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Brain development is a complex and highly organized process that relies on the coordinated interaction between neurons and vessels. These cell systems form a neurovascular link that involves the exchange of oxygen, ions, and other physiological components necessary for proper neuronal and vascular function. This physiologically coupled process is executed through analogous structural and molecular signaling mechanisms shared by both cell types. At the neurovascular interface, the cellular crosstalk via these shared signaling mechanisms allows for the synchronized expansion and integration of neurons and vessels into complex cellular networks. This study investigated the role of VEGFR2, a receptor for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), during postnatal neuronal development in the mouse hippocampus. Prior studies have revealed physiological roles of VEGF, a pro-angiogenic morphogen, in nervous system development. However, it was unclear if VEGF signaling had a direct effect on neuronal physiology and function through neuronal-expressing receptors. In this investigative work, we identified a previously unknown function of VEGFR2, whereby VEGF-induced signaling coordinates the development and circuitry integration of CA3 pyramidal neurons in the early postnatal mouse hippocampus. Mechanistically, we found that VEGFR2 signaling requires receptor endocytosis, a process mediated by ephrinB2. We also found that VEGF-induced cooperative signaling between VEGFR2 and ephrinB2 is functionally required for the dendritic arborization and spine maturation of developing CA3 neurons during the first few postnatal weeks. Moreover, in a collaborative effort with the research group of Carmen Ruiz de Almodovar, formerly at the University of Heidelberg, we simultaneously studied VEGF-induced VEGFR2 signaling in CA3 axonal development. Together, we aimed to gain a comprehensive understanding of the complex interplay between VEGF and VEGFR2 signaling during the early postnatal development of CA3 neurons. Ruiz de Almodovar’s research group found that, unlike the branch and spine development of CA3 dendrites, VEGF-VEGFR2 signaling promotes axonal development through mechanisms that are independent of ephrinB2 function. Our findings on CA3 dendritic development are reported in the published manuscript, Harde et al. (2019), and the complementary work on CA3 axonal development from Ruiz de Almodovar's group is presented in the co-published manuscript, Luck et al. (2019). Although the totality of Ruiz de Almodovar's group's work on CA3 axons is not fully discussed here, it is referenced where noted to provide biological context for our findings on CA3 dendritic development.
VEGFR2 signaling within neurovascular niches is known to play a role in the neurogenesis of neural progenitor cells during embryonic development and within the adult brain. However, the precise localization of neuronal VEGFR2 expression and functional role within the nervous system during postnatal brain development was unknown. To investigate this, we used immunohistochemistry to identify the spatial expression of VEGFR2 within the mouse hippocampus during the first few weeks after birth. Our results showed that VEGFR2 was predominantly expressed within the hippocampal vasculature, consistent with prior studies. However, we also observed localized VEGFR2 expression in pyramidal cell neurons of the hippocampal CA3 region by postnatal day 10 (P10). This spatially restricted postnatal expression of VEGFR2 in CA3 neurons suggested a potential role in the development of these neurons during this developmental stage.
The first two weeks after birth in the mouse hippocampus is a critical period for the development of neuronal circuits, as neurons undergo extensive dendritic arborization and spine formation. To explore the role of VEGFR2 in the postnatal nervous system, we used a Nes-cre VEGFR2lox/- mouse line to target the deletion of VEGFR2 expression within the nervous system while preserving normal receptor expression in all other cell types. We also generated corresponding control mice that were negative for Nes-cre. By breeding these mice with Thy1-GFP reporter mice, we could analyze the functional consequences of VEGFR2 by assessing the morphologies of CA3 dendritic trees and spine density and maturation at P10 and P15, respectively. Our analysis showed that CA3 neurons in Nes-cre VEGFR2lox/- mice had less complex dendritic arbors compared to control mice. There were significant reductions in total length and branch points, particularly in areas located 100-250 μm from the cell soma within the stratum radiatum layer. Additionally, Nes-cre VEGFR2lox/- mice exhibited a significant decrease in spine density accompanied by an increased proportion of immature spines. These findings suggest that VEGFR2 plays a crucial role in the proper development of CA3 dendrites and spines during the early postnatal weeks.
In view of a growing world population and the finite nature of fossil resources, the development of eco-friendly production processes is essential for the transition towards a sustainable industry. Methanol, which can be produced both petrochemically and from renewable resources, offers itself as bridging technology and attractive alternative raw material for biotechnological processes. This work describes developments for the progress of the well-studied methylotrophic α proteobacterium Methylorubrum extorquens AM1 towards an efficient methylotrophic cell factory. Although many homologous and heterologous production routes have already been described and realized for M. extorquens in a laboratory scale, no industrial process has yet been realized. Three major reasons can be identified for this: (1) A limited choice of tools for genetic modifications, (2) a lack of understanding of carbon fluxes and side reactions occurring in modified strains, such as product reimports, and (3) the lack of tailored production strains for profitable target products and optimized bioprocessing protocols. The aim of the present work was to achieve developments for the mentioned areas. As a model application, the high-level production of chiral dicarboxylic acids from the substrate methanol was chosen. Enantiomerically pure chiral compounds are of great interest, e.g., as building blocks for chiral drugs. The ethylmalonyl CoA metabolic pathway (EMCP) which is part of the primary metabolism of M. extorquens, harbors unique chiral CoA-ester intermediates. Their acid derivatives can be released by cleavage of the CoA-moiety using heterologous enzymes. The dicarboxylic acids 2 methylsuccinic acid and mesaconic acid were produced in a previous study by introducing the heterologous thioesterase YciA into M. extorquens. In the said study, a combined product titer of 0.65 g/L was obtained in shake flask experiments. These results serve as the basis for the developments in the present work.
First, the previously described reuptake of products was thoroughly investigated and dctA2, a gene encoding for an acid transporter, was identified as target for reducing the product reuptake. In addition, reuptake of mesaconic acid was prevented by converting it to (S)-citramalic acid, a product not metabolizable by M. extorquens, by the introduction of a heterologous mesaconase. Together with 2-methylsuccinic acid, for which a high enantiomeric excess of (S)-2-methylsuccinic acid was determined, a second chiral molecule was thus added to the product spectrum. For the release of dicarboxylic acid products, YciA, a broad-range thioesterase that accepts a variety of CoA-esters with different chain lengths as substrates, was chosen. The enzyme should theoretically be able to hydrolyze all CoA-esters of interest present in the EMCP. However, in culture supernatants of M. extorquens strains that were overexpressing the corresponding yciA gene, only mesaconic acid and 2 methylsuccinic acid could be detected. To expand the substrate spectrum of YciA thioesterase with respect to other EMCP intermediates, semi-rational enzyme engineering was attempted. Screening of the corresponding strains carrying the respective YciA variants did not result in strains capable of producing new dicarboxylic acid products. However, the experiments revealed an amino acid position that strongly affected the production of mesaconic acid and 2-methylsuccinic acid in vivo. By substituting the according amino acid in YciA, the maximum titers of mesaconic acid and 2-methylsuccinic acid could be increased substantially. Application of an improved thioesterase variant in a second E. coli-based process confirmed the enhanced activity of the enzyme. The desired extension of the product spectrum by another chiral molecule (2-hydroxy-3-methylsuccinic acid, presumably the (2S,3R)-form) was finally achieved by using an alternative thioesterase. Tailored fermentation strategies were developed for the high-level production of the above-mentioned products.
As second part of the work, two novel genetic tools for M. extorquens were developed and characterized. The pBBR1-derived plasmid pMis1_1B was shown to be stably maintained in M. extorquens cells. In addition, its suitability for co-transformations with other plasmids was demonstrated. The second tool, the cumate-inducible promoter Ps6, is tailored for expression of pathways with toxic products, as the transcription of genes controlled by Ps6 is strongly repressed in the absence of an inducer.
Overall, the present work demonstrates the enormous potential of using M. extorquens as a methylotrophic cell factory. In the applications shown, the biotechnological production of high-priced chiral molecules is combined with the use of an attractive alternative substrate. In addition, new achievements and approaches are presented to facilitate the development of future M. extorquens production strains.
Mechanistic characterization of photoisomerization reactions in organic molecules and photoreceptors
(2023)
In dieser Arbeit wurden verschiedene Einflüsse auf die Dynamik von Photoisomerisierungen in Phytochromen und indigoiden Photoschaltern untersucht. Beide Forschungsgebiete teilen wesentliche Aspekte wie die Kontrolle durch sterische Wechselwirkungen und den starken Einfluss der Polarität oder der ionischen Umgebung.
Auf dem Gebiet der Phytochrome wurde die relative Positionierung der knotenlosen Phytochrome innerhalb der Superfamilie der Phytochrome in Bezug auf ihre Photodynamik und den Effekt von Grundzustandsheterogenität herausgearbeitet. Es wurde anhand von ultraschnellen, zeitaufgelösten Anrege-Abtast-Experimenten der einzelnen GAF-Domäne All2699g1 im Vergleich mit dem vollständigen knotenlosen Phytochrom All2699g1g2 und dem strukturell ähnlichen knotenlosen Phytochrom SynCph2 gezeigt, dass knotenlose Phytochrome in ihrer Vorwärtsdynamik eine komplexe mehrphasige Kinetik mit einem langlebigen angeregten Zustand (~100 ps) aufweisen. Die beobachtete mehrphasige Kinetik konnte einer initialen Chromophordynamik sowie einer nicht exponentiellen Reorganisation der chromophor-umgebenden Proteinmatrix zugeordnet werden. Dies steht im starken Kontrast zur im Gebiet der Phytochrome etablierten Beschreibung derartiger mehrphasiger Kinetiken mittels heterogener Grundzustände. Stattdessen wurde ein konserviertes kinetisches Muster identifiziert, welches die mehrphasige Dynamik beschreibt und in allen in dieser Arbeit untersuchten Phytochrome beobachtet wurde. Zudem konnte dieses Muster in einem Phytochrom der Gruppe I und einem Phytochrom der Gruppe III, die einen ähnlichen Pr Dunkelzustand aufweisen, gezeigt werden, was eine breite Anwendbarkeit des damit verbundenen Mechanismus vermuten lässt. Weiterhin konnte die zentrale Rolle eines konservierten Tyrosins in der Photoisomerisierung anhand von Mutationsstudien in All2699g1 herausgearbeitet werden. Diese konservierte Aminosäure muss im Rahmen der Reorganisation der Proteinmatrix vom Chromophor weggezogen werden, damit die sterische Blockade abgebaut werden kann, die die Isomerisierung des Chromophors zunächst verhindert. Da diese Bewegung von diversen Faktoren in der den Chromophor umgebenden Proteinmatrix abhängt, weist sie eine nicht exponentielle Kinetik auf, die je nach Phytochrom, der spezifischen Flexibilität und dem vorhandenen Raum in der Bindetasche unterschiedliche Lebenszeiten aufweist.
Die Rückreaktion knotenloser Phytochrome konnte ebenfalls im Rahmen dieser Arbeit charakterisiert werden, welche im Pikosekundenbereich abläuft, und damit signifikant schneller ist als die Vorwärtsreaktion. Im Gegensatz zur Vorwärtsreaktion nimmt Grundzustandsheterogenität in der Rückreaktion eine weitaus bedeutendere Rolle ein. Hier weisen die in All2699g1 vorhandenen heterogenen Grundzustandspopulationen jeweils eine eigene Kinetik ihres angeregten Zustands auf, während die homogenen Grundzustände von All2699g1g2 und SynCph2 jeweils nur einen Zerfall des angeregten Zustands zeigen. Der Ursprung dieser Heterogenität konnte im Wasserstoffbrückennetzwerk des Chromophors lokalisiert und mit dem konservierten Tyrosin und einem konservierten Serin in der PHY-Domäne verknüpft werden. Die Anwesenheit der PHY-Domäne sorgt demnach für eine Verringerung der Grundzustandsheterogenität und des vorhandenen Raums in der Bindetasche, wodurch die Effizienz der Photoreaktion optimiert wird.
Zuletzt konnte die Millisekundendynamik knotenloser Phytochrome und der Einfluss der PHY-Domäne auf diese aufgeklärt werden. Die PHY-Domäne sorgt hierbei durch den verringerten Raum in der Bindetasche dafür, dass die zunächst stattfindende thermische Relaxation des Chromophors signifikant verlangsamt wird, während spätere Änderungen im Photozyklus nur wenig beeinflusst werden.
Auf dem Gebiet der indigoiden Photoschalter konnte, anhand eines sterisch überladenen Hemithioindigo Photoschalters, der Photoisomerisierungsmechanismus des Hula-Twists beobachtet und eine starke Lösungsmittelabhängigkeit der entsprechenden Kinetik aufgezeigt werden. Aus den durchgeführten zeitaufgelösten Anrege-Abtast-Experimenten in verschiedenen Lösungsmitteln konnte ein Modell für die Photodynamik des verwendeten Hemithioindigo Photoschalters entwickelt werden. In unpolaren Lösungsmitteln muss eine hohe Barriere zur produktiven konischen Durchschneidung überwunden werden, was zu Lebenszeiten des angeregten Zustands im Nanosekundenbereich führt. Der Weg zur produktiven konischen Durchschneidung folgt dabei dem Hula-Twist Mechanismus. Dieser Pfad ist in polaren Lösungsmitteln unerreichbar, weshalb eine schnelle Relaxation über eine unproduktive konische Durchschneidung stattfindet.
Im zweiten Projekt auf dem Gebiet der indigoiden Photoschalter wurde anhand der neuartigen Klasse der Iminothioindoxyl Photoschalter ein Schwingungsenergiedonor für Schwingungsenergietransferstudien entwickelt. Das daraus entwickelte Modellsystem, bestehend aus einer künstlichen Aminosäure auf Basis des Iminothioindoxyl Photoschalters und einem daran gekoppelten Schwingungsenergiesensor, wurde charakterisiert und die primäre Photoreaktion untersucht. Es konnte gezeigt werden, dass der angeregte Zustand des Modellsystems kurzlebig ist und unter Abgabe von großen Mengen an Schwingungsenergie zerfällt, unabhängig von der Anregungswellenlänge und dem verwendeten Lösungsmittel. Somit zeigt das entwickelte System vorteilhafte Eigenschaften für Schwingungsenergietransferstudien.
Insgesamt konnten somit die Mechanismen der Photoisomerisierungsreaktionen in knotenlosen Phytochromen und indigoiden Photoschaltern aufgeklärt und daraus die Relevanz der Umgebung für derartige Reaktionen herausgearbeitet werden.
Seed dispersal is a key ecosystem function for plant regeneration, as it involves the movement of seeds away from the parental plants to particular habitats where they can germinate and transition to seedlings and ultimately adult plants. Seed dispersal is shaped by a diversity of abiotic and biotic factors, particularly by associations between plants and climate and between plants and other species. Due to the ongoing loss of biodiversity and changing global conditions, such interactions are prone to change and pose a severe threat to plant regeneration. One way to address this challenge is to study associations between plant traits and abiotic and biotic factors to understand the potential impacts of global change on plant regeneration. Plant communities have long been analyzed through the lens of vegetative traits, mainly ignoring how other traits interact and respond to the environment. For instance, while associations between vegetative traits (e.g., specific leaf area, leaf nitrogen content) and climate are well studied, there are few case studies of reproductive traits in relation to trait-environment associations in the context of global change.
Thus, the overarching aim of this dissertation is to explore how trait-environment associations, with a special focus on reproductive traits, can improve our understanding of the effect that global change may have on seed dispersal, and ultimately on plant regeneration. To this end, my research focuses on studying associations between plant traits and abiotic and biotic factors along an elevational gradient in both forests and deforested areas of tropical mountains. This dissertation addresses three principal research objectives.
First, I investigate the extent to which reproductive (seed and fruit traits) and vegetative traits (leaf traits) are related to abiotic and biotic factors for communities of fleshy-fruited plants in the Ecuadorian Andes. I used multivariate analyses to test associations between four (a)biotic factors and seven reproductive traits and five vegetative traits measured on 18 and 33 fleshy fruited plant species respectively. My analyses demonstrate that climate and soil conditions are strongly associated with the distribution of both reproductive and vegetative traits in tropical tree communities. The production of “costly” vs. “cheap” seeds, fruits and leaves, i.e., the production of few rewarding fruits and acquisitive leaves versus the production of many less-rewarding fruits and conservative leaves, is primarily limited by temperature, whereas the size of plant organs is more related to variation in precipitation and soil conditions. My findings suggest that associations between reproductive and vegetative traits and the abiotic environment follow similar principles in tropical tree communities.
Second, I assess how climate and microhabitat conditions affect the prevalence of endozoochorous plant species in the seed rain of tropical montane forests in southern Ecuador. I analyzed seed rain data for an entire year from 162 traps located across an elevational gradient spanning of 2000 m. I documented the microhabitat conditions (leaf area index and soil moisture next to each seed trap) at small spatial scale as well as the climatic conditions (mean annual temperature and rainfall in each plot) at large spatial scale. After a one-year of sampling, I counted 331,838 seeds of 323 species/morphospecies. My analyses demonstrate that the prevalence of endozoochorous plant species in the seed rain increases with temperature across elevations and with leaf area index within elevations. These results show that the prevalence of endozoochory is shaped by the interplay of both abiotic and biotic factors at large and small spatial scales.
Third, I examine the potential of seed rain to restore deforested tropical areas along an elevational gradient in southern Ecuador. For this chapter, I collected seed rain using 324 seed traps installed in 18 1-ha plots in forests (nine forest plots) and in pastures (nine deforested plots) along an elevational gradient of 2000 m. After a sampling period of three months, I collected a total of 123,039 seeds of 255 species/morphospecies from both forests and pastures along the elevational gradient. I did not find a consistent decrease in the amount and richness of seed rain between forests and pastures, but I detected a systematic change in the type of dispersed seeds, as heavier seeds and a higher proportion of endozoochorous species were found in forests compared to pastures at all elevations. This finding suggests that deforestation acts as a strong filter selecting seed traits that are vital for plant regeneration.
Understanding the role that trait-environment associations play in how plant communities regenerate today could serve as a basis for predicting changes in regeneration processes of plant communities under changing global conditions in the near future. Here, I show how informative the measurement of reproductive traits and trait environment associations are in facilitating the conservation of forest habitats and the restoration of deforested areas in the context of global change.
This cumulative dissertation examines learning in chemistry laboratories, focusing on the challenges and benefits of problem-based learning (PBL) for novices in the lab. It addresses the lack of consistent understanding about what should be learned in labs and why it's important. The research aims to understand what students learn, how they learn, and how lab learning can be improved.
A central concept in PBL labs is Information Literacy, defined as a sociocultural practice enabling learners to identify and use information sources within a specific context as legitimized by the practice community.
The first publication, Wellhöfer and Lühken (2022a), investigates the relationship between PBL and learner motivation. It identifies factors that can foster students' intrinsic motivation in a PBL lab. Autonomy is found to be a key factor, increasing student motivation and presenting a model of the autonomous scientific process. This model involves four steps: information acquisition, designing and applying experimental procedures, experimental feedback, and autonomous process optimization. The results suggest that intrinsic motivation in PBL labs can be enhanced by enabling students to independently execute these steps.
The second publication, Wellhöfer and Lühken (2022b), examines the information process students undergo during their first PBL lab. Using a sociocultural framework, it explores Information Literacy to understand students' handling of information and their perceptions of the information process. The findings reveal that in PBL labs, developing a practical, applicable experimental procedure is crucial for problem-solving and significantly shapes the information-acquisition process. This process is iterative, influenced by new information, leading to more precise information needs. Students assess information quality based on its usefulness for their problem, implementability (considering cognitive understanding, available equipment, and psychomotor skills), and safety.
Furthermore, the role of privileged knowledge forms in evaluating the quality of text sources is explored. Students viewed non-scientific sources as "poor" and scientific sources as "good," yet used both for information gathering. There were discrepancies between their assessment of source quality and actual use, indicating that perception of source quality doesn't always affect their practical decisions.
The third publication, Wellhöfer, Machleid, and Lühken (2023), investigates students' information practices in the lab, focusing on discourse between novice learners and experienced assistants. It shows that theoretical knowledge isn't sufficient for independent practical action, and students need actionable social information from experienced community members. The results highlight that information literacy in the lab for newcomers to a community of practice has distinctive features, and physical experience and tacit knowledge are crucial for learning the methods and group-specific knowledge of the practice community. The article demonstrates how learning information literacy in a practice community requires a social and physical experience and provides insights on how educators can support this process.
Subject of this thesis was the investigation of the actin-interacting and glucocorticoid-sensitive Protein DRR1 (or Fam107a) and its role in promoting stress resilience in the murine hippocampus.
We proposed the hypothesis that DRR1 through its actin-binding properties specifically modulates neuronal actin dynamics and promotes resilience through synaptic plasticity leading to subsequently improvement of cognitive performance and social behavior. The accompanied AMPA-receptor transport could create an efficient way regulating neural function and complex behavior during stress episodes.
By utilizing fluorescent immunohistochemistry, we showed basal expression of DRR1 primarily in the murine cerebellum and hippocampal CA3 and CA1 area. Co-staining with different cell marker proteins showed DRR1 expression in neurons, microglia and especially in astrocytic end-feet, which create contact to the brain vasculature.
To test whether DRR1 and AMPA receptor function correlate to modulate stress-associated consequences, primary hippocampal neuron cultures were transduced with adeno-associated virus (AAV) for overexpression or suppression of the protein. Western Blot analysis showed a positive correlation between the AMPA-receptor subunit GluR2 and DRR1 amounts. Further the application of the proximity ligation assay (PLA) in untreated neural cultures indicated interaction between DRR1 and the AMPA receptor subunit GluR2. To address whether DRR1 even affects AMPAR trafficking we performed the “newly inserted assay” after AAV-treatment of primary hippocampal neuron cultures. Suppression of DRR1 revealed less newly inserted GluR2 subunits as compared to controls. Inconclusive were the results upon DRR1 overexpression, however they point to no changes.
In the second part we correlated behavioral phenotypes originating from in vivo overexpression and suppression of DRR1 in the murine hippocampus with potential alterations in neuronal morphology. Therefore, in vitro analysis was performed utilizing AAV transduced primary hippocampal cultures overexpressing or suppressing DRR1. Synchronously the viral vector included a green fluorescent protein (GFP) being expressed throughout the complete neural cell. GFP staining was used to verify successful transfection and for reconstruction of dendritic arbors and dendritic stretches for spine classification. DRR1 suppression showed reduced total spine numbers especially evoked by reduced numbers of immature spine classes – namely long thin spines and filopodia. Whereas mature mushroom spines and stubby spines were unaffected. By overexpressing DRR1, tendencies inclined against higher total dendritic lengths, branch points and increased dendritic arbors in comparison to controls. In regard of spines, total numbers were unaffected. However, mature mushroom spines were significantly declined in numbers, but compensated by increased numbers of immature long thin spines and filopodia.
Chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) is widely used in mouse models to study the effects of stress and resilience. We exposed C57Bl/6J mice expressing GFP under the Thy1 promoter CSDS and categorized them into resilient (R+/-), susceptible (R-/-) and non-learning (R+/+) mice following a modified social interaction test (MSIT). We found alterations in CA1 spine compositions with resilient animals resembling the untreated phenotype. Stress susceptible and non-learning animals displayed reduced numbers in stubby spines with simultaneous increases in mature mushroom spines. In addition, we could detect a tendency towards more immature spines in susceptible animals and non-learners, mirroring our in vitro results.
Finally, we present a different investigative approach in this thesis. Sequenced acute stress was previously found to compromise cognition including spine loss.
We aimed to investigate the implication of acute stress on DRR1 levels and its occurrence in diverse cell types of the brain. We subjected one group of C57Bl/6J mice to acute stress and injected another group with the artificial glucocorticoid DEX. Six hours post stress, animals were perfused and brains were subsequently immunobiologically analyzed. We found DRR1 protein levels elevated in the hippocampus of stressed and DEX-treated animals compared to controls. Interestingly, DRR1 seemed was especially elevated in endothelial cells. This coincides with our investigations finding DRR1 present in astrocytic end-feet under basal conditions and might claim a participation of DRR1 in the blood-brain-barrier integrity.
Our results show DRR1 as actin-interacting and glucocorticoid-sensitive gene affecting structural plasticity of hippocampal spines. Moreover, DRR1 directly interacts with AMPA glutamate receptors and presumably is involved in AMPA trafficking to the postsynaptic membrane. In addition, this study could demonstrate that DRR1 is expressed by other cell types of the brain. Of special interest is DRR1’s occurrence in astrocytic end-feet and endothelial cells suggesting a role as integrator of cell-cell communication and to this end also acting as modifier of stress-induced consequences at the neurovascular unit.
In vivo data of chronically stressed mice displayed no phenotypic differences in hippocampal pyramidal neurons of resilient animals as compared to unstressed mice. Morphological alterations of spine structures were particularly visible in stress susceptible and non-learning animals. Integrating our findings with existing behavioral data, we can conclude that DRR1 plays a role in stress resilience whereby it needs to be expressed in a tightly managed homeostatic equilibrium.
The functional and molecular role of transglutaminase 2 in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells
(2023)
Long-term repopulating hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs) that reside in the bone marrow (BM) give rise to all blood cell types including erythrocytes, leukocytes and platelets. LT-HSCs are mainly quiescent during steady state hematopoiesis. LT-HSCs can process self-renewal to expand and maintain stemness, or commit to differentiation into short-term (ST) repopulating HSC and multipotent progenitors (MPPs). MPPs differentiate into oligopotent lineagerestricted progenitors which eventually produce all mature blood cell lineages, and thereby regenerate hematopoietic system.
Previous studies have shown in transcription profiles and quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis that transglutaminase 2 (Tgm2) is one of the most upregulated genes in quiescent LT-HSCs in comparison to active HSCs, mobilized HSCs, ST-HSCs, MPPs, as well as leukemic stem cells (LSC). However, the reason why Tgm2 is strongly upregulated in dormant mouse LTHSCs and what the role of Tgm2 is in LT-HSCs has not been investigated yet.
Tgm2, encoded by the Tgm2 gene, is a multi-functional protein within the transglutaminase family. It has been found to be widely expressed inside and outside the cells. It consists of four domains and two functionally exclusive forms that are regulated by the Ca2+ and GTP concentration. Besides the most well-known transglutaminase enzymatic activity for transamidation, deamidation and crosslinking, Tgm2 acts also as a GTPase/ATPase, kinase, adhesion/scaffold protein, as well as disulfide isomerase. The role of Tgm2 in hematopoiesis remains elusive. Accordingly, the aim of this dissertation is to investigate the role of Tgm2 in murine hematopoiesis, especially in murine LT-HSCs.
Firstly, the expression of Tgm2 was analyzed in highly purified murine hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) populations. Low input label-free mass spectrometric proteomics and WES protein analysis confirmed the highly specific expression of Tgm2 in LT-HSCs at protein level. Already at the state of MPPs, Tgm2 protein was almost absent with further decline towards oligopotent progenitors. These results indicated Tgm2 as a specific protein marker for LT-HSCs, justifying the future generation of a fluorescent reporter mouse line based on endogenous Tgm2 tagging.
To delineate the functional and molecular role of Tgm2 in LT-HSCs, a conditional Tgm2 knockout mouse model was generated using the Mx1-Cre/loxP system, with the loxP sites flanking the coding exons of the catalytic domain of Tgm2. After PolyIC-mediated induction, a more than 95% knockout efficiency was observed in purified LT-HSCs and the protein expression of Tgm2 was confirmed to be vanished in the purified LT-HSCs from conditional Tgm2-KO mice. Conditional knockout mice are viable and show no aberrant organ functions.
In steady state condition, the distribution of mature blood cell lineages and immunophenotypically-defined HSPC populations within the BM, the mitochondrial potential of HSPCs reflected by the non-invasive cationic dye JC-1, as well as the cell cycle status of HSPCs mirrored by the intracellular Ki67 staining did not show any significant variations upon loss of Tgm2. However, the in vitro continuous observation of prospectivly isolated LT-HSCs by time-lapse microscopy-based cell tracking revealed a delayed entry into cell cycle with a two fold increased apoptosis rate after knocking out Tgm2, indicating Tgm2 expression might be essential for survival of LT-HSCs. Moreover, while the absence of Tgm2 in LT-HSCs did not influence differentiation and lineage choice in vitro, overexpression of Tgm2 in LT-HSCs resulted in an increase of the most immature subpopulation upon cultivation. All these features were not observed in Tgm2-deleted MPPs, suggesting Tgm2 playing a specific function at the level of LT-HSCs. Upon stress hematopoiesis, induced by the administration of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), there was a trend towards delayed recovery of LT-HSCs lacking Tgm2. Although Tgm2 express specificly in LT-HSCs, two rounds of competitive BM serial transplantation displayed an equal overall engraftment and multi-lineage reconstitution of LT-HSCs from Tgm2-WT and Tgm2-KO mice in peripheral blood (PB), BM and spleens. Interestingly, LT-HSCs from Tgm2-KO mice reconstituted to more myeloid cells and fewer B cells in the first four weeks after primary transplantation, which disappeared at later time points.
Gene expression profiling and simultaneous single cell proteo-genomic profiling indicated that HSPCs and LT-HSCs from Tgm2-KO mice were transcriptionally more active. A heterogeneity of Tgm2 expression within Tgm2-WT LT-HSCs was revealed by single cell data. Commonly up-regulated genes in Tgm2-KO LT-HSCs and MPPs were significantly involved in regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase II promoter in response to stress, positive regulation of cell death as well as negative regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathways. In Tgm2-KO LT-HSCs, 136 up-regulated genes demonstrated an enrichment of genes involved in apoptosis, as well as negative regulation of MAPK signaling pathway.
Taken together, this dissertation shows that Tgm2 protein is highly specifically expressed in LT-HSCs, but not in subsequent progenitor populations. However, Tgm2 is not essential for differentiation and maturation of myeloid lineages, the proliferation and the long-term multilineage reconstitution potential of LT-HSCs after transplantation. Tgm2 might be involved in accurate stress response of LT-HSCs and the transition from LT-HSCs into MPPs, meaning that the absence of Tgm2 results in poor survival, myeloid bias upon transplantation, as well as slower recovery upon chemotherapeutic treatment.
Sphingolipids are not only structural components of cell membranes but can also act as signalling molecules in different pathways. Sphingolipid precursors, Ceramides (Cer), are synthesized de novo by six different synthases (CerS1-6) which generate Cer of different chain lengths. Cer can be further synthesized to glycosphingolipids and sphingomyelin. Cell membrane parts that are enriched in glycosphingolipids are so-called lipid rafts and can function as signalling platforms for different receptors, such like the T cell receptor (TCR). CD4+ T cells play a crucial role in the development of ulcerative colitis, a chronic inflammatory disease of the colon. As CerS3 expression was increased in the white blood cells of human colitis patients, the role of CerS3 in the TCR signalling and colitis was investigated in this dissertation. By lenti-viral transduction of a CerS3-shRNA into a CD4+ Jurkat cell line, it was shown that CerS3 has an impact on activated T cells. A decrease of different sphingolipids after T cell activation via CD2/3/28 activation beads and IL2 treatment was observed that was accompanied by an inhibition of Zap70 phosphorylation, an important protein of the TCR signalling. The impaired TCR signalling led to a diminished NFAT1 translocation into the nucleus which subsequently led to a reduced NFAT1- dependent TNFα release. Downregulation of CerS3 in primary CD4+ T cells, obtained from the blood of healthy volunteers, also showed a reduced release of pro-inflammatory cytokines after activation. This dissertation demonstrates a pivotal role for CerS3 in T cell function and highlights CerS3 as potential new target for T cell driven colitis.
For thousands of years, S. cerevisiae has been employed by humans in brewing and baking. Nowadays, this budding yeast is more than that: it is a well investigated model organism and an established workhorse in biotechnology. S. cerevisiae serves as a production host for various applications such as i) bioethanol production ii) the biosynthesis of hormones including insulin or iii) cannabinoid biosynthesis. Hereby, the robustness of S. cerevisiae and its high tolerances regarding pH and salt concentrations qualifies it for a wide range of industrial applications. Moreover, products of S. cerevisiae are generally recognised as safe (GRAS), enabling diverse biotechnological applications. Various mechanisms for genetic engineering of S. cerevisiae are applicable and the engineering process itself is straightforward since methods are established and widely known. Due to the wide range of industrial applications of S. cerevisiae, this organism is an ideal candidate for applied research and implementation of the recombinant biosynthesis of tocochromanols in this study.
Tocochromanols encompass tocotrienols and tocopherols, which are lipid-soluble compounds that are commonly associated with vitamin E activity. Hereby, α-tocopherol is the most prevalent form, as it is an essential nutrient in the diet of humans and animals. Naturally, tocochromanols are almost exclusively synthesised by photoautotrophic organisms such as plants or cyanobacteria. They consist of an aromatic head group and a polyprenyl side chain which is saturated in tocopherols and 3-fold unsaturated in tocotrienols. The methylation status of the chromanol ring distinguishes α-, β-, γ- and δ-tocochromanol. All forms of tocochromanols represent a group of powerful antioxidants, scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS) and preventing the propagation of lipid oxidation in lipophilic environments. Recently, attention has been drawn to tocotrienols, due to their benefits in neuroprotection as well as cholesterol-lowering and anti-cancer properties. Consequently, tocochromanols are valuable additives in the food, feed, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries.
The metabolic engineering strategy of S. cerevisiae to enable tocochromanol biosynthesis was started in a preceding master thesis with the provision of the aromatic moiety, homogentisic acid (HGA), from the aromatic amino acid biosynthesis. Hereby, the upregulation and redirection of the native pathway was essential. Therefore, a strain with an engineered aromatic amino acid pathway for improved 4 hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) production (MRY33) was utilised from Reifenrath and Boles (2018). Furthermore, a heterologous hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) was required to convert HPP into HGA. Thus, several heterologous HPPDs were expressed and characterised regarding their HGA production within the previous study. The best variant originated from Yarrowia lipolytica, YlHPPD, and was integrated into the genome of MRY33. The resulting strain JBY2, produced 435 mg/L HGA in a shake flask fermentation.
This work was started with the genetically highly modified strain JBY2, whose genome already contained a large number of genes artificially expressed behind strong promoters. For further strain development, it was advantageous to maintain a high degree of sequence variability in order to prevent genomic instabilities due to sequence homologies. Thus, 17 artificial promoters (AP1-AP17) were characterised regarding their strength of expression by the yellow fluorescent protein (YFP). These sequences were also part of a patent that was filed during this work (WO2023094429A1).
The key point of this study was the development of a metabolic engineering strategy for the strain JBY2. First, the sufficient supply of the second precursor, the polyprenyl side chain, was investigated. Natively, S. cerevisiae produces the precursor, geranylgeranyl diphosphate (GGPP), from the isopentenyl diphosphate pathway. However, without further engineering, GGPP was barely detectable in JBY2 (< 0.1 mg/L). Thus, engineering of the isopentenyl diphosphate biosynthesis was necessary. The limiting enzyme of the mevalonate pathway was the 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR), which is encoded by HMG1. Therefore, a truncation for feedback-resistance and its overexpression by a promoter exchange was performed. Furthermore, the promoter of the gene for the squalene synthase (pERG9) was exchanged by the ergosterol sensitive promoter pERG1 to limit the metabolic flux of the mevalonate pathway into the ergosterol pathway. The native GGPP synthase (BTS1) was another limitation that was observed throughout this study. To overcome this bottleneck, plasmid-based and integrative overexpression of the native BTS1 and a codon optimised BTS1 were investigated. Other strategies to improve GGPP production were the deletion of the gene for the diacylglycerol pyrophosphate phosphatase (DPP1) to prevent excessive dephosphorylation of GGPP to geranylgeraniol (GGOH), and the overexpression of the farnesyl pyrophosphate synthetase, encoded by ERG20. However, the best improvements of the GGPP biosynthesis, inferred through GGOH measurements, were achieved from the screening of several heterologous GGPP synthases in S. cerevisiae. The best performing strain was JBY61 (JBY2, hmg1Δ::pTDH3-HMG1tr[1573–3165], pERG9Δ::pERG1, ChrIV-49293-49345Δ::pTDH3-XdcrtE-tSSA1_LEU2), bearing the heterologous GGPP synthase crtE of Xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous and produced 64.23 mg/L GGOH. Consequently, this engineering strategy improved the GGOH production by a factor of 642 compared to the parent strain JBY2.
In our rapidly changing world, land use has been recognized as having one of the strongest impacts on species and genetic diversity. The present state of temperate forests in Europe is a product of decisions made by former and current management and policy actions, rather than natural factors. Alterations of crown projection areas, structural complexity of the forest stand caused by thinning and cuttings, and changes in tree species composition caused by regeneration or plantings not only affect forest interior buffering against warming, but also the understorey light environment and nutrient availability. Ultimately, current silvicultural management practices have deep impact on the forest ecosystems, microenvironmental changes and forest floor understorey herbs. In response to environmental changes, plants rely on genetically heritable phenotypic variation, an important level of variation in the population, as it is prerequisite for adaptation. However, until now most studies on plant adaptation to land use focus on grassland management. Yet, studies on the adaptation of forest understorey herbs to forest management have been absent so far. This is important because understanding adaptation of understorey herbs is crucial for biodiversity conservation, forest restoration, and climate change mitigation. Studying current adaptation of understorey herbs to forest management yields insights into the evolutionary consequences of management practices, which could be employed to improve sustainable use of forest habitat.
In sum, my conducted experiments complement each other well and managed to fill in research gaps on the topic of genetically heritable phenotypic variation in understorey herbs and how it is affected by forest management and related microenvironmental variables. I showed that forest management has direct evolutionary consequences on the genetic basis of understorey herbs, but also indirectly through the microenvironment. Furthermore, I revealed that local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity of understorey herbs to forest structural attributes act along continuous gradients. And lastly, I highlighted the important role of intra-individual variation by revealing plastic responses to drought and shading, urging researchers to not ignore this important level of trait variation. Ultimately, understorey herbs in temperate forests employ phenotypic plasticity as a flexible strategy to adapt to varying environmental conditions. By adjusting their leaf characteristics, reproductive investment, and phenology, they can optimize their fitness and survival in response to changes in light availability, resource availability, and seasonal cues. The anthropogenic impact on temperate forests and understorey herbs will continue and likely increase in the future. This should urge foresters to adapt their silvicultural management decisions towards the long-term preservation of genetic diversity and, through this, the evolvability and adaptability of forest understorey herbs and associated organisms. Based on the results shown in my dissertation, variation in forest management regimes and types could be beneficial for promoting genetic diversity within several species of forest understorey herbs. Lastly, in the face of future climatic changes, the mechanisms by which plants can cope with increasing stressful environmental conditions might very well rely heavily on intra-individual variation, providing the necessary rapid plastic adjustment to changing microclimatic conditions within populations and thus increase climate change resilience.