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Savannas provide essential ecosystem services for human well-being in West Africa. Thus, ecosystem change not only directly affects biodiversity but also human livelihoods. Human land use considerably shaped these savanna ecosystems for millennia, particularly agriculture, livestock grazing, logging and the collection of non-timber forest products (NTFPs). NTFPs are wild plant products and comprise all organic matter from herbaceous plants, shrubs, and trees (excluding timber). Current increasing land use pressure through fast demographic changes is widely esteemed as a severe threat for savanna biodiversity and the socio-economy of rural communities. In consideration of the pivotal role of NTFP species for biodiversity and livelihoods, it is important to evaluate the effect of increasing land use change on savanna vegetation and on its provisioning service for human well-being. Thus, the major aim of this thesis is to investigate the impacts of land use intensification on vegetation composition, diversity and function and its consequences for provisioning ecosystem services (NTFPs) and human well-being in a West African savanna.
The research for this study was conducted in the North Sudanian vegetation zone of south-eastern Burkina Faso, where population growth exceeds the nationwide trend. Generally, Burkina Faso belongs to the worldwide poorest countries, where nearly one quarter of the population suffers from malnutrition (FAO 2014). The integration of NTFPs and particularly wild food species into rural household economies is, thus, an important measure in the national combat against poverty and food insecurity (FAO 2014). Against this background, I focus on vegetation changes, the economic importance of NTFPs as well as the decrease and substitution of wild food species in this study.
Vegetation resurveys of different vegetation types since the early 1990s showed that land use change led to more pronounced changes in the herbaceous than in the woody vegetation layer. Most woody vegetation types stayed stable in species composition and richness, even though some highly useful tree species (Vitellaria paradoxa, Parkia biglobosa) declined in some woody vegetation types. In contrast, in most herbaceous vegetation types species richness increased and species composition considerably changed. This change might be explained by a general ruderalisation process through a pronounced increase of wide-ranging herbaceous species. However, in spite of a general species increase in the herbaceous layer, a decrease of preferred herbaceous fodder species was found. Thus, the decline of useful species in both layers is alarming. Herbaceous vegetation types also showed more pronounced changes in plant functional trait characteristics in comparison to woody vegetation types. However, an increase of smaller plant species and species with a high diaspore terminal velocity (VTerm) was found in both vegetation layers. Since these two trait responses are generally related to grazing and browsing, the strong increase of livestock herds is likely to be responsible for the detected vegetation changes.
In addition to the vegetation study, interviews showed that all useful food species were widely considered to decline. The two economically most important tree species, the shea tree (Vitellaria paradoxa) and the locust bean tree (Parkia biglobosa) that contribute with 70% to wild food income, were considered among the most declining species of all cited wild food species. On this matter, local perceptions of species decline and results from field observations are in accordance. However, a wide range of cited substitutes indicated a great knowledge on alternative plant species in the area. Most wild food species are, however, substituted by other highly valued wild food species. Although our results suggest that rural communities are able to cope with the decrease or absence of wild food species, growing decline of one species would concurrently increase the pressure on other native food species. Therefore, the need to counteract the decrease of highly useful wild food species should be of high priority in management measures. In general, I showed that NTFPs are an essential component in rural households, since it contributed with 45 % to total household income. Significant differences in NTFP dependency between the two investigated villages and across the three main ethnic groups were detected, reflecting different traditional uses and harvesting practices. In general, it was shown that poorer households depend more on NTFP income than wealthier households. Against the background of this study, management strategies for agroforestry systems and poverty alleviation should consider local differences, and ethnicity-dependent NTFP-use patterns.
Overall, the combination of field studies on temporal and functional vegetation change with socio-economic and ethno-botanic interviews increases the knowledge on qualitative and quantitative vegetation changes and on the consequences for rural populations. This thesis gives a thorough insight into decreasing trends of economically valued plant species and thus gives evidence on the consequences of vegetation changes for ecosystem services of West African savanna ecosystems. Further, different NTFP-dependencies and use preferences according to socio-economic and cultural variables, such as ethnicity, present a valuable basis for specific decision-making and should be considered in management plans.
Urn models are simple examples for random growth processes that involve various competing types. In the study of these schemes, one is generally interested in the impact of the specific form of interaction on the allocation of elements to the types. Depending on their reciprocal action, effects of cancellation and self-reinforcement become apparent in the long run of the system. For some urn models, the influencing is of a smoothing nature and the asymptotic allocation to the types is close to being a result of independent and identically distributed growth events. On the contrary, for others, almost sure random tendencies or logarithmically periodic terms emerge in the second growth order. The present thesis is devoted to the derivation of central limit theorems in the latter case. For urns of this kind, we use a "non-classical" normalisation to derive asymptotic joint normality of the types. This normalisation takes random tendencies and phases into account and consequently involves random centering and, also, possibly random scaling.
The linguistic deficit in patients with Alzheimer's Disease: is there a syntactic impairment?
(2017)
The linguistic impairment of patients affected by Alzheimer’s disease (PAD) is defined as a form of fluent aphasia, which is caused by major disruptions in the semantic and lexical domains. Consequently, their discourse is often described as empty, although their speech is fluent. This study aims at enlarging the comprehension of the linguistic deficit in PADs; in particular, it deals with their syntactic competence and it addresses the following questions: 1) Do PADs suffer from syntactic impairment? 2) How can the impairment in PADs be accounted for? 3) At which stage of the disease are PADs affected by syntactic impairment? The syntactic competence of Italian-speaking PADs is investigated under two different perspectives. On one hand, the study considers the syntactic information stored in the lexicon as part of the lexical entry. For this purpose, PADs complete a grammatical gender retrieval task on a list of 100 Italian nouns. On the other hand, the question deals with syntax intended as the capacity to complete the processing of syntactic structures in sentence comprehension and production. The present study focuses on sentence comprehension and includes two sentence-to-picture matching tasks: one on Wh-questions, and one on relative clauses. PADs complete the experiment on grammatical gender retrieval with high accuracy, except for few mistakes on irregular and opaque nouns, thus showing a spared capacity to retrieve the syntactic information, especially when they can rely on the form-driven procedural mechanism, as in the case of regular nouns. Data on the comprehension of Wh-questions and RC reveals that PADs are more sensitive than controls to locality effects. Patients with moderate dementia are impaired at computing dependencies that entail a crossing movement between two arguments whose features are in a relation of inclusion. In contrast, crossing movements are allowed when the involved feature arrays are in a relation of disjunction. In short, patients are spared at using procedural mechanisms for the retrieval of syntactic information, while they are impaired at processing sentences that entail argument extraction. The impairment manifests itself in moderately impaired PADs in the form of enhanced sensitivity to locality effects.
This thesis investigated the acquisition of restrictive and appositive interpretations of relative clauses in German-speaking children between the age of 3 and 6 in three experiments.
The theoretical background shows that restrictive relative clauses are semantically less complex than appositive ones. This assumption is supported by observations from a typological overview on the semantic functions attested across languages. It is shown that the existence of appositive relative clauses implies the availability of restrictive readings in a given language. Furthermore, restrictive readings may be favored due to the functioning of general processing principles. Previous research on the acquisition of relative clauses demonstrates that the acquisition of the semantic functions of relative clauses is an understudied area. In contrast, the acquisition of syntactic aspects of relative clauses is well documented. Relative clauses start to be produced in the third year of life and can be interpreted target-like between the age of 4 and 8 depending on their structure. Which semantic interpretation children assign to relative clauses at this age, however, is still an open question.
Based on the formal background and insights from previous studies, three experiments were designed: two picture selection tasks and one acceptability task. The crucial aspect of the experimental design constitutes the interaction of an ordinal number word and the interpretation of the relative clause in sentences like “Take the third car(,) that/which is red”. The scope of the ordinal number reveals whether the relative clause had been attached restrictively at the NP-level or whether it had been attached higher up at the DP shell resulting in an appositive interpretation.
The results of the experiments demonstrate that 4- to 6-year-old German-speaking children and adults prefer restrictive readings over appositive ones. This preference is found within the group data and is mirrored by the results of an individual analysis. In addition, while the majority of children has acquired restrictive readings at the age of 4, appositive interpretations are mastered only by about half of the children between age 4 and 6. Interestingly, 3-year-old children show a different pattern than their older peers. Appositive but not restrictive interpretations seem to be available to these children. Although the results may be taken as evidence that appositivity is acquired before restrictivity in relative clauses by German-speaking children, I propose the contrary. Based on assumptions about the complexity of restrictive and appositive derivations, I argue that the appositive interpretations observed at the age of 3 do not result from a target-like syntactic and semantic representation. I propose that 3-year-old children do not yet identify relative clauses as nominal modifiers. Instead, they are derived from an incorrect attachment of the relative clause higher up in the syntactic tree.
The results of the three experiments are the first to show that neither a prototypical unintegrated prosodic contour nor the presence of a lexical marker, the discourse particle “ja”, or a visual context biasing for appositivity led to an increase of appositive interpretations in the children’s groups. Adults, in contrast, were sensitive to the presence of the discourse particle and the cues from the visual context. As for children, the prosodic format of the relative clauses did not systematically change the interpretation preferences of adults.
The proposed acquisition path may not be specific to German. Instead, it is predicted to hold cross-linguistically and may also be transferred to the interpretation of adjectives. Moreover, the assumptions on how children integrate relative clauses during comprehension may be generalized to other types of subordinate clauses.
Surface water can contain a complex mixture of organic micropollutants (i.e. residues of pharmaceuticals or biocides). Conventional wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) do not completely remove a broad range of anthropogenic chemicals and therefore represent a leading point source. To upgrade WWTPs, technical solutions based on oxidative and sorptive processes have been developed and successfully implemented. Acknowledging these substantial advances, this thesis focuses on another key topic and aims to investigate whether improved biological treatment processes likewise effectively remove anthropogenic micropollutants from wastewater. The work conducted on this topic was part of two European research projects (ATHENE, ENDETECH).
The ATHENE project aimed to go beyond the state-of-the-art by developing biological wastewater treatment processes that exploit the full potential of biodegradation. With the objective to explore the potential of complementary strictly anaerobic conditions within the biological wastewater treatment, combinations of aerobic and anaerobic treatments on site of a WWTP were implemented. Based on pre-experiments, two promising treatment combinations were selected for a more comprehensive evaluation. An aerobic treatment was paired with an anaerobic pre-treatment under iron-reducing conditions, and an activated sludge treatment was combined with an anaerobic post-treatment under substrate-limiting conditions. For the evaluation of these processes, an effect-based assessment was applied and combined with chemical data of 31 selected target organic micropollutants as well as ten metabolites. To assess the removal of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), yeast based reporter gene assays covering seven receptor-mediated mechanisms of action including (anti-)estrogenicity, (anti-) androgenicity, retinoid-like, and dioxin-like activity were conducted. Furthermore, the removal of unspecific toxicity (Microtox assay) and oxidative stress response as a marker for reactive toxicity (AREc32 assay) were analyzed to cover micropollutants acting via a non-specific mechanism of action. Moreover, to assess toxicity of the whole effluent in vivo, standardized in vivo bioassays with four aquatic model species (Desmodesmus subspicatus, Daphnia magna, Lumbriculus variegatus, Potamopyrgus antipodarum) were performed.
The combination of aerobic and anaerobic treatments resulted in a low additional removal of the selected target organic micropollutants (by 14-17%). In contrast, the removal of endocrine and dioxin-like activities (by 17-75%) and non-specific in vitro toxicities (by 27-60%) was significantly enhanced. Compared to technical solutions (i.e. ozonation), the combination with an anaerobic pre-treatment under iron-reducing conditions was likewise effective in removing the estrogenic activity as well as the unspecific toxicity, whereas anti-androgenic activity and dioxin-like activity were less effectively removed. Exposure to effluents of the conventional activated sludge treatment did not induce adverse in vivo effects in the investigated aquatic model species. Accordingly, no further improvement in water quality could be observed. In conclusion, the combination of aerobic and anaerobic treatment processes significantly enhanced the removal of specific and non-specific in vitro toxicities. Thus, an optimization of the biological wastewater treatment can lead to a substantially improved detoxification. These capacities of a treatment technology can only be uncovered by complementary effect-based measurements.
The global objective of the ENDETECH project was to develop a biotechnological solution to eliminate recalcitrant pharmaceuticals in wastewater direct from sites, where high loads are expected (i.e. hospitals). For this purpose, laccase, an enzyme mainly found in wood decaying fungi, was immobilized on ceramic membranes for application in bioreactors. In a proof of principle experiment, the performance of immobilized laccase in removing a mixture of 38 antibiotics without and in combination with a natural mediator (syringaldehyde; SYR) was investigated. For the evaluation of the enzymatic membrane bioreactors, chemical data on the elimination of the selected target antibiotics was combined with the outcomes of two in vitro bioassays. Growth inhibition tests with an antibiotic sensitive Bacillus subtilis strain were conducted to assess the residual antibiotic activity of the effluents, and Microtox assays were performed to detect a potential formation of toxic by-products.
The treatment by laccase without SYR did not reduce the load of antibiotics significantly. In contrast, in combination with a SYR concentration of 10 µmol L-1, 26 out of 38 antibiotics were removed by >50% after 24 h treatment. Moreover, increasing the SYR concentration to 1000 µmol L-1 resulted in a further improvement of the antibiotic removal. 32 out of 38 antibiotics were removed by over 50%, whereby 17 were almost completely eliminated (>90%). However, the treatment with laccase in combination with SYR resulted in a time-dependent increase of unspecific toxicity. While SYR alone did not affect B. subtilis, the combination of laccase with SYR led to a strong time-dependent growth inhibition up to 100%. Similar to that, a time-dependent increase of unspecific toxicity in the Microtox assay was observed. In conclusion, the laccase-mediator process successfully degrades a broad spectrum of antibiotics and thus represents a promising technology to treat wastewater from sites, where high loads are expected. However, further research is required to reduce the formation of unspecific toxicity before an implementation of this technology can be considered.
The focus of this research was to understand the molecular mechanism that lies behind the insertion of tail-anchored membrane proteins into the ER membrane of yeast cells. State-of-art instruments such as LILBID, and Cryo-EM, combined with the introduction of direct electron detectors, were used to analyze the proteins that capture tail-anchored proteins near the ER membrane and help their releases from a chaperone, an ATPase named Get3. Get3 escorts TA proteins to the ER membrane, where both Get3 and the TA proteins interact sequentially to Get3 membrane bound receptors Get1 and Get2. Get1 and Get2 are homologs of mammalian WRB and CAML.
The native host was used to separately produce Get1, Get2, and the Get2/Get1 single chain constructs. The studies showed that when Get1 is expressed alone, Get1 does not seems to be located in the ER membrane but rather in microbodies like shape organelles (or peroxisome). Interestingly, Get1 seems to be located in the ER membrane when it is linked to Get2 as single chain construct.
The localization study of Get2/Get1 fused to GFP shows from the fluorescence intensity that Get2/Get1.GFP has a tube-like morphology or membrane-enclosed sacs (cisterna), implying that Get2/Get1 is actually targeted to the ER membrane and is likely functional. In other words, Get1 and Get2 stabilize each other in the ER membrane.
The expression of Get2/Get1 was found to be already optimum when expressed as single chain construct because the fluorescence counts did not improve when additives such as DMSO or histidine were added. However, when Get1 and Get2 are expressed separately, additives improve their protein production yield. In 1 liter culture, Get1 yield is increased by about 3 mg and Get2 by 1.8 mg. This can be explained by the space that Get1 and Get2 should occupy within the ER membrane as they must coexist with other membrane components to maintain the homeostasis of the cell. Hence, if there were no gain for single chain construct expression, it meant that Get2/Get1 was already well expressed on its own in ER membrane and has reached its optimum expression without the help of additives. The Get2/Get1 overexpression is more stable, tolerated and less toxic for the cells to express it at a high level.
DDM has proved to be the best detergent from the detergents tested to solubilize Get1, Get2, and Get2/Get1.
Thereafter, Get1, Get2 (data not shown), and Get2/Get1 were successfully purified in DDM micelles.
Furthermore, for the first time using LILBID, the actual study has shown that Get1 and Get2 are predominantly a heterotetramer (2xGet1 and 2xGet2) but higher oligomerization may exist as well.
Get3 binds to Get1 in a biphasic way with a specific strong binding of an affinity of 57 nM and the second of 740 nM nonspecific indicative of heterogeneity within the interaction between Get1 and Get3. This heterogeneity is caused by the presence of different conformation of either protein. However, in order to characterize a high-resolution structure model of a specific target one needs highly homogenous and identical molecules of the target protein or complex in solution. The homogeneity increases the chances of growing crystals during crystallography as the good homogeneity will likely generate a perfect packing of unit cells stack (also known as crystal lattice) in the three-dimensional spaces. The same truth goes for the single particles analysis Cryo-EM, especially for smaller complexes where having less or no conformation alterations of specific targets will enable the researcher to classify the particles in 2D and 3D, therefore improving the signal-to-noise-ratio that will ultimately lead to high-resolution structure determination.
Get1, Get2/Get1 and chimeric variants (tGet2/Get1, T4l.Get2/Get1, T4l.Get2.apocyte.Get1) were crystallized but none of the crystals could diffract due to heterogeneity.
This heterogeneity was not only occurring upon the binding of Get3 to its membrane receptors, but seems to be already present within the receptors themselves through possibly different conformation.
In this Ph.D. thesis, the heterogeneity of purified Get2 and Get1 as complex or individually in detergent is then, so far, the limiting factor for obtaining a high-resolution structure model of Get1 and Get2. As mentioned above, the heterogeneity observed was not due to the quality of the sample preparation but rather to the effect of different conformations that could have been native, or just because of the micelle used, as it was proven by the 3-D heterogeneity classification by Cryo-EM.
In general, crosslinking is one way to keep the integrity of protein complexes, however it appeared not to improve the sample quality when it was analyzed in micelles. Often the integrity of some membrane proteins is affected when they are solubilized and purified in detergents.
Finally, in this study, the structural map of Get2 and Get1 complex linked with chimeric protein T4 lysozyme and apocytochrome C b562RIL gene was obtained at 10 Å. However, this single chain construct has a density map corresponding to heterodimer species (one Get1 and Get2). Therefore, based on those data the tertiary structure of Get2/Get1 in micelle is poorly defined. It could be that the membrane extraction in DDM and the purification destabilizes the structure of the complex.
Research in cell and developmental biology requires the application of three-dimensional model systems that reproduce the natural environment of cells. Processes in developmental biology are therefore studied in entire systems like insects or plants. In cell biology, three-dimensional cell cultures (e.g. spheroids or organoids) model the physiology and pathology of cells, tissues or organs. In all systems, the cellular neighborhood and interactions, but also physicochemical influences, are realistically presented. The production and handling of these model systems is rather simple and allows for reproducible characterization.
Confocal and light sheet-based fluorescence microscopy (LSFM) enable the observation of these systems while maintaining their three-dimensional integrity. LSFM is applicable to imaging live samples at high spatio-temporal resolution over long periods of time. The quality of the acquired datasets enables the extraction of quantitative features about morphology, functionality and dynamics in the context of the complete system. This approach is referred to as image-based systems biology. Exploiting the potential of the generated datasets requires an image analysis pipeline for data management, visualization and the retrieval of biologically meaningful values.
The goal of this thesis was to identify, develop and optimize modules of the image analysis pipeline. The modules cover data management and reduction, visualization, reconstruction of multiview image datasets, the segmentation and tracking of cell nuclei and the extraction of quantitative features. The modules were developed in an application-driven manner to test and ensure their applicability to real datasets from three-dimensional fluorescence microscopy. The underlying datasets were taken from research projects in developmental biology in insects and plants, as well as from cell biology.
The datasets acquired in fluorescence microscopy are typically complex and require common image processing steps in order to manage, visualize, and analyze the datasets. The first module accomplishes automatic structuring of large image datasets, reduces the data amount by image cropping and compression and computes maximum projection images along different spatial directions. The second module corrects for intensity variations in the generated maximum projection images that occur as a function of time. The program was published as a part of an article in Nature Protocols. Another developed module named BugCube provides a web-based platform to visualize and share the processed image datasets.
In LSFM, samples can be rotated in-between two acquisitions enabling the generation of multiview image datasets. Prior to my work, Frederic Strobl and Alexander Ross acquired the complete embryogenesis of the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, and the field cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus, with LSFM. I evaluated a plugin for the software FIJI as a module for the reconstruction of such datasets. The plugin was optimized for automation and efficiency. We obtained the first high quality three-dimensional reconstructions of Tribolium and Gryllus datasets.
Optical clearing increases the penetration depth into samples, thus providing endpoint images of entire three-dimensional objects with cellular detail. This work contributes a quantitative characterization module that was applied to endpoint images of optically cleared spheroids. A program for the generation of ground truth datasets was developed in order to evaluate the cell nuclei segmentation performance. The program was part of a paper that was published in BMC Bioinformatics. Using the program, I could show that the cell nuclei segmentation is robust and accurate. Approaches from computational topology and graph theory complete the segmentation of cell nuclei. Thus, the developed module provides a comprehensive quantitative characterization of spheroids on the level of the individual cell, the cell neighborhood and the whole cell aggregate. The module was employed in four applications to analyze the influence of different stress conditions on the morphology and cellular arrangement of cells in spheroids. The module was accepted for publication in Scientific Reports along with the results for one application. The cell nuclei segmentation further provided a data source for simulation models that used correlation functions to identify structural zones in spheroids. These results were published in Royal Society Interface.
The final part of this work presents a module for cell tracking and lineage reconstruction. In collaboration with Dr. Alexis Maizel, Dr. Jens Fangerau and Dr. Daniel von Wangenheim, I developed a module to track the positions of all cells involved in lateral root formation in Arabidopsis thaliana and used the extracted positions for extensive data analysis. We reconstructed the cell lineages and established the first atlas of all founder cells that contribute to the formation. The analysis of the retrieved data allowed us to study conserved and individual patterns in lateral root formation. The atlas and parts of the analysis presented in this thesis were published in Current Biology.
In this thesis, I developed modules for an image analysis pipeline in three-dimensional fluorescence microscopy and applied them in interdisciplinary research projects. The modules enabled the organization, processing, visualization and analysis of the datasets. The perspective of the image analysis pipeline is not restricted to image-based systems biology. With ongoing development of the image analysis pipeline, it can also be a valuable tool for medical diagnostics or industrial high-throughput approaches.
The present PhD thesis comprises structural geology, petrographic and geochronological investiga-tions on crystalline rocks of the Uppermost Unit in the southern Aegean realm. Studies were carried out in three areas: (1) on the island of Anafi, (2) in the area west of Melambes in central Crete and (3) between the villages of Pefkos, Kalami and Sykologos in the municipality of Viannos in eastern Crete.
The Uppermost Unit forms together with the underlying, non-metamorphic Pindos Unit the upper nappe system of the Cretan nappe pile that, unlike the units of the lower nappe system, was not affected by Late Oligocene to Early Miocene subduction-related metamorphism. The upper nappe system must therefore have been at upper levels of the lithosphere in the Late Oligocene. This is of particular im-portance when reconstructing the tectonometamorphic evolution of the Uppermost Unit. The Upper-most Unit is very heterogeneous in composition and is subdivided into several subunits, which differ mainly in their lithological composition and the degree of metamorphic overprint. Usually, it is subdi-vided into several low-grade metamorphic subunits and one high-grade metamorphic subunit. Within the scope of this PhD thesis, three of these subunits were examined; (1) the anchimetamorphic Arvi Unit, (2) the newly described Greenschist Unit and (3) the Asterousia Crystalline Complex (ACC).
The analyses conducted during this PhD thesis include: (1) structural geology investigations in the field, (2) microstructural and petrographic analyses on thin sections, (3) radiometric dating of zircons using isotope dilution thermal ionisation mass spectrometry (ID-TIMS) and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS), (4) electron microprobe (EMP) analysis, (5) quartz texture analysis using electron-backscattered diffraction (EBSD), (6) semiquantitative analysis of min-eral phases using X-ray powder diffraction (XRD), (7) analysis of the modal composition of intrusive rocks applying point counting on thin sections and (8) X-ray microtomography (micro-CT) on chias-tolite hornfels.
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Biological ageing is a degenerative and irreversible process, ultimately leading to death of the organism. The process is complex and under the control of genetic, environmental and stochastic traits. Although many theories have been established during the last decades, none of these are able to fully describe the complex mechanisms, which lead to ageing. Generally, biological processes and environmental factors lead to molecular damage and an accumulation of impaired cellular components. In contrast, counteracting surveillance systems are effective, including repair, remodelling and degradation of damaged or impaired components, respectively. Nevertheless, at some point these systems are no longer effective, either because the increasing amount of molecular damages can not longer be removed efficiently or because the repairing and removing mechanisms themselves become affected by impairing effects. The organism finally declines and dies. To investigate and to understand these counteracting mechanisms and the complex interplay of decline and maintenance, holistic and systems biological investigations are required. Hence, the processes which lead to ageing in the fungal model organism Podospora anserina, had been analysed using different advanced bioinformatics methods. In contrast to many other ageing models, P. anserina exhibits a short lifespan, a less biochemical complexity and it provides a good accessibility for genetic manipulations.
To achieve a general overview on the different biochemical processes, which are affected during ageing in P. anserina, an initial comprehensive investigation was applied, which aimed to reveal genes significantly regulated and expressed in an age-dependent manner. This investigation was based on an age-dependent transcriptome analysis. Sophisticated and comprehensive analyses revealed different age-related pathways and indicated that especially autophagy may play a crucial role during ageing. For example, it was found that the expression of autophagy-associated genes increases in the course of ageing.
Subsequently, to investigate and to characterise the autophagy pathway, its associated single components and their interactions, Path2PPI, a new bioinformatics approach, was developed. Path2PPI enables the prediction of protein-protein interaction networks of particular pathways by means of a homology comparison approach and was applied to construct the protein-protein interaction network of autophagy in P. anserina.
The predicted network was extended by experimental data, comprising the transcriptome data as well as newly generated protein-protein interaction data achieved from a yeast two-hybrid analysis. Using different mathematical and statistical methods the topological properties of the constructed network had been compared with those of randomly generated networks to approve its biological significance. In addition, based on this topological and functional analysis, the most important proteins were determined and functional modules were identified, which correspond to the different sub-pathways of autophagy. Due to the integrated transcriptome data the autophagy network could be linked to the ageing process. For example, different proteins had been identified, which genes are continuously up- or down-regulated during ageing and it was shown for the first time that autophagy-associated genes are significantly often co-expressed during ageing.
The presented biological network provides a systems biological view on autophagy and enables further studies, which aim to analyse the relationship of autophagy and ageing. Furthermore, it allows the investigation of potential methods for intervention into the ageing process and to extend the healthy lifespan of P. anserina as well as of other eukaryotic organisms, in particular humans.
This dissertation explores the linguistic identity changes of Chinese international students in Germany, and the relationship between their identity reconstruction and their multilingual competence. With the social turn (Block, 2003) of applied linguistics, research on study abroad has shown that student sojourners abroad encounter challenges not only to their language abilities, but also to their identities, which explains the vast individual differences in the measurable outcomes of student sojourns abroad. However, the realm of learners’ linguistic identity development in the English as a lingua franca (ELF) and multilingual contexts remains to be further explored, since most existing studies examined learners in the target language community. Guided by poststructuralist views and sociocultural theories, this study is designed with a view towards investigating the lived experience of Chinese international students at German universities.
Employing a qualitative approach, my research tracked seventeen Chinese students’ experiences of language learning and use in both their social lives and academic settings over one year. The empirical work combined semi-structured, in-depth interviews and emails. Three rounds of one-to-one interviews were conducted every 6 months and each round focused on students’ respective past, present and future. The grounded theory approach (Corbin & Strauss, 2015) was used in this study to analyse the data, aiming at generating theoretical explanations for phenomena through constant comparison.
The results of the category-based analysis offer a new lens on the intricate linguistic identity development of Chinese students in the study abroad context. The construction of their new identity facets is related to various contextual elements in experiences of their language learning and use. More importantly, learners’ identity changes related to the use of ELF is conceived as within a framework of multilingualism (Jenkins, 2015). In any given social interaction, learners’ linguistic identities are influenced by a combination of factors: perceived linguistic proficiency gap, power distribution,preferred communication styles, sensitivity to second/third language self-images and openness to new cultures. It is these factors, instead of the lingua franca context or
target language context per se, that come into play in the reformation of learners’
linguistic identities. Learners’ linguistic identity changes, together with their priority setting in studying abroad, are in turn interconnected with their multilingual competence development.
The findings of my study suggest theories for understanding learners’ linguistic identity development and the outcomes of their language learning in the study abroad context in the face of the complexity of individual experiences. My study also demonstrates the importance to foster learners’ “self-presentational competence” (Pellegrino Aveni, 2005: 145-146) so that they could successfully negotiate new subject positions when crossing the borders.
Structural biology often employs a combination of experimental and computational approaches to unravel the structure-function paradigm of biological macromolecules. This thesis aims to approach this combination by the application of Pulsed Electron-Electron Double Resonance (PELDOR/DEER) spectroscopy and structural modelling. In this respect, PELDOR spectroscopy in combination with site-directed spin labelling (SDSL) of proteins is frequently used to gain distance restraints in the range from 1.8 to 8 nm. The inter-spin distance and the flexibility of the spin labelled protein domains are encoded in the oscillation and the dampening of the PELDOR signal. The intrinsic flexibility of the commonly used MTSSL (1-Oxyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrroline-3-methyl) spin label itself can be an obstacle for structural modelling if the flexibility of the label is large compared to the flexibility of the protein domains. In this thesis the investigation of two multi-domain proteins by the 4-pulse PELDOR sequence is presented. At first, the N-terminal polypeptide transport-associated (POTRA) domains of anaOmp85, a rigid three domain protein, giving well-defined PELDOR distance restraints, is investigated. The experimental restraints are used for structure refinement of the X-ray structure and reveal a strong impact of the intrinsic flexibility of MTSSL on the accuracy of structural refinement. The second example, K48-linked diubiquitin, is a highly flexible multi-domain protein on which the flexibility of MTSSL is of minor impact on structural modelling. In this case, the distance restraints are utilized to determine conformational ensembles. Due to the high intrinsic flexibility already characterizing diubiquitin the recently developed 7-pulse Carr-Purcell (CP) PELDOR sequence was applied to investigate longer ubiquitin chains. This sequence enables to measure dipolar oscillations with an extended time window, allowing a good separation between inter- and intramolecular contributions even for long distance and broad conformational distributions, thereby providing an increased accuracy of the obtained distance distributions.
This thesis is concerned with quantum dynamical propagation methods suitable for high-dimensional systems, and their application to excitation energy transfer (EET), electron transfer (ET), and intra-molecular vibrational redistribution (IVR) in molecular aggregates. The theoretical description of these processes, which are often ultrafast – with time scales in the range of femtoseconds to picoseconds – is challenging, both with regard to quantum dynamical simulations and electronic structure calculations.
The present thesis comprises two parts. The first part concerns the implementation of a novel quantum dynamical method based on Gaussian Wavepackets (GWPs): the 2-Layer Gaussian-MCTDH (2L-GMCTDH) method. This method, which has recently been proposed in [S. Römer, M. Ruckenbauer, I. Burghardt, The Journal of Chemical Physics, 2013, 138, 064106] was implemented in a Fortran90 code and applied to various high-dimensional test systems. The second part of the thesis addresses the combined electronic structure and dynamical study of a novel type of donor-acceptor systems that have been investigated in a joint project with experimental collaboration partners at Strasbourg University. In both parts, numerical applications focus on high-dimensional model Hamiltonians for EET and ET processes.
Regarding the first part, the interest of using GWP-based methods is two-fold: First, GWPs represent spatially localized basis sets that are useful for on-the-fly dynamics in conjunction with electronic structure calculations. Second, they are naturally suited for the explicit representation of quantum mechanical system-bath type problems where a large number of vibrational bath modes are weakly perturbed from equilibrium. In this context, various methods exist that are based upon classically evolving GWP bases. A major improvement results from variational methods which involve optimized, non-classical GWP trajectories. In particular, the variational Gaussian-based Multi-Configuration Time-Dependent Hartree (GMCTDH) and its variational Multi-Configurational Gaussians (vMCG) variant were originally derived as semiclassical variants of the Multi-Configuration Time-Dependent Hartree (MCTDH) method. However, the G-MCTDH and vMCG methods mostly use Frozen Gaussian (FG) basis sets that are far less flexible than the single-particle (SPF) representation of standard MCTDH. As a consequence, a significantly larger number of GWPs are generally required to reach convergence. To remedy the lack of flexibility of the FG basis sets, the abovementioned two-layer (2L-G-MCTDH) approach has been introduced: Here, the first layer is composed of flexible SPFs, while the second layer is composed of low-dimensional FGs. The numerical scaling properties are significantly improved as compared with the conventional G-MCTDH and vMCG schemes. The first implementation of the method in an in-house Fortran90 code is presented, along with applications to (i) a model of site-to-site vibrational energy flow in the presence of intra-site vibrational energy redistribution (IVR) and (ii) a multidimensional donor-acceptor electron transfer system described within a linear vibronic coupling model. The second system relates to a model for ET at an oligothiophene-fullerene interface relevant to organic photovoltaics. Besides the description of the implementation, a detailed assessment of the convergence properties and comparison with multi-layer MCTDH (ML-MCTDH) benchmark calculations is presented. Finally, a perspective is given on the future combination with the existing ML-MCTDH scheme; indeed, such a combination is straightforward since the first layer of the 2L-G-MCTDH approach can be chosen to be orthogonal.
Regarding the second part of the thesis, two generations of a novel donor-acceptor (DA) system for organic photovoltaics applications, involving self-assembled block co-oligomers DA dyads and triads with perylene-diimide (PDI) accepter units, are addressed within a collaborative project with S. Haacke and S. Mery (University of Strasbourg). Based upon detailed excited-state electronic structure investigations along with quantum dynamical and kinetic studies, the relevant ET formation and recombination steps are characterized quantitatively, in view of optimizing the chemical design and reducing recombination losses.
In a first-generation variant of the abovementioned DA systems, which involves liquid-crystalline triads, we were able to show that a highly efficient inter-chain ET process prevails over intra-molecular ET, leading to fast recombination. Due to the latter, this system turns out to be inefficient for photovoltaic applications. To fully understand the elementary steps, high-dimensional quantum dynamics simulations were carried out using the ML-MCTDH method, in collaboration with Matthias Polkehn from our group. In the second-generation variant, which is in the focus of the present thesis, both the nanomorphology and the chemical design were modified. The present work, focuses upon the aspect of chemical design, by characterizing a series of modified DA’s, with donor units of varying length while the PDI accepter units remain unchanged. The intra-molecular ET is observed in these systems, but the processes are comparatively slow, of the order of tens to hundreds of picoseconds. Hence, a kinetic analysis using the Marcus-Levich-Jortner rate theory is employed. Among the main results of the study is that addition of an electron donating amine unit strongly increases the lifetime of the charge-separated state, and therefore reduced recombination losses.
Overall, the present thesis shows how a combination of high-dimensional quantum dynamics, electronic structure calculations, and vibronic coupling model Hamiltonians can be employed to obtain an accurate picture of EET, ET, and IVR in high-dimensional molecular assemblies. Furthermore, the 2L-GMCTDH method paves the way for accurate and efficient on-the-fly calculations; a suitable set-up for such calculations is currently in progress.
This thesis reports on the results obtained by expression photoactivatable adenylyl cyclase from Beggiatoa spp. (bPAC) in cholinergic neurons from Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) and the characterization of the role of a single neuron, RIS, during locomotion in the adult animal.
Pharmacological activation of adenylyl cyclases through Forskolin is known to induce increased neuronal output in diverse model organisms through a protein kinase A (PKA) dependent mechanism. Nevertheless, pharmacological assays are not spatially restricted, do not allow for precise and acute activation nor to cessation of the signal. Thus, an optogenetic approach for was selected trough the expression of photoactivatable adenylyl cyclase from Beggiatoa spp. (bPAC) in cholinergic neurons of Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans). This model organism was chosen due to its transparency, ease of maintenance, fast generation cycles as well as for being an eutelic animal. Further, its genome has been fully sequenced and the connectome of the neuronal network is known, thus allowing for precise analysis of neuronal function. Furthermore, the molecular mechanisms governing neuronal functions are well conserved up to primates. Mainly two optogenetical tools were applied, bPAC and the light gated cation channel channelrhodopsin 2 (ChR2).
Behavioral assays of bPAC photostimulation in cholinergic neurons recapitulated previous work performed with the photoactivatable adenylyl cyclase from Euglena gracilis (EuPACa), in which swimming frequency and speed on solid substrate were increased. Electrophysiological recordings of body wall muscle (BWM) cells by Dr. Jana F. Liewald showed that bPAC photoactivation led to an increase in miniature postsynaptic current (mPSC) rate and, in contrast to ChR2 invoked depolarization, also amplitude. Analysis of mutants deficient in neuropeptidergic signaling (UNC- 31) via electrophysiology performed by Dr. Jana F. Liewald showed that the increase in mPSC amplitude due to bPAC photoactivation requires neuropeptide release. This was confirmed by co-expression of bPAC with the neuropeptide marker NLP-21::Venus and subsequent fluorescence analysis of release, exploiting the fact that released neuropeptides are ultimately degraded by scavenger cells (coelomocytes). These were enriched with NLP-21::Venus after bPAC photostimulation, but no fluorescence could be observed in the UNC-31 mutants.
Additional analysis of the electrophysiological data performed by myself showed no modulation of mPSC kinetics dues to neuropeptidergic release induced by bPAC. Hence, neuropeptide release and action sites were in the cholinergic neurons, the latter including cholinergic motoneurons.
Dr. Szi-chieh Yu provided electron microscopy images of high pressure frozen, bPAC or ChR2 expressing animals. These were tagged by myself for automatic analysis of ultrastructural properties of the cholinergic presynapse, also during photoactivation of both optogenetic tools. Photoactivation of both induced a reduction of synaptic vesicles, with ChR2 showing a more severe effect. In contrast to ChR2, though, bPAC also reduced the amount of dense core vesicles (DCV), the neuropeptide transporters. Additionally, long bPAC photoactivation as well as ChR2 photoactivation led to the appearance of large vesicles (LV), presumably in response to the increased SV fusion rate. bPAC photostimulation also induced an increase in SV size, not observed after ChR2 photostimulation. In UNC-31 mutants, bPAC photostimulation could not lead to the SV size increase, a further argument for the presynaptic effect of the released neuropeptide. Additional analysis of electrophysiology paired with pharmacology, performed by Dr. Jana F. Liewald, showed that mPSC amplitude increase requires the function of the vesicular acetylcholine transporter.
A further effect observed in the ultrastructure of bPAC photostimulated cholinergic presynapses was a shift in the distribution of SV regarding the dense projection. An analysis of cAMP pathway mutants showed that synapsin is required for bPAC induced behavior effects. Synapsin is known to mediate SV tethering to the cytoskeleton. Here, I show evidence for a new role of synapsin in controlling the availability of DCVs for fusion and thus, in neuropeptidergic signaling.
In the second part of my thesis I characterized the function of the GABAergic interneuron RIS in the neuronal network of C. elegans. RIS was shown to induce lethargus, a sleep-like state, during all larval molts, but its function in the adult animal was not yet described. Specific RIS expression of ChR2 achieved by a recombinase based system allowed to acutely depolarize the neuron during locomotion, which led to an acute behavioral stop. Diverse signal transduction pathway mutants were analyzed showing that the phenotype was induced by neuropeptidergic signaling. Through mutagenesis followed by whole genome sequencing data analysis as well as analysis of RIS specific RNA sequencing data further narrowed the signal transduction pathway to mediate the locomotion stop behavior. Since the neuropeptide and, to some extent, the neuron are conserved across nematodes, an argument is outlined in favor of the conservation of this sleep-like state.
In addition, since ChR2 could induce neuropeptidergic signaling from RIS, secretion of vesicles is regulated by variable pathways depending on the neuronal identity. Nevertheless, expression of bPAC in RIS allowed to optogenetically increase the probability of short stops, as observed by expression of a calcium sensor (GCaMP) in RIS and analysis of its intrinsic activity in the adult animal.
Taxonomy, phylogeny and zoogeography of the hexaploid Torini of the Middle East and North Africa
(2017)
Fishes of the tribe Torini Karaman, 1971 (Teleostei: Cyprinidae) are a diverse group of primary freshwater fishes, distributed in Africa, the Middle East, and Indomalaya. They are an important component of the native freshwater-fish fauna of the Middle East and North Africa, and occur in most large river systems of the Levant, Arabia, Mesopotamia, southern Iran, and Morocco. They belong to the subfamily Cyprininae, are characterised by being tetraploid or hexaploid, having large scales, and a smooth and ossified last unbranched ray in the dorsal fin. As primary freshwater fishes they are not able to tolerate marine conditions and depend on direct freshwater connections for their dispersal. This makes them an ideal model for zoogeographic studies.
Prior to this study, the diversity of the Torini species in the Middle East and North Africa was not well understood. The validity of several genera and species was unclear, and the generic assignment of several species changed frequently.
In this PhD project the taxonomy, phylogeny, and zoogeography of the Torini of the Middle East and North Africa were investigated with morphological, as well as molecular methods. More than 1550 fish specimens were examined morphologically. Some of the specimens, including the types of most nominal species, were already available from museum collections. The remaining specimens were collected during expeditions to Ethiopia, Iran, Jordan, Morocco and Syria. Tissue samples were collected for molecular genetic analyses. The mitochondrial genes for cytochrome b, NADH dehydrogenase subunit 4 and the tRNAs for serine and histidine were sequenced from more than 120 specimens, representing 20 species of Torini and two small, diploid African barbs (Cyprinidae, tribe Smiliogastrini). Molecular data were analysed with Bayesian inference and other methods.
The analyses confirmed that the hexaploid Torini of Africa and the Middle East form a monophyletic group. In the Middle East and North Africa the Torini are represented by the genera Arabibarbus, Carasobarbus, Mesopotamichthys, and Pterocapoeta. These genera are each morphologically diagnosable, monophyletic, and genetically distinct. The species 'Labeobarbus' reinii cannot be assigned to any of these genera, because it is morphologically dissimilar and genetically clearly separated from each of them. A generic name for this species is presently not available and until the description of a new genus it is preliminarily assigned to the genus 'Labeobarbus'.
Out of the 28 species-group taxa described from the Middle East and North Africa until now, 15 are valid: Arabibarbus arabicus, A. grypus, A. hadhrami, Carasobarbus apoensis, C. canis, C. chantrei, C. exulatus, C. fritschii, C. harterti, C. kosswigi, C. luteus, C. sublimus, Mesopotamichthys sharpeyi, Pterocapoeta maroccana, and 'Labeobarbus' reinii.
The phylogenetic relationships between the Middle Eastern and North African Torini are well resolved, based on the analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences from nearly all relevant species.
The interspecific and intraspecific morphological and genetic diversity is shaped by the zoogeographic history. Conclusions can be drawn about the events that shaped the evolution of this group. The Torini originated in the Indomalayan biogeographical realm and colonised the Middle East and Africa during the Miocene via the Gomphotherium landbridge. The Indomalayan Torini are tetraploid, whereas those of the Middle East and Africa are hexaploid. Molecular phylogenetic analyses showed that the hexaploid Torini cluster within the tetraploid Torini. This makes the tetraploid Torini a paraphyletic group with respect to the hexaploid Torini. Morocco was colonised in two independent waves. The first came from sub-Saharan Africa and is represented by Pterocapoeta maroccana. The second originated in the Middle East and gave rise to C. fritschii, C. harterti, and probably 'L.' reinii. The Tigris-Euphrates system is the largest freshwater system in the Middle East. Its central position between the Orontes River and Jordan River in the West, the Iranian tributaries to the Persian Gulf in the East, and the Arabian Peninsula in the South made it an important crossroad for the colonisation of the Middle East by Torini and other freshwater biota. During the Miocene the predecessors of the Jordan and Orontes rivers were connected to the Tigris-Euphrates system. The Jordan River was separated from the Euphrates before the Orontes. Arabia was colonised in two waves. The first (A. arabicus, A. hadhrami, C. exulatus) dates to the Pliocene, whereas the second (C. apoensis) ended as recently as the late Pleistocene or early Holocene.
The process of urbanization is one of the major causes of the global loss of biodiversity; however, cities nowadays also have the potential to serve as new habitats for wildlife. The European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus, L. 1758) is a typical example of a wildlife species that reaches stable population densities in cities. Due to intense plant and soil damages, German city authorities aim to control high rabbit densities through the application of a yearly hunting regime (e. g., in Munich, Berlin or Frankfurt am Main). In contrast, population densities of O. cuniculus are on decline in German rural areas, i. e., numbers of yearly hunting bags decreased. The aim of my doctoral thesis was to answer the following research questions: Do population densities of the European rabbit correlate with the intensity of urbanization in and around Frankfurt am Main and if so, which factors play a role in varying densities? How are burrow construction behaviors and group sizes, daytime activity patterns and anti-predator behaviors as well as communication behaviors of this mammal affected by urbanization?
In my first study, I focused on population dynamics across 17 different study sites in and around Frankfurt. As one of yet few studies, I invented an approach that quantified the intensity of urbanization (degree of urbanity) of each study site base on four variables: (1) intensity of anthropogenic disturbance per min and ha, (2) number of residents within a radius of 500 m, (3) proportion of artificial ground cover and (4) numbers of anthropogenic objects per ha. Spearman rank correlations confirmed that with increasing degree of urbanity also rabbit and burrow densities increased. The access to dense shrubs, bushes etc. as suitable sites for burrow construction is the most determining factor for rabbit abundances, and therefore I presumed different densities along the rural-to-urban gradient to be driven by shifts in the availability of thick vegetation.
In the second study, I calculated two indices that in both cases classified burrows to be either accumulated, evenly or randomly distributed within study sites. Additionally, in cooperation with local hunters the number of burrow entrances and animals that occupy the same burrow had been determined during the hunting season. With increasing degree of urbanity burrow distribution patterns shifted from accumulated in rural areas towards more evenly distributed within the city center of Frankfurt. This is a clear sign for an increasing access to sites suitable for burrow construction along the rural to-urban gradient. Additional Spearman rank correlations revealed that the external dimensions of burrows decreased (shorter distances between entrances) and that burrows became less complex (fewer entrances) along the rural-to-urban gradient. In accordance, the number of rabbits that commonly shared the same burrow system was highest within rural areas, whereas I found mainly pairs and single individuals within highly urbanized study sites.
In the last study I compared activity patterns, burrow use and percentages of anti-predator behaviors from one hour before sunrise until one hour after sunset of rural, suburban and urban rabbit groups. A linear mixed model (LMM) and Spearman rank correlations confirmed that rabbits located at urban and suburban sites spent more time outside their protective burrows compared to their rural conspecifics. At suburban sites, individuals invested the least amount of time in anti-predator behavior. Results of this third study gave evidence that suburban rabbit populations on one hand benefit from less predation pressure by natural predators in comparison to rural sites, whereas on the other hand are exposed to less intense disturbance by humans compared to urban study sites.
The last study focused on the effects that urbanization had on the latrine-based communication behavior of rabbits. As many other mammals, O. cuniculus exchange information via the deposition of excreta in latrines, and depending on the intended receiver(s), latrines are either formed in central areas for within-group communication or at territorial boundaries, e. g., for between-group communication. The relative importance of within- vs. between-group communication depends on, amongst other factors, population densities and group sizes which I proved both to shift along the considered rural-to-urban gradient. I determined latrine sizes, latrine densities and latrine utilization frequencies relative to their distance to the nearest burrow at 15 different study sites. Latrine densities and utilization frequencies increased with increasing distance from the burrow in suburban and urban populations whereas at rural sites, largest latrines and those containing the most fecal pellets were close to the burrow, suggesting that within-group communication prevailed.
To sum up, for the first time, I was able to relate shifts in the ecology and behavior of the European rabbit as adaptations to a gradual anthropogenic habitat alteration that are typical for “urban exploiters”. Especially the suburban habitat provides high landscape heterogeneity (“edge habitat“) which is essential for high and stable rabbit populations. Moreover, here, comparably low human disturbance and predation pressure are given in contrast to the agriculturally transformed, open landscapes which are nowadays typical for most rural areas in central Europe. I argue that this mainly leads to the observed behavioral changes along the rural-to-urban gradient. Future plans for rural land management actions should aim to increase refuge availability by generating networks of ecotones. This would also benefit species that depend on similar ecosystem structures as the European rabbit and are on decline in Germany.
In dieser Dissertation wurde die Rolle des Proteins Carboxypeptidase E (CPE) im Glioblastom (GBM) untersucht. Ursprünglich wurde CPE in der neuroendokrinen Regulation beschrieben, wo es die Reifung der meisten Neuropeptide und Hormone reguliert und somit Einfluss auf Stoffwechsel und humorale Effekte hat (Fricker et al., 1982; Fricker & Snyder, 1982 and 1983; Davidson & Hutton, 1987; Shen & Loh, 1997; Lou et al., 2005). Ab 1989 wurde CPE in unterschiedlichen Tumorentitäten nachgewiesen (Grimwood et al., 1989; Manser et al., 1991), jedoch ohne Hinweise, welche Bedeutung das Protein dort haben könnte. Erst im letzten Jahrzehnt konnten sowohl pro- als auch anti-tumorigene Wirkungen von CPE gezeigt werden. Die beschriebenen Wirkungen von CPE sind jedoch von dessen Isoform abhängig. Das ∂(delta)N-trunkierte CPE zeigte sich mit erhöhtem Tumorwachstum und schlechter Überlebensprognose in verschiedenen Krebsentitäten assoziiert (Murthy et al., 2010; Lee et al., 2011; Zhou et al., 2013). Im Gegensatz dazu verringerte sezerniertes CPE (sCPE) im Fibrosarkom und Glioblastom die Zellmigration, was einen anti-tumorigenen Effekt suggeriert (Höring et al., 2012; Murthy et al., 2013a). Die Molekularmechanismen, die für die Regulation der Migration zuständig sind, sind jedoch kaum untersucht. Die meisten Untersuchungen von sCPE in Normal- und Tumorgewebe beschränken sich hauptsächlich auf Apoptose und Zellüberleben (Skalka et al., 2013; Murthy et al., 2013b; Cheng et al., 2013; Selvaraj et al., 2015; Cheng et al., 2015). Die vorliegende Arbeit ist demzufolge die erste Studie, die sich dem Mechanismus der Migrationsregulation durch sCPE im Glioblastom widmet.
Humane Gliome stellen die größte und bösartigste Gruppe hirneigener Tumore dar. Bösartige Gliome sind höchst resistent gegen alle zurzeit verfügbaren Behandlungsmethoden. Einer der Hauptgründe dafür ist, dass die Tumorzellen durch diffuse Infiltration in das Gehirn einwandern können. Ferner sind Gliomzellen metabolisch sehr aktiv und können sich dadurch an schnell verändertes Milieu anpassen (Fack et al., 2015; Demeure et al., 2016). Über die grundlegenden Mechanismen für diese Art des infiltrierenden Tumorwachstums ist bisher noch nicht viel bekannt. Zurzeit sind nur wenige Schlüsselfaktoren beschrieben, die den sogenannten Mechanismus der Migration oder Proliferation ("go or grow") in bösartigen Tumoren beeinflussen: wenige Transkriptionsfaktoren, miRNAs sowie metabolische Faktoren. Interessanterweise, sind miRNAs zum Teil mit der Regulation des Metabolismus in Tumorzellen assoziiert. Eine vorangehende Studie aus unserem Labor hat sCPE aufgrund seines Potentials, Zellwanderung zu verringern, als einen weiteren Schlüsselfaktor identifiziert. Wir konnten zeigen, dass sCPE in der Gliomzelllinie LNT-229 zur einer differentiellen Regulation von Migration und Proliferation führt (Höring et al., 2012). Die vorliegende Arbeit widmet sich nun der Frage nach den genauen zugrundeliegenden Mechanismen, wie sCPE seine Effekte auf molekularer Ebene vermittelt. Darüber hinaus soll geklärt werden, ob sCPE auch in der metabolischen Adaptation eine Rolle spielt und dadurch ebenfalls die Gliomzellmigration beeinflußen kann.
Die neuronalen Mechanismen, welche den meisten kognitiven Prozessen zu Grunde liegen, bestehen aus dem Zusammenspiel verschiedener Neuronen-Typen und deren spezifischen Funktionsmechanismen, sowohl in lokalen, als auch in globalen neuronalen Netzwerken. Eine funktionelle Interaktion mit diesen Netzwerken ist unumgänglich um das „kognitive“ Gehirn zu studieren, da neuronale Gruppen in einer hierarchischen, nicht linearen Weise miteinander interagieren, und dabei charakteristische raum-zeitliche Muster aufweisen. In dieser Arbeit untersuchten wir die Struktur und Funktion eines wichtigen Merkmals kortikaler Prozesse: Die neuronale gamma-Band Oszillation.
The presented work inside this thesis aims to raise the degree of automation in analog circuit design. Therefore, a framework was developed to provide the necessary mechanisms in order to carry out a fully automated analog circuit synthesis, i.e., the construction of an analog circuit fulfilling all previously defined (electrical) specifications. Nowadays, analog circuit design in general is a very time consuming process compared to a digital design flow. Due to its discrete nature, the digital design process is highly automated and thus very efficient compared to analog circuit design. In modern Very-Large-Scale integration (VLSI) circuits the analog parts are mostly just a small portion of the overall chip area. Although this small portion is known to consume a major part of the needed workforce. Paired with product cycles which constantly get shorter, the time needed to develop the analog parts of an integrated circuit (IC) becomes a determinant factor. Apart from this, the ongoing progress in semiconductor processing technologies promises more speed with less power consumption on smaller areas, forcing the IC developers to keep track with the technology nodes in order to maintain competitiveness. Analog circuitry exhibits the inherent property of being hard to reuse, as porting from one technology node to another imposes critical changes for operating conditions (e.g., supply voltage) - mostly leading to a full redesign for most of the analog modules. This productivity gap between digital and analog design resembles the primary motivation for this thesis. Due to the availability of commercial sizing tools, this work deliberately focuses on the construction of circuit topologies in distinction to parameter synthesis, which can be obtained with a dedicated sizing tool. The focus on circuit construction allows the development of a framework which allows a full design space exploration. This thesis describes the needed concepts and methods to realize a deterministic, explorative analog synthesis framework. Despite this, a reference implementation is presented, which demonstrates the applicability in current analog design flows.
For the class of balanced, irreducible Pólya urn schemes with two colours, say black and white, limit theorems for the number of black balls after n steps are known. Depending on the ratio of the eigenvalues of the replacement matrix, two regimes of limit laws occur: almost sure convergence to a non-degenerate random variable whose distribution depends on the initial composition of the urn and that is known to be not normally distributed and weak convergence to the normal distribution. In this thesis, upper bounds on the rates of convergence in both the non-normal limit case and the normal limit case are given.