Weitere biologische Literatur (eingeschränkter Zugriff)
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Doctoral Thesis (26)
Language
- English (26) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- yes (26)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (26)
Keywords
Institute
- Biowissenschaften (26) (remove)
The Opisthobranchia comprise highly specialized marine gastropods and have therefore been subject to diverse investigations covering various biological disciplines. However, a robust phylogeny of these gastropods is still lacking and several subclades have only been rarely studied. Furthermore, crucial aspects for the evolution of Opisthobranchia have not been comparatively analysed. Therefore, the aim of the present thesis is to gain new insights into the phylogeny of the Opisthobranchia with special focus on certain critical groups (Pleurobranchomorpha, Acteonoidea) and to assess several crucial features of the evolution of the investigated clades. The combination of four different gene markers (18S rDNA, 28S rDNA, 16S rDNA and CO1) and modern molecular systematic analysis tools were used to construct phylogenetic hypotheses focussing on Opisthobranchia as a whole as well as Pleurobranchomorpha and Acteonoidea in more detail. Intriguing new aspects of phylogeny and evolution of Opisthobranchia were revealed. First of all, monophyly of Opisthobranchia is definitely rejected based on the present data, while monophyly of Euthyneura (comprising Opisthobranchia and Pulmonata) is supported. Monophyly of opisthobranch subclades is confirmed for Nudipleura (as well as its constituting groups Nudibranchia and Pleurobranchomorpha), Umbraculida, Pteropoda (as well as subclades Thecosomata and Gymnosomata) and Acochlidiacea, for Cephalaspidea (if Runcinacea is regarded as a separate clade) and for Sacoglossa (if Cylindrobulla is accepted as an Oxynoacea). Aplysiomorpha are rendered paraphyletic due to the position of Akera bullata, but this result needs further investigation and should be considered with caution. The Nudipleura are found as the first single offshoot of the Euthyneura implying an early evolutionary separation of the last common ancestor of this clade. The remaining taxa form two main clades, one comprising the opisthobranch subgroups Umbraculida, Cephalaspidea, Aplysiomorpha and Pteropoda, while the other contains the pulmonate taxa and the opisthobranch Sacoglossa and Acochlidiacea. The interrelationships within these clades remain largely unresolved due to low statistical support values. However, a possible sister group relationship of Acochlidiacea and Eupulmonata receives statistical support. Opisthobranchia display various highly specific adaptations to diverse food sources. However, evolution of these specialized traits has never been assessed at an analytical level. The current thesis reconstructs the evolution of dietary preferences with novel methodologies based on the newly proposed phylogenetic hypothesis. Reconstruction of dietary evolution revealed herbivory as the ancestral condition in Euthyneura implying that carnivory evolved at least five times independently in the diverse lineages. The first comprehensive molecular phylogenetic hypothesis of the Pleurobranchomorpha could not reveal monophyly of the two main subclades Pleurobranchaeidae and Pleurobranchidae. This is due to the position of a single taxon (Euselenops luniceps) which is assigned to the Pleurobranchaeidae based on morphology but clusters within Pleurobranchidae in the current hypothesis. Furthermore, the tribe Berthellini and the genus Berthella are rendered paraphyletic by the current analyses. The results of molecular systematic analyses were used to reconstruct historical biogeography of Pleurobranchomorpha. Four different methodological approaches were applied yielding ambiguous results for Pleurobranchomorpha. However, the Pleurobranchidae comprising about 80% of the extant Pleurobranchomorpha most probably derived from an Antarctic origin. Dating of the phylogenetic tree via molecular clock methods yielded divergence of Pleurobranchidae into the Antarctic Tomthompsonia antarctica and the remaining species in Early Oligocene. Afterwards the latter underwent rapid radiation during Oligocene and Early Miocene. This divergence event coincides with two major geological events in the Antarctic region. On the one hand, the onset of glaciation and on the other hand the opening of the Drake Passage with concurrent formation of an Antarctic circumpolar current (ACC). I suppose that these sudden and dramatic changes in climate and palaeogeography probably accounted for migration of the last common ancestor of Pleurobranchidae (besides Tomthompsonia) into warmer regions via the Drake Passage to the Western Atlantic and Eastern Pacific and via the South Tasman Rise to the Indo-West Pacific. Furthermore, the ACC may have triggered larval dispersal to the Eastern Atlantic. The phylogenetic position of Acteonoidea has been a matter of debate for decades and they have long been considered as basal opisthobranchs. Results of the present thesis rather support placement in “Lower Heterobranchia” as sister group of Rissoelloidea. The current division of Acteonoidea into three families has never been investigated by means of phylogenetic methods. Thus, this thesis provides the first comprehensive investigation of this clade challenging present division into three families. The results rather support division into two main clades with the monogeneric Bullinidae clustering within Aplustridae doubting its separate status. Additionally, Rictaxis punctocaelatus which has been assigned to Acteonidae clusters basal to Aplustridae rendering Acteonidae paraphyletic. Since information on morphology of R. punctocaelatus was lacking until now, I conducted the first detailed investigation on morphology and histology of this species in order to reassess the unexpected molecular systematic placement. Character tracing analyses revealed similarities with both acteonoidean families implying an intermediate position of this species which might be assigned to a separate family in the future. Furthermore, the common features of Acteonidae and Rictaxis (massive shell, small foot, anterior mantle cavity opening, and absence of oral gland) are possibly plesiomorphic for the whole Acteonoidea. In summary, the results of the present thesis provide valuable novel insights into the phylogeny and evolution of the Opisthobranchia by employing state-of-the-art approaches of molecular systematics and evolutionary reconstruction. Thus, diverse hypotheses on opisthobranch phylogeny and evolution were either supported or rejected as well as novel hypotheses proposed which offer the basis for further research on these extraordinary gastropods.
TeaABC from the halophilic bacterium Halomonas elongata belongs to the family of tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic (TRAP) transporters. It facilitates the uptake of the compatible solutes ectoine and hydroxyectoine which protect the cell from dehydration by accumulating in the cytoplasm during hyperosmotic stress. It is the only known TRAP transporter activated by osmotic stress. Ectoine and hydroxyectoine accumulation in H. elongata is regulated by the cytoplasmic universal stress protein TeaD. The gene encoding TeaD is located in the same operon as the TeaABC gene. TeaD regulates the cellular homeostasis of ectoine possibly by interacting directly or indirectly with TeaABC. All subunits of TeaABC and TeaD were expressed in E. coli and purified. With TeaD and the solute binding protein (SBP) TeaA high levels of expression suitable for crystallization could be obtained and their 3D structures solved. The small transmembrane protein TeaB and the transporter TeaC showed only moderate and low levels of expression respectively. Functional analysis on TeaA was performed using Isothermal Titration Calorimetry. The measurements demonstrate that TeaA is a high affinity ectoine-binding protein (Kd = 0.19 _M) that also has a significant affinity for hydroxyectoine (Kd = 3.8 _M). The structure of TeaA was solved using ab initio phase determination by MAD (multiple anomalous dispersion). TeaA structures were determined in three conformations: TeaA alone, TeaA in complex with ectoine and TeaA in complex with hydroxyectoine. The resolutions of the structures were 2.2, 1.55 and 1.80 Å, respectively. These represent the first structures of an osmolyte SBP associated to a TRAP transporter. The structures reveal similar ligand binding compared to osmolyte SBPs of ABC transporter pointing to coevolution of the ligand binding modes. Moreover, unique features such as the solvent-mediated specific binding of the ligands ectoine and hydroxyectoine could be observed for TeaA. The structure of TeaD in complex with its cofactor ATP was solved by molecular replacement at a resolution of 1.9 Å. Comparison with other structures of universal stress proteins shows striking oligomerization and ATP binding in TeaD. In conclusion, this work presents the first detailed analysis of the molecular mechanisms underlying ligand recognition of an osmoregulated transporter from the TRAP-transporter family.
Mitochondria are dynamic organelles indispensible for viability of eukaryotic cells. Diffusion of proteins in mitochondrial membranes is a prerequisite for the correct functionality of the organelles. However, its study is made complicated due to the nontrivial geometry, small size and positional instability of the organelle, restricting the usability of regular experimental methods and theoretical understanding of acquired data. Therefore, here the molecular transport along the main mitochondrial axis was investigated using highly accurate computational methods combining them with traditional experimental approaches. Using recently reported electron microscopic tomography data concerning the constitution of mitochondria [Fre02], a lattice model of the inner mitochondrial membrane (IM) reproducing its structure in great details was built up. With Monte Carlo (MC) simulations of particle dynamics on this model, it was found that the membrane geometry induces nonlinear effects in the motion of molecules along the mitochondrial axis, which in turn lead to a transient violation of the 2nd Fick?s equation. We show that mere curvature of the IM resulting from the presence of cristae is sufficient for the emergence of transient anomalous diffusion (TAD) in the membrane. The MC calculations have enabled an accurate estimation of regularities in the extent of deviations from the normal regime, therefore allowing us to propose non-homogenous power law as a suitable generalization of the current approach to the analysis of experimental data for the transient dynamics. The general cause of TAD resulting from the membrane curvature alone, without any involvement of specific inter-particle interactions prompted us to predict the similar dynamical effect also for other curved cellular membranes, be it diffusion in endoplasmic reticulum or in plasma membrane of cells possessing dense microvilli. The data indicate that the geometry-induced anomalous diffusion should be easily detectable with current experimental methods, but only in the restricted range of time scales corresponding to high temporal resolution. Until now, experimental measurements of molecular diffusion in biological membranes indiscriminately assumed either pure normal or pure anomalous diffusion schemes for the analysis of data acquired in very wide range of temporal resolutions, which often lead to ambiguities in the interpretation of diffusion parameters. The MC calculations have clearly illustrated the necessity for a more subtle treatment of experimental conditions: the assumption of pure Gaussian diffusion model is justified only if the applied temporal resolution is sufficiently low (as is often the case when using scanning techniques exemplified further); otherwise, the transient regime should be tested for by means of the non-homogenous power function. In the second part of the study the Fluorescence Recovery after Photobleaching (FRAP) with the laser scanning microscope is introduced as a method of choice for studying protein mobility within mitochondrial membranes. The conventional FRAP methodology [Axe76] was extended to enable its application for the determination of confined diffusion with conventional laser scanning microscopes which allowed us to communicate for the first time the direct measurement of protein diffusion in mitochondrial membranes of living cells. This is achieved through adaptation of FRAP data analysis to account for the spatial dimensions of the organelle and the spatiotemporal pattern of light pulses induced by the microscope. The experimental circumstances existing during the particular measurement session are computationally recreated and this way the best suited values of diffusion parameters are found. The method is validated experimentally for four FP-tagged mitochondrial membrane proteins: the IM OxPhos complexes F1F0 ATPase and cytochrome c oxidase and for Tom7 and hFis1 - components of the mitochondrial protein import and fission machineries respectively localized in the outer membrane. We find that for all proteins simple normal diffusion is not a sufficient description. In the inner membrane, diffusion coefficient of F1F0 ATPase expressed in HeLa cell line is found to be 0.2 ?m2/s, with more than 1/3 of the protein molecules being immobilized, while cytochrome c oxidase (in CEF primary cells) demonstrated a similar diffusivity pattern (0.4 ?m2/s, 30% immobile). In the outer membrane, the D (0.7 ?m2/s) and immobile fraction (7-8%) of GFP-Tom7 and GFP-hFis1 (both in HeLa cells) are identical, which designates a substantial difference in comparison to the IM protein mobility. Diffusion coefficients of mitochondrial membrane proteins studied here lay in the intermediate region between those measured in artificial bilayers and in plasma membranes. Protein crowding and intermolecular interactions will be among the major causes responsible for the detected slowdown of diffusion.
Amphibians of Malawi : an analysis of their richness and community diversity in a changing landscape
(2009)
This study summarizes the state of the knowledge of the amphibian diversity in Malawi highlighting the possible threats impending on this fauna correlated with human encroachment and land use change. New data about diversity, distribution and ecology have been gathered, whereas the old ones have been summarised, reviewed and commented. In order to put in context the responses of the amphibian communities to land use change, the main environmental characteristics of the country at a broad space and time scale have been explored. Furthermore, the original habitats and vegetation have been described, and their status in the present day Malawi discussed. In the same way, an overview of the actual state of the knowledge about the Malawian amphibians has been provided, and their ability to act as surrogate of environmental integrity in Sub-Saharan Africa commented on the basis of the available studies. Afterwards, the results of the study of the selected areas and samples have been analysed within this newly generated context. Different field and laboratory methods were applied for the quantitative analysis of the richness and diversity of the communities. Opportunistic search was used to detect species richness, whereas the visual encounter survey was applied to detect the relative abundance of species. Several indices of diversity and similarity, and extrapolations by means of true richness estimators were used for the analysis of the alpha and beta diversities. Additional information were gathered by means of pitfall traps with drift fence, and by the recording of the advertisement calls. Supplementary methods were applied for the analysis of the taxonomic composition of the collected material. In Malawi 84 amphibian species are recorded, two of which still undescribed (Leptopelis sp. and Phrynobatrachus sp.). Three further species need to be confirmed and might be possibly present too: Amietia viridireticulata, Hemisus guineensis, and Hyperolius minutissimus. Additionally, other unrecognised cryptic species — at least one — are present within the Hyperolius nasutus complex. Most of the species belong to the order Anura (82 species; 97.6%), whereas only two species belong to the Gymnophiona (2.4%). Anurans are divided into 12 families and 23 genera, whereas the two caecilians species into one family (Caecilidae) and two genera. The more diverse family is the Hyperoliidae (21 species, 25%) followed by the families Ptychadenidae (13 species, 15%), Arthroleptidae (11 species, 13%), Phrynobatrachidae (10 species, 12%), and Bufonidae and Pyxicephalidae (9 species, 11% respectively). The remaining high family diversity (seven families, Caecilidae included) is contrasted by a low number of species (11 species in total, 14%). Based on the available distribution data, the value of species richness of the anuran communities in Malawi is comprised between 5‒45 species. In average 16.8 ± 9.0 species (N=80) are to be found, 75% of the sites have less than 21 species, and only two sites have more than 25 species. Four hot spots of amphibian diversity were identified: the Nyika Plateau (24 species), Mangochi-Malombe (25 species), Zomba Plateau (32 species) and the Mulanje Massif (45 species). In the studied areas a mean of 14.7 ± 1.6 species was observed and extrapolations by means of the true richness estimators were in good agreement with this result. Among the studied areas the richest was Palm Forest Reserve (17 species), followed by Kaningina Forest Reserve (16 species) and Vinthukutu F. R., and Vwaza W. R (15 species). The poorest area was the Misuku Mountains with 12 species only and a slightly different ranking was generated by the true richness estimators. The mean of the species present in the samples was 4.8 ± 2.1 species, considerably less than the true species richness detected in the respective areas. Basing on the ranking generated by the K-dominance plot the most diverse samples were Palm F. R. and Misuku, whereas the less diverse were Kaningina F. R. and Fort Lister, confirmed by the values of the diversity indices. The main finding of this study was the observation of the lack of a clear match between environmental degradation and amphibian diversity, and the crucial importance of temporary water bodies for the preservation of the amphibian diversity. In fact, despite most of the original habitat formerly present in Malawi have been destroyed and replaced by cultivations, the amphibian communities of different areas showed a comparable diversity at both family and species richness level, and no evident match between environmental degradation and amphibian diversity was recognisable. Differences in species richness could mostly be explained by natural factors such the elevation gradient and the presence of temporary water bodies. However, it was not possible to exclude that the communities have changed during historical time and the shift in species composition already occurred together with the modification of their relative frequencies. Most of the species showed a remarkable ecological plasticity and several species were found in a variety of both natural and altered habitats. The classification of the Malawian amphibians on the basis of ecological guilds based on the available natural history data showed the preponderance (76%) of generalist pond breeders. As a consequence, most of these amphibians possessed a scarce capacity to act as surrogates of habitat integrity. Based on the result of this study the farm bush landscape with traditional agriculture practices bears a great potential to support amphibian diversity in terms of species richness, representing a compromise between local economic development and conservation. Furthermore, the results of this study indicate the outstanding importance of the southern-east region of Malawi for the conservation of the country’s amphibians.
Plastids are complex plant organelles fulfilling essential physiological functions, such as photosynthesis and amino acid metabolism. The majority of proteins required for these functions are encoded in the nuclear genome and synthesized on cytosolic ribosomes as precursors, which are subsequently translocated across the outer and inner membrane of the organelle. Their targeting to the organelle is ensured by a so called transit peptide, which is specifically recognized by GTP-dependent receptors Toc159 and Toc34 at the cytosolic side of outer envelope. They cooperatively regulate the insertion of the precursor protein into the channel protein Toc75, thereby initiating the translocation process. Toc34 is regarded as the primary receptor, while Toc159 probably provides the driving force for the insertion. Precursor transfer is achieved by the physical interaction between both receptors in the GTP loaded state. One translocon unit, also called the Toc core complex, is formed by four molecules Toc34, four molecules Toc75 and one molecule Toc159. In the GDP-loaded state, Toc34 preferably forms homodimers, whose physiological function was investigated in the presented study. It could be shown that the dissociation of GDP and therefore the nucleotide exchange are inhibited by the homodimeric state of Toc34. Dissociation of the homodimer is induced by the recognition of a precursor protein, which renders the binding of GTP and subsequent interaction with Toc159 possible. Thus, the homodimeric conformation could reflect an inactive state of the translocon, preventing GTP consumption in the absence of a precursor protein. Both homodimerization as well as heterodimerization of the receptor are regulated by phosphorylation, which could be demonstrated by in vitro and in vivo approaches using atToc33 from Arabidopsis thaliana as a model system. Since the phosphorylated form of Toc34 cannot be assembled with the Toc core complex, it can be concluded that the interactions between GTPase domains not only regulate the transfer of precursor proteins, but also warrant the integrity of the translocon.
Höhere Eukaryoten stellen ein Ensemble von Zellen dar, die in Kompartimente unterteilt sind. Somit sind intra- und interzelluläre Transportprozesse entscheidend für das Überleben dieser Zellverbände. In meiner Arbeit habe ich Evolution und Struktur von Translokationskomplexen untersucht, um einige Aspekte dieser komplexen Systeme zu untersuchen. Eingangs befassten wir uns mit Rezeptorsystemen am Beispiel des Proteintransports. Mittels phylogenetischer Analysen fanden wir heraus, dass Pex5 nicht der Urahn der anderen untersuchten 3-TPR-Domänen ist, obwohl Pex5 in allen eukaryotischen Organismen vorkommt. Ein Vergleich der 3-TPR-Domänen mit der restlichen Sequenz des Rezeptorproteins ergab, dass die 3-TPR-Domänen eine langsamere Evolutionsgeschwindigkeit aufweisen, was für eine Evolutionseinschränkung durch Interaktionspartner spricht. Sec72 ist möglicherweise aus einer TPR1 (Hop) Domäne entstanden und eine Funktion als Hsp70-erkennende Komponente des Sec-Komplexes für den post-translationalen Import kann daraus abgeleitet werden. „Recycling“ von 3-TPR-Domänen anderer Proteine konnten wir durch unsere phylogenetische Analyse auch für die zweite 3-TPR-Domäne von Tom34 nachweisen, die mit CYP40/FKBP51/52 clustert. Darüber hinaus war es uns möglich, die plastidär bzw. mitochondriell lokalisierten Formen von Toc64 phylogenetisch zu unterscheiden. Durch Erzeugung von Homologiemodellen konnten organellspezifische Aminosäuren strukturell eingeordnet werden. Dabei stellten wir fest, dass sich fast alle Positionen, die sich in der Aminosäurekomposition unterscheiden, auf der konvexen Seite der 3-TPR-Domäne befinden. Molekulardynamische Simulationen zeigten zudem deutliche Veränderung der Hauptbewegungen der 3-TPR-Domänen nach Komplexierung mit dem Hsp90-C-Terminus. Bei Bindung des Liganden werden intramolekulare Wasserstoffbrücken sowohl auf der konvexen als auch konkaven Seite der 3-TPR-Domäne „umgeschaltet“. Diese Erkenntnisse führen zu zwei Hypothesen: 1.) die Organellspezifität der Rezeptoren wird durch die Interaktion mit anderen Komplexpartnern garantiert und 2.) die Änderungen des Wasserstoffbrückennetzwerkes auf der konvexen Seite nach Hsp90-Bindung führen zur Ausbildung der Bindungsstelle für die andere Komplexkomponente. Beide Hypothesen erklären die experimentellen Beobachtungen bezüglich der Rezeptoren und warum keine phylogenetischen Hinweise für die Existenz von Vorstufenprotein-spezifischen Hsp70/90-Proteinen gefunden werden konnten. Nach dem Rezeptor haben wir uns mit dem Translokationsprozess befasst. Wir konnten phylogenetisch zeigen, dass sich Omp85 aus Proteobakterien im Vergleich zu Cyanobakterien und Eukaryoten insbesondere durch andersartige POTRA Domänen auszeichnet und fanden zwei konservierte Motive in der Porenregion. Zudem konnten wir im Heterokontophyten P. tricornutum ein vollständiges Omp85 identifizieren (bipartite Signalsequenz, 2 POTRAs, Pore mit langen Schleifen). Die Aminosäuresequenz weicht teils deutlich von den bekannten Omp85-Proteinen ab, was die Entdeckung erschwerte. Wir haben damit geklärt, dass auch im Translokationsapparat von komplexen Plastiden ein b-Fassprotein der Omp85 Familie die Kerneinheit bildet. Ebenfalls zu den Protein-transportierenden b-Fassproteinen gehört TolC, das aber im Gegensatz zu Omp85 auch andere Substanzen, wie zum Beispiel Siderophore transportiert. Alr2887 ist das einzige TolC-ähnliche Protein aus Anabaena sp. PCC7120. Vergleichende Phänotypuntersuchungen weisen auf eine Interaktion eines ABC-Transporters (DevBCA Operon) mit Alr2887 hin. Die Distanz zwischen äußerer Membran und Plasmamembran ist in Anabaena doppelt so groß wie in E. coli. Entsprechend fanden wir im Adapterprotein DevB eine stark verlängerte dimere Doppelwendel, die das von TolC gebildete a-Fass im Periplasma bis hin zum ABC-Transporter in der Plasmamembran theoretisch fortsetzen kann. Da verschiedenste in Anabaena existierende ABC-Transporter TolC als Abflusskanal benötigen, nehmen wir an, dass Alr2887 ein Rundumtalent in Bezug auf die zu transportierenden Substrate darstellt. Dieses ist auch aufgrund der basalen Einordnung im phylogenetischen Baum zu vermuten; es könnte somit auch in den „Multi-Drug-Efflux“ involviert sein. Nicht nur ABC-Transporter, auch TonB-abhängige Transporter stehen in funktionellem Zusammenhang mit TolC. Wir haben Aminosäuresequenzen von ~4600 TBDTs aus Gram-negativen Bakterien und Cyanobakterien zusammengetragen und nach ihrer paarweisen Ähnlichkeit geclustert. Anhand experimentell charakterisierter TBDTs mit bekannten Substraten und TBDTs mit vorhergesagten Substraten konnten wir sehr vielen Clustern ein Substrat zuordnen, das die in ihnen zusammengefassten TBDTs aller Wahrscheinlichkeit nach importieren. Wir konnten ferner feststellen, dass es noch eine Menge weiterer Cluster mit unbekannten Substratspezifitäten gibt und unsere Analysen stimulieren somit die Arbeiten an diesem System im Allgemeinen und in Cyanobakterien im Besonderen.
Die anaerobe Atmung mit Nitrat und Nitrit als terminalen Elektronenakzeptoren bildet einen wichtigen Teil des biologischen Stickstoff-Zyklus. Beispiele sind Denitrifikation und respiratorische Nitrat-Ammonifikation, wobei in beiden Fällen in einem ersten Schritt Nitrat zu Nitrit reduziert wird. In der Denitrifikation entstehen dann verschiedene gasförmige Produkte (NO, N2O, N2), wogegen Nitrit in der Ammonifikation ohne die Freisetzung weiterer Zwischenprodukte direkt zu Ammonium reduziert wird. Während die terminalen Reduktasen dieser Atmungsketten gut untersucht sind, ist das Wissen über die Zusammensetzung kompletter Elektronentransportketten sowie die Interaktion einzelner Proteine als auch zwischen den Proteinen und Chinonen in der Membran begrenzt. Ziel dieser Arbeit war die Charakterisierung der membranständigen Chinol-Dehydrogenasen NapGH und NrfH in der respiratorischen Nitrat-Ammonifikation von Wolinella succinogenes. Dieses Epsilonproteobakterium ist ein etablierter Modellorganismus der anaeroben Atmung und wächst durch respiratorische Nitrat-Ammonifikation mit Formiat oder H2 als Elektronendonoren. Als terminale Reduktasen werden dabei die periplasmatische Nitratreduktase NapA und die Cytochom c-Nitritreduktase NrfA benötigt. Die Genomsequenz weist keine weiteren typischen Nitrat- und Nitritreduktasen auf, und napA- und nrfA-defiziente Mutanten sind nicht in der Lage durch Nitrat- bzw. Nitritatmung wachsen. Das Operon des Nap-Systems (napAGHBFLD) von W. succinogenes kodiert Proteine, die an der Nitrat-Reduktion durch Menachinol beteiligt sind (NapA, -B, -G und -H) und Proteine, die für die Reifung und Prozessierung von NapA benötigt werden (NapF, -L und –D). Im Gegensatz zu vielen anderen Bakterien läuft die Nitrat-Atmung unabhängig von einem NapC-ähnlichen Protein ab, das als membrangebundenes Tetrahäm-Cytochrom c für die Chinol-Oxidation zuständig ist und Elektronen über den Elektronenüberträger NapB an die terminale Reduktase NapA liefert. Zwar sind im Genom zwei NapC-Homologe kodiert (FccC und NrfH), doch die Deletion beider Gene hatte keinen Einfluss auf die Nitrat-Atmung. Es wurde vermutet, dass die Funktion von NapC in W. succinogenes stattdessen durch die beiden Fe/S-Cluster Proteine NapG und NapH übernommen wird. Die Reduktion von Nitrit zu Ammonium wird durch den NrfHA-Komplex katalysiert. Das Pentahäm-Cytochrom c NrfA bildet dabei die katalytische Untereinheit, die über das membranständige Tetrahäm-Cytochrom c auf der periplasmatischen Seite der Membran gebunden ist. NrfH gehört zur NapC/NirT-Familie und überträgt Elektronen von Menachinol auf NrfA. Mittels gerichteter Mutagenese von nrfH wurden in früheren Arbeiten bereits Aminosäure-Reste identifiziert, die essentiell für die Elektronentransportaktivität von Formiat zu Nitrit sind.
The reggie protein family consists of two homologous members, reggie-1 and reggie-2, also termed flotillin-2 and flotillin-1, respectively, that are ubiquitously expressed and evolutionarily well conserved, suggesting an important but so far ill-defined function. In various cell types, both reggies have been found to be constitutively associated with lipid rafts by means of acylation modifications and oligomerization. Lipid rafts are glycosphingolipid- and cholesterol-rich membrane microdomains which have been implicated in several cellular processes including membrane transport and signal transduction through growth factor receptors. However, the molecular details of these processes are still poorly understood. With the observation that reggies colocalize with activated glycosylphosphatidylinositolanchored proteins (GPI-APs) and Fyn kinase in rafts, a role for these proteins in signaling events has been suggested. In agreement with that, we have previously shown that reggie-1 becomes multiply tyrosine phosphorylated by Src kinases in response to epidermal growth factor (EGF) stimulation, pointing to a function for reggie-1 in growth factor signaling. Furthermore, overexpression of reggie-1 enhances spreading on fibronectin substrate in a tyrosine-dependent manner, thus revealing a role for reggie-1 in regulation of actin cytoskeleton through growth factor receptors. Due to the similarity shared by reggie proteins at amino acid level and to their ability to form hetero-oligomeric complexes, the first aim of this study was to analyze the putative tyrosine phosphorylation of reggie-2 in growth factor stimulated cells. Similarly to reggie-1, reggie-2 was found to be multiply tyrosine phosphorylated by Src kinase and to exist in a molecular complex with Src, with the degree of co-immunoprecipitation dependent on the activity of Src. Recent studies from us have also shown that administration of EGF results in the endocytosis of reggie-1 from the plasma membrane into endosomes, which is in line with a proposed role for reggies in membrane trafficking processes. In order to characterize in detail the endocytic mechanism that mediates the uptake of reggie-1, the dependency of reggie-1 endocytosis on clathrin and dynamin was investigated by means of overexpressing a variant form of Eps15 or a dominant negative form of dynamin-2. In either case the translocation of reggie-1 into endosomes in response to EGF was not affected, and this, together with the results that reggie-1 colocalized with cholera toxin (CTX) but not with transferrin receptor (TfnR) during EGF signaling, indicates that reggie-1 is taken up by means of a dynaminindependent, raft-mediated pathway. These findings are very well in line with recent data showing the pathway of entry into cells of reggie-2 as a raft-mediated endocytic pathway. The endocytosis of reggie-2 in response to EGF was also analyzed in this study. Similarly to reggie-1, in growth factor stimulated cells reggie-2 underwent a translocation from the plasma membrane to endosomes where the two reggies were found to colocalize with each other, suggesting that epidermal growth factor signaling might trigger the endocytosis of reggie oligomers. In addition, colocalization with both the late endosomal marker LAMP3/CD63 and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) was detected, again indicating a function for reggies in signal transduction through growth factor receptors. EGFR has been reported to localize in rafts but, although this association is thought to be functional during EGF stimulation, how segregation of EGFR into rafts modulates its endocytosis and signaling is still under debate. Since reggie oligomers have recently been suggested to define a raft subtype, a further aim of this study was to investigate whether the depletion of reggies by means of small interfering RNA could interfere with the signaling and the trafficking through EGFR. Knockdown of reggie-2 resulted in an altered tyrosine phosphorylation of EGFR in response to EGF, while the degree of ubiquitination was not affected. Less efficient phosphorylation of tyrosine residues, especially of those which are docking sites for Grb2 and Shc, led in turn to an impaired activation of p38 and ERK1/2 MAPKs. Depletion of reggie-2 did not affect the early trafficking of activated EGFRs, with receptors being endocytosed and delivered to late endosomes as efficiently as in control cells. This would be in line with the normal degree of ubiquitination observed for EGFR, as ubiquitin moieties have been proposed to represent sorting tags that ensure receptor endocytosis into early endosomes and its proper intracellular trafficking. On the contrary, after prolonged EGF stimulation, depletion of reggie-2 resulted in a decreased downregulation of both receptor-bound ligand and EGFR, and in their accumulation in intracellular vesicles, thus pointing to a role for reggie-2 in the degradative pathway. Taken all together, these data ndicate that the association of EGFR with reggie-microdomains is likely to be important for proper receptor trafficking and signaling.
The growth of blood vessels is crucial for organ growth in the embryo and repair of wounded tissues in the adult. An imbalance in this process contributes to numerous malignant, inflammatory, ischemic, infectious and immune disorders (Ferrara et al., 2003). Postnatal neovascularization occurs through the recruitment of progenitor cells and angiogenesis. Integrins are heterodimeric cell surface molecules and are the main receptors for extracellular matrix proteins. Regulation of integrin activation is crucial during embryonic development and during adult life. Dysregulation of integrin activity leads to severe diseases. In this study, we have demonstrated that Rap1, a small GTPase regulating integrin activity, and its GEF Epac1 are expressed in both EPC and endothelial cells. Moreover, the pharmacological activator of Epac activates the small GTPase Rap1 in progenitor cells. In parallel the angiogenic growth factors VEGF and bFGF activate Rap1 in endothelial cells. In addition, the regulation of Rap1 activity in EPC and in endothelial cells plays an important role in the regulation of migration and adhesion to matrix proteins, by regulating the activity of different integrins, a mechanism known as integrin inside‐out signaling. Furthermore, regulation of Rap1 activity affects probably indirectly through outside‐in signaling of integrins the activity of several and crucial proteins such PKB/Akt and focal adhesion kinase in endothelial cells. In line with these results, we have demonstrated that Rap1 activity affect angiogenesis, homing of EPC to ischemic tissues and thereby postnatal neovascularization. The understanding how Rap1 regulates integrin activity in endothelial cells is still not completely clear, for example we have demonstrated that the known effectors of Rap1 mediating the increase of integrin activity in T and B cells, such as RAPL and RIAM are, respectively, either not increasing integrin activity or not expressed in endothelial cells. We aim to find the effector of Rap1 promoting integrin activity in endothelial cells and how RAPL regulates integrin functions and angiogenesis. Moreover data from us and others using genetic models and generation of Rap1a or Rap1b deficient mice or deficient for Rap1a and Rap1b led to embryonic lethality suggesting that Rap1 is a key node protein during embryonic development. The development of conditionnal Rap1a/b endothelial/pericytes restricted deficient mice will help us to decipher more precisely the role of Rap1 during vascular development and angiogenesis.