Universitätspublikationen
Refine
Year of publication
- 2019 (33) (remove)
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (33) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (33)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (33)
Keywords
- Schülerlabor (2)
- ADAM15 (1)
- Agonist selection (1)
- Aphanomyces astaci (1)
- Apoptosis (1)
- Calmodulin (1)
- Climate (1)
- Conventional T cell selection (1)
- Didaktik Neurowissenschaften (1)
- Digitalisierung (1)
Institute
- Biowissenschaften (33) (remove)
Die Physiologie des Schmerzes umfasst komplexe immunologische, sensorische und inflammatorische Prozesse im Rückenmark, im Gehirn und in der Peripherie. Wiederholte nozizeptive Stimulation induziert pathophysiologische Veränderungen bei der Schmerzweiterleitung, aus denen eine periphere oder zentrale Sensibilisierung resultiert. Diese kann bei dafür anfälligen Patienten zu der Ausbildung von chronischen Schmerzzuständen führen. Obwohl das Wissen über die genauen molekularen Vorgänge der Schmerz-Chronifizierung noch immer unvollständig ist, sind die Identifizierung von Risikofaktoren vernünftige Schritte, um die individuelle Anfälligkeit für die Entwicklung chronischer Schmerzen zu bestimmen. Das Hauptziel dieser Doktorarbeit bestand daher in der Identifikation humaner genetischer Biomarker für chronische Schmerzzustände.
The division Ascomycota(Fungi) contains a large number of taxa known to reproduce only asexually by the formation of conidia or other non-motile propagules produced by mitotic cellular devisions. They are called anamorphic, mitosporic, asexual or conidial fungi and ecologically, they are often found associated with plant debris in different stages of decay. In general, saprobic anamorphs of ascomycetous affinities are poorly studied and their outstanding diversity is currently underexplored. Phylogenetic relationships are unknown for many of them and they are still largely underrepresented in the current phylogenetic classification system of Fungi, with many morphologically defined anamorphic taxa still awaiting taxonomic reassessment in the light of molecular approaches. The increasing usage of molecular markers combined with robust statistical methods has allowed their phylogenetic affinities to be revealed and to gradually incorporate many of them into the different taxonomic groups of the division Ascomycota. However, the phylogenetic placement and taxonomic status of a large number of saprobic taxa remain unresolved due to the lack of DNA sequence data.
The present dissertation aims to explore the rich but understudied diversity of those anamorphic fungi traditionally known as hyphomycetes that inhabit dead plant debris. It consists of five publications in which a polyphasic approach integrating morphological, developmental, cultural and molecular data was used to incorporate novel or incertae sedis taxa within Ascomycota and to make more sound decisions regarding their taxonomic status. Specific objectives include: 1. the collection, isolation and morphological characterization of selected anamorphic fungi representing putative new or interesting taxa of uncertain phylogenetic placement; 2. the generation of novel DNA sequence data to infer their phylogenetic relationships and to resolve their taxonomic affinities within Ascomycota; 3. the testing of any previously available morphologically based hypotheses on their putative position, generic placement or relationships with teleomorphic, pleomorphic or other anamorphic taxa; and 4. the determination of their generic validity, monophyly and taxonomic boundaries using molecular data and phylogenetic analyses methods.
Materials studied in these five projects consisted of specimens collected during field work carried out by the author or collaborators in different countries including USA, the Czech Republic and Panama between the years 2014 and 2017. The target substrates were dead leaves of different palm trees, dead wood and bark of pines and twigs or stems of unknown shrubs and woody vines that are all known to harbor a rich saprobic mycobiota. Putative novelties or anamorphic taxa with unknown or poorly studied phylogenetic affinities were selected for further morphological and molecular investigation. Micromorphological studies were based on fungal structures observed on natural substrate, herbarium specimens and in culture. DNA was extracted from cultures and PCR amplification followed by Sanger sequencing was carried out using relevant molecular markers employed in fungal phylogenetic studies. Newly obtained DNA sequence data were analyzed following a standard phylogenetic analysis pipeline and phylogenetic relationships were reconstructed using character-based methods such as Maximum Likelihood and Bayesian inference.
Conclusion is that anamorphic Ascomycota inhabiting dead plant debris represents a largely untapped source of biodiversity and information still in need of further exploration. A new capnodiaceous genus Castanedospora, seven new species named Taeniolella sabalicola, Hermatomyces bifurcatus, H. constrictus, H. megasporus, H. sphaericoides, H. verrucosus and Septonema lohmanii, and two new combinations, Castanedospora pachyanthicola and H. reticulatus, are proposed based on morphological and DNA sequence data. Molecular phylogenetics was confirmed as the tool of choice for the inference of relationships in novel or incertae sedis anamorphic fungi that are otherwise difficult to assess in the absence of a teleomorphic state. They were first resolved or revisited for several saprobic species such as Ernakulamia cochinensis, H. sphaericus, H. tucumanensis or Septonema fasciculare in a suitable framework for phylogenetic hypothesis testing. Molecular data allowed to fully incorporate all these taxa in Ascomycota, particularly within the classes Dothideomycetes and Sordariomycetes, and to provide a foundation for better taxonomic decisions on their classification. Large and polyphyletic genera such as Taeniolella, Sporidesmium and Septonema, partially treated in this work and containing mostly saprobic species of obscure affinities, remained in need of further investigation.
This work deals with the characterization of three different type II polyketide synthase systems (PKS II) from the Gram-negative bacteria Xenorhabdus and Photorhabdus.
Particular attention was paid to a biochemically underexplored class of aryl polyene (APE) pigments. Bioinformatic analysis of enzymes involved in the biosynthesis and the in vitro reconstruction proved that the synthesis of APEs involves an unusual fatty acid-like elongation mechanism. Furthermore, the discovery of unexpected protein-protein interactions provided new insights into the multienzyme complex formation of this unusual PKS II system. Through collaboration with the groups from Prof. Michael Groll and junior Prof. Nina Morgner, two protein complexes were structurally solved and several native protein multimerization events were identified and allowed us to suggest a possible protein-interaction network. The results are summarized in publication ‘An Uncommon Type II PKS Catalyzes Biosynthesis of Aryl Polyene Pigments’ (first author; J. Am. Chem. Soc.).
In addition to in vitro-analysis, in vivo-studies were used to investigate the APE compound produced by X. doucetiae in more detail. The activation of the silent biosynthetic gene cluster (BGC) led to the detection of the APE compound in the homologous host. Further combination of homologous expression and targeted deletions of the APE BGC revealed an APE-lipid-like structure. MS-based analyses and purification of intermediates allowed us to deduce structural building blocks of the APE-lipid, which is composed of an APE structural core, a glucosamine residue and an unusual long-chain fatty acid with unusual conjugated double bonds and a phosphoethanolamine head group. In combination with the above stated in vitro-data, we assumed a plausible biosynthetic mechanism of the APE-lipid. The results are summarized in the section ‘Additional Results: Tracing the Full-length APE’.
The biosynthesis of isopropylstilbene (IPS) has already been well-studied by the Bode laboratory and the group of Prof. Ikuro Abe. Studies with Photorhabdus laumondii TT01 by the Bode group revealed the distributed locations and functions of the genes involved in biosynthesis, which originate from two pathways. Particularly, the Bode group first demonstrated that an unusual ketosynthase/cyclase (StlD) catalyzes the condensation of 5-phenyl-2,4-pentadienoyl-ACP and isovaleryl-beta-ketoacyl-ACP via a Michael addition. Such a pathway for stilbene formation is distinct from those widespread in plants. The Abe group solved the structure and biochemical mechanism of StlD and further investigated the aromatization reaction of the aromatase StlC. However, the generation of the required cinnamoyl-precursor 5-phenyl-2,4-pentadienoyl-ACP as a Michael acceptor for this cyclization reaction remained elusive. In this work, we were able to reconstitute the synthesis of the Michael acceptor in vitro, by the action of enzymes from the fatty acid biosynthesis. With the knowledge about the crucial cross-talk from primary and specialized metabolism, we further determined the minimal endowment for stilbene production in a heterologous host. Here, the discovered AasS enzyme StlB is responsible for the generation of cinnamoyl-ACP and among others, plFabH plays a key role as gatekeeper enzyme for further processing. With this information in hand, we were able to obtain IPS production in E. coli. These results are presented in the manuscript ‘Biosynthesis of the Multifunctional Isopropylstilbene in Photorhabdus laumondii Involves Cross-talk Between Specialized and Primary Metabolism’ (co-first author, manuscript).
The biosynthesis of the orange-to-red-pigmented anthraquinones (AQs) is the best-studied type II PKS system according to preliminary results. While several investigations by Brachmann et al. discovered the BGC and the overall product spectrum of the main AQ-256 and its methylated derivatives, data of Quiqin Zhou (Bode group) performed biochemical in vitro analysis paired with in vivo heterologous expression of the ant-genes antA-I. This led to the identification of shunt products that indicated an AQ-scaffold derived from an octaketide intermediate that gets shortened to a heptaketide by the hydrolase AntI, resulting in the main anthraquinone AQ-256. This PKS-shortening mechanism was further confirmed by the protein crystal structure of AntI by the Groll group (publication, minor contributions, co-author, Chem Sci. ‘Molecular Mechanism of Polyketide Shortening in Anthraquinone Biosynthesis of Photorhabdus luminescens’). Further substrate analysis of the P. luminescens AQ-producer and mutants revealed an inhibitory effect of cinnamic acid against the hydrolase AntI. Cinnamic acid might therefore be involved in regulation of AQ biosynthesis (‘Anthraquinone Production is Influenced by Cinnamic Acid’, first author, manuscript).
Biochemical analysis from Quiqin Zhou with the minimal PKS of the AQ-synthase further revealed the exclusive activation of the AQ-ACP by the PPTase AntB. The PPTase is insoluble alone but gets stabilized by the CoA-ligase, most likely inactive, working as a chaperone. Thus, the minimal PKS endowment to produce the octaketide scaffold compromises, besides the ACP, the KS:CLF heterodimer and the MCAT, the co-occurrence of the PPTase AntB and the CoA-ligase AntG. For the first time, X-ray crystallography depicted a minimal PKS in action, by obtaining the structural data of native complexes from an ACP:KS:CLF, the KS:CLF alone and an ACP:MCAT in their non-active and active forms. It was possible to confirm a KS-bound hexaketide, which was built upon heterologous expression of the KS:CLF. Mutagenesis with amino-acids proposed to be involved in protein-protein interactions in the ACP:KS:CLF complex revealed some interesting protein-interaction sites. Additionally, an induced-fit mechanism of the MCAT with the ACP during the malonylation reaction confirmed a monodirectional transfer reaction (‘Structural Snapshots of the Minimal PKS System Responsible for Octaketide Biosynthesis’ co-author, manuscript under review).
The neocortical microcircuit, a local network of excitatory and inhibitory neurons, is a highly complex information processing unit, which can flexibly be modulated to adapt to external context and internal state such as motivation or attention. The mechanisms underlying these adaptations for flexible processing are not sufficiently understood yet. The aim of this study is to further elucidate the role of inhibitory and excitatory components of the local neocortical microcircuit for the processing of sensory information in an awake, behaving animal.
Layer 1 of the neocortex is of particular importance because it contains afferents from the thalamus and more distant cortical regions, which relay top-down information that is important for processes such as learning and attention. The dendrites of the excitatory pyramidal neurons located in deeper layers extend into layer 1, and in addition to that layer 1 contains inhibitory neurons, as well as axons from inhibitory somatostatin expressing (SOM) neurons located in lower layers. These layer 1 inhibitory neurons and SOM axons are therefore well positioned to control top-down information transfer at the pyramidal dendrites, and thus to flexibly regulate information processing in the local circuit. To further investigate this, the stimulus responses in inhibitory (SOM axons) and excitatory (layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons) components of the neocortical microcircuit were measured in primary auditory cortex during learning, when auditory stimuli gain relevance.
For this purpose, I first established a suitable learning behaviour, an auditory GO-NOGO discrimination task, which can be performed by head-fixed mice under the microscope. The task also contains a visual start cue, which signals the start of every trial, as a multimodal element. Mice learn to distinguish two auditory stimuli by being rewarded with water after the GO stimulus and receiving no reward after the NOGO stimulus. They indicate that they have identified the stimuli accordingly by licking at a water dispenser during the GO stimulus and not during the NOGO stimulus. Licking during the NOGO stimulus is punished by an aversive air puff. As the mice learn this behaviour, the stimuli gain relevance. The activity in the same neuronal structures was observed over the course of all training sessions via 2-photon imaging in awake, behaving mice, and their stimulus responses were measured throughout the learning process, acquiring a comprehensive dataset. In these data, short-term and long-term plasticity of the stimulus responses can be detected and these changes in the stimulus responses differ for SOM axons and pyramidal neurons. Already from the first training day, stimulus responses change in the course of a single session, both in SOM axons and in pyramidal cells. With time over the course of task acquisition, the stimulus representation in a group of pyramidal neurons in layer 2/3 is enhanced and distal dendrites are less inhibited over training through reduced activation of the SOM axons, so that the integration of information along the somatodendritic axis shifts, increasing the relative impact of top-down information. This shift is even stronger for the NOGO stimulus in correct trials compared to the GO stimulus. This is the first study to show that this somato-dendritic shift by SOM-axon responses occurs at different strengths for the GO and NOGO stimulus, probably due to the different learned responses (action or refraining), which require different forms of circuit control. After learning, the neuronal responses to GO and NOGO stimuli also differ in pyramidal neurons, with the GO stimulus evoking stronger responses than the NOGO stimulus. This learned distinction is reversed in passive trials during which the mice have no possibility to respond to the stimuli, in both SOM axons and pyramidal neurons, resulting in similar response sizes for both stimuli. This indicates that not only learning over the long term, but also short-term changes regarding the state (active execution of the discrimination task or no active participation during the stimulus presentations) affect the processing of the stimuli in the local circuit. In addition, on an even shorter time scale pyramidal neurons show a modulation of responses from trial to trial, probably due to anticipation of reward, which is absent from SOM axon responses. Thus, there are various levels of plasticity that develop over the course of training: long-term changes in the response size of both the excitatory and inhibitory components that facilitate stimulus recognition when engaged, and short-term modulation (possibly in anticipation of reward) in excitatory neurons that could underlie sensorimotor transformation. Both pyramidal neurons and SOM axons in the primary auditory cortex respond to multimodal and reinforcement-related stimuli, likely contributing to the optimisation of circuit dynamics for goal-directed information processing. This shows that the circuit flexibly adjusts information processing under different circumstances, depending on the relevance the stimuli carry and whether the mouse is active or inactive and can use the presented information to achieve a goal.
Hypoxia is a condition in which cells are deprived of adequate oxygen supply and represents a main feature of solid tumours. Cells under hypoxic stress activate transcriptional responses driven by hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), which affect multiple cellular pathways, including angiogenesis, metabolic adaptation and cell proliferation. While the transcriptional changes induced in hypoxic tumours are well characterised, it is still poorly understood how hypoxia contributes to the aberrant post-transcriptional regulation observed in tumours. In this PhD thesis, I studied the RNA response to hypoxia in cancer, to provide novel insights into its regulation.
Using deep RNA-Sequencing (RNA-Seq), I investigated transcriptome changes of three human cell lines from lung, cervical and breast cancer under hypoxia, advancing our knowledge of post-transcriptional gene regulation in hypoxic cancer. I show that hypoxia induced consistent changes in transcript abundance in the three cancer types. This was coupled to divergent splicing responses, highlighting the cell type specificity of alternative splicing programs. While the mRNA levels of RNA-binding proteins were mainly reduced, hypoxia upregulated muscleblind-like protein 2 (MBNL2) in all three cell lines. Hypoxia control was specific for MBNL2, since it did not affect its paralogs MBNL1 and MBNL3. Via knockdown experiments of MBNL2 in hypoxic cells, I could show that MBNL2 induction promotes adaptation of cancer cells to low oxygen by regulating both transcript abundance and alternative splicing of hypoxia response genes. In addition, depletion of MBNL2 reduced the proliferation and migration of cancer cells, corroborating a function of MBNL2 as cancer driver.
In the last few years, a novel class of RNAs has gained attention, namely circular RNAs (circRNAs), which are produced by a particular splicing mechanism, known as back-splicing. CircRNAs have been reported to change their abundance in cancer and their high stability makes them promising candidates as diagnostic biomarkers. In this study, I took advantage of deep rRNA-depleted RNA-Seq data to comprehensively investigate the expression of circRNAs in human cancer cells and their changes in response to hypoxia. To reliably identify circRNAs, I established a pipeline that integrates two available tools. for circRNA detection with custom approaches for quantification and statistical analysis. Using this pipeline, I identified 12006 circRNAs in the three cancer cell lines. Their molecular features suggest an involvement of complementary RNA sequences as well as trans-acting factors in circRNA biogenesis, including the splicing factor HNRNPC. Remarkably, I detected 210 circRNAs that are more abundant than their linear counterparts. Upon hypoxic stress, 64 circRNAs were differentially expressed in cancer cells, in most cases in a cell type-specific manner. In summary, in this PhD thesis, I present a comparative transcriptome profiling in human cancer cell lines. It reveals MBNL2 as an important player in hypoxic cancer progression and provides novel insights into the biogenesis and regulation of circRNAs under hypoxic stress.
Cardiovascular diseases are still regarded as the main cause of death in the modern world. However, the generic term "cardiovascular diseases" is not uniformly defined. It essentially describes diseases of the cardiovascular system and includes diseases such as hypertension, arteriosclerosis, myocardial infarctions, heart failure, coronary heart diseases, rheumatic heart diseases and heart valve defects. In addition to the well-known risk factors such as obesity, smoking, hypercholesterolemia and lack of exercise, age is a further risk factor that plays an important role in the development of cardiovascular diseases. As the modern societies age; this becomes an increasing problem.
But why does the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases increase with age? In gen-eral, age-dependent changes at the cellular level are assumed to be responsible for the pathological changes in the cardiac and vascular tissues. Important mechanisms such as autophagy, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunctions, genomic instability, cellular senescence and disturbances in signaling pathways of growth factors play a decisive role. In old age, myocardial hypertrophy occurs, which results in cardiac wall thickening and an altered geometry of the ventricle. Chronic inflammations, paracrine and age-dependent cell-intrinsic factors further lead to activation of cardiac fibro-blasts with increase cell proliferation, collagen secretion and matrix cross-linking. The consequences are interstitial and perivascular fibrosis, which stiffen the heart and blood vessels. Oxidative stress and inflammations additionally attack the blood ves-sels and impair endothelial function, which is further aggravated by possible pre-existing conditions such as diabetes mellitus and hypertension.
In the past decades, the main focus has therefore been on researching these age-dependent changes in the hope of better understanding cardiovascular ageing and developing possible regenerative interventions. By studying the repair mechanisms of other organs such as the lungs and the bone marrow, the endothelium in particular showed a high regenerative capacity, which influences the proliferation and cell func-tion of the surrounding cells.
For a long time, the general opinion was that the endothelium is only the internal lin-ing of blood and lymphatic vessels, as well as the heart chambers, which as a single-layer barrier guarantees the integrity of the blood vessels. However, endothelial cells are very heterogeneous, depending on the type of blood vessel and the type of tis-sue they serve. In addition to their barrier function, endothelial cells also regulate the exchange of substances between blood and tissue, stimulate the formation of new blood vessels and re-model existing vascular networks. They are also able to re-structure the extracellular matrix that surrounds them. They release not only matrix proteins, but also cytokines and growth factors into the extracellular space. On de-mand, these factors are then released and stimulate angiogenesis or cell prolifera-tion. In addition, the secretion of various matrix proteins not only stabilizes the cellu-lar neighborhood, but also regulates various cell functions.
By modelling the endothelial environment - the so-called vascular niche - endothelial cells are able to communicate with the surrounding cells. As a result, a regenerative effect of the vascular niche has already been described in various organs. In the liv-er, for example, it has been shown that increased concentrations of endothelial Ang2 and decreased endothelial activin A after partial hepatectomy stimulate the prolifera-tion of hepatocytes and thus liver regeneration. In the bone marrow, endothelial cells mobilize stem cells via nitric oxide and in the lungs, endothelial MMP14 releases growth factors from the extracellular matrix, which stimulate epithelial cell prolifera-tion after partial pneumectomy. Whether such a regenerative effect of the vascular niche also plays a role in the heart is largely unknown.
Since both the regenerative capacity of the heart and endothelial function decrease with age, the aim of this dissertation was to investigate the role of the vascular niche and endothelial cell communication in the aged heart. Human cell lines as well as mouse and artificial rat models were used for these investigations. Since this thesis is a cumulative dissertation with partially published papers, it is divided into three parts.
In the first part of this thesis, the transcriptional signature of secretory genes in the aged cardiac endothelium was studied. Perfused endothelial cells from hearts of young (12-week-old animals) and old mice (20-month-old animals) were isolated and used for bulk RNA sequencing. The two matrix proteins laminin β1 and β2 were among the top-regulated genes. While laminin β2 was particularly expressed in the young cardiac endothelium, laminin β1 was predominantly found in the old endotheli-um. This change in laminin expression was confirmed histologically at protein level and its autocrine function was investigated in vitro. To mimic the in vivo situation in vitro, cell culture dishes were coated with human recombinant laminin 421 or laminin 411 and sutured with human endothelial cells from the umbilical vein (HUVEC). Di-verse functional investigations showed that endothelial cells migrated and adhered poorly in the presence of laminin 411, while in Matrigel tube formation assays HU-VEC formed reduced endothelial networks when cultured on LM 411.
...
Die klimatische Nische beschreibt die klimatischen Bedingungen, unter denen eine Art eine stabile Population aufrechterhalten kann. Die Quantifizierung von Klimanischen ist ein wichtiges Werkzeug, um tiefergehende Einsichten in individuelle Art-Umwelt Beziehungen zu erlangen, um den Effekt des Klimawandels effektiv zu bewerten, und um Arten- und Naturschutz zu unterstützen. Ein makroökologischer Ansatz ist von Vorteil um Ökosysteme über ein breites taxonomisches, geographisches und zeitliches Spektrum zu untersuchen, und damit die klimatischen Nischen vieler Arten auf eine konsistente Art und Weise zu quantifizieren und vergleichen.
Im Kontext des aktuellen Klimawandels ist es wichtig zu verstehen, ob Arten in der Lage sind ihre Klima-nische anzupassen. Viele bisherige Vorhersagen über klimawandelbedingte Veränderungen von Artverbreitungen beruhen auf der Annahme, dass die klimatische Nische einer Art konstant ist. Allerdings ist bekannt, dass Arten ihre klimatischen Präferenzen auf unterschiedlichen Zeitskalen verändern - sowohl über kurze (ökologische) als auch evolutionäre Zeiträume. Dies ist ein wichtiger, aber oft missachteter Faktor für die Nischenquantifizierung. Ein gutes Beispiel für solche ökologische Dynamiken sind Zugvögel, die etwa 20% aller Vogelarten ausmachen. Sie stellen eine interessante, aber auch herausfordernde Artengruppe für die Untersuchung klimatischer Nischen dar. Des Weiteren ist es wichtig klimatische Nischen über evolutionäre Zeiträume zu untersuchen, um die Prozesse zu verstehen, die Evolution, Diversifikation und Extinktion unterliegen, da sich Klimanischen mit der Anpassung einzelner Arten an neue klimatische Gegebenheiten ebenfalls wandeln. Bislang hat ein Mangel an geographisch expliziten Daten über terrestrische Umwelt-bedingungen durch evolutionäre Zeiträume eine explizite Überprüfung dieser Zusammenhänge verhindert.
Das übergeordnete Ziel dieser Dissertation war es, die ökologische (d.h. saisonale) und evolutionäre Dynamik klimatischer Nischen von Vögeln zu untersuchen. Dazu wurde ein Ansatz gewählt der makroökologische, und evolutionsbiologische Methoden vereint, um ein breites taxonomisches und zeitliches Spektrum abzudecken. Das erste Kapitel bearbeitet die Frage wie klimatische Nischen am besten zu quantifizieren sind, wenn man die Dynamik des Vogelzuges in Betracht zieht. Dazu wurde eine Datenbank erstellt, die das Zugverhalten aller 10.443 lebenden Vogelarten katalogisiert. Des Weiteren wurde eine Übersicht über die Methoden zur Quantifizierung klimatischer Nischen in der makroökologischen Literatur erstellt. Das Ergebnis derselben ist, dass die überwiegende Mehrzahl der Veröffentlichungen saisonalen Zugbewegungen nicht ausreichend berücksichtigt. Zuletzt habe ich anhand der Avifauna Australiens die Vor- und Nachteile der Verwendung von Verbreitungskarten gegenüber Punktverbreitungsdaten zur Erfassung saisonaler geographischer Muster der Artenvielfalt bewertet. Damit bietet dieses Kapitel Rahmenempfehlungen für die Datenanforderungen und Methoden, die je nach Zugverhalten einer Art, und dem geographischen, bzw. zeitlichen Fokus einer Studie für eine optimale Nischenquantifizierung notwendig sind.
Im zweiten Kapitel untersuchte ich die saisonale Dynamik klimatischer Nischen von Zugvögeln. Dabei überprüfte ich die Hypothese, dass Zugvögel in ihrem Jahreszyklus durch die Zugbewegung eine gewisse Klimanische verfolgen. Zu diesem Zweck habe ich mit Brut- und Überwinterungsarealkarten saisonale Klima-nischen für 437 Zug- und Standvogelarten aus acht Kladen der Sperlingsvögel (Passeriformes) charakterisiert. Mit Ordinationsmethoden wurde dann der innerartliche saisonale Nischenüberlapp quantifiziert. Der Beweis für die Verfolgung einer klimatischen Nische in einer Art war von mehreren Faktoren, z.B. der geographischen Verortung des Brutareals und der Zugrichtung, abhängig. Dies lässt darauf schließen, dass sich die Ursachen für den Vogelzug sowohl geographisch als auch saisonal (d.h. abhängig von der Zugrichtung) unterscheiden.
Im dritten Kapitel untersuchte ich die evolutionäre Dynamik klimatischer Nischen in Steinschmätzern (Gattung Oenanthe), um explizit zu untersuchen ob es einen Zusammenhang zwischen den Raten klimatischer Nischen-evolution und den Veränderungen paläoklimatischer Bedingungen gibt. Methoden der Klimanischen-quantifizierung wurden mit datierten molekularen Phylogenien verknüpft, um die Raten klimatischer Nischen-evolution mit einem variablen Ratenmodell abzuschätzen. Paläoklimatische Umweltbedingungen wurden mit paläobiologischen Methoden aus dem Fossilbericht altweltlicher Säugetiere der vergangenen 20 Millionen Jahre erschlossen. Die Fallstudie konnte keinen Zusammenhang zwischen Nischenevolution und Umwelt-bedingungen feststellen. Dies legt nahe, dass Vögel als überaus mobile Organismen, auf Klimaveränderungen eher durch Arealverschiebungen reagieren, als durch eine Anpassung ihrer klimatischen Nische. Die Klimanischen der Steinschmätzer waren allerdings an sich nicht statisch, so dass andere Faktoren wie z.B. biologische Wechselbeziehungen für die Nischenevolution dieser Gattung verantwortlich sein müssen.
Meine Dissertation beleuchtet die zentrale Bedeutung zeitlicher Dynamiken für den Nischenraum, den Arten über ökologische (d.h. saisonale) und evolutionäre Zeiträume einnehmen. Aus ihr ergeben sich methodische Konsequenzen für zukünftige Studien klimatischer Nischen. Der Befund, dass die klimatischen Nischen von Zugvögeln nicht saisonal konstant sind, zeigt dass es für mobile Kladen wie Vögel notwendig ist die klimatischen Bedingungen über den gesamten Jahreszyklus und das gesamte Verbreitungsgebiet in Betracht zu nehmen, um die jeweiligen klimatischen Nischen voll charakterisieren zu können.
Über diese methodischen Innovationen hinaus, hat meine Arbeit auch wichtige theoretische und praktische Schlussfolgerungen produziert. Zum einen zeigt die Betrachtung saisonaler Klimanischen, dass Zugvögel entgegen gängiger Annahmen nicht denselben Umweltbedingungen in ihren Brut- und Überwinterungsarealen ausgesetzt sind. Zum anderen zeigt meine Betrachtung von Klimanischen über evolutionäre Zeiträume, dass die Nischenevolution nicht von klimatischen Bedingungen angetrieben wird. Zusammengenommen zeigen diese Ergebnisse auf unterschiedlichen Zeitskalen, dass das Klima nicht der alleinige Faktor ist, der die Artverbreitung von Vögeln bestimmt. Während dieser Befund Raum für Optimismus schafft, was die Auswirkungen des aktuellen Klimawandels auf Vögel angeht, zeigt er auch auf, dass Faktoren wie wechselseitige Artbeziehungen und das Mobilitätspotential von Arten einen wichtigen Einfluss auf Artverbreitungen ausüben. Diese Faktoren könnten jedoch an sich vom Klimawandel beeinflusst sein, und Untersuchungen dieses Zusammenspiels zwischen Klima und anderen Faktoren und die daraus resultierenden Einflüsse auf Artareale bieten ein vielversprechendes Arbeitsfeld für zukünftige Studien.
Alternative splicing (AS) is a co- or post-transcriptional process by which one gene gives rise to multiple isoforms. This ‘split and combine’ step multiplies eukaryotic proteome diversity several fold and is implicated in several diseases given its pervasive impact. Control of alternative splicing is brought about by cis-regulatory elements, such as RNA sequence and structure, which recruit trans-acting RNA-binding proteins (RBPs). Although several of these interactions are already described in detail, we lack a comprehensive understanding of the regulatory code that underlies a splicing decision.
Here, we have established a high-throughput screen to comprehensively identify and characterise cis-regulatory elements that control a specific splicing decision. A cancer-relevant splicing event in proto-oncogene RON was picked as a minigene prototype for initialising the screening approach. Then, we transfected a library of thousands of randomly mutagenised minigene variants as a pool into human cells, and subsequently quantified the spliced isoforms by RNA sequencing. Importantly, we used a barcode sequence to tag the minigene variants and thereby linked mutations to their corresponding spliced products. By using a linear regression-based modelling approach, we were able to determine the effects of single mutations on RON AS. In total, more than 700 mutations were found to significantly affect the splicing regulation of the RON alternative exon. In addition, mutation effects quantified from the screening approach correlate with RON alternative splicing in cancer patients. We discovered numerous previously unknown cis-regulatory elements in both introns and exons, and found that the RBP heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein H (HNRNPH) extensively regulates RON AS at multiple levels in both cell lines and cancer. Furthermore, the large number of RBPs involved in the process, point to a complex splicing regulatory network involved in the control of RON splicing. iCLIP and synergy analysis between mutations and HNRNPH knockdown data pinpointed the most relevant HNRNPH binding sites across RON. Finally, cooperative HNRNPH binding was shown to mediate a splicing switch of RON alternative exon. In summary, our results provide an unprecedented view on the complexity of splicing regulation of an alternative exon. The novel screening approach introduces a tool to study the relationship of RNA sequence variants along with trans-acting regulators to their impact on the splicing outcome, offering insights on alternative splicing regulation and the relevance of mutations in human disease.
Die Rheumatoide Arthritis (RA) ist die häufigste chronisch-entzündliche Gelenkerkrankung, die inadäquat therapiert zu Gelenkzerstörung und resultierender Invalidität führen kann. Genetische Risikofaktoren sowie Lebensstileinflüsse führen in präklinischen Erkrankungsstadien zu posttranslationalen Modifikationen körpereigener Strukturen, die die immunologische Selbst-Toleranz brechen und zur immunologischen Fehlerkennung von Gelenkstrukturen durch B- und T-Lymphozyten führen.
Das Ziel der hier vorliegenden Arbeit war die Aufklärung von Wirkmechanismen eines für die immunmodulatorische Therapie der RA entwickelten innovativen Ansatzes zur Rekonstitution der immunologischen Autotoleranz mittels rekombinant hergestellter MHC-Klasse-II/Peptidkomplexe durch Induktion regulatorischer T-Zellen. Im Mittelpunkt der in vitro Studien steht hierbei eine über Speziesbarrieren hinweg evolutionär konservierte, von T-Lymphozyten auf dem Kollagen Typ-II (CII) erkannte, durch Glykosylierung posttranslational modifizierte, autoantigene Strukturdeterminante. Dieses T-Zellepitop (CII-Peptid) stellt sowohl in der humanen RA als auch in der murinen Experimentalerkrankung der CIA (Collagen induced arthritis) eine immunodominante Struktur der arthritogenen Autoimmunität dar. Für die modellhaften in vitro Studien zur Aufklärung der Wirkweise rekombinanter MHC-II/Peptidkomplexe auf humane T-Zellen, standen über eine Kooperation mit Prof. Rikard Holmdahl (Karolinska Institut, Stockholm) T-Zell-Hydridome mit transgener Expression des humanen MHC-II/Moleküls DR4 (DRA1/DRB1*04:01) mit unterschiedlicher Epitopspezifität (T-Zell-Hybridom 3H8, Spezifität: unmodifiziertes CII-Peptid und mDR1.1, Spezifität: galaktosyliertes CII-Peptid an Position K264) zur Verfügung. Das aus einer α- und β-Kette bestehende MHC-II/Molekül DR4 ist durch das DRA1-Gen und allelische Varianten des DRB1-Locus (stärkste RA-Assoziation: DRB1*04:01) kodiert und bildet die Form seiner Bindungstasche für die Präsentation antigener Peptide an den T-Zell-Rezeptor (TCR) auf der Oberfläche antigenpräsentierender Zellen (APC). In den Studien zur Stimulation der Hybridomzellen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die T-Zellstimulation und die daraus resultierende Zytokinausschüttung (IL-2 und IL-10) kontextabhängig ist. Je nach Stimulationsart, ob festphasengebunden- oder löslich, erfolgt die Stimulusperzeption über differente TCR-Anordnungen in Mikrodomänen der Zelloberfläche und resultiert in entsprechend modulierten Signalstärken. So führt die Zellaktivierung über die festphasengebundene Stimulation mittels MHC-II/Peptidkomplexen zur Ausbildung einer hohen TCR-Dichte, die über hohe Signalstärken zu einer spezifischen IL-2 Sekretion als Antwort führen. Die Stimulation mit monomeren DR4/CII-Peptidkomplexen in gelöster Form adressiert dagegen die auf der gesamten Zelloberfläche verteilten T-Zell-Rezeptoren, was in einer geringeren Aktivierungsdichte und einer attenuierten Gesamtsignalstärke sowie der Sekretion des immunsupressiv wirkenden IL-10 resultiert. Für den angestrebten pharmakologischen Einsatz der DR4/CII-Peptidkomplexe ist bedeutsam, dass die aktivierende TCR-Bindung der gelösten monomeren Komplexe nur partiell agonistisch wirkt und die Induktion immunregulatorischer IL-10 Zytokinantworten begünstigt. Neben der direkten T-Zellinteraktion konnte auch die Möglichkeit einer indirekten Aktivierung unter Vermittlung von APCs nach Endozytose der DR4/CII-Peptidkomplexe, ihrer lysosomalen Prozessierung und Präsentation auf endogenen neusynthetisierten DR4/Molekülen experimentell u.a. unter Verwendung der HLA-DR4- exprimierenden murinen Makrophagenlinie BL25 als APC-Modell belegt werden. Im Hinblick auf die intendierte Weiterentwicklung zu therapeutischen Anwendungen der MHC-II/CII-Peptidkomplexe unter Gesichtspunkten der Arzneimittelsicherheit ist wichtig, dass der aufgezeigte indirekte Weg der T-Zellaktivierung nach vorausgehender Prozessierung durch APCs ineffizient ist. Dieser Weg erfordert nämlich sehr hohe Konzentrationen an MHC-II/Peptidkomplexen, welche weit oberhalb der in tierexperimentellen Studien unter therapeutisch wirksamen Dosierungen erreichten Gewebespiegel liegen.
Darüber hinaus ist es uns gelungen, methodisch den Nachweis CII-spezifischer T-Zellen, die im Gesamtrepertoire der CD4+ T-Zellen im peripheren Blut von RA-Patienten (HLA-DRB1*04:01) nur in sehr niedriger Frequenz vorkommen, mittels T-Zellaktivierung und spezifischer Tetramerbindung als phänotypischen Marker zu verbessern. Für die Tetramerbindung wurden Monomere mit dem galaktosylierten CII-Peptid (CIIgal259-273) beladenen DR4/Moleküle über einen aminoterminal konjugierten Biotinrest mittels eines Fluorochromgekoppelten Streptavidins tetramerisiert. Unter Einsatz dieser Methoden ist es gelungen, aus den durchflusszytometrisch sortierten CII-spezifischen Zellen, mittels Nukleotidsequenzierung, ihr TCR-Repertoire zu analysieren und hinsichtlich präferentieller V-Genverwendung zu charakterisieren. Für zwei humane DR4-restringiert gal264CII-spezifische T-Zell-Rezeptoren aus RA-Patienten konnte die Funktionalität und Epitopspezifität durch rekombinante Expression demonstriert werden. Auf Basis der gemeinsamen Vorarbeiten mit Prof. Rikard Holmdahl im murinen CIA-Modell und den bekannten Daten zur Induktion regulatorischer T-Zellen (Tr1-Zellen) durch MHC-II/CII-Peptidkomplexe, wurden in vitro Differenzierungsexperimente an humanen PBMCs DR4-positiver RA-Patienten unter dem Einfluss von DR4/gal264CII-Peptidkomplexen durchgeführt. Die Studien belegen, dass die Komplexe mit den antigenspezifischen T-Zellen interagieren und zur Induktion von Markern eines Tr1-Phänotyps, darunter PD-1 und IL-10 führen. Zukünftige Kristallstrukturanalysen eines TCR/DR4/gal264CII-Komplexes sollen dem verbesserten molekularen Verständnis der TCR-Erkennung von CII als Autoantigen insbesondere bzgl. des flexibleren Galaktoserestes für Arthritogenität und Tolerogenität dienen. Fernziel ist die Entwicklung einer wirksamen und sicheren immunmodulatorischen Therapie der RA durch Induktion regulatorischer T-Zellen.