantitative development of tax legislation in post-war Germany is presented. It can be shown that the legislative output did not increase over the decades and is not affected by a split majority in the upper and lower houses. Finally, it turns out that an increasing fraction of this legislation is passed in December.
Structural analysis of the enzyme N-formylmethanofuran:tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase
(2008)
Archaea represent a third domain of life and some archaea exhibit a high degree of tolerance to extreme environmental conditions. Several members are methanogens and present in many anaerobic environments. Most methanogens are able to maintain growth simply on H2 and CO2 via the enzymatically catalyzed reaction 4H2 + CO2 > CH4 + 2 H2O. The archaeon Methanopyrus kandleri grows optimally at temperatures of 84°C to 110°C, pH values of 5.5 to 7.0 and NaCl concentrations 0.2% to 4%. The enzyme N-formylmethanofuran tetrahydromethanopterin formyltransferase (MkFTR) catalyzes the transfer of a formyl group from the cofactor N-formylmethanofuran (FMF) to the cofactor tetrahydromethanopterin (H4MPT), the second step of the above reaction. X-ray crystallographic analysis yielded insights into the structure and function of MkFTR, (1) the MkFTR monomer exhibits a pseudo-two fold structure suggestive of an evolutionary gene duplication. (2) The structure is a D2 homo-tetramer with prominent cleft-like surface features. Analysis of the interface contacts showed that the tetramer is best described as a dimer of dimers. The clefts were associated with the monomer:monomer interface and were weakly occupied by extra electron density which might be attributed to the H4MPT analog folate. (3) This suggested that the clefts are active sites and their association with oligomer interfaces suggested a basis for the dependence of activity on oligomerization. (4) The thermal stability of MkFTR most likely arises from the greater number of H- and ionic-bonds within the monomer and between monomers with respect to mesophilic protein structures. (5) The structure showed a large number of surface exposed negatively charged, glutamate and aspartate residues. These residues explain the salt dependent oligomerization, as only at high enough salt concentration is the electrostatic charge compensated by cation binding and neutralized allowing oligomerization. (6) These residues also improve the solubility of MkFTR at high salt concentration by increased charge repulsion. (7) Comparison of MkFTR structures from low and hight salt conditions showed that surface glutamate residues bind slightly more water molecules at high salt conditions further contributing to MkFTR solubility at high salt concentration.
In 1911 Eugen Bleuler (Bleuler, 1911) postulated that schizophrenia was a disorder resulting from inability to properly integrate mental processes. Around the same time, Carl Wernicke (Wernicke, 1894) proposed that psychosis might result from disruption of white matter tracts. Both of these statements can be considered early cornerstones of modern connectivity hypotheses developed towards the end of the twentieth century by such researchers as Karl Friston (1998) and Nancy Andreansen (1998). In the current work, the hypothesis that schizophrenia, rather than being a disorder or either anatomical or functional connectivity, is a disorder where both of these processes interact and influence the clinical presentation of patients, is examined. This is achieved through a detailed examination of a sample of chronic schizophrenia patients using a combination of functional and anatomical Magnetic Resonance Imaging techniques. The relationship of these measures to clinical symptoms is also explored. In the first study, anatomical connectivity at the whole-brain level is examined using Diffusion Tensor Imaging. The results of the study contribute to the previous literature on auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia and provide the first direct correlation between increased anatomical connectivity and increased severity of psychotic symptoms. The second study provides a thorough examination of the interhemispheric connectivity. This is achieved through a detailed examination of the corpus callosum using a combination of diffusivity and volumetric values. This is the first study to date where several anatomical methods are used in one sample. The results illustrate the importance of using different techniques to accurately characterize anatomical abnormalities observed in schizophrenia. In addition, contrary to previous research reports, the results of the current study imply that only specific sub-sections of the corpus callosum are affected by anatomical abnormalities. The pattern of these changes may influence clinical presentation of patients. Finally, functional connectivity at the whole-brain level is examined during resting-state using Independent Component Analysis. Similarly to the results of the anatomical examinations, it provides further supporting evidence that the pattern of disturbances observed in the current sample of schizophrenia patients examined herein reflects a combination of hypo- and hyperconnectivity. Moreover, the study further validates resting-state functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging as a reliable tool for examining functional abnormalities in schizophrenia.
The Na+,K+-ATPase was discovered more than 50 years ago, but even today the pumpcycle and its partial reactions are still not completely understood. In this thesis, Voltage Clamp Fluorometry was used to monitor the conformational changes that are associated with several electrogenic partial reactions of the Na+,K+-ATPase. The conformational dynamics of the ion pump were analyzed at different concentrations of internal Na+ or of external K+ and the influences on the conformational equilibrium were determined. To probe the effect of the internal Na+ concentration on the Na+ branch of the ion pump, oocytes were first depleted of internal Na+ and then loaded with Na+ using the epithelial sodium channel which can be blocked by amiloride. The conformational dynamics of the K+ branch were studied using different external K+ concentrations in the presence and in the absence of external Na+ to yield additional information on the apparent affinity of K+. The results of our Voltage Clamp Fluorometry experiments demonstrate that lowering the intracellular concentration of Na+ has a comparable effect on the conformational equilibrium as increasing the amount of K+ in the external solution. Both of these changes shift the equilibrium towards the E1/E1(P) conformation. Furthermore, it can be shown that the ratio between external Na+ and K+ ions is also a determinant for the position of the conformational equilibrium: in the absence of external Na+, the K+ dependent shift of the equilibrium towards E1 was observed at a much lower K+ concentration than in the presence of Na+. In addition, indications were found that both external K+ and internal Na+ bind within an ion well. Finally, the crucial role of negatively charged glutamate residues in the 2nd extracellular loop for the control of ion-access to the binding sites could be verified.
Deformation quantization on symplectic stacks and applications to the moduli of flat connections
(2008)
It is a common problem in mathematical physics to describe and quantize the Poisson algebra on a symplectic quotient [...] given in terms of some moment map [...] on a symplectic manifold [...] with a hamiltonian action by a Lie group G. Among others, problems may arise in two parts of the process: c might be a singular value of the moment map and the quotient might not be well-behaving; in the interesting cases the quotient often is singular. By the famous result of Sjamaar and Lerman ([102]) X is a symplectic stratified space. We are interested in cases for which we can give a deformation quantization of the possibly singular Poisson algebra of X. To that purpose we introduce a Poisson algebra on the associated stack [...] for special cases and consider its deformations and their classification. We dedicate ourselves to use the rather geometric methods introduced by Fedosov for symplectic manifolds in [37]. That leads to the question how to perform differential geometry on a smooth stack. The Lie groupoid atlas of a smooth stack is a nice model for the same space (Tu, Xu and Laurent-Gengoux in [107] and Behrend and Xu in [16]), but both have different topoi. We give a morphism (P,R) that compares the topologies of a smooth stack and its atlas. This yields a method to transport sheaves and their sections between a smooth stack and its Lie groupoid atlas. A symplectic stack is a smooth separated Deligne-Mumford stack with a 2-form which is closed and non-degenerate in an atlas. Via (P,R) a deformation quantization on a symplectic stack can be performed in terms of an atlas. We also give a classification functor for the quantizations in the spirit of Deligne ([35]) based on the geometric interpretation given by Gutt and Rawnsely in [49]. As an application we give a deformation quantization for the moduli stack of flat connections in particular configurations. We use Darboux charts provided by Huebschmann (e.g. in [54]) to construct the corresponding Lie groupoid. This captures the symplectic form arising in the reduction process and differs from other approaches using gerbes of bundles (e.g. Teleman [105]).
RNA interference (RNAi) is triggered by recognition of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), and elicits the silencing of gene(s) complementary to the dsRNA sequence. RNAi is thought to have emerged as a way of safeguarding the genome against mobile genetic elements and viral infection, thus maintaining genomic integrity. dsRNA is first processed into small interfering RNAs (siRNA) by the enzyme Dicer. siRNAs are ~21 to 25 -nt long, and contain a signature 5’ phosphate group and a two nucleotide long 3’ overhang (Bernstein et al., 2001). The siRNA is then loaded into the RNA-induced si-lencing complex (RISC), of which Argonaute is the primary catalytic component (Liu et al., 2004). Energetic asymmetry of the siRNA ends allows for its directional loading into RISC (Khvorova et al., 2003; Schwarz et al., 2003). Argonaute cleaves the passen-ger strand of the siRNA, leaving the guide strand of the siRNA bound to RISC (Gregory et al., 2005; Matranga et al., 2005; Rand et al., 2005). This single-stranded guide strand siRNA bound to Argonaute is able to recognize target mRNA in a sequence-specific manner, and cleaves the mRNA. Argonaute 2 in complex with single-stranded siRNA is sufficient for mRNA recognition and cleavage, thus forming a minimal RISC (Rivas et al., 2005). miRNAs, endogenously expressed small RNA genes which typically contain mismatches and non-Watson-Crick base pairing, are processed by this general pathway, although typically modulate gene expression by translational repression as opposed to cleavage of their target mRNA. The number of Argonaute genes is highly variable between species, ranging from one in S. pombe to twenty-seven in C. elegans. Earlier crystal structures of Argonaute apoen-zymes show the architecture of Argonaute to be a multidomain protein composed of N terminal, PAZ, MID, and PIWI domains (Song et al., 2004; Yuan et al., 2005). These multi-domain proteins are present in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. The role of Argonaute proteins in prokaryotes is still unknown, but based similarity to eu-karyotic Argonautes, they may also be involved in nucleic acid-directed regulatory pathways. These proteins have served as excellent models for learning about the struc-ture and function of this family of proteins. RNAi has found a widespread application for the simple yet effective knockdown of genes of interest. The catalytic cycle of RISC requires the binding of a number of different nucleotide structures to Argonaute, and we expect Argonaute to undergo a number of conforma-tional changes during the cycle of mRNA recognition by RISC (Filipowicz, 2005; Tom-ari and Zamore, 2005). Nevertheless, it remains unclear how the multi-domain ar-rangement of Argonaute recognizes and distinguishes between single-stranded and dou-ble-stranded oligonucleotides, which correspond to the Dicer-processed siRNA product, guide strand siRNA, and the guide strand / mRNA duplex. The Argonaute protein from Aquifex aeolicus was cloned, expressed, crystallized and solved by molecular replacement. Relative to earlier Argonaute structures, a 24° reorientation of the PAZ domain in this structure opens a basic cleft between the N-terminal and PAZ domains, exposing the guide strand binding pocket of PAZ. A 5.5-ns molecular dynamics simulation of Argonaute showed a strong tendency of the PAZ and N-terminal domains to be mobile. Binding of single-stranded DNA to Argonaute was monitored by total internal reflection fluorescence spectroscopy (TIRFS). The experi-ments showed biphasic kinetics indicative of large conformational changes, and re-vealed a hotspot of binding energy corresponding to the first 9 nucleotides, the so-called “seed region” most crucial for sequence-specific target recognition. As RNAi may have evolved as a way of safeguarding the genome viral infection, it is not surprising that viruses have evolved different strategies to suppress the host RNAi response in the form of viral suppressor protein. (Hock and Meister, 2008; Lecellier and Voinnet, 2004; Rashid et al., 2007; Song et al., 2004; Vastenhouw and Plasterk, 2004). These viral suppressors are widespread, having been identified in a number of different viral families. Not surprisingly, they generally share little sequence homology with one another, although they appear to exist as oligomers built upon a ~ 100-200 amino acid protomer. Tomato aspermy virus, a member of the Cucumoviruses, encodes for protein 2B (TAV 2B, 95 a.a., ~11.3 kDa) that acts as an RNAi suppressor. Intriguingly, a similar genomic arrangement is seen in RNAi suppressors in the Nodaviruses, a family of viruses that can infect both plants and animals, such as Flock house virus b2 (FHV b2). The 2B and b2 proteins are both derived from a frameshifted ORF within the RNA polymerase gene (Chao et al., 2005). In spite of this genomic similarity, the 2B and b2 proteins share little sequence identity, and it is not well understood how the Cucumovirus 2B proteins suppress RNAi. To address how TAV 2B suppresses RNAi, the oligonucleotide-binding properties of TAV 2B were studied. TAV 2B shows a preference for double-stranded RNA oligonucleotides corresponding to siRNAs and miRNAs, and also binds to single-stranded RNA oligonucleotides. A stretch of positively charged residues between amino acids 20-30 are critical for RNA binding. Binding to RNA oligomerizes and induces a conformational change in TAV 2B into a primarily helical structure. These studies sug-gest that suppression of RNAi by TAV 2B may occur by targeting different stages of the RNAi pathway. TAV 2B falls under the category of more general RNAi suppres-sors, with potentially multiple targets for suppression.
Flexibility and constraints in migration and breeding of the barnacle goose Maximising fitness means, to a large extent, optimising management of time and energy. This thesis investigates aspects of timing and resource acquisition and utilisation in the barnacle goose Branta leucopsis during spring migration and reproduction. The barnacle goose population wintering along the Wadden Sea coast, and traditionally migrating via a stopover in the Baltic to its breeding sites in northern Russia, has shown some remarkable developments, among them, a geometric growth rate since the 1950s and a notable change in the timing of departure from the wintering grounds. Furthermore, long being regarded as an obligate Arctic breeder, within the past three decades this species has successfully colonised a wide variety of habitats at temperate latitudes, thereby shortening the migratory distances considerably or refraining from migration altogether. These remarkable changes raise questions about the flexibility of migratory and reproductive schedules. What are the costs and benefits of different migration strategies? And, given the context of global change, to what extent are animals capable of adapting to rapidly changing environments? In order to answer these questions we tracked migratory geese by satellite and with the help of data loggers and, furthermore, explored possible relationships of migratory behaviour and breeding performance. Another central thesis topic represents a within-species comparison of major life-history traits in populations breeding along a large ecological gradient from arctic to temperate environments. Fieldwork was conducted in arctic Russia, Sweden and The Netherlands.
The relation between reality and language, the instability of language as a signification system, the representation crisis, and the borders of interpretation are the controversial issues that have engaged not only philosophers, but also many authors, translators, and literary critics. Some philosophers like Derrida accuse Western thinking of being obsessed with binary oppositions. In Derrida's view, Western tradition resorts to external references as God, truth, origin, center and reason to stabilize the signification system. Since these concepts lack an internal sense and there is no transcendental signified that can fix these signifiers, language turns to an instable system by means of which no fixed meaning can be created. Many authors like Beckett, Stoppard, and Caryl Churchill also noticed this impossibility of language. While Derrida's deconstructive approach to this crisis has an epistemological nature, these playwrights present an aesthetic solution by turning the deconstructive potential of language against itself in text and performance. This dissertation aims at exploring their performing methods and dramatic texts to demonstrate how their delogocentric strategies work. By analyzing their plays, I will examine if their use of signifiers that have no references in reality, intentional misconceptions, disintegrated subjectivities, decentered narratives, and experimental performances can help them undermine the prevailing logocentrism of Western thought. The examination of the change in aesthetic strategies from Beckett, who belongs to earlier stages of post modernism, to Caryl Churchill, who should perform in a globalized world with increasing dominance of speed and information, is another aim of this research. In my view,Beckett's obsession with unspeakable, absurdity, and disintegration of subjectivity develops to Stoppard's language games, metadrama, and anti-representation and culminates in Churchill's anti-narrative texts and pluralistic performances. The monophony of Beckett's dramatic texts is replaced by the polyphony of Churchill's performances, which are a mixture of theater, dance and music. However, all explored dramatic texts in this dissertation have something in common: they are language games, which have no claim on a faithful representation of reality or transcendental truth.
The reggie protein family consists of two homologous members, reggie-1 and reggie-2, also termed flotillin-2 and flotillin-1, respectively, that are ubiquitously expressed and evolutionarily well conserved, suggesting an important but so far ill-defined function. In various cell types, both reggies have been found to be constitutively associated with lipid rafts by means of acylation modifications and oligomerization. Lipid rafts are glycosphingolipid- and cholesterol-rich membrane microdomains which have been implicated in several cellular processes including membrane transport and signal transduction through growth factor receptors. However, the molecular details of these processes are still poorly understood. With the observation that reggies colocalize with activated glycosylphosphatidylinositolanchored proteins (GPI-APs) and Fyn kinase in rafts, a role for these proteins in signaling events has been suggested. In agreement with that, we have previously shown that reggie-1 becomes multiply tyrosine phosphorylated by Src kinases in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation, pointing to a function for reggie-1 in growth factor signaling. Furthermore, overexpression of reggie-1 enhances spreading on fibronectin substrate in a tyrosine-dependent manner, thus revealing a role for reggie-1 in regulation of actin cytoskeleton through growth factor receptors. Due to the similarity shared by reggie proteins at amino acid level and to their ability to form hetero-oligomeric complexes, the first aim of this study was to analyze the putative tyrosine phosphorylation of reggie-2 in growth factor stimulated cells. Similarly to reggie-1, reggie-2 was found to be multiply tyrosine phosphorylated by Src kinase and to exist in a molecular complex with Src, with the degree of co-immunoprecipitation dependent on the activity of Src. Recent studies from us have also shown that administration of EGF results in the endocytosis of reggie-1 from the plasma membrane into endosomes, which is in line with a proposed role for reggies in membrane trafficking processes. In order to characterize in detail the endocytic mechanism that mediates the uptake of reggie-1, the dependency of reggie-1 endocytosis on clathrin and dynamin was investigated by means of overexpressing a variant form of Eps15 or a dominant negative form of dynamin-2. In either case the translocation of reggie-1 into endosomes in response to EGF was not affected, and this, together with the results that reggie-1 colocalized with cholera toxin (CTX) but not with transferrin receptor (TfnR) during EGF signaling, indicates that reggie-1 is taken up by means of a dynaminindependent, raft-mediated pathway. These findings are very well in line with recent data showing the pathway of entry into cells of reggie-2 as a raft-mediated endocytic pathway. The endocytosis of reggie-2 in response to EGF was also analyzed in this study. Similarly to reggie-1, in growth factor stimulated cells reggie-2 underwent a translocation from the plasma membrane to endosomes where the two reggies were found to colocalize with each other, suggesting that epidermal growth factor signaling might trigger the endocytosis of reggie oligomers. In addition, colocalization with both the late endosomal marker LAMP3/CD63 and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) was detected, again indicating a function for reggies in signal transduction through growth factor receptors. EGFR has been reported to localize in rafts but, although this association is thought to be functional during EGF stimulation, how segregation of EGFR into rafts modulates its endocytosis and signaling is still under debate. Since reggie oligomers have recently been suggested to define a raft subtype, a further aim of this study was to investigate whether the depletion of reggies by means of small interfering RNA could interfere with the signaling and the trafficking through EGFR. Knockdown of reggie-2 resulted in an altered tyrosine phosphorylation of EGFR in response to EGF, while the degree of ubiquitination was not affected. Less efficient phosphorylation of tyrosine residues, especially of those which are docking sites for Grb2 and Shc, led in turn to an impaired activation of p38 and ERK1/2 MAPKs. Depletion of reggie-2 did not affect the early trafficking of activated EGFRs, with receptors being endocytosed and delivered to late endosomes as efficiently as in control cells. This would be in line with the normal degree of ubiquitination observed for EGFR, as ubiquitin moieties have been proposed to represent sorting tags that ensure receptor endocytosis into early endosomes and its proper intracellular trafficking. On the contrary, after prolonged EGF stimulation, depletion of reggie-2 resulted in a decreased downregulation of both receptor-bound ligand and EGFR, and in their accumulation in intracellular vesicles, thus pointing to a role for reggie-2 in the degradative pathway. Taken all together, these data ndicate that the association of EGFR with reggie-microdomains is likely to be important for proper receptor trafficking and signaling.
Background and objectives: Constrictive pericarditis (CP) is the result of a spectrum of primary cardiac and non-cardiac conditions. Little data exists on the cause-specific survival after pericardiectomy in the modern era. The impact of pericardial calcification (CA) on survival is unclear. We sought to determine the association of etiology of CP, CA and other clinical variables with long-term survival after pericardiectomy. Methods: We analyzed the records of 163 patients who underwent pericardiectomy for CP over a 24-year period at a single center. The diagnosis of CP was established by surgical report. Vital status was obtained by the Social Security Death Index. The Kaplan Meier method was used to estimate overall survival and survival by etiology group. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis was performed to assess the effect of various causes for CP on longterm survival while adjusting for age. Results: The etiology of CP was idiopathic in 75 patients (46%), prior cardiac surgery in 60 (37%), radiation treatment in 15 (9%) and miscellaneous in 13 patients (8%). Vital status was obtained in 160 patients (98%). Median follow-up was 6.9 years (range: 0.8 to 24.5 years). Perioperative mortality for all patients was 6%. Idiopathic CP had the best prognosis (7 year survival: 88%, 95% confidence interval [CI] 76% to 94%) followed by postsurgical (66%, 95% CI 52% to 78%) and postradiation CP (27%, 95% CI 9% to 58%). In bootstrap-validated proportional hazards analyses, predictors of poor survival were prior radiation, worse renal function, higher pulmonary artery pressure (PAP), abnormal left ventricular (LV) systolic function, lower serum sodium level, and older age. Pericardial calcification had no impact on survival. Conclusion: Long-term survival after pericardiectomy for CP is determined by the underlying etiology of constriction, LV systolic function, renal function, serum sodium, and PAP. Patients with postsurgical as well as postradiation CP have a survival inferior to patients with idiopathic CP. Perioperative Mortality is low. The relatively good survival after pericardiectomy in patients with idiopathic CP emphasizes the safety of pericardiectomy in this group.
The growth of blood vessels is crucial for organ growth in the embryo and repair of wounded tissues in the adult. An imbalance in this process contributes to numerous malignant, inflammatory, ischemic, infectious and immune disorders (Ferrara et al., 2003). Postnatal neovascularization occurs through the recruitment of progenitor cells and angiogenesis. Integrins are heterodimeric cell surface molecules and are the main receptors for extracellular matrix proteins. Regulation of integrin activation is crucial during embryonic development and during adult life. Dysregulation of integrin activity leads to severe diseases. In this study, we have demonstrated that Rap1, a small GTPase regulating integrin activity, and its GEF Epac1 are expressed in both EPC and endothelial cells. Moreover, the pharmacological activator of Epac activates the small GTPase Rap1 in progenitor cells. In parallel the angiogenic growth factors VEGF and bFGF activate Rap1 in endothelial cells. In addition, the regulation of Rap1 activity in EPC and in endothelial cells plays an important role in the regulation of migration and adhesion to matrix proteins, by regulating the activity of different integrins, a mechanism known as integrin inside‐out signaling. Furthermore, regulation of Rap1 activity affects probably indirectly through outside‐in signaling of integrins the activity of several and crucial proteins such PKB/Akt and focal adhesion kinase in endothelial cells. In line with these results, we have demonstrated that Rap1 activity affect angiogenesis, homing of EPC to ischemic tissues and thereby postnatal neovascularization. The understanding how Rap1 regulates integrin activity in endothelial cells is still not completely clear, for example we have demonstrated that the known effectors of Rap1 mediating the increase of integrin activity in T and B cells, such as RAPL and RIAM are, respectively, either not increasing integrin activity or not expressed in endothelial cells. We aim to find the effector of Rap1 promoting integrin activity in endothelial cells and how RAPL regulates integrin functions and angiogenesis. Moreover data from us and others using genetic models and generation of Rap1a or Rap1b deficient mice or deficient for Rap1a and Rap1b led to embryonic lethality suggesting that Rap1 is a key node protein during embryonic development. The development of conditionnal Rap1a/b endothelial/pericytes restricted deficient mice will help us to decipher more precisely the role of Rap1 during vascular development and angiogenesis.
The geodynamic processes and the chemical and thermal evolution of the mantle beneath the Kaapvaal craton (South Africa) was investigated with further regard to diamond formation. For this, 31 coarse-grained peridotites and 21 individual subcalcic garnets from heavy mineral concentrates (HMC) from the Finsch mine were studied for their major and trace element compositions, Lu-Hf and Sm-Nd isotope composition. Furthermore, processes in the Earth’s mantle that follow kimberlite sampling and propagation were studied in polymict peridotite breccia from Kimberley mines. Inter mineral equilibrium of the peridotites was tested by comparing the results from different, independent thermometers. These, well equilibrated peridotites stem from a restricted pressure of 5 to 6.5 GPa (depth ~160-200 km) and a temperature range of 1050-1250°C, following the 40 mW/m2 conductive geotherm. The majority of the samples display a well developed anti-correlation of oxygen fugacity with pressure, which is in contrast to the sheared and oxidised, younger kimberlite erupted peridotites from Kimberley. All analysed samples have homogeneous trace element mineral chemistry. Variations in trace elements among Finsch peridotites reflect their complex nature and the intricate development of the subcratonic mantle. The 3.6 Ga is the oldest crustal age recorded in the Kaapvaal craton, and is confirmed by the Lu-Hf model age of a highly radiogenic subcalcic garnet in this study. Therefore, this age probably represents the oldest depletion (partial melting event) of the subcratonic mantle beneath the Kaapvaal craton. Both, subcalcic garnets and Finsch peridotites yield Lu-Hf isochron ages of around 2.5 Ga, which probably represent the last depletion event of the Kaapvaal craton. Several older (than 2.5 Ga) depletions were also necessary to explain higher isochron initials of the both isochrones. The Cr# and HREE concentrations and ratios of the Finsch subcalcic garnets and peridotites indicate that partial melting of the Kaapvaal craton happened at different depths. One group of subcalcic garnets (group-1) experienced depletion at high pressure in the garnet stability field and another one (group-2) at low pressures in the spinel or plagioclase stability field. Major and trace elements indicate that up to 50%, of the melt was remover from the primitive (primer) mantle in at least two melting events. Thus, first continental crust was created early (> 2.5 Ga) from high degrees of partial melting of the lithospheric mantle. According to the Sm-Nd isotope signatures at least two metasomatic events took place significantly after 2.5 Ga. As monitored by group-1 subcalcic garnets, the first enrichment was produced by a fluid and occurred at around 1.3 Ga. The second metasomatic event was much later at 500-300 Ma ago and has changed both Nd and Hf isotopic compositions of group-2 subcalcic garnet as well as some Finsch peridotites. During partial melting any carbon species will be dissolved in the melt and removed from the residue. Therefore, any diamond growth before the last depletion (~2.5 Ga) would have been probably completely removed from the lithospheric mantle. Consequently, carbon was apparently reintroduced into the system, i.e. during Metasomatism, and triggered the growth of diamonds. The Sm-Nd isotope systematics of the subcalcic garnets of this study indicates that enrichment occurred at ~1.3 Ga or later, which implies non-Archean, late diamond growth in Finsch. Fertilisation of the subcontinental craton associated with the percolation of group-2 (~120 Ma) or even younger (~90 Ma) group-1 kimberlites and their precursors are not observed in Finsch peridotites, but are well presented in mantle xenoliths from Kimberley. Therefore, these younger events were studied on specific mantle xenoliths, polymict breccia from Kimberley. A polymict peridotite found at the Boshof road dump, Kimberley, represents a mechanical mixture of upper mantle clasts and minerals (opx, cpx, garnet and olivine) of different lithologies, cemented by fine-grained olivine and minute amounts of interstitial ilmenite, phlogopite and sulphide. According to Ni in garnet thermometry, single porphyroclastic garnets were sampled and mixed during ascent in a 100 km stratigraphic column, starting from ~250 km until ~120 km. During this ascent, melt has reacted with the porphyroclasts and at theirrims neoblastic minerals were formed, i.e. neoblastic opx around opx porphyroclast, neoblastic garnet around garnet porphyroclast, and neoblastic opx around cpx porphyroclast. Analyses of those neoblastic minerals indicate that volatile-rich, kimberlite-like melt was the agent that collected the mantle minerals and amalgamated this xenolith. Several complex processes were responsible for the formation of the polymict breccia. They comprise melt degassing at high pressures that probably created “explosive” Brecciation of the cratonic roots (~250 km), propagation of the melt that collected different porphyroclasts on a way and amalgamation at around 120 km. The whole process of “explosive” brecciation, turbulent transport and mixing of mantle porphyroclasts and melt, porphyroclast dissolution and neoblast precipitation happened very fast and was part of the kimberlite formation. Therefore, the here studied sample probably represents one frozen part (with variable mantle clasts) of the kimberlitic magma precursor, with kimberlite eruption at ~90 Ma years ago in Kimberley.
The production of quarkonia, the bound state of an heavy quark with its anti-particle, has for a long time been seen as a key process to understand the properties of nuclear matter in a relativistic heavy-ion collision. This thesis presents studies on the production of quarkonia in heavy-ion collisions at the new Large Hadron collider (LHC). The focus is set on the decay of J/Psi and Upsilon-states into their di-electronic decay channel, measured within the central detectors of the ALICE detector.
The dissertation, ”Coping with emergent hearing loss”, is written in English and is based on the diversity of problems connected to hearing loss and the adaptation of hearing aids. The research was carried out in Denmark and involves adults with an emergent hearing loss, who have decided to become hearing aid users. The data is analyzed through methods of cultural anthropology with focus on the following topics: How do the new users cope with the status passage towards being hearing aid users, how do they integrate the hearing aids into their lives, and what are the involved learning processes. What are the consequences of the provision by the state of free hearing aids, their free adaptation as well as free batteries, and does the state take part in the construction of the social group of new hearing aid users? The method is based on qualitative field work. Two public hospitals were helpful in identifying 24 new users, who acquired a free hearing aid through the hearing health care system. Through ENTs and private dispensers 17 further respondents joined the study – these acquired their hearing aids with a considerable state subsidy but mostly they themselves contributed financially as well. The 41 respondents between the ages of 42 to 92 years of age came from a wide range of professions and were followed throughout 2003 und 2004. After an in-depth qualitative interview, the contact to the respondents was maintained in order to follow the process of integration into their lives. When possible, the respondents were accompanied to their appointments in the private or public clinics. Moreover, interviews with experts from the public hearing health care system, politicians and user organisations were carried out, and the general public debate on the hard of hearing and hearing loss was followed and recorded. The second chapter gives an overview of the position of audiology in Denmark, of epidemiological information on hearing loss in the Danish society and statistics to the use of hearing aids. Moreover, basic information is given about the functioning of the human ear, the auditive perception and diagnosis and classification of hearing loss as well as a short introduction to the hearing aid technology. The structure of the further thesis divides the material into three pillars that make the discussion of the interaction processes possible. (1) The user’s interaction with the lifeworld concerns the meaning of hearing in relation to social participation. For some of the users, a good sense of hearing was essential to communicate freely and uphold their position in relation to others, whereas other respondents paid less attention to the information they acquired through their sense of hearing. A number of the respondents were selective and only used their hearing aids in specific situations, whereas another group discontinued the use of their hearing aids for various reasons. Status passages that hold specific challenges like a new work place or a new marriage motivate the continued everyday use. On the whole, the thesis illustrates that hearing loss is a socially dividing factor that complicates the interaction with others. In comparison to other bodily impairments or diseases, the hearing loss is rarely used as occasion to unite with fellow sufferers, join patient organisations or form self help groups. (2) The users’ interaction with the institutions The medical anthropologist Arthur Kleinman conceptualises health care as a moral process in which essential issues are at stake for the users. Different factors interact in the process: the training of the experts, allocation of funds, the quality of the technology, the dispensing procedures and the motivation and individual characteristics of the new users. The integration of the hearing aid into the lifeworld can be compared to a learning process, for which reason the learning theory of the anthropologist Gregory Bateson is outlined. Susanne Bisgaard’s own theory lists the meaning creating elements that serve as motivation for the users to counteract contingency (occurrences that influence the adaptation negatively). In the interaction between individual and society, the individual can apply strategies in order to eliminate stumbling blocks. (3) The users’ interaction with the technology A number of theorists from Anthropology as well as Science and Technology Studies are discussed in order to question their validity with regard to human action autonomy vs. technological determination and test the theoretical models with regard to their usability for the thesis. Hearing aids have a supporting function in everyday life and have the capability of moderating the user’s perception of sound. The alienating experience of hearing one’s own voice amplified, of wearing a foreign body in the ear and the different strategies that emerge from the more or less successful handling of the technology is reported by way of case stories and quotes from the interviews.
This work presents the study on the suitability of single-crystal CVD diamond for particle-detection systems in present and future hadron physics experiments. Different characterization methods of the electrical and the structural properties were applied to gain a deeper understanding of the crystal quality and the charge transport properties of this novel semiconductor material. First measurements regarding the radiation tolerance of diamond were performed with sensors heavily irradiated with protons and neutrons. Finally, detector prototypes were fabricated and successfully tested in various experiments as time detectors for minimum ionizing particles as well as for spectroscopy of heavy ions at the energy ranges available at the SIS and the UNILAC facilities of GSI. ...
5-LO is the key enzyme in the biosynthesis of proinflammatory leukotrienes. It catalyses the conversion of arachidonic acid to the hydroperoxy intermediate 5(S)-hydroperoxy-6- trans-8,11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid (5-HpETE). In a second step 5-LO catalyses a dehydration reaction forming the unstable epoxide intermediate 5(S)-trans-5,6-oxido-7,9- trans-11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid (leukotriene A4 , LTA4). The 5-LO gene is subjected to versatile regulation mechanisms. Apart from regulation by DNA-methylation and histone acetylation / deacetylation 5-LO gene expression can be regulated by the differentiation inducers calcitriol (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3) and transforming growth factor beta (TGFβ) 5-LO gene expression. In the myeloid cell lines Mono Mac 6 (MM6) and HL-60, differentiation with both agents caused a prominent upregulation of 5-LO mRNA level, of 5-LO protein expression and of 5-LO activity. Treatment with calcitriol alone already has an impact on 5-LO gene expression which is additionally potentiated by TGFβ treatment. Previous nuclear run-off analysis and reporter gene analysis could not associate the 5-LO promoter with the induction of 5-LO mRNA expression mediated by calcitriol and TGFβ. Inclusion of the 5-LO coding sequence (cds) and inclusion of the 5-LO cds plus the last four introns of the gene (J to M) in the 5-LO promoter construct pN10 led to an enhanced reporter gene activity. The inductions were dependent on vitamin D receptor (VDR) and retinoid x receptor (RXR) cotransfection. Therefore the work was concentrated on identifying elements outside the 5-LO promoter region which contribute to the calcitriol / TGFβ effect on 5-LO mRNA expression. Insertion of the LTA4 hydrolase coding sequence – a coding sequence of similar size - instead of the 5-LO cds led to a loss of the calcitriol / TGFβ effect (pN10LTA4Hcds 1-fold induction). Therewith, it was proven that the presence of the 5-LO cds is crucial for the upregulating effect of calcitriol / TGFβ on 5-LO mRNA level. Cloning of the SV40 promoter instead of pN10 upstream of the 5-LO cds still showed inducibility by treatment with the inducers which argues for a promoter unspecific effect. Insertion of the 5-LO cds in a promoterless basic vector (pGL3cds) displayed same inductions by calcitriol / TGFβ treatment as the 5-LO promoter 5-LO cds construct (pN10cds). Thus, the effect of the inducers is not dependent on the 5-LO promoter under the in vitro conditions of the reporter gene assay. Hence, further cloning was done with promoterless constructs. Through 5-LO cds deletion constructs a positive regulating region in exon 10 to 14 was discovered. To adapt the natural gene context the last four introns (J-M) of the 5-LO gene were inserted in a promoterless construct containing exon 10 to 14 (pGL3cdsΔABInJM). 5end deletion constructs of it revealed putative vitamin D responsive elements (VDREs) in exon 12 and intron M. Mutation of the putative VDREs led to a reduced calcitriol effect –more prominent when the putative VDRE in intron M was mutated (reduction of 40%). Moreover another putative VDRE in exon 10 with an adjacent SMAD binding element (SBE) was detected. SMAD proteins are effector proteins of TGFβ signalling. Gelshift experiments demonstrated in vitro binding of the VDR-RXR heterodimer to those three putative VDREs. By chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assay in vivo binding of VDR and RXR was shown to the VDRE in the region of exon 10, exon 12 and intron M. 8h and 24h incubation with calcitriol / TGFβ resulted in enhanced expression of VDR in each of the examined regions. The VDR is able to bind to the VDRE without its ligand, whereas this goes along with corepressor recruitment and thus the VDR has a repressive effect on transcription. Histone H4 acetylation was increased when MM6 cells were treated for 8h or 24h with calcitriol or the combination of calcitriol / TGFβ. This finding implies that at that point of time corepressors associated with the VDR are replaced by coactivators. It seems convincing that 5-LO transcription is mainly promoted by calcitriol alone which leads to a more accessible chromatin structure. Previous data indicated that calcitriol and TGFβ upregulate 5-LO RNA maturation and 5- LO transcript elongation. Thus several elongation markers were investigated by ChIP analysis: Histone H3 lysine 36 (H3K36) trimethylation and H4K20 monomethylation were detected in the analysed regions in exon 10, exon 12 and intron M. In region exon 10 the H3K36 trimethylation status was enhanced after 24h calcitriol or calcitriol / TGFβ treatment. An increased H4K20 monomethylation status in all regions was observed when MM6 cells were treated for 24h with calcitriol / TGFβ. 24h treatment with both agents also enhanced the recruitment of the elongation form of RNA polymerase II, which is phosphorylated at serine 2 of the carboxyterminal domain, to the investigated regions. These findings prove the positive regulating role for calcitriol and TGFβ on 5-LO transcript elongation. A putative mechanism of the effect of calcitriol and TGFβ on 5-LO RNA maturation might be the elevated phosphorylation of serine 2 of the RNA Polymerase II which is known to be followed by recruiting polyadenylating factors.
The dissertation deals with the general problem of how the brain can establish correspondences between neural patterns stored in different cortical areas. Although an important capability in many cognitive areas like language understanding, abstract reasoning, or motor control, this thesis concentrates on invariant object recognition as application of correspondence finding. One part of the work presents a correspondence-based, neurally plausible system for face recognition. Other parts address the question of visual information routing over several stages by proposing optimal architectures for such routing ('switchyards') and deriving ontogenetic mechanisms for the growth of switchyards. Finally, the idea of multi-stage routing is united with the object recognition system introduced before, making suggestions of how the so far distinct feature-based and correspondence-based approaches to object recognition could be reconciled.
The epithelial absorbing cells of the small intestinal villi, the enterocytes, are the main protagonists for the transport of nutrients from the intestinal lumen to the interstitial fluids. The oriented flow of nutrients is carried out by different and complementary transport systems present in the apical and the basolateral domains of the enterocyte’s plasma membrane. One of the distinctive characteristics of those intestinal cells is the presence of numerous structurally distinct protrusions (referred as microvilli) on the apical surface of the plasma membrane. They confer the brush-like appearance of the microvillus border (commonly referred to as the "brush border") typically observed in the light microscope. Over the years, there has been considerable interest to study the molecular mechanisms driving the transport of molecules across the intestinal brush border membrane (BBM). Defects have been described to cause a variety of pathological conditions, such as disorders in the metabolism of saccharides (glucose and galactose malabsorption, lactose intolerance), amino acids (Hartnup disease, aminoacidurias), ions (sodium and potassium in the case of familiar diarrhea), metals (zinc in acrodermatitis enteropathica) and cholesterol lipids (cardiovascular diseases). In particular, the essential role of the BBM in regulating the delicate balance between cholesterol influx and efflux from the lumen to the enterocyte has been recently highlighted through the genetic analysis of individuals suffering of cholesterol disorders as well as in several clinical studies involving the use of dietary plant sterols (phytostrerols) or specific protein inhibitors blocking essential components of the cholesterol absorption/resorption pathway. ...
The respiratory chain is composed of protein complexes residing in the inner mitochondrial membrane of eukaryotes or in the cytoplasmic membrane of prokaryotes. This cellular energy converter transforms a redox potential stored in low potential substrates into an electrochemical potential across the respective membrane. Typical respiratory chains contain the complexes I, II, III and IV named according to their sequence in the respiratory chain reaction. Electrons of low potential substrates enter at complex I or II and are passed via complex III to complex IV where they are transferred to oxygen. The transport of electrons between the complexes is mediated by small electron shuttles like quinol or cytochrome c. Two different models describe their exchange either by (1) random collision of freely diffusible electron shuttles and membrane protein complexes or (2) arrangement of the complexes in supercomplexes enabling direct channeling of electron shuttles. In the Gram positive bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum, the complex III to complex IV electron shuttle cytochrome c is not diffusible but a covalently bound part of the diheme cytochrome subunit QcrC of complex III. Therefore, the complexes III and IV have to form a supercomplex for electron transduction. The aim of this thesis was to purify and characterise this obligatory supercomplex III/IV of C. glutamicum. To gain sufficient biomass of C. glutamicum as starting material for purification, a phosphate buffered minimal medium was developed that enabled yield of total 120 g wet cell mass (38 g dry mass) in 12 L (6×2 L) shaking cultures. The determined conversion factor of glucose into biomass was 0.46 g/g indicating an intact respiratory chain. The yield was increased by bioreactor cultivation to ~690 g wet cell mass (~220 g dry mass) in ~10 L culture volume. A previously described homologous expression system was applied that produces the complex IV subunit CtaD with a fused Strep-tag II to facilitate purification. Affinity purifications using the Strep-tag II affinity to Strep-Tactin resin yielded a mixture of complexes and supercomplexes. Two supercomplex III/IV versions named supercomplex A and B and free complex IV were identified in this mixture by size exclusion chromatography, redox difference spectroscopy and two dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis including blue native polyacrylamide electrophoresis. The here presented downscaled blue native polyacrylamide electrophoresis method with analysis times of ~1 h enabled efficient screening of factors influencing the stability of supercomplex III/IV. The screening resulted that the integrity of supercomplex III/IV is preserved by using neutral detergents at minimal detergent to protein ratios for solubilisation and low detergent concentrations for purification and storage slightly above the required critical micellar concentration. Furthermore, pH <=7.5 is required for stability of supercomplex III/IV. Large biomass yields enabled upscaling of supercomplex III/IV affinity purification. Application of the identified stability conditions resulted in affinity purified samples free of supercomplex B. The major component supercomplex A was efficiently separated from residual free complex IV by preparative size exclusion chromatography. Concentration of purified supercomplex A by ultracentrifugation resulted in integrity of the supercomplex for several days at 4 °C. Purified supercomplex A contains ten different previously described subunits. The heme content of supercomplex A relative to the protein mass is heme A: 6.0 μmol/g, heme B: 6.5 μmol/g, and heme C: 5.8 μmol/g determined by redox difference spectroscopy and biochemical protein quantification. This indicates an equimolar ratio of complex III and complex IV in supercomplex A. Supercomplex A has quinol oxidase activity that is inhibited by stigmatellin or sodium azide. The turnover number of transferred electrons per complex III monomer is 148 s−1 at 25° C. The homogeneity and stability of the prepared supercomplex A enabled the growth of threedimensional crystals of up to 0.1 mm in length. Their composition of supercomplex A was verified by redox difference spectroscopy of intact crystals and blue native polyacrylamide electrophoresis of dissolved crystals. The crystals diffracted X-rays corresponding to a resolution of ~10 Å. Electron microscopy of negative stained samples revealed the uniform shape of purified supercomplex A particles with dimensions of 22 × 9 nm in the view plane. Combined heme quantification, size determination, determined activity, symmetry considerations, and particle shape indicate that supercomplex A has a central dimer of complex III and two monomers of complex IV on opposite sides. This conformation is functionally reasonable because it provides each complex III monomer with one complex IV monomer as electron acceptor. Therefore, the stoichiometry of supercomplex A is most likely III2IV2. The sensitivity of supercomplex A to detergents indicated a role of phospholipids in its stability. Therefore, a method for phospholipid identification and quantification was developed that is suitable for detergent solubilised crude and purified membrane protein samples. The analysis combines separation of phospholipid classes according to their head group by normal phase high performance liquid chromatography with evaporative light scattering detection. Calibration with external standard allows quantification of phospholipid amount in the range of 0.25-12 μg. The method is verified by analysing the phospholipid content of the well characterised complex III of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The reduction of its phospholipid content during its purification steps is monitored. The complex III sample purified to crystallisation quality contains the phospholipid content that was also observed in previously reported structures determined by X-ray crystallography. Purified stable supercomplex A from C. glutamicum revealed a large content of bound phospholipids. The main differences between intact supercomplex A and a mixture of potentially disintegrated smaller complexes is that intact supercomplex A has a doubled phosphatidic acid content and an increased phosphatidyl glycerol content. The importance of the small anionic phosphatidic acid for mediation of contacts between complexes in a supercomplex is discussed. The total phospholipid content of stable supercomplex A is sufficient for a complete belt surrounding the supercomplex in the membrane plane. This indicates that also all essential internal phospholipid binding positions are occupied and potentially stabilise supercomplex A.
The function of APOBEC3G in the innate immune response against the HIV infection of primary cells
(2008)
In the past few years the regulation of HIV-1 replication by cellular cofactors has been a major topic of ongoing research. These factors potentially represent new targets for antiviral therapy as resistance will be minimized. However this requires a better understanding of the interaction of HIV-1 with these cellular factors and the immune system. The virus infects the cells of the immune system, beginning with macrophages and dendritic cells as primary target cells during transmission. The cellular cofactor, APOBEC3G was found to be an antiviral factor in macrophages, dendritic cells and primary T cells. APOBEC3G is a cytidindeaminase which causes G->A hypermutations in the HIV-Genome. Another protein which has a strong inhibitory effect on the HIV infection is Interferon alpha (IFN-alpha), however the exact reason for this has not yet been elucidated. The bacterial protein, Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) also induces a strong antiviral state in macrophages. In micro-array analysis it was shown that APOBEC3G was upregulated after the stimulation with both IFN-alpha and LPS in macrophages. The goal of this work was to investigate the role of APOBEC3G in the innate immune response to APOBEC3G. For this, the expression of APOBEC3G was examined in HIV-1 target cells after stimulation with IFN-alpha or LPS and the effect of the protein on the viral infection was examined. In the first experiments it could be shown through real time quantitative PCR that APOBEC3G was overexpressed after the stimulation with IFN-alpha or LPS. This result could be shown in monocytes derived macrophages from different blood donors. It was also shown that the overexpression of APOBEC3G correlated directly with the concentration of IFN-alpha. Through mutational analysis it could be then shown that the overexpressed APOBEC3G protein was also functional in the cells. In order to show that this was the result of APOBEC3G, the protein was the regulated through lentiviral vectors. After transduction of cell lines with lentiviral vectors containing APOBEC3G, the infection was inhibited by up to 70%. The infection was restored after the addition of shRNAs against APOBEC3G. For the further experiments, CD34+ stem cells were used. The cells were transduced the day after thawing with lentiviral vectors containing an eGFP marker gene and either APOBEC3G or shRNAs against APOBEC3G. The CD34+ cells were then cultivated and differentiated to macrophages. The cells transduced with Lentiviral vectors containing APOBEC3G had a very high expression of APOBEC3G in the cells, however the cells transduced with shRNA against APOBEC3G did not show a reduction in the protein expression. The infectivity of the transduced CD34+ and CD34 derived macrophages was then examined. It was expected that the cells transduced with APOBEC3G would show a reduced HIV-1 infection, and the cells transduced with shRNA against APOBEC3G would show an increase in infection. After the transduction and differentiation the CD34+ cells from the 3 donors were stimulated and infected with wild type HIV-1 and Vif defective HIV-1 virus. Vif is a viral protein that can bind to APOBEC3G leading it to the proteasome for degradation. The cells from the first donor transduced with APOBEC3G, were very difficult to infect. In general the shRNA against APOBEC3G had little effect on the course of infection; presumably, the shRNA against APOBEC3G was not active in most of these cells. Only the cells from the first donor showed an increase in HIV infection after the transduction with the shRNAs against APOBEC3G, this was most notably the case in the cells stimulated with IFN-alpha, which usually show very little infection. This work showed that APOBEC3G plays an important role in the innate immune response to HIV-1. The effect of APOBEC3G is both cell type as well as donor dependent. Recently, an interesting study also showed that there is a correlation between the expression of APOBEC3G in HIV infected individuals and their progression to AIDS. A better understanding of the role that APOBEC3G plays in the innate immune response would help in the search of new therapeutic possibilities. This could be done by inhibiting the Vif-APOBEC3G interaction in order to increase the amount of active APOBEC3G in the cells or increasing the APOBEC3G concentration in the cells in some manner.
Visual information is processed hierarchically in the human visual system. Early during processing basic features are analysed separately while at later stages of processing, they are integrated into a unified percept. By investigating a basic visual feature and following its integration at different levels of processing one can identify specific patterns. In certain visual impairments, these patterns can function defectively and their detailed study can clarify the cause of the visual deficit. Here we investigate orientation as a basic feature and use a property of the visual system called adaptation. Adaptation occurs as a decrease in the level of neural activity during repetitive presentation of the same stimulus. Psychophysical studies have shown that adaptation transfers interocularly, meaning that if only one eye is adapted the other eye shows also adaptation effects. Our aim was to investigate interocular transfer by means of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Even though adaptation was demonstrated in the fMRI environment, the interocular transfer was never investigated in such a setup. First, we developed a method to measure interocular transfer of adaptation to gratings with fMRI. We then went further to test it in various groups of subjects. In normally sighted humans interocular transfer was present both in early (striate) as well as later visual areas (extrastriate). In subjects with impaired stereovision (with or without normal visual acuity) interocular transfer was absent in the investigated regions. Detailed analysis of the recorded differences between subjects with and subjects without stereovision was performed. The results of this analysis are presented in detail in this book. These results suggest that the neuronal mechanisms involved in the interocular transfer of pattern adaptation share, at least in part, the neural circuitry underlying binocular functions and stereopsis. We conclude that fMRI adaptation can be used for the assessment of cortical binocularity in humans with normal and impaired stereopsis. Further investigations are needed to address more subtle aspects of the lack of interocular transfer. Towards this purpose, through a fourth experiment we propose further directions that might shed more light on the issue of stereovision and its clinical implications. We show that carefully tuned variations in our experimental procedure might reveal other aspects of binocularity in the human visual system. We believe that the method we developed, apart from the interesting results shown here, has a high potential to be further used for other research questions. Following the above summarized ideas, the thesis comprises of three parts (chapters). The first chapter provides the main theoretical backgrounds of the visual system and of the MRI imaging technique, chapter two describes the experimental procedures while the results and their detailed discussion are detailed in chapter three.
This work presents a contribution to the literature on methods in search of lowdimensional models that yield insight into the equilibrium and kinetic behavior of peptides and small proteins. A deep understanding of various methods for projecting the sampled configurations of molecular dynamics simulations to obtain a low-dimensional free energy landscape is acquired. Furthermore low-dimensional dynamic models for the conformational dynamics of biomolecules in reduced dimensionality are presented. As exemplary systems, mainly short alanine chains are studied. Due to their size they allow for performing long simulations. They are simple, yet nontrivial systems, as due to their flexibility they are rapidly interconverting conformers. Understanding these polypeptide chains in great detail is of considerable interest for getting insight in the process of protein folding. For example, K. Dill et al. conclude in their review [28] about the protein folding problem that "the once intractable Levinthal puzzle now seems to have a very simple answer: a protein can fold quickly and solve its large global optimization puzzle simply through piecewise solutions of smaller component puzzles".
Ataxin-2 is a novel protein, within which the unstable expansion of a polyglutamine domain can cause Spinocerebellar Ataxia type 2 (SCA2), a neurodegenerative disease which belongs to the group of polyglutamine disorders. SCA2 is characterised by a progressive loss of neurons that first affects the cerebellum and brain stem and then may extend to other areas of the brain, like substantia nigra, motoneurons and thalamus. Several lines of research have attempted to determine therole of ataxin-2 in its normal and mutant version. Different animal models and cell culture approaches to study ataxin-2 function implicated ataxin-2 in RNA processing, embryonic development, apoptosis and cytoskeleton. However, the function of ataxin-2 still remains unclear. In this thesis, a protein interaction approach was chosen as an alternative to gain insights into the cellular function of ataxin-2. Full-length ataxin-2 was used as bait in a yeast two-hybrid screen of human adult brain cDNA. Among five candidate interactor proteins identified, two were the endophilins A1 and A3, proteins involved in vesicle endocytosis. Co-immunoprecipitation studies confirmed the association of these proteins in an endogenous complex of mouse brain. In vitro binding experiments narrowed the binding interfaces down to two proline-rich domains on ataxin-2, which interacted with the SH3 domain of endophilins A1/A3. Ataxin-2 and endophilins A1/A3 colocalised at the endoplasmic reticulum as determined by immunofluorescence microscopy of transfected cell lines, and by centrifugation fractionation studies of mouse brain. Importantly, the pattern observed in transfected cells was conserved in untransfected rat hippocampal neurons. In mouse brain, associations of ataxin-2 with endocytic proteins such as the adaptor CIN85, the ubiquitin ligase c-Cbl and also GRB2, in the last case by means of a SH3 domain array chip, were also demonstrated. GST pull-down assays showed ataxin-2 to interact directly with the SH3 domains A and C of CIN85, the C-terminal SH3 domain of GRB2, and the SH3 domain of Src, a kinase activated after receptor stimulation. Functional studies demonstrated that ataxin-2 affects endocytic trafficking of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) by reducing the EGFR internalisation after EGF stimulation. Taken together, these data implicate ataxin-2 to play a role in endocytic receptor cycling.
Synchronized neural activity in the visual cortex is associated with small time delays (up to ~10 ms). The magnitude and direction of these delays depend on stimulus properties. Thus, synchronized neurons produce fast sequences of action potentials, and the order in which units tend to fire within these sequences is stimulusdependent, but not stimulus-locked. In the present thesis, I investigated whether such preferred firing sequences repeat with sufficient accuracy to serve as a neuronal code. To this end, I developed a method for extracting the preferred sequence of firing in a group of neurons from their pair-wise preferred delays, as measured by the offsets of the centre peaks in their cross-correlation histograms. This analysis method was then applied to highly parallel recordings of neuronal spiking activity made in area 17 of anaesthetized cats in response to simple visual stimuli, like drifting gratings and moving bars. Using a measure of effect size, I then analyzed the accuracy with which preferred firing sequences reflected stimulus properties, and found that in the presence of gamma oscillations, the time at which a unit fired in the firing sequence conveyed stimulus information almost as precisely as the firing rate of the same unit. Moreover, the stimulus-dependent changes in firing rates and firing times were largely unrelated, suggesting that the information they carry is not redundant. Thus, despite operating at a time scale of only a few milliseconds, firing sequences have the strong potential to provide a precise neural code that can complement firing rates in the cortical processing of stimulus information.
Genetic analysis of salt adaptation in Methanosarcina mazei Gö1 : the role of abl, ota and otb genes
(2008)
1. M. mazei ist ein halotolerantes methanogenes Archäon und akkumuliert kompatible Solute als längerfristige Anpassung an erhöhte Osmolarität in der Umgebung. Bei intermediären Salzkonzentrationen (~ 400 mM NaCl) wird vorzugsweise α-Glutamat gebildet und bei höheren Salzkonzentrationen (~ 800 mM NaCl) wird Nε-Acetyl-ß-Lysin zusätzlich zu Alpha-Glutamat synthetisiert. 2. Eine Analyse der intrazellulären Solutezusammensetzung mittels NMR ergab, dass M. mazei Glycin-Betain als Osmolyt akkumulieren kann. Für die Aufnahme von Glycin-Betain konnten zwei putative Glycin-Betain-Transporter in M. mazei identifiziert werden, Ota und Otb. Ota steht für „osmoprotectant transporter A“ und Otb für „osmoprotectant transporter B“. Das Genom von M. mazei wurde, nachdem es vollstänidg sequenziert war, nach Genen durchsucht, die eine Rolle bei der Aufnhame von Glycin-Betain oder anderen kompabtiblen Solute spielen könnten. Dafür wurde die Sequenz eines Substratbindeproteins eines bekannten bakteriellen Glycin-Betain-Transporters, opuAC aus B. subtillis als Referenzsequenz verwendet. Hierbei konnte ein Homolog, otaC, in M. mazei identifiziert werden. otaC ist Teil eines Genclusters, welches für einen ABC-Transporter kodiert. otb wurde bei einer genomweiten Expressionsanalyse zur Salzadaptation von M. mazei identifiziert. Es wurden Gene eines putativen ABC-Transporters identifiziert, die unter Hochsalzbedingungen leicht induziert waren. Es stellte sich heraus, dass es sich hierbei um einen zweiten putativen Glycin-Betain-Transporter handelte. Otb gehört auch zur Familie der ABC-Transporter. Vergleichsanalysen zeigten, dass die beiden Transporter keine große Ähnlichkeit zueinander aufweisen. Die Funktion und Rolle der beiden ABC-Transporter, vor allem von Otb, war zu Beginn dieser Arbeit unklar. 3. Bei Analysen des intrazellulären Solutepools im Wildtyp von M. mazei stellte sich heraus, dass in Anwesenheit von Glycin-Betain die Konzentration von Glutamat und NE- Acetyl-ß-Lysin verringert war. Bei 400 mM NaCl reduzierte Glycin-Betain die Glutamat- Konzentration um 16% und bei 800 mM NaCl um 29%. Besonders deutlich zeigte sich der Einfluß von Glycin-Betain bei der Akkumulation von NE-Acetyl-ß-Lysin. Bei 400 mM NaCl reduzierte Glycin-Betain die Konzentration an NE-Acetyl-ß-Lysin um 60% und bei 800 mM NaCl um 50%. Der Einfluß von Glycin-Betain konnte auf verschiedenen Ebenen in M. mazei beobachten werden. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass die relative Transkriptimenge von ota unter Hochsalzbedingungen zunimmt. Glycin-Betain reduzierte die Transkription von ota bei verschiedenen Salzkonzentrationen. Die relative Transkriptmenge an mRNA von ota wurde mittels quantitativer real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) quantifiziert und war bis zu 52% reduziert in Zellen, die in Gegenwart von Glycin-Betain gewachsen waren. Die Transkriptmenge von otb war unter den gleichen Bedingungen nicht beeinflusst und zeigte generell keine Zunahme mit der Salinität des Mediums. Des Weiteren konnte ein Effekt von Glycin-Betain auf Ebene der Transportaktivität von Ota gezeigt werden. Hier zeigte sich, dass Zellen, die bei 400 mM NaCl in Gegenwart von Glycin-Betain gezogen waren, eine geringere Transportaktivität aufweisen, als Zellen, die bei 400 mM NaCl ohne Glycin-Betain gewachsen waren. Die Transportaktivität war um 90% geringer. Es muss jedoch berücksichtigt werden, dass es sich bei den Zellen, die ohne Glycin-Betain gewachsen waren, um eine Nettoaufnahme von Glycin-Betain handelte. Im Gegensatz dazu, ist davon auszugehen, dass Zellen, die in Gegenwart von Glycin-Betain gewachsen waren, eine Austaschreaktion zwischen bereits vorhandenem intrazellulärem und extrazellulär angebotenem Glycin-Betain vornehmen. [Die dem letzten Punkt zugrundeliegenden Daten wurden von Silke Schmidt im Rahmen einer Diplomarbeit erhoben, die von mir mitbetreut wurde. Aus Gründen der vollständigen Darstellung des Projektverlaufes werden diese Daten mitaufgeführt.] 4. Zur weiteren Klärung der Rolle und Funktion der beiden putativen Glycin-Betain- Transporter Ota und Otb war es Ziel, Mutantenstudien durchzuführen. Eine Vorraussetzung für die Generierung von Mutanten ist, dass der Organismus auf Agarplatten wächst und Einzelkolonien von einer einzelnen Zelle ausgehend bildet. Dies ist ein wichtiger Punkt bei Methanosarcina spp., die Zellpakete, sogenannte Sarcinen bilden. Deshalb wurde zunächst nach den optimalsten Plattierungsbedingungen gesucht, unter denen M. mazei keine Sarcinen bildet und die Plattierungseffizienz am höchsten war. Die Plattierungseffizienz betrug im Durchschnitt 54%. Für das Einbringen von DNA in die Zellen wurde eine Liposomen-vermittelte Transformation getestet. Ein ähnliches Vorgehen war bereits für Methanosarcina acetivorans beschrieben, konnte bislang aber noch nicht erfolgreich für M. mazei Gö1 und andere Stämme von M. mazei angwendet werden. Erste Schritte zur Anpassung des Transformations-Protokolles beinhalteten das Testen von DOTAP verschiedener Hersteller, sowie die Konzentration an eingesetzter DNA. Das jeweilige Zielgen/Zieloperon, welches deletiert werden sollte, wurde durch eine pac-Kassette ersetzt. Diese kodiert für eine Puromycin-Transacetylase und verleiht dem Organismus Puromycin- Resistenz. Die pac-Kassette wurde von umgebenden Bereichen des Ziellocus flankiert und integrierte mit Hilfe dieser flankierenden Bereiche über doppelt-homologe Rekombination in das Genom. 5. Mit dem oben beschriebenen Verfahren wurden ota::pac- und otb::pac-Mutanten erzeugt und über Southern-Blot Analyse verifiziert. Eine erste Charakterisierung der Mutanten mittels qRT-PCR zeigte, dass auf mRNA-Ebene keine Transkripte von ota in M. mazei ota::pac oder otb in M. mazei otb::pac nachweisbar waren. Zusätzlich konnte auf Proteinebene das Substratbindeprotein OtaC in M. mazei ota::pac und OtbC in M. mazei otb::pac nicht über einen Antikörper gegen das jeweilige Substratbindeprotein nachgewiesen, was die erfolgreiche Deletion bestätigte. Erste phänotypische Charakterisierungen zeigten, dass das Wachstum von M. mazei ota::pac und M. mazei otb::pac unter Hochsalzbedingungen nicht beeinträchtigt und vergleichbar mit dem des Wildtyps war. Auch bei kälteren Wachstumstemperaturen von 22°C wuchsen die Mutanten ohne Phänotyp. 6. Radioaktive Transportstudien mit M. mazei otb::pac zeigten, dass diese Mutante, die noch ein funktionelles Ota besitzt, [14C]Glycin-Betain aufnehmen kann. Es stellte sich heraus, dass diese Mutante eine höhere Transportrate für Glycin-Betain aufwies, als der Wildtyp. Die Aufnahmerate war um einen Faktor 2 höher als beim Wildtyp. Zusätzlich konnten qRT-PCR Analysen zeigen, dass die relative Transkriptmenge an ota in der otb::pac-Mutante um einen Faktor 2 höher war, als im Wildtyp. Umgekehrt konnte dieser Effekt nicht beobachtet werden, d.h. eine erhöhte Transkriptmenge an otb in M. mazei ota::pac. Auf Proteinebene konnte beobachtet werden, dass die intrazelluläre Konzentration an OtaC in der Mutatne leicht höher war als im Wildtyp. Jedoch stellte sich heraus, dass die intrazelluläre Glycin-Betain-Konzentration bei 400 mM NaCl in der Mutante nicht erhöht war verglichen mit Wildtyp, sondern die Konzentrationen gleich waren. Bei höheren Salzkonzentrationen (800 mM NaCl) zeigte sich jedoch ein anderes Bild: die intrazelluläre Glycin-Betain-Konzentration war in der Mutante um 60% erhöht. Dies könnte auf die erhöhte Transportaktivität von M. mazei otb::pac zurückzuführen sein. Die Konzentration anderer kompatibler Solute wie Glutamat und NE-Acetyl-ß-Lysin waren in diesen Zellen bis zu 48% reduziert. In vorherigen Studien konnte gezeigt werden, dass heterolog überproduziertes Ota von M. mazei in E. coli MKH13, eine E. coli-Mutante, die keine Glycin-Betain-Transporter mehr besitzt, die Aufnahme von Glycin-Betain wieder herstellen konnte [die Daten von ota in E. coli MKH13 wurden in der bereits oben erwähnten Diplomarbeit von Silke Schmidt erhoben]. Zur Klärung der Funktion von Otb wurde der gleiche Versuch mit otb in E. coli MKH13 durchgeführt. Jedoch konnte eine heterologe Produktion von Otb aus M. mazei die Aufnahme von Glycin-Betain in E. coli MKH13 nicht wieder herstellen. Hierbei wurde über Western-Blot Analyse sichergestellt, dass Otb tatsächlich in der Membran vorhanden war. Auch Transportstudien mit der Mutante M. mazei ota::pac zeigten, dass diese Mutante kein [14C]Glycin-Betain mehr aufnehmen konnte. Es konnte auch keine Akkumulation von Glycin-Betain mittels NMR in dieser Mutante gemessen werden. Des Weiteren zeigte sich, dass die intrazellulären Konzentrationen an Glutamat und Nε-Acetyl-ß-Lysin bei 400 mM und 800 mM NaCl in der Mutante unbeeinflusst von der Glycin-Betain-Konzentration im Medium waren. Weitere Transportstudien mit M. mazei ota::pac zur Aufnahme von [14C]Cholin zeigten, dass dieses Molekül weder vom Wildtyp, noch von der Mutante aufgenommen wurde. Dieses Ergebnis wurde durch Messung des Solutepools mittels NMR bestätigt. Somit kann ausgeschlossen werden, dass Otb unter den gemessenen Bedingungen weder ein Glycin- Betain-Transporter noch ein Cholin-Transporter in M. mazei ist. Diese Beobachtungen belegen eindeutig, dass Ota der einzige funktionelle Glycin-Betain-Transporter in M. mazei ist, während die Rolle von Otb bislang noch ungeklärt ist. 7. Nε-Acetyl-ß-Lysin, das dominante kompatible Solut in M. mazei bei 800 mM NaCl, wird durch die Enzyme AblA, einer Lysin-2,3-Aminomutase und AblB, einer ß-Lysin- Acetyltransferase synthetisiert. In dieser Arbeit wurde eine Δabl::pac-Mutante generiert, um die Fragen zu klären, ob die beiden Enzyme vom postulierten abl-Operon kodiert werden und wenn ja, welchen Phänotyp eine Nε-Acetyl-ß-Lysin-freier-Mutante bei Salzstress zeigt. NMR-Analysen zeigten, dass in der abl::pac-Mutante kein Nε-Acetyl-ß-Lysin mehr nachweisbar war. Dies belegt, dass die Gene ablA und ablB und deren Genprodukte für die Synthese von NE-Acetyl-ß-Lysin in M. mazei essentiell sind. Unter Hochsalzbedingungen ist das Wachstum von M. mazei abl::pac im Vergleich zum Wildtyp deutlich verlangsamt. Dieses Ergebnis war unerwartet, da eine abl::pac-Mutante von Methanococcus maripaludis unter Hochsalzbedingungen nicht mehr wachsen konnte. Unter Niedrigsalz und bei intermediären Salzkonzentration war das Wachstum von M. mazei abl::pac nicht eingeschränkt und verhielt sich wie der Wildtyp. In Gegenwart von Glycin-Betain akkumulierte die abl::pac-Mutante von M. mazei unter Hochsalzbedingungen 2,4 mal mehr Glycin-Betain als der Wildtyp, um das Defizit im Solutepool auszugleichen und Wachstum bei Hochsalz zu ermöglichen. Dadurch war sie in der Lage, wieder wie der Wildtyp zu wachsen. 8. Der Verlust von NE-Acetyl-ß-Lysin wurde unter Hochsalzbedingungen durch erhöhte Konzentrationen an Glutamat und einem neuen kompatiblen Solut kompensiert. NMRAnalysen zeigten, dass es sich hierbei um Alanin handelte. Bis jetzt wurde die Verwendung von Alanin als kompatibles Solut noch nie beschrieben. Um sicherzustellen, dass Alanin als kompatibles Solut in M. mazei abl::pac dient, wurde die Konzentration bei verschiedenen Salzkonzentrationen gemessen. Die Konzentration an Alanin nahm mit steigender Salzkonzentration zu. Bei 800 mM NaCl war die Konzentration 12 fach erhöht verglichen mit der Konzentration bei 400 mM NaCl. Außerdem redzierte Glycin-Betain die Alanin- Konzentration bei 800 mM NaCl um 58%. Transportexperimente zeigten, dass M. mazei kein Alanin aus dem Medium aufnehmen kann. 9. Erste Analysen möglicher Synthesewege für Alanin zeigten, dass die Alanin- Dehydrogenase nicht auf Transkriptebene unter Hochsalzbedingungen induziert war und somit keine Rolle in der Synthese von Alanin als kompatibles Solut spielen dürfte. Es könnten jedoch Aminotransferasen eine Rolle bei der Biosynthese von Alanin spielen. Des Weiteren sind die Enzyme, die für die Synthese von Glutamat als kompatibles Solut verantwortlich sind, unbekannt. Dies gilt für alle bis jetzt untersuchten Organismen, die Glutamat als kompatibles Solut nutzen. In dieser Arbeit wurde versucht, mit Hilfe der abl::pac-Mutante, die erhöhte Glutamat-Mengen zum Osmoschutz produziert, der Frage nachzugehen, welche Gene/Enzyme eine Rolle spielen könnten bei der Synthese von Glutamat als kompatibles Solut. Dazu wurden unter Hochsalzbedingungen die Transkriptmengen verschiedener Genen, die an der Glutamat-Synthese beteiligt sein könnten, in der Mutante und im Wildtyp untersucht. Hierbei zeigte sich, dass mehrere Gene verschiedener Enzyme unter Hochsalzbedingungen in der Mutante leicht induziert waren. Eines dieser Enzyme ist die Glutaminsynthetase. Dieses Enzym ist für die Umsetzung von Glutamat zu Glutamin unter Verbrauch von ATP verantwortlich. M. mazei besitzt zwei Gene, die für eine putative Gluaminsynthetase kodieren. In M. mazei abl::pac ist unter Hochsalzbedingungen das Gen glnA2 im Vergleich zum Wildtyp (4,03 ± 1,14) leicht induziert (7,63 ± 2,2). Des weiteren konnte in der Mutante eine leichte Induktion von gltB1, gltB2 und gltB3 unter Hochsalz beobachtet werden. Diese Gene kodieren für die einzelnen Domänen einer Glutamatsynthase. Diese ersten Analysen geben einen Hinweis darauf, dass die Synthese von Glutamat als kompatibles Solut über eine gekoppelte Reaktion der Glutaminsynthetase und der Glutamatsynthase verlaufen könnte.
By translocating proteasomal degradation products into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) for loading of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules, the ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) plays a pivotal role in the adaptive immunity against infected or malignantly transformed cells. A key question regarding the transport mechanism is how the inter-domain communication and conformational dynamics of the TAP complex are connected during the peptide transport. To identify residues involved in this processes, we evolved a Trojan horse strategy in which a small artificial protease is inserted into antigenic epitopes. After binding, the TAP backbone in contact is cleaved, allowing the peptide sensor site to be mapped by mass spectrometry. Within this study, the peptide sensor and transmission interface have been identified. This region aligns with the cytosolic loop 1 (CL1) of Sav1866 and MsbA. Based on a number of experimental data and the homology to the bacterial ABC exporter Sav1866, we constructed a 3D structural model of the core TAP complex. According to this model, the CL1 and CL2 of TAP1 are extended cytosolic loops connecting the transmembrane helices (TMH) 2 and 3, and TMH4 and 5 respectively, and contact both nucleotide binding domains (NBDs) of the opposite subunit. In contrast to exporters, the cytosolic loop (named L-loop) of BtuCD importer is much shorter, and contacts only one NBD. The data confirm that the CL1 of TAP1 functions as signal transducer in ABC exporters, because it does not interfere with substrate binding but with substrate transport. The peptide contact site identified herein is restructured during the ATP hydrolysis cycle. Importantly, TAP showed a structural change trapped in the ATP hydrolysis transition state, because direct contact between peptide and CL1 is abolished. By cysteine scanning, the most conserved residues within CL1 were identified, which disrupted the tight coupling between peptide binding and transport. Together with Val-288, these residues are essential in sensing the bound peptide and inter-domain signal transmission. To characterize the molecular architecture of CL1, a convenient and minimally perturbing approach was used, which combined cysteine substitution in the CL1 region and determination of accessibility to thiol specific compounds with different properties. These studies revealed that the N-terminal region of CL1 has a good accessibility for hydrophilic (iodoacetamidofluorescein, IAF) and amphiphilic probes (BODIPY maleimide, BM), whereas the C-terminal region is accessible for hydrophobic probe (coumarin maleimide, CM). Kinetic studies of fluorescence labeling suggest that this region displayed a different accessibility to probes when the protein undergoes distinct conformations (e. g. nucleotide free state), thereby reflecting conformational transitions. Fluorescence labeling with BM induces a lost of peptide transport, whereas the peptide binding remains unaffected. These results indicate that covalent modifications of the CL1 residues influenced the inter-domain communication between transmembrane domain (TMD) and NBD. The X-loop is a recently discovered motif in the NBD of ABC exporters, which stays in close contact to the CLs. Moreover, because the X-loop precedes the ABC signature motif, it probably responds to ATP binding and hydrolysis and may transmit conformational changes to the CLs. By substitution of the highly conserved Glu-602 of TAP2 with residues that have different chemical properties, it was shown for the first time that the X-loop is a functional important element, which plays an key role in coupling substrate binding to downstream events in the transport cycle. We further verified domain swapping in the TAP complex by cysteine cross-linking. The TAP complex can be reversibly arrested either in a binding or translocation incompetent state by cross-linking of the X-loop to CL1 or CL2, respectively. These results resolve the structural arrangement of the transmission interface and point to different functions of the cytosolic loops in substrate recognition, signaling and transport.
In the present work, the photo-protection mechanisms in plants and purple bacteria were investigated experimentally at the molecular level. For this purpose, several spectroscopic methods were combined and applied to elucidate the function of carotenoids, pigments of the photosynthetic apparatus, in photo-protection. The experiments were focused on the mechanisms involved in quenching of singlet and triplet states of the electronically excited (bacterio)chlorophylls. This photosynthetic reaction events occur on an ultrafast time-scale. Measuring such short-lived events, and understanding the underlying principles, demand some of the most precise experiments and exact measurement technologies currently available. This implies certain requirements for the light source used: a suitable wavelength within the absorption band of the sample, sufficient power, and, most importantly, a pulse duration short compared to the studied reaction. Nowadays, we can achieve all this requirements using femtosecond-spectroscopic systems, which produce laser pulses shorter than 100 femtoseconds (fs). Transient absorption spectroscopy provides important information on molecular dynamics interrogating electronic transitions. The technique is based on photochemical generation of transient species with femtoseconds pump pulses and measuring transient absorption changes of the sample using a second, time delayed probe pulse which in this case is a spectrally broad white-light pulse.
Many highly active antitumour agents are currently not employable for the systemic chemotherapy of brain tumours since their entrance into the brain is blocked by the BBB. Obviously, the development of a strategy allowing effective delivery of these agents across the BBB would enormously extend the potential of the systemic chemotherapy. Chemotherapy of rat glioblastoma using nanoparticle-bound doxorubicin Doxorubicin bound to polysorbate-coated nanoparticles had been previously shown to significantly enhance survival in the orthotopic rat 101/8 glioblastoma model. The objective of this study was to investigate the therapeutic effects of this formulation by morphometric, histological and immunohistological methods. The 101/8 glioblastoma was implanted intracranially into the male Wistar rats. The animals were randomly divided into 3 groups; one group served as untreated control (n = 20). The second group received doxorubicin in solution (Dox-sol, n = 18), and the third group received doxorubicin bound to PBCA nanoparticles coated with PS 80 (Dox-NP + PS 80, n = 18). The treatment regimen was 3 × 1.5 mg/kg on days 2, 5, and 8 after tumor implantation. The formulations were injected into the tail vein. The untreated control animals were sacrificed on days 6, 8, 10, 12, and 14 after the implantation. The animals that had received chemotherapy were sacrificed on day 10, 14 and 18 after the implantation. The brains were investigated by morphometrical, histochemical, and immunohistochemical methods such as the measurement of the tumor size, proliferation of tumor cells, vessel density, expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), incidence and dimension of necrosis, and microvascular proliferation. Tumours showed signs of malignancy including invasion to brain tissue and brisk mitotic activity. The tumor proliferation remained stable at high levels throughout the host survival time. Overall, the tumor showed a reproducible growth pattern and temporal development that is comparable to human glioblastoma. Furthermore, the 101/8 glioblastoma had infiltrated diffusely the surrounding host brain at the edge of the solid tumor mass showed no signs of encapsulation. Thus the 101/8 glioblastoma fulfills the most criteria for an adequate glioma model and can be qualified as a reliable model. ...
Dicer and Drosha are the major enzymes involved in microRNA processing. Using siRNA targeting Dicer and Drosha, thereby downregulating a substantial number of microRNAs in EC, we demonstrate a crucial role of both enzymes in angiogenic processes. Interestingly, Dicer inhibition exerts more profound effects on processes like migration and viability of EC in comparison to Drosha inhibition. Moreover, Dicer effects in vivo angiogenesis, a process which is unaffected by Drosha. This discrepancy might be partially due to the involvement of Dicer in other cellular processes like heterochromatin formation and to the fact that Dicer and Drosha target mainly different subsets of microRNAs. In addition, we identified miR-92a as a novel endogenous repressor of the angiogenic program in EC, which impairs their angiogenic functions in vitro and in vivo. Consistent with these data, blocking miR-92a by systemic infusion of antagomirs enhances neovascularization and functional recovery after ischemia in vivo. At first sight, the anti-angiogenic function of miR-92a in EC appears to contradict the previously identified anti-apoptotic and pro-angiogenic activities of the miR-17~92 cluster in tumor cells. However, this apparent discrepancy might be well rationalized by a predominant function of miR-18a and miR-19a in tumor cells, which are responsible for the tumorigenic and non-cell autonomous pro-angiogenic functions of the miR-17~92 cluster. Instead, miR-92a expression is specifically upregulated in ischemic tissues and appears to cell-autonomously repress the angiogenic potential of EC. Among the various targets and verified regulated genes identified by microarray, we confirmed the downregulation of Integrin a5 in vitro and in vivo. The relevance of this miR-92a target is evidenced by severe vascular defects in the absence of Integrin a5. In addition, endothelial miR-92a interferes with the expression pattern of genes controlling key EC functions at various levels, some of which, e.g. eNOS, might be secondarily affected by directly targeted genes. Obviously, our data do not formally exclude effects of antagomir-92a on perivascular and other cell types, but surely include effects on EC. Regardless of this, the capacity of miR-92a to target various downstream effectors might be an advantage of miRNA-based therapeutic strategies and may overcome the limited therapeutic capacity of single growth factor or single gene therapies in ischemic diseases, since the highly organized process of vessel growth, maturation and functional maintenance is well known to require the fine-tuned regulation of a set of genes.
Presentation of intracellular processed antigens by major histocompatibility (MHC) class I molecules to CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes is mediated by the macromolecular peptide loading complex (PLC). In particular accessory proteins, including the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP) and tapasin, play a pivotal role in the MHC class I mediated antigen presentation pathway. TAP belongs to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) superfamily and consists of TAP1 (ABCB2) and TAP2 (ABCB3), each of which possesses a transmembrane and a nucleotide-binding domain (NBD). The ER-resident glycoprotein tapasin promotes the optimal folding and assembly of MHC-peptide complexes, and independently stabilizes the steady state expression level of TAP. In the present thesis recombinant Fv, scFv and Fab antibody fragments to human TAP from a hybridoma cell line expressing the TAP1-specific monoclonal antibody mAb148.3, were generated. The epitope of the mAb148.3 was mapped to the very last five C-terminal amino acid residues of TAP1 on solid-supported peptide arrays. The recombinant antibody fragments were heterologously expressed in E. coli and insect cells, and purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography. The monoclonal and recombinant antibodies display nanomolar affinity to the last five C-terminal amino acid residues of TAP1 as demonstrated by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and surface plasmon resonance (SPR). Surprisingly, the recombinant antibody fragments confer thermal stability to the heterodimeric TAP complex in insect cells when incubated at elevated temperature. At the same time, TAP is arrested in a peptide transport incompetent conformation, although ATP and peptide binding to TAP are not affected. Furthermore, the recombinant antibodies were successfully used in the purification of the PLC from a human B-lymphoblastoid cell line and a novel factor, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), was identified by matrix assisted laser desorption/ionisation-mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS). In the second part of this thesis the tapasin-MHC class I interaction was investigated. It is for this reason, that an in vitro assay had been established for direct measuring tapasin-MHC class I interactions. First, soluble single chain MHC class I molecules were engineered, choosing two MHC class I alleles: HLA-B4402 representing a highly tapasin-dependent allele and with HLA-B4405, a tapasin-independent allele was chosen. Tapasin as well as the two single chain MHC class I constructs, scB4402-b2m and scB4405-b2m, were expressed in insect cells and purified from insect cell supernatants by affinity chromatography. In contrast to the HLA-B4405 allele, which was expressed and secreted at moderate yield, the HLA-B4402 allele was expressed and trapped inside the insect cells instead of secreted into the medium. Peptide-binding and anisotropy measurements with fluorescein-labeled peptides verified the functionality of the scB4405-b2m. For further investigation of the tapasin-MHC class I interaction an in vitro assay was established using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. Due to the transient nature of the interaction including the decreased affinity of both interaction partners, kinetic data acquisition was difficult to evaluate. Furthermore, interaction of the scB4405-b2m with the sensor surface itself contributed to the measured interaction. Additionally, to investigate tapasin editing function, tapasin as well as the scB4405-b2m-peptide complex were tethered on fluid chelator lipid bilayers and monitored by reflectance interference (RIf) and total internal reflection fluorescence spectroscopy (TIRFS). Stable immobilization of scB4405-b2m-peptide complex as well as of tapasin was observed, unfortunately no changes in peptide dissociation kinetics monitored in the TIRFS channel were detected. Presumably, the tapasin-independent HLA-B4405 already loaded with a high affinity peptide is not influenced by the peptide-editing function of tapasin. Here, for the first time an in vitro assay was established for direct probing interactions within the various proteins of the PLC.
In the field of strongly correlated electron systems, there is a long standing discussion on whether lattice degrees of freedom play a role for several physical phenomena, among them the Mott MI transition and charge-ordering transition. Charge-transfer salts of the ..-(BEDT-TTF)2X and (TMTCF)2X families have been revealed as model systemss for the study of the latter phenomena. The (TMTCF)2X salts have been recognized as model systems for studying correlation effects in 1D, while the (BEDT-TTF)-based materials for such studies in 2D. In this work, high-resolution dilatometry experiments were performed in order to address these issues. The main results obtained are summarized below. ...
Driving can be dangerous. Humans become inattentive when performing a monotonous task like driving. Also the risk implied while multi-tasking, like using the cellular phone while driving, can break the concentration of the driver and increase the risk of accidents. Others factors like exhaustion, nervousness and excitement affect the performance of the driver and the response time. Consequently, car manufacturers have developed systems in the last decades which assist the driver under various circumstances. These systems are called driver assistance systems. Driver assistance systems are meant to support the task of driving, and the field of action varies from alerting the driver, with acoustical or optical warnings, to taking control of the car, such as keeping the vehicle in the traffic lane until the driver resumes control. For such a purpose, the vehicle is equipped with on-board sensors which allow the perception of the environment and/or the state of the vehicle. Cameras are sensors which extract useful information about the visual appearance of the environment. Additionally, a binocular system allows the extraction of 3D information. One of the main requirements for most camera-based driver assistance systems is the accurate knowledge of the motion of the vehicle. Some sources of information, like velocimeters and GPS, are of common use in vehicles today. Nevertheless, the resolution and accuracy usually achieved with these systems are not enough for many real-time applications. The computation of ego-motion from sequences of stereo images for the implementation of driving intelligent systems, like autonomous navigation or collision avoidance, constitutes the core of this thesis. This dissertation proposes a framework for the simultaneous computation of the 6 degrees of freedom of ego-motion (rotation and translation in 3D Euclidean space), the estimation of the scene structure and the detection and estimation of independently moving objects. The input is exclusively provided by a binocular system and the framework does not call for any data acquisition strategy, i.e. the stereo images are just processed as they are provided. Stereo allows one to establish correspondences between left and right images, estimating 3D points of the environment via triangulation. Likewise, feature tracking establishes correspondences between the images acquired at different time instances. When both are used together for a large number of points, the result is a set of clouds of 3D points with point-to-point correspondences between clouds. The apparent motion of the 3D points between consecutive frames is caused by a variety of reasons. The most dominant motion for most of the points in the clouds is caused by the ego-motion of the vehicle; as the vehicle moves and images are acquired, the relative position of the world points with respect to the vehicle changes. Motion is also caused by objects moving in the environment. They move independently of the vehicle motion, so the observed motion for these points is the sum of the ego-vehicle motion and the independent motion of the object. A third reason, and of paramount importance in vision applications, is caused by correspondence problems, i.e. the incorrect spatial or temporal assignment of the point-to-point correspondence. Furthermore, all the points in the clouds are actually noisy measurements of the real unknown 3D points of the environment. Solving ego-motion and scene structure from the clouds of points requires some previous analysis of the noise involved in the imaging process, and how it propagates as the data is processed. Therefore, this dissertation analyzes the noise properties of the 3D points obtained through stereo triangulation. This leads to the detection of a bias in the estimation of 3D position, which is corrected with a reformulation of the projection equation. Ego-motion is obtained by finding the rotation and translation between the two clouds of points. This problem is known as absolute orientation, and many solutions based on least squares have been proposed in the literature. This thesis reviews the available closed form solutions to the problem. The proposed framework is divided in three main blocks: 1) stereo and feature tracking computation, 2) ego-motion estimation and 3) estimation of 3D point position and 3D velocity. The first block solves the correspondence problem providing the clouds of points as output. No special implementation of this block is required in this thesis. The ego-motion block computes the motion of the cameras by finding the absolute orientation between the clouds of static points in the environment. Since the cloud of points might contain independently moving objects and outliers generated by false correspondences, the direct computation of the least squares might lead to an erroneous solution. The first contribution of this thesis is an effective rejection rule that detects outliers based on the distance between predicted and measured quantities, and reduces the effects of noisy measurement by assigning appropriate weights to the data. This method is called Smoothness Motion Constraint (SMC). The ego-motion of the camera between two frames is obtained finding the absolute orientation between consecutive clouds of weighted 3D points. The complete ego-motion since initialization is achieved concatenating the individual motion estimates. This leads to a super-linear propagation of the error, since noise is integrated. A second contribution of this dissertation is a predictor/corrector iterative method, which integrates the clouds of 3D points of multiple time instances for the computation of ego-motion. The presented method considerably reduces the accumulation of errors in the estimated ego-position of the camera. Another contribution of this dissertation is a method which recursively estimates the 3D world position of a point and its velocity; by fusing stereo, feature tracking and the estimated ego-motion in a Kalman Filter system. An improved estimation of point position is obtained this way, which is used in the subsequent system cycle resulting in an improved computation of ego-motion. The general contribution of this dissertation is a single framework for the real time computation of scene structure, independently moving objects and ego-motion for automotive applications.
Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) redistributes pulmonary blood flow from areas of low oxygen partial pressure to areas of normal or relativity high oxygen availability, thus optimising the matching of perfusion to ventilation and preventing arterial hypoxemia. Generalised alveolar hypoxia results in a sustained increase in pulmonary artery pressure which in turn leads to structural changes in the walls of the pulmonary vasculature (pulmonary vascular remodelling). Recent findings have indicated a role for cytochrome P450 (CYP) epoxygenase-derived epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) in hypoxia-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction. Given that the intracellular concentration of EETs is determined by the soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH), which metabolises EETs to their less active dihydroxyeicosatrienoic acids (DHETs), we assessed the influence of the sEH and EETs on pulmonary artery pressure, acute and chronic HPV, and pulmonary vascular remodelling in the mouse lung. In isolated lungs from wild-type mice, acute HPV was significantly increased by sEH inhibition, an effect abolished by pre-treatment with CYP epoxygenase inhibitors and the EET antagonist 14,15-EEZE. The acute hypoxia-induced vasoconstriction and EET production were greater in lungs from sEH-/- mice than from wild-type mice and sEH inhibition had no further effect on HPV in lungs from the former animals, while MSPPOH (CYP epoxygenase inhibitor) and 14,15-EEZE decreased the response. Exogenous application of 11,12-EET increased pulmonary artery pressure in a concentration-dependent manner and enhanced acute HPV in wild-type lungs, while 14,15-EET and 11,12-DHET were without significant effect on pulmonary artery pressure. 5-HT2A receptor antagonism or Rho kinase inhibition shifted the EET concentration-response curve to the right and abrogated the EET- and sEH inhibition-induced potentiation of acute hypoxic vasoconstriction. In lungs from wild-type and sEH-/- mice, hypoxic preconditioning (hypoxic ventilation for 10 minutes) enhanced the 5-HT response. 1-Adamantyl-3-cyclohexylurea (ACU), a sEH inhibitor, further amplified the hypoxia-induced 5-HT-hypersensitivity in wild-type mice. However, after hypoxic preconditioning, the sEH-/- lungs displayed a striking leftward shift in the 5-HT response. 11,12-EET can activate TRPC6 channels in endothelial cells by eliciting its translocation to the plasma membrane, more specifically to membrane domains enriched with the caveolae marker caveolin-1. This effect was also observed in rat pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells overexpressing the channel. Exposure of the latter cells to acute hypoxia also stimulated the intracellular translocation of TRPC6 to caveolae, an effect that was sensitive to the EET antagonist. The EET-induced translocation of TRPC6 channels was prevented by a 5-HT2A receptor antagonist but not by a Rho kinase inhibitor. Moreover, while acute hypoxia and 11,12-EET increased pulmonary pressure in lungs from TRPC6+/- mice, lungs from TRPC6-/- mice did not respond to either stimuli. These results indicate that the sEH and CYP-derived EETs are involved in acute HPV and that EET-induced pulmonary contraction under normoxic and hypoxic conditions involves a TRPC6 channel, a 5-HT2A receptor-dependent pathway and Rho kinase activation. In the second part of the study the role of the sEH in the development of pulmonary hypertension and vascular remodelling induced in mice by exposure to hypoxia (10% O2) for 21 days was analysed. In wild-type mice, chronic hypoxia decreased the pulmonary expression/activity of the sEH, induced right heart hypertrophy and erythropoiesis, and increased the number of partially and fully muscularised pulmonary resistance arteries (by 3-fold). Moreover, in HEK 293 cells, hypoxia (1% O2 up to 24 h) decreased sEH promoter activity by 50%. In isolated lungs, pre-exposure to chronic hypoxia significantly increased baseline perfusion pressures and potentiated the acute HPV. While an sEH inhibitor, ACU, potentiated acute HPV in lungs from mice maintained in normoxic conditions, it had no effect on HPV in lungs from mice exposed to hypoxia. The EET antagonist, 14,15-EEZE, abolished the sEH inhibitor-dependent increase in acute HPV in normoxic lungs and decreased HPV in chronic hypoxic lungs. Hypoxia-induced right heart hypertrophy and erythropoiesis were more pronounced in sEH-/- than in wild-type mice. Under normoxic and hypoxic conditions the muscularisation of resistance pulmonary arteries was greater in lungs from sEH-/- mice than in lungs from wild-type mice. sEH-/- mice also displayed an enhanced acute HPV, compared to that observed in wild-type mice and chronic exposure to hypoxia did not further potentiate acute HPV. However, in the presence of 14,15-EEZE responses returned to levels observed in normoxic lungs from wild-type animals. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry demonstrated an extensive expression of the sEH in the medial wall of pulmonary arteries from human donor lungs. Whereas sEH expression was not detectable in samples from pulmonary hypertension patients, indicating that the sEH is involved in hypoxia-induced pulmonary vascular remodelling and hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction. Taken together, the results presented in this thesis indicate that the expression/activity of the sEH is an important determinant of the magnitude of acute and chronic hypoxia-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction and pulmonary vascular remodelling by inactivating vasoconstrictor CYP-derived EETs. As sEH inhibitors are currently being developed for the treatment of human systemic hypertension, it should be noted that these compounds may even promote the development of pulmonary hypertension.
The mammary gland of mice serves as a model system for studying differentiation in an adult animal. With the beginning of pregnancy the mammary epithelial cells undergo functional differentiation to produce milk for nourishment of the young. The transcription factor STAT5 mediates the cytokine-induced induction of the milk proteins during pregnancy and lactation in response to the lactogenic hormone prolactin. In addition to transcription factors that mediate transcription of their target genes by recruitment of the general transcription machinery to the DNA-regulator regions, specific post-translational modifications on the N-terminal tails of histones also influence expression. These histone modifications can affect chromatin structure, which is a main control barrier to transcription, by directly altering accessibility of the chromatin and by providing binding surfaces for protein complexes that can further modulate chromatin structure and regulate transcription. In this work N-terminal histone modification marks that associate with open, permissive and repressed chromatin where investigated in different regions of two milk protein genes during mammary gland development. Using the chromatin-immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays increased acetylation of histone H3 and H4 at the 5’ region, promoter and transcribed regions of β-casein and whey acidic protein (WAP) gene were observed during pregnancy and lactation when these genes are expressed. The presence of these histone marks, which are associated with a relaxed chromatin structure, correlates with the recruitment of STAT5A and STAT5B to the promoter containing regulatory regions as well as the detection of the phosphorylated RNA polymerase II in the transcribed gene region. Both di- and tri-methylation of histone H3 lysine 4, that mark permissive and active chromatin respectively, were enriched in tissue from pregnant and lactating mice. In comparison tri-methylation of histone H3 lysine 27, a mark associated with repressed chromatin, could be observed during all stages of mammary gland tissue investigated, but appears slightly elevated in the tissue from virgin mice when β-casein and WAP are not expressed. Together these results illustrate that the expression of the two milk proteins genes at distinct stages of mammary gland differentiation correlate with specific changes in histone modifications. In mammary gland tissue STAT5A is important for the mammary gland epithelial cell differentiation and survival during lactation. Yet many genomic target regions that STAT5A actually bind and which are involved in regulation of gene expression during lactation still remain unknown. Therefore, the second part of this thesis was focused on the identification of novel STAT5-binding sites that are differentiation specifically bound by STAT5A in mammary gland tissue during lactation. In summary, the results demonstrate that the ChIP cloning method was employed successfully for the cloning of a STAT5A library and the identification of new STAT5 targets in mammary gland tissue from lactating mice. Nine of the newly identified STAT5-binding targets were verified to differentiation specifically bind STAT5A and STAT5B in vivo during pregnancy and lactation. Even though the selection of the tested clones was biased towards STAT5-binding sites near or at known genes and for multiple STAT5 binding sites, only one out of the nine validated STAT5-binding regions is located in a traditional defined proximal promoter. Except for two STAT5-binding regions, which are located at least 10 kb from the next annotated known gene, six are located in the intronic regions of annotated mRNA or EST transcripts. Three, out of four verified STAT5-binding regions tested in reporter gene assays for functionality, display the ability to drive reporter gene activity in a STAT5 dependent manner. This transcriptional activity is due to the STAT5-binding sites within the cloned regions as determined by mutational analysis. Of special interest is a STAT5-binding region that contains one STAT5 and three STAT-like sites within a 339 bp region that is evolutionary conserved by approximately 80% between the mouse and human genome. This STAT5-binding region lies about 62 kb 5 prime of the nuclear factor I/B gene. The expression of the NFI/B mRNA transcript correlates with the in vivo association of STAT5A to the conserved region during the mammary gland differentiation. Together, these results suggest that this STAT5-binding might be a cis-regulatory region that potentially mediates STAT5 induced NFI/B gene expression in mice during lactation.
This thesis deals with the analysis of “presolar” silicates and oxides by high resolution mass spectrometry and electron microscopy techniques. This “stardust” was identified by its extreme oxygen isotopic anomalies, which point to nucleosynthetic reactions in stellar interiors, in the carbonaceous chondrite Acfer 094. Isotopic, chemical and mineralogical studies on these stardust grains therefore allow the testing of astrophysical questions on Earth, which are otherwise only accessible by spectroscopy and theoretical models. The class of presolar silicates has been identified only six years ago in 2002, although it was known already from spectroscopic observations that silicates represent the most abundant type of dust in the galaxy. The development of the “NanoSIMS” was a crucial step in this respect, because this ion probe with its superior spatial resolution of only 50 nm allowed the detection of the typically 300 nm sized presolar silicates. A total of 142 presolar silicates and 20 presolar oxides were identified within Acfer 094, whose matrix therefore contains 163 ± 14 ppm presolar silicates and 26 ± 6 ppm presolar oxides. This is among the highest amounts reported so far for any primitive solar system material. The majority of detected stardust grains derive from asymptotic giant branch stars of 1 – 2.5 Msun and close-to-solar or slightly lower-than-solar metallicity. However, by measuring the Si isotopic compositions of some enigmatic grains, it could be shown that there is a sub-class of presolar silicates characterized by an extreme enrichment of 17O and a moderate enhancement of 30Si relative to solar, whose origins might be explained by formation in binary stellar systems. About 10% of all grains exhibit an enrichment in 18O and some of them also of 28Si relative to solar, which most likely point to an origin in type II supernova explosions. The Si isotopic measurements also allowed to quantify the effect of the s-process on the Si isotopes in low-mass asymptotic giant branch stars. The results agree well with theoretical predictions. The grains were furthermore characterized by SEM and the chemistries of about half of the grains were determined by Auger electron spectroscopy. The majority of grain morphologies are consistent with what is expected from condensation experiments. However, a lot of grains are altered by Fe-rich minerals, which are either of primary condensation or of secondary ISM or solar nebula origin. Furthermore, complex presolar grains consisting of refractory Al-rich grains attached to silicate material could be identified, which have been predicted by condensation theory and observational evidence. Nine presolar silicates were analyzed by combined NanoSIMS/TEM studies. The majority of grains are Mg-rich and amorphous, which is in contrast to astrophysical evidence, which mainly postulate crystalline Mg-rich and amorphous Fe-rich circumstellar condensates. However, the grains might have been rendered amorphous by secondary processes in the ISM or could have condensed under non-equilibrium, low-temperature conditions in the circumstellar outflow. The grains are more likely characterized by a variable, pyroxene-like chemistry, which could be a result of sputtering in the ISM, which preferentially removes Mg. The detected crystalline presolar silicates in this study and in other work are all olivines, whereas grains with a pyroxene stoichiometry are all amorphous except one. This supports astrophysical models which point to different formation pathways for these two types of grains and therefore different crystallinity. However, the relatively high Fe content of three detected presolar olivines in this study and in other work is in contrast to astrophysical evidence and theoretical considerations, which predict essentially Fe-free crystalline grains. It is therefore possible that the infrared spectra might also be compatible with less Mg-rich olivines. The only crystalline presolar silicate with a pyroxene-like stoichiometry is the unusual grain 1_07: although it is chemically enstatite, the electron diffraction pattern could only be indexed to silicate perovskite, which is stable above ~23 GPa. The discovery of a high-pressure phase of presolar origin shows that dust grains encountering interstellar shocks might not necessarily be completely destroyed. In astrophysical models it is in principle also possible that a fraction of larger grains might survive such a shock wave encounter as a high-pressure modification, which is supported by this discovery.
The present study was elaborated within the scope of the INTAFERE (Integrated Analysis of Mobile Organic Foreign Substances in Rivers) project which investigates the occurrence of xenobiotics in small freshwater streams with particular consideration of social impact factors. The aim of this study is to investigate the seasonal and spatial variance of organic micropollutants in small fresh water streams and to identify possible sources and sinks. Therefore four small freshwater river systems in Hesse, Germany, have been investigated with respect to common organic pollutants such as: the organophosphates tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP), tris(2-butoxyethyl)phosphate (TBEP), tris(2-chloroethyl)phosphate (TCEP), tris(1-chloro-2-propyl)phosphate (TCPP), and tris(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl)phosphate (TDCPP), the synthetic musk fragrances 1,3,4,6,7,8-hexahydro-4,6,6,7,8,8-hexa-methylcyclopenta-[g]-2-benzopyran (HHCB) and 7-acetyl-1,1,3,4,4,6-hexamethyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene (AHTN), the endocrine disruptors bisphenol A (BPA), 4-tert-octylphenol (OP) and the technical isomer mixture of 4-nonylphenol (NP), the herbicide terbutryn [2-(t-butylamino)-4-(ethylamino)-6-(methylthio)-s-triazine] as well as the insect repellent N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide (DEET). Water samples were collected in the time span from September 2003 to September 2006 at 26 sampling locations. The samples were extracted with solid phase extraction (SPE) and analyzed by coupled gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). For quantification the internal standard method was used. The results of the study showed an ubiquitous occurrence of organic pollutants in the fresh water streams of the study area. The organophosphates have been detected in 90 % of the water samples with mean concentrations of 502 ng/l (TCPP), 276 ng/l (TBP), 183 ng/l (TBEP), 118 ng/l (TCEP) and 117 ng/l (TDCPP). Sewage treatment plant (STP) effluents were identified as the dominating source for the chlorinated organophosphates as well as for the synthetic musk fragrances and the insect repellent DEET in the river systems. Consequently the highest concentrations were observed in the Schwarzbach system characterized by the highest proportion of waste water compared to the other river systems. Mean concentration levels of the synthetic musk fragrances HHCB and ATHN were 141 ng/l and 46 ng/l, respectively and 124 ng/l in case of DEET. The synthetic musk fragrances showed a clear seasonal trend with significantly lower concentrations in summer times compared to winter times, which is ascribed to stronger photodegradation and volatization during summer times. In contrast, mean DEET concentrations and loads were significantly higher in summer than in autumn, winter and spring, in parallel with the main insect season. The concentrations of the endocrine disruptors BPA, NP and OP in the river water samples ranged from <20 ng/l to 1927 ng/l, <10 ng/l to 770 ng/l, and <10 ng/l to 420 ng/l, respectively. Whereas OP was present in about 2/3 of the samples, NP and BPA could only be detected in 56% and 13% of the water samples, respectively. BPA levels exceeded in two samples the predicted no-effect concentration (PNEC) for water organisms. In case of NP, highest concentrations and loads were found in September 2003 and decreased significantly since then. In contrast, concentrations and loads of OP which serves in a similar application field remained nearly constant during the sampling period. The decrease of NP can be attributed to the implementation of the European Directive 2003/53/EG, which restricts the use of nonylphenols and nonylphenol ethoxylates since January 2005. However, at the end of the sampling period in September 2006, NP could still be detected at mean concentrations of 18 ng/l in the river waters of the sampling area. Furthermore, absence of NP in several samples from associated STP effluents indicate that the STPs cannot be the only sources for NP found in the river water. The herbicide terbutryn was present in the rivers during the whole sampling period from September 2003 to September 2006 despite a ban on its use as a herbicide from January 2004 on. Terbutryn levels ranged from < 4 ng/l to 5600 ng/l, showing a clear spatial pattern with high terbutryn concentrations in the Weschnitz and Modau river systems and significantly lower terbutryn levels in Schwarzbach and Winkelbach. Results from the analysis of two STP effluents discharging into the Weschnitz and the Modau, respectively, indicate that terbutryn enters the rivers from this source. Furthermore, terbutryn concentrations and loads showed a clear seasonal trend with significantly higher levels in summer and autumn. Obviously, the ban on agricultural use of terbutryn at the end of 2003 had no discernable influence on terbutryn concentration in the rivers because there was no trend of decreasing.
The development of benthic foraminiferal assemblages during the past 6,000 yrs was investigated in Holocene sediment cores from three carbonate platforms (Turneffe Islands, Lighthouse Reef, and Glovers Reef) of Belize, Central America. Foraminiferal assemblages and their diversity were determined in different time periods to identify their dependence on environmental factors, such as lagoonal age, lagoonal depth, water circulation, substrate, bottom-water temperature, and salinity. Geochemical proxies (δ18O and δ13C), obtained from the common larger foraminifer Archaias angulatus were used to estimate Holocene seasonal BW-temperatures and climate variabilities. A total of 51 samples were taken from 12 vibracores for taxonomic determination and 10 to 15 subsamples of 32 tests of Archaias angulatus were used for stable oxygen and carbon isotope analyses. Based on cluster analyses, seven benthic foraminiferal assemblages are distinguished during the Holocene. The three platforms exhibit characteristic differences in benthic foraminiferal fauna and diversity, which are controlled by their respective environments during the last 6,000 yrs. Turneffe Islands has four benthic foraminiferal assemblages, which are typical for restricted lagoons with fluctuating salinity. Lighthouse Reef is inhabited by two benthic foraminifera associations, which are characteristic of high water exchange with the surrounding ocean and clear waters. Glovers Reef is characterized by two benthic foraminiferal assemblages, which occur in deeper lagoons with slow water circulation. In general, during the Holocene, the highest mean diversity, evenness, and richness of benthic foraminifera were found in the Turneffe Islands and the lowest occurred at Glovers Reef. The foraminiferal faunas of the Lighthouse and Glovers Reefs had been in a “Diversification Stage” since 6,000 yrs, whereas the foraminiferal fauna of the Turneffe Islands reflects the development from a “Colonisation” (~4,000 yrs BP) to a “Diversification Stage” (~2,000 yrs to present time). Lagoonal depth, water circulation, substrate, and BW-temperature have higher influence on foraminiferal diversity as compared to lagoonal size and age. The negative correlation between diversity and lagoonal depth is based on differences in light intensity and substrate. In contrast to Lighthouse Reef, the Turneffe Islands and Glovers Reef show decreasing diversity of benthic foraminifera with increasing lagoon depth, due to finer sediment, turbid waters and/or dense mangrove growth, which reduce the light intensity and the number of species. Water Circulation also affected the benthic foraminifera modes of living and their diversity during the last 6,000 yrs. Increasing abundances of infaunal taxa refer to restricted circulation and/or lower oxygen conditions, as assumed for the Turneffe Islands and Glovers Reef. Increasing abundances of epifaunal foraminifera, as observed in the Lighthouse Reef indicate better circulation and/or higher oxygen conditions. Holocene BW-temperature reconstructions based on δ18O of single Archaias angulatus tests do not correspond to typical Holocene climate models of the Caribbean. In the Belize area, mean BW-temperature trends indicate local climate variations. A decrease of δ13C values during the last 1,000 yrs could be related to the “Suess Effect”. The seasonal BW-temperature variations within single large benthic foraminifera tests correspond to present-day temperature fluctuations in the lagoons, and indicate higher temperatures in Summer and Autumn and lower temperatures in Winter and Spring.
Cytochrome P450 epoxygenases of the 2C family (CYP2C) are highly expressed in the endothelium and metabolize arachidonic acid to different regioisomers of epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EET). They have a number of roles in the regulation of vascular tone and homeostasis by activating different signal transduction pathways and have recently been reported to be involved in proliferation and angiogenesis. However, the exact mechanisms by which epoxygenases regulate angiogenesis are still unclear. Therefore, the initial aim of the present study was to characterize the relevance of major signalling molecules that are involved in angiogenesis and to investigate possible signalling pathways involved. Initially the effect of CYP2C9 overexpression on expression levels of EphB4, a tyrosine kinase that plays a role in a number of developmental processes, was investigated. EphB4 protein expression was increased in CYP2C9 overexpressing cells without any effects on expression levels of its ligand ephrinB2. To clarify whether EphB4 is a critical determinant of CYP2C9-induced angiogenesis, endothelial cell sprouting was assessed using a collagen gel-based in vitro angiogenesis assay. Following transfection with EphB4 antisense or scrambled oligonucleotides, capillary-like structures were clearly present after 24 hours in cells overexpressing CYP2C9, while EphB4 downregulation abolished CYP2C9-induced sprouting. In addition stimulation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells with VEGF resulted in an increase in CYP2C expression and a subsequent increase of 11,12-EET production; an effect that was abolished by the CYP epoxygenases inhibitor MSPPOH as well as when cells were infected with a dominant negative mutant of AMPK. In vivo 11,12-EET treatment increased EphB4 expression in mesenteric arteries as well as in Matrigel plugs; an effect that was abolished when plugs were impregnated at the same time with small interfering RNA (siRNA) for EphB4. Furthermore, impregnation of Matrigel plugs with VEGF resulted in endothelial cell and smooth muscle cell recruitment into a Matrigel plug and this effect was mediated by CYP2C9-derived EETs as it was prevented by 14,15-EEZE. When infiltration of EET impregnated plugs with endothelial cells and pericytes/smooth muscle cells in vivo was compared to the effects seen in VEGF treated plugs, it was apparent that only EET treatment resulted in the formation of tube like structures that were covered by smooth muscle cells. Therefore, the final aim of the study was to further define the consequences of EET signalling in vivo as well as to characterize its physiological relevance. This hypothesis could be assessed by isolectin injection through the tail-vein where isolectin was taken up only by the EET-impregnated plug. Moreover ultrasound measurements revealed accumulation of contrast agent in EET impregnated plugs compared to control plugs. Taken together our findings emphasize that CYP2C plays a crucial role in the vessel formation process by modulating the effects mediated by two important control elements of the angiogenic response, namely VEGF and EphB4. CYP2C-derived EETs not only participate as second messengers in the angiogenic response, but have the potential to influence much more than angiogenesis by enhancing smooth muscle cell/pericyte recruitment to endothelial cell tubes to promote vascular maturation.
In this thesis I have investigated the regulation of eicosanoid synthesizing-enzymes by cannabinoid receptor agonists. Rat renal mesangial cells were used as a model system. I could show that all three (CB1, CB2, and GPR55) cannabinoid receptors are expressed on the mRNA level in rat renal mesangial cells – but with differing expression profiles. The CB1 and GPR55 receptors are expressed in comparable amounts, whereas the CB2 receptor is considerably less expressed than the CB1 and the GPR55 receptors. Furthermore I could show that stimulation of renal mesangial cells with CB1 receptor agonists, such as R(+)MA or ACEA, increased IL-1β-induced cPLA2, sPLA2-IIa, and COX2 protein and mRNA expression which subsequently led to an enhanced IL-1β-induced PGE2 formation. Additionally, the IL-1β- induced sPLA2-IIa promoter activity was also increased by CB1 receptor stimulation. Besides the modulated expression of the eicosanoid synthesizing enzymes, I could show that CB1 agonists also led to an increase of IL-1β-induced iNOS expression and subsequent NO formation. In contrast, stimulation with CB2 selective agonists led to a decrease in IL-1β- induced sPLA2-IIa protein expression and PGE2 formation. Accordingly, the IL-1β-induced sPLA2-IIa promoter activity was also reduced by CB2 receptor agonists. IL-1β-induced iNOS expression and subsequent NO formation were not influenced by CB2 recptor activation. Matching the results I obtained with CB1 receptor agonists on IL-1β-induced PGE2 formation, I could observe an increased cPLA2 protein and mRNA expression with a subsequent increase in IL-1β-induced PGE2 formation by GPR55 stimulation. Stimulation with THC, an unselective CB agonist, increased the IL-1β-induced sPLA2-IIa protein expression and subsequently led to an enhanced IL-1β-induced PGE2 formation. Subjecting the cells to higher THC concentrations surprisingly led to a reduction of the IL-1b-induced sPLA2-IIa protein expression and PGE2 formation. A possible explanation may be the differential expression of the three CB receptors. At low concentrations THC may predominantly activate CB1 and GPR55 and with increasing concentration CB2 receptors may also be activated, slightly reversing the enhancing effect. Moreover, I could show that the CB1 receptor stimulation mediated phosphorylation and hence the activation of ERK1/2 MAPK. Additionally to ERK1/2, there was also a phosphorylation and activation of NFkB observed by CB1 receptor stimulation. In my thesis I could show for the first time that PPARα was activated by IL-1β in rMC. The IL-1β-induced PPARα promoter activity was completely inhibited by addition of the CB2 receptor agonist, JWH015. These findings were confirmed by inhibition of the IL-1β-induced PGE2 formation by a PPARα antagonist (MK-886). In summary, I could show that activation of CB1 receptors in our system led to a worsening of an inflammatory condition, whereas activation of the CB2 receptors led to the complete opposite; namely a reduction of the inflammatory response by reducing the sPLA2-IIa expression and PGE2 formation. GPR55 activation did not display any alteration of inflammatory conditions, since the classical inflammatory pathway was not influenced.