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The neocortical microcircuit, a local network of excitatory and inhibitory neurons, is a highly complex information processing unit, which can flexibly be modulated to adapt to external context and internal state such as motivation or attention. The mechanisms underlying these adaptations for flexible processing are not sufficiently understood yet. The aim of this study is to further elucidate the role of inhibitory and excitatory components of the local neocortical microcircuit for the processing of sensory information in an awake, behaving animal.
Layer 1 of the neocortex is of particular importance because it contains afferents from the thalamus and more distant cortical regions, which relay top-down information that is important for processes such as learning and attention. The dendrites of the excitatory pyramidal neurons located in deeper layers extend into layer 1, and in addition to that layer 1 contains inhibitory neurons, as well as axons from inhibitory somatostatin expressing (SOM) neurons located in lower layers. These layer 1 inhibitory neurons and SOM axons are therefore well positioned to control top-down information transfer at the pyramidal dendrites, and thus to flexibly regulate information processing in the local circuit. To further investigate this, the stimulus responses in inhibitory (SOM axons) and excitatory (layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons) components of the neocortical microcircuit were measured in primary auditory cortex during learning, when auditory stimuli gain relevance.
For this purpose, I first established a suitable learning behaviour, an auditory GO-NOGO discrimination task, which can be performed by head-fixed mice under the microscope. The task also contains a visual start cue, which signals the start of every trial, as a multimodal element. Mice learn to distinguish two auditory stimuli by being rewarded with water after the GO stimulus and receiving no reward after the NOGO stimulus. They indicate that they have identified the stimuli accordingly by licking at a water dispenser during the GO stimulus and not during the NOGO stimulus. Licking during the NOGO stimulus is punished by an aversive air puff. As the mice learn this behaviour, the stimuli gain relevance. The activity in the same neuronal structures was observed over the course of all training sessions via 2-photon imaging in awake, behaving mice, and their stimulus responses were measured throughout the learning process, acquiring a comprehensive dataset. In these data, short-term and long-term plasticity of the stimulus responses can be detected and these changes in the stimulus responses differ for SOM axons and pyramidal neurons. Already from the first training day, stimulus responses change in the course of a single session, both in SOM axons and in pyramidal cells. With time over the course of task acquisition, the stimulus representation in a group of pyramidal neurons in layer 2/3 is enhanced and distal dendrites are less inhibited over training through reduced activation of the SOM axons, so that the integration of information along the somatodendritic axis shifts, increasing the relative impact of top-down information. This shift is even stronger for the NOGO stimulus in correct trials compared to the GO stimulus. This is the first study to show that this somato-dendritic shift by SOM-axon responses occurs at different strengths for the GO and NOGO stimulus, probably due to the different learned responses (action or refraining), which require different forms of circuit control. After learning, the neuronal responses to GO and NOGO stimuli also differ in pyramidal neurons, with the GO stimulus evoking stronger responses than the NOGO stimulus. This learned distinction is reversed in passive trials during which the mice have no possibility to respond to the stimuli, in both SOM axons and pyramidal neurons, resulting in similar response sizes for both stimuli. This indicates that not only learning over the long term, but also short-term changes regarding the state (active execution of the discrimination task or no active participation during the stimulus presentations) affect the processing of the stimuli in the local circuit. In addition, on an even shorter time scale pyramidal neurons show a modulation of responses from trial to trial, probably due to anticipation of reward, which is absent from SOM axon responses. Thus, there are various levels of plasticity that develop over the course of training: long-term changes in the response size of both the excitatory and inhibitory components that facilitate stimulus recognition when engaged, and short-term modulation (possibly in anticipation of reward) in excitatory neurons that could underlie sensorimotor transformation. Both pyramidal neurons and SOM axons in the primary auditory cortex respond to multimodal and reinforcement-related stimuli, likely contributing to the optimisation of circuit dynamics for goal-directed information processing. This shows that the circuit flexibly adjusts information processing under different circumstances, depending on the relevance the stimuli carry and whether the mouse is active or inactive and can use the presented information to achieve a goal.
Hypoxia is a condition in which cells are deprived of adequate oxygen supply and represents a main feature of solid tumours. Cells under hypoxic stress activate transcriptional responses driven by hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs), which affect multiple cellular pathways, including angiogenesis, metabolic adaptation and cell proliferation. While the transcriptional changes induced in hypoxic tumours are well characterised, it is still poorly understood how hypoxia contributes to the aberrant post-transcriptional regulation observed in tumours. In this PhD thesis, I studied the RNA response to hypoxia in cancer, to provide novel insights into its regulation.
Using deep RNA-Sequencing (RNA-Seq), I investigated transcriptome changes of three human cell lines from lung, cervical and breast cancer under hypoxia, advancing our knowledge of post-transcriptional gene regulation in hypoxic cancer. I show that hypoxia induced consistent changes in transcript abundance in the three cancer types. This was coupled to divergent splicing responses, highlighting the cell type specificity of alternative splicing programs. While the mRNA levels of RNA-binding proteins were mainly reduced, hypoxia upregulated muscleblind-like protein 2 (MBNL2) in all three cell lines. Hypoxia control was specific for MBNL2, since it did not affect its paralogs MBNL1 and MBNL3. Via knockdown experiments of MBNL2 in hypoxic cells, I could show that MBNL2 induction promotes adaptation of cancer cells to low oxygen by regulating both transcript abundance and alternative splicing of hypoxia response genes. In addition, depletion of MBNL2 reduced the proliferation and migration of cancer cells, corroborating a function of MBNL2 as cancer driver.
In the last few years, a novel class of RNAs has gained attention, namely circular RNAs (circRNAs), which are produced by a particular splicing mechanism, known as back-splicing. CircRNAs have been reported to change their abundance in cancer and their high stability makes them promising candidates as diagnostic biomarkers. In this study, I took advantage of deep rRNA-depleted RNA-Seq data to comprehensively investigate the expression of circRNAs in human cancer cells and their changes in response to hypoxia. To reliably identify circRNAs, I established a pipeline that integrates two available tools. for circRNA detection with custom approaches for quantification and statistical analysis. Using this pipeline, I identified 12006 circRNAs in the three cancer cell lines. Their molecular features suggest an involvement of complementary RNA sequences as well as trans-acting factors in circRNA biogenesis, including the splicing factor HNRNPC. Remarkably, I detected 210 circRNAs that are more abundant than their linear counterparts. Upon hypoxic stress, 64 circRNAs were differentially expressed in cancer cells, in most cases in a cell type-specific manner. In summary, in this PhD thesis, I present a comparative transcriptome profiling in human cancer cell lines. It reveals MBNL2 as an important player in hypoxic cancer progression and provides novel insights into the biogenesis and regulation of circRNAs under hypoxic stress.
In the light of emerging resistances against common drugs, new drug leads are required. In the past natural sources have been more yielding in this respect than synthetic strategies. Fungi synthesize many natural products with biological activities and pharmacological relevance. However, only a fraction of the estimated fungal diversity has been evaluated for biological activity, and much of the Fungi’s natural chemical diversity awaits discovery. Especially promising in this context are lichenized fungi. Lichens are well known for their particularly rich and characteristic secondary chemistry which allows them to withstand intense UV radiation, protects them against herbivory, and prevents them from being overgrown. The slow growth rates of lichens and difficulties and infeasibility of large scale cultivations in the laboratory render lichens inaccessible for applied purposes. These experimental challenges have led to a poor understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying the biosynthesis of characteristic lichen secondary metabolites. The recent development of improved sequencing techniques has enabled new strategies to address multi-species assemblages directly through metagenome sequencing and survey their biosynthetic potential through genome mining. However, whole genome sequencing of entire lichen thalli to metagenomically assess the lichen-forming fungus without the need of cultivation has not been evaluated for lichens before. This approach will enable the reconstruction of fungal genomes from mixed DNA from lichen thalli and allow the exploration of biosynthetic gene content.
My thesis was conducted in two parts: a methodological evaluation of a metagenomic strategy to reconstruct genomes and gene sets of lichen-forming fungi, and the exploration of biosynthetic gene content with the help of comparative genomics and phylogenetics. For the first part, I evaluated the quality of metagenome-derived genome assemblies and gene sets by direct comparison to culture-derived reference assemblies and gene sets of the same species. I showed that metagenome-derived fungal assemblies are comparable to culture-derived references genomes and have a similar total genome size and fungal genome completeness. The quality of assemblies was affected strongly by the choice of assembler, but not by the method of taxonomic assignment or inference of non-mycobiont DNA sequences. The fungal gene space is well covered in metagenome-derived and culture-derived fungal gene sets and overlaps to 88-90 %. Finally, the metagenome-derived assemblies reliably recover gene families of secondary metabolism. This shows the suitability of metagenomically derived genomes for mining biosynthetic genes, and potentially also other gene families. Overall, the method validation showed a high similarity between metagenome- and culture-derived genome assemblies.
For the second part of my thesis, I explored the biosynthetic gene content in two different systems: Between two sister-species with different ecological requirements but similar chemical profile, and between two species which are metabolite-rich and economically relevant in the perfume industry. I compared the diversity of biosynthetic gene clusters between the species and in the broader context of other lichenized and non-lichenized fungi. Overall, the whole genome mining revealed a large number of uncharacterised secondary metabolite gene clusters in fifteen genomes of lichen-forming fungi compared to other fungal classes. Their number highly outweighs the number of known synthesized metabolites and highlights the hidden biosynthetic potential in lichen-forming fungi. Many biosynthetic gene clusters in the ecological distinct sister-species showed a high homology in accordance with the high synteny in gene content and order in both genomes. These clusters represent ideal candidates for secondary metabolites synthesized by both species, while the remaining clusters may encode for metabolites relevant for the different ecological requirements of both species. The metabolite-rich species used in the perfume industry showed a particularly high number of biosynthetic gene clusters. An in-depth characterization of architecture and gene content of homologous gene clusters together with hints from phylogenetic relatedness to functional characterized metabolites provides promising insights into the biosynthetic gene content of these lichen-forming fungi.
In conclusion, I showed that metagenome sequencing of natural lichen thalli is a feasible approach to reconstruct the fungal mycobiont genome of lichens and circumvent time-consuming and in some cases impossible cultivation of individuals. The genome mining for secondary metabolite gene clusters in lichen-forming fungi revealed a high biosynthetic potential for the discovery of new natural products. One of the focal species, Evernia prunastri, contained the highest ever reported number (80) of biosynthetic clusters in lichenized fungi. The comprehensive cluster characterizations through annotation, comparative mapping and phylogenetics provide first valuable hints for linking metabolites to genes in these lichen-forming fungi. My results pave the way for biotechnological strategies to unlock the vast richness of natural products from lichens for applied purposes.
Aufgrund des großen Potenzials der Nanotechnologie ist in Zukunft eine Zunahme der Produktion und Verwendung von Nanomaterialien zu erwarten, wodurch mit einer steigenden Freisetzung in der Umwelt zu rechnen ist. In der vorliegenden Dissertation werden daher Methoden zur Untersuchung von Nanomaterialien betrachtet und Effekte von NP auf Algen untersucht.
In Teil I wurden Silber-, Titandioxid- und Polystyrol-Nanopartikel sowie Kohlenstoffnano-röhrchen untersucht. Von jedem Nanomaterial standen eine unmodifizierte Form sowie zwei modifizierte Partikeltypen mit geladener Oberfläche und zusätzlich Polystyrol-Mikropartikel zur Verfügung. Zunächst erfolgte eine Charakterisierung der Materialien mittels Transmissions-elektronenmikroskopie, wobei die Größe der Objekte gemessen und das Verhalten beschrieben wurde. Zudem wurde im Fall der Polystyrol-Nanopartikel der Einfluss mehrerer Chemikalien getestet, welche im Zusammenhang mit der Probenvorbereitung für das Elektronen¬mikroskop zum Einsatz kamen. In einem nächsten Schritt erfolgte die Untersuchung von Nanomaterialien in umweltrelevanten Matrices. Hierbei wurden Boden- und Wasserproben sowie humane Körperflüssigkeiten und Fischgewebe elektronenmikroskopisch auf die Anwesenheit von synthetischen Nanomaterialien untersucht und Proben mit Nanomaterialien versetzte, um die Nachweisbarkeit mit dem Elektronenmikroskop bewerten zu können. Zusätzlich wurden verschiedene Zellkulturen und Gewebe auf morphologische Auffälligkeiten im Zusammenhang mit einer Exposition gegenüber Nanomaterialien untersucht.
Die durchgeführten Versuche zeigen, dass die Transmissionselektronenmikroskopie für viele Nanomaterialien ein sinnvolles Charakterisierungswerkzeug darstellt. Die Untersuchung besonders kleiner Partikel mit einem Durchmesser im einstelligen Nanobereich gestaltet sich jedoch schwierig bis unmöglich. Für den Nachweis von Nanomaterialien in Umweltmatrices und Zellen ist die Methode nur bedingt geeignet, wobei insbesondere niedrige Partikelkonzentrationen problematisch sind. Die Methode ist somit lediglich als Ergänzung zu anderen Nachweismethoden zu betrachten, kann jedoch hilfreiche Informationen zur Lokalisation von Nanoobjekten in Zellen und zu ihrem Verhalten in Umweltproben liefern.
In Teil II wurden die beiden Grünalgen Raphidocelis subcapitata und Chlamydomonas reinhardtii sowie die Diatomee Cyclotella meneghiniana gegenüber unterschiedlich modifizierten Silber-, Titandioxid- und Polystyrol-Nanopartikeln exponiert. Die Beurteilung der Toxizität wurde anhand der über die Absorption gemessenen Zellzahl, des Chlorophyll a Gehalts, der über die Chlorophyllfluoreszenz gemessenen Parameter Fv/Fm und NPQ sowie der transmissions¬elektronenmikroskopischen Untersuchung der Algenzellen vorgenommen. Zudem wurde der Einfluss der Beschattung von Algenzellen durch die Nanopartikel experimentell untersucht.
Die Untersuchungen zeigen, dass Nanomaterialien bei Absorptionsmessungen in Abhängigkeit von ihrem Grundmaterial, ihrer Oberflächenmodifikation und dem umgebenden Medium ein mehr oder weniger starkes Streuungsverhalten zeigen. Auch die Anwesenheit von Algen kann einen deutlichen Einfluss haben. Trotz der Beeinflussung der Lichtstreuung hat die Beschattung von Algen durch die Trübung des Mediums durch Nanomaterialien keinen Einfluss auf das Wachstum der Testorganismen. Die direkte Exposition der Algen gegenüber den Nanomaterialien zeigt, dass Silber-Nanopartikel die toxischste Wirkung haben. Die Abgabe von Silberionen durch die Partikel kann hierbei die auftretenden Effekte erklären. Auch Titandioxid-Nanopartikel führen zu negativen Effekten, wobei mögliche Gründe die Toxizität des Materials und die physikalische Isolierung der Zellen sind. Die Polystyrol-Nanopartikel haben eine stimulierende Wirkung auf die Algenzellen, welche auf einer Präferenz von adhäsivem Wachsen und dem Hormesis-Effekt beruhen kann. Die Oberflächenmodifikation der Nanomaterialien hat zwar einen Effekt auf die Toxizität, ihr Einfluss wird jedoch durch andere Faktoren überlagert. In Bezug auf die unterschiedlichen Methoden zum Nachweis der Toxizität, ist die Bestimmung des Chlorophyll a-Gehalts als besonders sensitiv zu bewerten und kann zudem auf alle Partikel angewandt werden. Hinsichtlich der Absorptionsmessung besteht teilweise ein Einfluss durch die Partikelstreuung. Die Messung der Chlorophyllfluoreszenz scheint einer starken Beeinflussung durch externe Faktoren und ggf. die Nanomaterialien selbst zu unterliegen. Die elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchung ist vergleichsweise wenig sensitiv, kann jedoch ergänzende Informationen bezüglich der Wirkweise von Nanomaterialien liefern. Der Vergleich der Testorganismen zeigt, dass Raphidocelis subcapitata empfindlicher reagiert als Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Eine allgemeingültige Sensitivitätsabstufung zwischen den Grünalgen und der Diatomee ist nicht möglich, da die Reaktionen in Abhängigkeit von Medium bzw. Partikelgrundmaterial unterschiedlich ausfallen.
The balance between peripheral T-cell reactivity and self-tolerance is achieved during T-cell development in the thymus. During thymic development T-cell sensitivity to self-antigens drives their selection and is dynamically regulated via multiple mechanisms. The microRNA miR-181 has been implicated as a post-transcriptional modulator of T-cell sensitivity due to its suppression of several negative regulators of T-cell receptor (TCR) signalling. By tuning developing thymocytes to be exquisitely sensitive to signals transduced through their TCR, miR-181 has previously been shown to be essential for the agonist selection of invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells. In this thesis, we extend the knowledge on the developmental control elicited by miR-181 in the thymus to cover mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT), regulatory T (Treg) and conventional T cells. Using a germline knock-out of mature miR-181a/b-1, we could show that all agonist-selected T cell populations are critically dependant on miR-181a/b-1, noting an absence of MAIT and a reduction of thymic-derived Tregs in miR-181a/b-1-deficient mice. Furthermore, we provided evidence that miR-181 is also required for the negative selection of conventional T cells, with miR-181a/b-1-deficient mice presenting with a near absence of apoptotic markers. Therefore, by heightening the TCR sensitivity to self-antigens, miR-181a/b-1 aids in the detection and subsequent elimination of autoreactive thymocytes. In addition, we characterised the murine primary miR-181a/b-1 transcript, which surprisingly has a transcription start site (TSS) more than 70kB upstream of the mature miRNA sequences. This shall hopefully lead to future research aimed at deciphering the upstream regulatory networks that promote dynamic miR-181a/b-1 expression in developing thymocytes. In summary, we present here a single miRNA subset with broad implications in T-cell development. In disagreement with central dogma that individual miRNAs generally provide weak to moderate modulation over cellular pathways, we showcase the miR-181 family subset, miR-181a/b-1, as an efficient regulator of TCR signalling pathways. Due to the sensitive nature of TCR signalling during thymocyte selection, miR-181a/b-1 elicits gross effects, which are essential for agonist selection, central tolerance and generating a functional self-tolerant peripheral T cell repertoire. We therefore conclude that miR-181a/b-1 is fundamental in T-cell development as a whole.
Die vorliegende kumulative, publikationsbasierte Disserationsschrift zum Thema „Diversität und Zoogeographie metazoischer Fischparasiten aus dem Südpolarmeer“ gibt einen zusammenfassenden Überblick über die von mir verfasseten ausgewählten drei (ISI-)Publiaktionen. Diese sind im Anhang (Kapitel 6) in chronologischer Reihenfolge aufgeführt. Die Verweise zu den Publikationen sind im Text mit den römischen Ziffern I-III (s.u.) gekennzeichnet. Die für die Promotion relevanten Publikationen wurden wie folgt publiziert:
I Münster J, Kochmann J, Klimpel S, Klapper R, Kuhn T (2016) Parasite fauna of Antarctic Macrourus whitsoni (Gadiformes: Macrouridae) in comparison with closely related macrourids. Parasites & Vectors 9:403
II Münster J, Kochmann J, Grigat J, Klimpel S, Kuhn T (2017) Parasite fauna of the Antarctic dragonfish Parachaenichthys charcoti (Perciformes: Bathydraconidae) and closely related Bathydraconidae from the Antarctic Peninsula, Southern Ocean. Parasites & Vectors 10:235
III Kuhn T, Zizka VMA, Münster J, Klapper R, Mattiucci S, Kochmann J, Klimpel S (2018) Lighten up the dark: metazoan parasites as indicators for the ecology of Antarctic crocodile icefish (Channichthyidae) from the north-west Antarctic Peninsula. PeerJ 6, e4638
Diese drei Publikationen sind im Ergebnisteil (Kapitel 2) separat zusammengefasst und folgend im gemeinsamen Kontext diskutiert (Kapitel 3).
The adult mammalian heart is a non-regenerative organ that fails to recover neither functionally nor structurally after insults. Although, reports show that the presences of mitotic nuclei after pathological or physiological cardiac stress in humans, it is widely accepted that the regenerative capacity of the human heart is immensely inadequate to restore the loss of cardiomyocytes (CMs) (Beltrami et al., 2001; Kajstura et al., 1998). Consequently, myocardial infarctions (MIs) are the primary cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. MIs is the irreversible loss of cardiac myocytes due to prolonged myocardial ischemia caused by an imbalance of the metabolic demand of the myocardium and myocardial blood flow (Whelan et al., 2010). Patients with MIs often die prematurely because of heart failure, resulting from irreversible scar formation on the ventricular wall and undermined heart function (Jessup and Brozena, 2003). Despite early intervention and advancements of medical devices for prevention, MIs are still untreatable, unless the heart transplantation approach considered, which is very limited by heart donation (Augoustides and Riha, 2009). Therefore, there is a high demand for standard therapy for heart failure that can restore the loss of CMs, prompt myocardial regeneration, and eventually, reduce morbidity and mortality rate of the disease.
Contrary to the adult mammalian heart, zebrafish display an extraordinary capacity for heart regeneration after the cardiac insult (Poss et al., 2002). This regenerative response relies on the ability of CMs to proliferate and replenish the lost tissue. Zebrafish is indeed one of the most commonly used experimental models for developmental and regenerative biology studies (Gemberling et al., 2013; Gonzalez-Rosa et al., 2017). For decades, the process of cardiac regeneration has been investigated using various cardiac injury models. The most commonly used and well-established injury methods are ventricular apical resection (Poss et al., 2002; Raya et al., 2003), cryoinjury (Chablais et al., 2011; Schnabel et al., 2011), as well as genetic and chemical ablation of heart cells (Curado et al., 2007; Wang et al., 2011). The origin of new cells is one of the most fundamental questions to be addressed during organ regeneration in any regenerative organism, and understanding of such phenomenon is crucial to design effective therapeutic strategies for non-regenerative organisms (Gonzalez-Rosa et al., 2017; Tanaka and Reddien, 2011).
Despite the robust cardiac regenerative potential, to date, only a handful of lineage tracing experiments have been reported in zebrafish heart regeneration. It was proposed that the cellular source of the renewed cardiac tissue might arise from progenitor or stem cells (Lepilina et al., 2006), through CMs dedifferentiation (Jopling et al., 2010; Kikuchi et al., 2010), transdifferentiation from other cell types in the heart tissue, and/or direct proliferation of the existing CMs (Kikuchi and Poss, 2012). Fate-mapping studies using transgenic lines driven by the myl7 promoter have shown that pre-existing CMs contribute to myocardial regeneration. However, myl7 expression is activated at early developmental stages in cardiac progenitor cells and hence precluding the identification of genuinely mature CMs in adult stages. Therefore, the cellular origin of the regenerating CMs remains elusive. Moreover, CM heterogeneity in the developing and adult zebrafish heart has never been explored to provide full insight into the process of regeneration. Therefore, I set out to identify genes exclusively expressed by either immature or mature CMs, generate promoter-driven reporter and CreERT2 lines to characterize the reporters during zebrafish heart development, and regeneration, and eventually to determine the contribution of the immature CMs to the regenerating CMs....