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This paper employs stochastic simulations of the New Area-Wide Model—a microfounded open-economy model developed at the ECB—to investigate the consequences of the zero lower bound on nominal interest rates for the evolution of risks to price stability in the euro area during the recent financial crisis. Using a formal measure of the balance of risks, which is derived from policy-makers’ preferences about inflation outcomes, we first show that downside risks to price stability were considerably greater than upside risks during the first half of 2009, followed by a gradual rebalancing of these risks until mid-2011 and a renewed deterioration thereafter. We find that the lower bound has induced a noticeable downward bias in the risk balance throughout our evaluation period because of the implied amplification of deflation risks. We then illustrate that, with nominal interest rates close to zero, forward guidance in the form of a time-based conditional commitment to keep interest rates low for longer can be successful in mitigating downside risks to price stability. However, we find that the provision of time-based forward guidance may give rise to upside risks over the medium term if extended too far into the future. By contrast, time-based forward guidance complemented with a threshold condition concerning tolerable future inflation can provide insurance against the materialisation of such upside risks.
Background: A number of scientific papers on yellow fever have been published but no broad scientometric analysis on the published research of yellow fever has been reported. The aim of the article based study was to provide an in-depth evaluation of the yellow fever field using large-scale data analysis and employment of bibliometric indicators of production and quantity.
Methods: Data were retrieved from the Web of Science database (WoS) and analyzed as part of the NewQis platform. Then data were extracted from each file, transferred to databases and visualized as diagrams. Partially by means of density-equalizing mapping makes the findings clear and emphasizes the output of the analysis.
Results: In the study period from 1900 to 2012 a total of 5,053 yellow fever-associated items were published by 79 countries. The United States (USA) having the highest publication rate at 42% (n = 751) followed by far from Brazil (n = 203), France (n = 149) and the United Kingdom (n = 113). The most productive journals are the "Public Health Reports", the "American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene" and the "Journal of Virology". The gender analysis showed an overall steady increase of female authorship from 1950 to 2011. Brazil is the only country of the five most productive countries with a higher proportion of female scientists.
Conclusions: The present data shows an increase in research productivity over the entire study period, in particular an increase of female scientists. Brazil shows a majority of female authors, a fact that is confirmed by other studies.
Background: Tobacco is a leading environmental factor in the initiation of respiratory diseases and causes chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Suppressor of cytokine signaling (SOCS) family members are involved in the pathogenesis of many inflammatory diseases and SOCS-3 has been shown to play an important role in the regulation, onset and maintenance of airway allergic inflammation indicating that SOCS-3 displays a potential therapeutic target for anti-inflammatory respiratory drugs development. Since chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is also characterized by inflammatory changes and airflow limitation, the present study assessed the transcriptional expression of SOCS-3 in COPD.
Methods: Real-time PCR was performed to assess quantitative changes in bronchial biopsies of COPD patients in comparison to unaffected controls.
Results: SOCS-3 was significantly down-regulated in COPD at the transcriptional level while SOCS-4 and SOCS-5 displayed no change.
Conclusions: It can be concluded that the presently observed inhibition of SOCS-3 mRNA expression may be related to the dysbalance of cytokine signaling observed in COPD.
Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) is a putative neurotransmitter of the inhibitory non-adrenergic non-cholinergic nervous system and influences the mammalian airway function in various ways. Hence known for bronchodilatory, immunomodulatory and mucus secretion modulating effects by interacting with the VIP receptors VPAC1 and VPAC2, it is discussed to be a promising target for pharmaceutical intervention in common diseases such as COPD and bronchial asthma. Here we examined the expression and transcriptional regulation of VPAC1 in the lungs of allergic mice using an ovalbumin (OVA) -induced model of allergic asthma. Mice were sensitized to OVA and challenged with an OVA aerosol. In parallel a control group was sham sensitized with saline. VPAC1 expression was examined using RT-PCR and real time-PCR studies were performed to quantify gene transcription. VPAC1 mRNA expression was detected in all samples of OVA-sensitized and challenged animals and control tissues. Further realtime analysis did not show significant differences at the transcriptional level.
Although the present studies did not indicate a major transcriptional regulation of VPAC1 in states of allergic airway inflammation, immunomodulatory effects of VPAC1 might still be present due to regulations at the translational level.
We show that market discipline, defined as the extent to which firm specific risk characteristics are reflected in market prices, eroded during the recent financial crisis in 2008. We design a novel test of changes in market discipline based on the relation between firm specific risk characteristics and debt-to-equity hedge ratios. We find that market discipline already weakened after the rescue of Bear Stearns before disappearing almost entirely after the failure of Lehman Brothers. The effect is stronger for investment banks and large financial institutions, while there is no comparable effect for non-financial firms.
Long-distance seed dispersal is a crucial process allowing the dispersal of fleshy-fruited tree species among forest fragments. In particular, large frugivorous bird species have a high potential to provide inter-patch and long-distance seed transport, both important for maintaining fundamental genetic and demographic processes of plant populations in isolated forest fragments. In the face of increasing worldwide forest fragmentation, the investigation of long-distance seed dispersal and the factors influencing seed dispersal processes has recently become a central issue in ecology. In my thesis, I studied the movement behaviour and the seed dispersal patterns of the trumpeter hornbill (Bycanistes bucinator), a large obligate frugivorous bird, in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. I investigated (i) the potential of trumpeter hornbills to provide long-distance seed dispersal within different landscape structures, (ii) seasonal variations in ranging behaviour of this species, and (iii) the potential of this species to enhance the functional connectivity of a fragmented landscape. I used highresolution GPS-data loggers to record temporally and spatially fine-scaled movement data of trumpeter hornbills within both continuous forests and fragmented agricultural landscapes during the breeding- and the non-breeding season. First, combining these data with data on seed-retention times, I calculated seed dispersal kernels, able to distinguish between seed dispersal kernels from the continuous forests and those from the fragmented agricultural landscapes. The seed dispersal distributions showed a generally high ability of trumpeter hornbills to generate seed transport over a distance of more than 100 m and for potential dispersal distances of up to 14.5 km. Seed dispersal distributions were considerably different between the two landscape types, with a bimodal distribution showing larger dispersal distances for fragmented agricultural landscapes and a unimodal one for continuous forests. My results showed that the landscape structure strongly influenced the movement behaviour of trumpeter hornbills, and this variation in behaviour is likely reflected in the shape of the seed dispersal distributions. Second, for each individual bird I calculated daily ranges and investigated differences in daily ranging behaviour and in the process of range expansion comparatively between the breeding- and the non-breeding season. I considered differences in habitat use and possible consequences resulting for seed dispersal function during different seasons. I found that within the breeding season multi-day ranges were built from strongly overlapping and nearly stationary daily ranges which were almost completely restricted to continuous forest. In the non-breeding season, however, birds assembled multi-day ranges by shifting their range site to a generally different area, frequently utilizing the fragmented agricultural landscape. Thereby, several small daily ranges and few large daily ranges composed larger multi-day ranges within the non-breeding season. Seasonal differences in ranging behaviour and range assembly processes resulted in important consequences for seed dispersal function, with short distances and less spatial variation during the breeding season and more inter-patch dispersal across the fragmented landscape during the non-breeding season. Last, I used a projection of simulated seed dispersal events on a high-resolution habitat map to assess the extent to which trumpeter hornbills potentially facilitate functional connectivity between plant populations of isolated forest fragments. About 7% of dispersal events resulted in potential between-patch dispersal and trumpeter hornbills connected a network of about 100 forest patches with an overall extent of about 50 km. Trumpeter hornbills increased the potential of functional connectivity of the landscape more than twofold and seed dispersal pathways revealed certain forest patches as important stepping-stones for seed dispersal among forest fragments. Overall, my study highlights the overriding role that large frugivorous bird species, like trumpeter hornbills, play in seed dispersal in fragmented landscapes. In addition, it shows the importance of fine-scaled movement data combined with high-resolution habitat data and consideration of different landscape structures and seasonality for a comprehensive understanding of seed dispersal function.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden mikroskopische Studien zur Äquilibrierung von partonischer und hadronischer Materie im Rahmen einer Nichtgleichgewichts-Transporttheorie durchgeführt, die sowohl hadronische als partonische Freiheitsgrade enthält und den Übergang zwischen beiden Phasen dynamisch beschreibt. Des Weiteren wurden die thermischen Eigenschaften des Gleichgewichtszustandes der stark wechselwirkenden Materie untersucht, insbesondere Fluktuationen in der Teilchenzahl wie auch höhere Momente von Observablen und deren Verhältnisse. Besonderes Interesse galt dabei den Transportkoeffizienten wie Scher- und Volumenviskosität sowie der elektrischen Leitfähigkeit.
Die Methode der Nichtgleichgewichts-Green'schen Funktionen - initiiert von Schwinger sowie Kadanoff und Baym - wurde vorgestellt um hochenergetische Kern-Kern Kollisionen zu beschreiben. Weiterhin wurde der Schwinger-Keldysh Formalismus benutzt um im Sinne einer Zweiteilchen-irrediziblen Näherung (2PI) die Dynamik von 'resummierten' Propagatoren und Kopplungen in konsistenter Weise zu beschreiben. Des Weiterhin wurden generalisierte Transportgleichungen auf der Basis der Kadanoff-Baym Gleichungen (in Phasenraumdarstellung) abgeleitet und ein Testteilchenverfahren zur Lösung dieser Gleichungen vorgestellt. Damit wurde der formale Rahmen der Parton-Hadron-String Dynamik (PHSD) abgesteckt.
Das PHSD Transportmodell wurde sodann für die Lösung der expliziten Fragestellungen in dieser Arbeit verwendet. Die 'Eingangsgrößen' des Modells wurden in Kapitel 3 aufgeführt. Weiterhin wurde aufgezeigt, dass das Transportmodell alle Phasen einer relativistischen Schwerionenkollision konsistent beschreibt, d.h. angefangen von den primären harten Stoßprozessen und der Bildung von 'Strings' zur Formierung einer partonischen Phase, den Wechselwirkungen in dieser Phase sowie die
dynamische Beschreibung der Hadronisierung. Weiterhin enthält das Modell zudem die hadronischen Endzustandswechselwirkungen bis zum Ausfrieren der hadronischen Freiheitsgrade bei geringer Dichte. ...
ß1-integrins are essential for angiogenesis but the mechanisms regulating integrin function in endothelial cells (EC) and their contribution to angiogenesis remain elusive. BRAG2 is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the small Arf-GTPases Arf5 and Arf6. The role of BRAG2 in EC and angiogenesis and the underlying molecular mechanisms remains unclear. siRNA-mediated BRAG2-silencing reduced EC angiogenic sprouting and migration. BRAG2-siRNA-transfection differentially affected a5ß1- and aVß3-integrin function: specifically, BRAG2-silencing increased focal/fibrillar adhesions and EC adhesion on ß1-integrin-ligands (fibronectin and collagen), while reducing the adhesion on the aVß3-integrin-ligand, vitronectin. Consistent with these results, BRAG2-silencing enhanced surface expression of a5ß1-integrin, while reducing surface expression of aVß3-integrin. Mechanistically, BRAG2 mediated recycling of aVß3-integrins and endocytosis of ß1-integrins and specifically of the active/matrix bound a5ß1-integrin present in fibrillar/focal adhesions (FA), suggesting that BRAG2 contributes to the disassembly of FA via ß1-integrin-endocytosis. Arf5 and Arf6 are promoting downstream of BRAG2 angiogenic sprouting, ß1-integrin-endocytosis and the regulation of FA. In vivo silencing of the BRAG2-orthologues in zebrafish embryos using morpholinos perturbed vascular development. Furthermore, in vivo intravitral injection of plasmids containing BRAG2-shRNA reduced pathological ischemia-induced retinal and choroidal neovascularization. These data reveals that BRAG2 is essential for developmental and pathological angiogenesis by promoting EC sprouting through regulation of adhesion by mediating ß1-integrin internalization and associates for the first time the process of ß1-integrin endocytosis with angiogenesis.
The biogenesis and function of photosynthetically active chloroplasts relies on the import of thousands of nuclear encoded proteins via the coordinated actions of two multiprotein translocon machineries in the outer and inner envelope membrane. Trafficking of preproteins across the soluble compartment of InterMembrane Space (IMS) is currently envisioned to be facilitated by an IMS complex composed of outer envelope proteins Toc64 and Toc12, a soluble IMS component, Tic22 and an IMS-localized Hsp70. Among them, currently Tic22 is the only component that stands undisputed in terms of its existence. Having two closely related homologs in A. thaliana, their biochemical and functional characterization was still lacking. A critical analysis of Tic22 knockout mutants displayed growth phenotype reminiscent of ppi1, the mutant of Toc33. However, both the genes have similar expression patterns with no clear preference for photosynthetic or nonphotosynthetic tissues, which explained the absence of a detectable phenotype in single mutants. In addition, transgenic complementation study with either of the homolog affirmed the identical localization of both proteins in the IMS which characterizes the two homologs as functionally redundant. Based on the pale-yellow phenotype exhibited by the double mutant plants, an attempt to analyze the import capacity of a stromal substrate in the double mutant revealed threefold reduction when compared to wild-type acknowledging the essential role of Tic22 in the import mechanism. Initially, Tic22 was identified together with another protein, Tic20, which has been heavily discussed as a protein conducting channel in the inner membrane. Despite being characterized, in A. thaliana, two out of four homologs of Tic20 are differentially localized with one being additionally localized in mitochondria and the other, exclusively residing in the thylakoids.
According to in silico analysis, for all the Tic20 proteins, a four-helix transmembrane topology was predicted. Accordingly, its topology was mapped by employing the recently established selfassembling GFP-based in vivo experiments. Astonishingly, the expression of one of the inner envelope localized Tic20 homolog enforces inner membrane proliferation affecting the shape and organization of the membrane. Therefore this study focuses on analyzing the effects of high envelope protein concentrations on membrane structures, which together with the existing results, an imbalance in the lipid to protein ratio and a possible role of signaling pathway regulating membrane biogenesis is discussed.
Retroviral vectors are powerful tools in clinical gene therapy as they integrate permanently into the target cell genome and thus guarantee long-term expression of transgenes. Therefore, they belong to the most frequently used application platforms in clinical gene therapy involving a broad range of different target cells and tissues. However, stable genomic integration of retroviral vectors can be oncogenic, as reported in several animal models and in clinical trials. In particular, γ-retroviral vectors, which derive from naturally mutagenic γ-retroviruses, integrate semirandomly into the host genome with regard to the target sequence, but have a preference for regions of active transcription and regulatory elements of transcriptionally active genes. The integration can result in overexpression of adjacent genes or disruption of ‘target’ gene expression. Moreover, γ-retroviral integration can cause modified transcripts and proteins through alternative or aberrant splicing or through premature termination of transcription.
Initially, the event of insertional mutagenesis and subsequent induction of leukemia by the genotoxicity of a γ-retroviral vector was described in a mouse model after genetic modification of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Vector-related activation and overexpression of the oncogene ecotropic viral integration site-1 (Evi1) fostered clonal outgrowth and leukemogenesis. Additional genotoxic events of γ-retroviral vectors were observed in clinical HSC gene therapy trials for X-linked severe combined immune deficiency (SCID-X1), chronic granulomatous disease (X-CGD), and Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (WAS). But, genotoxicity induced by γ-retroviral vectors has never been described in clinical gene therapy trials involving adoptive transfer of genetically modified mature T lymphocytes. This fact is surprising, since T cells are long-lived and have a high capacity of self-renewal.
In a previous study, the susceptibility towards oncogenic transformation of mature T cells and HSCs after genetic modification was compared. It could be demonstrated that T-cell receptor (TCR)-polyclonal mature T cells are far less prone to transformation after γ-retroviral transfer of (proto-)oncogenes in vivo than HSCs. Additional experiments revealed that TCR-oligoclonal (OT-I and P14) mature T cells are transformable in the same setting and give rise to mature T-cell lymphomas (MTCLs).
In the present thesis, the susceptibility of mature T cells towards insertional mutagenesis was investigated. Within the first part of the thesis, retroviral integration sites (RISs) from 33 murine MTCLs were retrieved and subsequently analyzed in terms of integration pattern, detection of common integration sites (CIS) and gene ontology (GO). As these bioinformatic results demonstrated that insertional mutagenesis most likely contributed to mature T-cell lymphomagenesis, the susceptibility of mature T cells was directly assessed in a mouse model. Therefore, murine TCR-oligoclonal OT-I T cells were transduced with an enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) encoding γ-retroviral vector and gene-modified T cells were transplanted into RAG1-/- mice. After 16 months, including one round of serial transplantation, a case of MTCL emerged. Tumor cells were characterized by CD3, CD8, TCR and ICOS expression. Integration site analysis via ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction (LM-PCR) revealed a proviral insertion in the Janus kinase 1 (Jak1) gene. Subsequent overexpression of Jak1 could be demonstrated on transcriptional and protein level. Furthermore, T-cell lymphoma cells were characterized by an activated Jak/STAT-pathway as signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) was highly phosphorylated. The overexpression of Jak1 was causally implicated in tumor growth promotion as specific pharmacological inhibition of Jak1 using Ruxolitinib significantly prolonged survival of mice transplanted with these Jak1-activated tumor cells. A concluding systematic metaanalysis of available gene expression data on human mature T-cell lymphomas/leukemias confirmed the relevance of Jak/STAT overexpression in sporadic human T-cell tumorigenesis.
This was the first reported case of an insertional mutagenesis event in mature T cells in vivo. Thus, the results obtained in this thesis underline the importance of long-term monitoring of genetically modified T cells in vivo and the evaluation of vector toxicology and safety in T-cell based gene therapies. In particular, the transduction of T cells with a recombinant TCR or CAR (chimeric antigen receptor) bears a risk enhancement, as normal T-cell homeostasis is perturbed besides the general risk of insertional mutagenesis.