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The capacity of pathogenic bacteria to adhere to host cells and to avoid subsequent clearance by the host´s immune response is the initial and most decisive step leading to infections. Human pathogenic bacteria circulating in the bloodstream need to find ways to interact with endothelial cells (ECs) lining the blood vessels to infect and colonise the host. The extracellular matrix (ECM) of ECs might represent an attractive initial target for bacterial interaction, as many bacterial adhesins have reported affinities to ECM proteins, particularly fibronectin (Fn). Trimeric autotransporter adhesins (TAA) have been described as important pathogenicity factors of Gram-negative bacteria. The TAA from human pathogenic Bartonella henselae, Bartonella adhesin A (BadA), is one of the longest and best characterised adhesin and represents a prototypic TAA due to its domain architecture. B. henselae, the causative agent of cat scratch disease, endocarditis, and bacillary angiomatosis, adheres to ECs and ECM proteins via BadA interaction.
In this research, it was determined that the interaction between BadA and Fn is essential for B. henselae host cell adhesion. BadA interactions were identified within the heparin-binding domains of Fn, and the exact binding sites were revealed by mass spectrometry analysis of chemically crosslinked whole-cell bacteria and Fn. It turned out that specific BadA interactions with defined Fn regions represent the molecular basis for bacterial adhesion to ECs. These data were confirmed by using BadA-deficient bacteria and CRISPR-Cas FN1 knockout ECs. It was also identified that BadA binds to Fn from both cellular and plasma origin, suggesting that B. henselae binding to Fn might possibly take part in other infection processes apart from bacterial adherence, e.g. evasion from the host cell immune system.
Interactions between TAAs and Fn represent a key step for adherence of B. henselae to ECs. Still, Fn-mediated binding is of more significant importance for pathogenic bacteria than broadly recognised. Fn removal from the ECM environment of ECs, also reduced adherence of Staphylococcus aureus, Borrelia burgdorferi, and Acinetobacter baumannii to host cells Interactions between adhesins and Fn might therefore represent a crucial step for the adhesion of human-pathogenic Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria targeting the ECs as a niche of infection or as means for persistence.
This research demonstrated that combining large-scale analysis approaches to describe protein-protein interactions with supportive functional readouts (binding assays) allows for the discrimination of crucial interactions involved in bacterial adhesion to the host. The herein-described experimental approaches and tools might guide future research for other pathogenic bacteria and represent an initial point for the future generation of anti-virulence strategies to inhibit bacterial binding to host cells.
Heart development is a dynamic process modulated by various extracellular and intracellular cues. Cardiac progenitors in vertebrates such as the zebrafish, migrate over to the midline after differentiation from the epiblast (Bakkers, 2011; Rosenthal & Harvey, 2010; Stainier et al., 1996; Trinh & Stainier, 2004). These progenitors form a cardiac disc at the midline which elongates into the linear heart tube. The differentiation and migration of cardiac precursors is modulated by signaling interactions between cardiac precursor cells and their extracellular environment known as the Extracellular Matrix (ECM). Studies have shown that Cell-ECM interactions play a crucial role in sculpting the heart during early morphogenic events (Davis CL, 1924; Männer & Yelbuz, 2019; Rosenthal & Harvey, 2010). One key factor to these processes is the presence of a specialized ECM known as the Basement Membrane (BM). Extracellular basement membrane proteins such as Fibronectin have been shown to modulate these very early migration processes of the cardiomyocyte progenitors (Trinh & Stainier, 2004). As the heart develops further, the linear heart tube is composed of myocardial cells with an inner endothelial cell lining separated by a layer of thick jelly like substance called the cardiac jelly (Barry A, 1948; Davis CL, 1924; Little et al., 1989). The cardiac jelly also called the cardiac basement membrane, has been shown to regulate distinct developmental events during cardiogenesis. This early CJ contains components of the basal lamina such as laminins, fibronectin, hyaluronan as well as non-fibrillar collagens such as Collagen IV (Little et al., 1989). In this study, I aimed to identify ECM molecules of the Basement Membrane in the heart and identify their role in the modulation of cardiac development and regeneration using the zebrafish as my model organism.
I identified genes belonging to the Zebrafish Matrisome expressed during cardiac developmental and regeneration and performed CRISPR/Cas9 sgRNA mediated mutagenesis. I also developed overexpression tools for these genes.
Agrinp168 mutants exhibited no obvious gross morphology defects during cardiac development and were adult viable. Adult mutants exhibited reduced cardiomyocyte proliferation, but no significant difference in cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation post cardiac cryoinjury.
Decorin overexpression through mRNA injections led to increased myocardial wall thickness and DN dcn overexpression through mRNA injections led to loss of cardiac looping during early development.
Mutants for Small Leucine Rich Proteoglycan (SLRP) prelp generated using CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis exhibited cardiovascular defects. Close observation of prelp mutant hearts revealed a reduced heart rate and impaired fractional shortening of the ventricle. prelp mutants exhibited an enlarged atrium at 48 hpf and 72 hpf as well as a reduced ventricle size at 72 hpf. Chamber size in the mutant hearts were enlarged irrespective of contractility of the heart. Mutants showed an increased number of Atrial cardiomyocytes, but no change in cell size. On the molecular level, extracellular Laminin localization was disrupted in prelp mutants along with an increase in thickness and volume of the cardiac HA in the CJ suggesting a potential compensatory role, or retention of immaturity of the cardiac jelly in the prelp mutants. Transcriptomics analysis on the prelp mutant hearts revealed downregulation of ECM organization and ECM-Receptor interaction processes in the mutants. Gene Ontology analysis on prelp mutants hearts transcriptome revealed increased MAPK signaling. Interestingly, genes related to degradation of cardiac HA and maturation of cardiac jelly were downregulated, and genes related to epithelial identity of cardiomyocytes were upregulated. Analysis of the mutant hearts at single cell resolution revealed increased number of mutants exhibiting rounded up cardiomyocytes and loss of apical Podocalyxin. Truncated forms of prelp were generated to identify domain specific roles for Prelp, and reintroduction of N-terminal truncated Prelp into the mutants rescued the basal lamina localization and cardiac jelly volume phenotypes. Myocardium specific re-establishment of prelp expression revealed a marked rescue of the mutant cardiovascular phenotype suggesting that tissue specific expression of prelp is not required so long as Prelp is secreted into the CJ. With these data, I’ve elucidated the role of ECM SLRPs in modulation of cardiac chamber morphogenesis process and regeneration of the heart.
Embryonale Stammzellen (ESCs) sind ein wichtiges Werkzeug zur Untersuchung der frühen embryonalen Entwicklung. ESCs können mit Hilfe neuer Technologien zur Modifikation von Genen (z.B. mit dem CRISPR/Cas9 System) genetisch manipuliert werden. Daraus resultierende „knockout“ ES Zelllinien können helfen, die physiologische Rolle von Proteinen während der Differenzierung zu verstehen.
Transkriptionsfaktoren, die schnell und spezifisch Signalwege regulieren, spielen während der Embryonalentwicklung und während der Differenzierung von ESCs in vielen verschiedenen Zelltypen eine essentielle Rolle. Der Transkriptionsregulator „Far Upstream Binding Protein 1“ (FUBP1) ist ein Protein, welches eine ganz bestimmte einzelsträngige DNA Sequenz, das „Far Upstream Sequenz Element“, erkennt, bindet, und dadurch Gene wie z.B c-myc oder p21 reguliert. Mit der Entwicklung zweier Fubp1 Genfallen Mausstämme (Fubp1 GT) sollte die Frage nach der physiologischen Funktion von FUBP1 beantwortet werden. Die homozygoten FUBP1-defizienten GT Embryonen sterben im Mutterleib ungefähr am Tag E15.5 der Embryonalentwicklung. Sie sind kleiner als Wildtypembryonen und zeigen ein anämisches Aussehen. Daher wurden diese Mausmodelle hinsichtlich der Hämatopoese untersucht, die zu diesem Zeitpunkt vor allem in der Leber stattfindet. Es konnte eine signifikante Reduktion der hämatopoetischen Stammzellen (HSCs) festgestellt werden und zusätzlich war die langfristige Repopulation der FUBP1-/--Stammzellen im Knochenmark in Transplantationsexperimenten reduziert.
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Rolle von FUBP1 in einem weiteren Stammzellsystem analysiert und gleichzeitig seine Bedeutung in anderen Zelltypen der frühen Embryonalentwicklung untersucht.
Die Quantifizierung der FUBP1 Expression in den ESCs und während der Differenzierung zu sogenannten `embryoid bodies` (EBs) zeigten eine starke Expression auf mRNA- und auf Proteinebene. Nach der erfolgreichen Optimierung der Differenzierung von murinen ESCs wurden Fubp1 „knockout“ (KO) ESC Klone mit Hilfe der CRISPR/Cas9 Technologie etabliert. Die molekularbiologische Analyse der ESCs zeigte eine signifikante Erhöhung der Oct4 mRNA-Expression, während Nanog und die Differenzierungsmarker Brachyury, Nestin und Sox17 unverändert und in vergleichbarer Menge zu den Kontrollen vorhanden waren. Während der Differenzierung der Fubp1 KO Klone zu EBs zeigte sich eine signifikante Reduktion mesodermaler Marker wie Flk-1, SnaiI, Snai2, Bmp4 und FgfR2. Mit Hilfe durchflusszytometrischer Analysen bestätigte sich die verzögerte Bildung mesodermaler Zellen (Brachyury- und Flk-1-exprimierender Zellen) in den Fubp1 KO Klonen der EBs an den Tagen 3, 4 und 5 nach Beginn der Differenzierung.
Die Anwendung einer Ko-Kultivierung auf OP9 Zellen zur Differenzierung der ESCs in hämatopoetische Linien sollte zeigen, ob der Fubp1 KO ESCs ein Defekt in der frühen Entwicklung hämatopoetischer Stammzellen zu beobachten ist. Erneut konnte am Tag 5 der ESC-Differenzierung in der OP9 Ko-Kultur eine signifikante Reduktion der mesodermalen (Flk-1+) Zellen festgestellt werden. Die weitere Differenzierung zu hämatopoetischen CD45+ Zellen zeigte jedoch keinen Unterschied im prozentualen Anteil CD45+ Zellen am Tag 12 der Differenzierung. Auch die gezielte Differenzierung zu erythroiden Zellen durch Zugabe des Zytokins EPO zum Medium zeigte keinen signifikanten Unterschied im Differenzierungsgrad der erythroiden Zellen zwischen Kontroll- und Fubp1 KO Klonen.
In weiteren Experimenten habe ich in dieser Arbeit die Expression von FUBP1 in WT Embryos an den Tagen E9.5 und E13.5 der Embryonalentwicklung untersucht. Hierbei zeigte sich in beiden Entwicklungsstadien eine immunhistochemische Anfärbung von FUBP1 in den meisten Zellen des Embryos. Die Annahme, dass die Abwesenheit von FUBP1 in der Embryonalentwicklung zu verstärkten apoptotischen Vorgängen führen könnte und gleichzeitig die massive Expansion von Zellen gestört sein könnte wurde mit Hilfe immunhistochemischer Färbung von „cleaved Caspase 3“ (Apoptosemarker) und „Ki-67“ (Proliferationsmarker) in den homozygoten Fubp1 GT Embryos an den Tagen E9.5 und E13.5 nicht bestätigt.
Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit lassen darauf schließen, dass die Regulation von Apoptose und Proliferation durch FUBP1 während der Embryonalentwicklung nicht die Hauptrolle von FUBP1 darstellt. Es zeigte sich jedoch, dass FUBP1 als Transkriptionsregulator wichtig für die mesodermale Differenzierung von ESCs ist. Zu beobachten war, dass es in den FUBP1-defizienten ESCs zu einer Verzögerung der mesodermalen Differenzierung kommt. Es konnte bereits gezeigt werden, dass FUBP1 essenziell für die Selbsterneuerung von HSCs ist. Dies macht deutlich, dass FUBP1 neben der Proliferation und Apoptose ein breiteres Spektrum an Signalwegen reguliert, die für Stammzellen und deren Differenzierung von Bedeutung sind.
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.
Die akute myeloische Leukämie (AML) ist eine aggressive Erkrankung des Knochenmarks, welche die Hämatopoese beeinträchtigt und zu Knochenmarksversagen führt. Trotz des Fortschritts in der AML-Therapie bleibt die Prognose für die meisten Patienten schlecht, sodass neue Therapieansätze für die Behandlung dringend benötigt werden. Autophagie, ein kataboler Abbauprozess von zellulären Komponenten, ist nachweislich an der Entstehung von AML beteiligt. Als zentraler Regulator von Zellüberleben, Homöostase und Stoffwechsel, dient die Autophagie als Nährstoffquelle durch die Wiederverwertung von Makromolekülen während begrenzter Energieversorgung. AML-Zellen benötigen ein konstantes Nährstoff- und Energieniveau, um ihre Vermehrung aufrechtzuerhalten. Dies wird durch eine Umstellung von Stoffwechselwegen, insbesondere des mitochondrialen Stoffwechsels einschließlich der oxidativen Phosphorylierung (OXPHOS) und des Tricarbonsäurezyklus (TCA), erreicht.
Mehrere Studien haben die Hemmung der Autophagie für die Behandlung von Krebs als vielversprechenden Ansatz vorgestellt. Doch eine Monotherapie mit Autophagie-Inhibitoren erzielte nur eine geringfügige Wirksamkeit. Eine mögliche Erklärung hierfür ist die Entstehung von Kompensationsmechanismen, die zum Ausgleich der Autophagie-Hemmung in Krebszellen entstehen. Bis heute sind diese Kompensationsmechanismen kaum untersucht. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist es, ein geeignetes Autophagie-Gen zu identifizieren, mit dem sich die Rolle der Autophagie-Hemmung für das Überleben von AML-Zellen untersuchen lässt. Zusätzlich sollen die kompensatorischen Mechanismen, die durch die Autophagie-Hemmung in AML-Zellen entstehen können, untersucht werden, um neue metabolische Angriffspunkte zu identifizieren, die für Kombinationstherapien genutzt werden können.
Zu Beginn der Arbeit wurde ein gezielter CRISPR/Cas9 Screen in zwei humanen AML-Zelllinien durchgeführt, um Autophagie-Gene zu identifizieren, deren Verlust eine Proliferationsstörung in AML-Zellen verursacht, welche überwunden werden kann. Validierungsexperimente zeigten, dass der Verlust von ATG3 das Zellwachstum signifikant verminderte. Außerdem zeigte die Messung des Autophagie-Fluxes, dass der Verlust von ATG3 die Autophagie stark beeinträchtigte. Dies wurde durch eine Western-Blot-Analyse, die eine beeinträchtigte LC3-Lipidierung zeigte, und durch eine Immunfluoreszenzanalyse der Autophagosomen-Bildung mittels konfokaler Mikroskopie, die eine geringere Anzahl von Autophagosomen in ATG3-defizienten Zellen ergab, bestätigt. Deshalb wurde der Knockdown von ATG3 in AML Zellen verwendet, um die Mechanismen, die zum Ausgleichen der Autophagie-Hemmung entstehen, zu untersuchen. Zuerst wurde die Zellproliferation in fünf verschiedenen AML Zelllinien über sieben Tage betrachtet. In allen Zellenlinien führte der Verlust von ATG3 mittels small hairpin RNA zu verminderter Zellproliferation. Diese Ergebnisse zeigen die wichtige Rolle von ATG3 in der Autophagie und dass Autophagie-Hemmung durch ATG3-Verlust das Wachstum von AML-Zellen beeinträchtigt.
Da der Verlust von ATG3 die Proliferation von AML-Zellen beeinträchtigte, wurde eine Zellzyklusanalyse durchgeführt. Eine reduzierte S-Phase bestätigte die verminderte Proliferation in ATG3-depletierten AML-Zellen, doch der Zellzyklus war grundsätzlich nicht gestoppt. Darüber hinaus ergab die Analyse der Apoptose, dass diese unter dem Verlust von ATG3 erhöht war, aber etwa 50% der Zellen blieben vital. Diese Beobachtungen deuten darauf hin, dass AML-Zellen trotz des Verlusts der ATG3-abhängigen Autophagie weiter proliferieren können.
Um die Mechanismen zur Kompensation der Autophagie-Hemmung zu untersuchen, wurden die Auswirkungen des ATG3-Verlusts auf die mitochondriale Homöostase untersucht. Die Mitophagie sowie das mitochondriale Membranpotenzial und die Masse unterschieden sich zwischen Kontroll- und ATG3-depletierten AML-Zellen nicht, was darauf hindeutet, dass die mitochondriale Homöostase durch den Verlust von ATG3 nicht beeinträchtigt ist. Als nächstes wurde die mitochondriale Funktion durch Messung des ATP-Spiegels und der OXPHOS untersucht. Die ATP-Level und die OXPHOS waren nach dem Verlust von ATG3 in AML-Zellen erhöht, was auf eine gesteigerte mitochondriale Aktivität bei Autophagie-Defizienz hinweist.
The role of the homeobox transcription factor Meis2b in zebrafish heart development and asymmetry
(2018)
Zebrafish heart development: The heart of the zebrafish is the first organ to form and function during embryonic development, and is composed by one atrium and one ventricle. Between 5-17 somites stage, the cardiomyocyte precursors form the bilateral cardiac fields in the anterior lateral plate mesoderm (ALMP); where the endocardial precursors are located anterior to the cardiac fields (Zeng, Wilm et al. 2007). Then, the pools of endocardial andmyocardial precursors fuse at the midline and form the heart disc; where atrial cardiomyocytes are located around, the ventricular cardiomyocytes are located in the centerof the heart disc, and the future endocardium is located in a ventral position relative to the cardiomyocytes (Bakkers 2011). After the heart disc is formed, the cardiomyocyte progenitors start to migrate and rotate asymmetrically to form the heart tube (de Campos-Baptista, Holtzman et al. 2008, Rohr, Otten et al. 2008, Smith, Chocron et al. 2008). This process is followed by a rightward bending of the heart tube, and the arterial and venous poles rotate at different speed and directions (a process known as heart looping) (Smith, Chocron et al. 2008). The heart looping process results in a ventricle located on the right side and a more posterior atrium located on the left side with respect to the midline; at this point the atrium and ventricle are separated by a fine segment called the atrioventricular canal, where the valves will be formed (Staudt and Stainier 2012). The second heart field (SHF) is a pool of cardiac progenitors that are specified later during the formation of the heart disc and until the heart looping stages. The SHF contributes withcells to the distal side of the ventricle, the outflow and inflow tracts, and is important for the specification of the cardiac conduction system (de Pater, Clijsters et al. 2009, Hami, Grimes et al. 2011, Zhou, Cashman et al. 2011, Witzel, Jungblut et al. 2012, Guner-Ataman, Paffett-Lugassy et al. 2013)....
Ischemic heart disease caused by occlusion of coronary vessels leads to the death of downstream tissues, resulting in a fibrotic scar that cannot be resolved. In contrast to the adult mammalian heart, the adult zebrafish heart can regenerate following injury, enabling the study of the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms. One of the earliest responses that take place after cardiac injury in adult zebrafish is coronary revascularization. Previous transcriptomic data from our lab show that vegfc, a well-known regulator of lymphatic development, is upregulated early after injury and peaks at 96 hours post cryoinjury, coinciding with the peak of coronary endothelial cell proliferation. To test the hypothesis that vegfc is involved in coronary revascularization, I examined its expression pattern and found that it is expressed by coronary endothelial cells after cardiac damage. Using a loss-of-function approach to block Vegfc signaling, I found that it is required for coronary revascularization during cardiac regeneration. Notably, blocking Vegfc signaling resulted in a significant reduction in cardiomyocyte regeneration. Using transcriptomic analysis, I identified the extracellular matrix component gene emilin2a and the chemokine gene cxcl8a as effectors of Vegfc signaling. During cardiac regeneration, cxcl8a is expressed in epicardium-derived cells, while the gene encoding its receptor cxcr1 is expressed on coronary endothelial cells. I found that overexpressing emilin2a increases coronary revascularization, and induces cxcl8a expression. Using loss-of-function approaches, I observed that both cxcl8a and cxcr1 are required for coronary revascularization after cardiac injury.
Altogether, my findings indicate that Vegfc acts as an angiocrine factor that plays an important role in regulating cardiac regeneration in zebrafish. Mechanistically, Vegfc promotes the expression of emilin2a, which promotes coronary proliferation, at least in part by enhancing Cxcl8a-Cxcr1 signaling. This study helps in understanding the mechanisms underlying coronary revascularization during cardiac regeneration, with promising therapeutic applications for human heart regeneration.
The early-diverging oomycetes contain a large number of holocarpic obligate parasites of diatoms, algae, aquatic phycomycetes, and invertebrate animals. These organisms are diverse and widespread. However, taxonomic placement most of the early-diverging oomycetes remains provisional and unresolved, since many have not been sequenced and studied for molecular phylogeny. Here, we report the taxonomy and phylogeny of several holocarpic oomycetes that we have rediscovered and newly classified, including several new species combinations. Phylogenetic reconstructions revealed that the type species of genus Ectrogella (E. bacillariacearum) is a member of the early-diverging Saprolegniales, while the type species of Olpidiopsis (O. saprolegniae) and Pontisma (P. lagenidioides) grouped within the early-diverging lineage of oomycetes forming distinct clades. Since the monophyletic red-algae parasitoids are unrelated to the Olpidiopsis, these were reclassified to the genus Pontisma, while genus Diatomophthora was introduced to accommodate all the diatom parasitoids that were previously assigned to Olpidiopsis. In addition, four new oomycete parasitoids, Miracula helgolandica, Miracula moenusica, Diatomophthora drebesii and Olpidiopsis parthenogenetica and a single rediscovered species, Diatomophthora gillii, are also classified here, including eight new species combinations of red-algae parasites (Pontisma bostrychiae, P. heterosiphoniae, P. muelleri, P. palmariae, P. porphyrae, P. pyropiae) and diatom parasitoids (Diatomophthora drebesii, D. gillii). The results obtained in this study have further improved the resolution and expanded the knowledge on the phylogeny of the earlydiverging oomycetes, leading to the establishment of three new orders (Miraculales, Diatomophthorales, Pontismatales) and one order (Anisolpidiales) being reintroduced.
For millennia, rural West African communities living in or adjacent of savanna ecosystems have been collecting components of local plant species (e.g. fruits, leaves, bark) in order to fulfil essential household subsistence needs (alimentation, medical care, energy demand etc.), to generate cash income and to overcome times of (financial) crisis. Thus, these non-timber forest products (NTFPs) make a considerable contribution to the well-being of local households. However, climate and land use change severely impact West African savanna ecosystems and, consequently, the safe-guarding of dependent rural livelihoods. The conversion of savanna area into cultivated land for subsistence farming owing to the ongoing population growth, as well as the progressive promotion of cash crops (e.g. cotton) is ever-increasing. As a consequence, present land-use management in West Africa has to cope with serious trade-offs. Within this decision-making NTFPs have been constantly understated due to a lack of appropriate economic figures to use within common cost-benefit analysis, and, thus, have been frequently outcompeted by seemingly more profitable land-use options. Therefore, it is crucial to provide appropriate economic data for NTFPs in order to create positive incentives for both decision-makers and NTFP beneficiaries to conserve NTFP-providing trees. The key finding of this analysis is that income from NTFPs accounts for 39 % on average of an annual total household income in Northern Benin, representing the second largest income share next to crop income and proving the respective households to be economically heavily dependent on NTFPs. Thereby, socio-economic characteristics of NTFP users tremendously shape their preferences for woody species. Particularly ethnicity has a major impact on the species used and the economic return obtained by them. Moreover, the study investigated the impacts of climate and land use change on the economic benefits derived from the three economically most important tree species in the region Vitellaria paradoxa, Parkia biglobosa and Adansonia digitata in 2050: Environmental changes will have primarily negative effects on the economic returns from all the three species. At large, the study underpins the economic relevance of NTFPs for rural communities in West African savannas and, consequently, the necessity to appropriately sustain them in order to safe-guard local livelihoods. Providing key figures on the current and future economic benefits obtained from NTFPs can augment common cost-benefit analysis, and, delivering detailed information about peoples’ use preferences for local species, this study clearly contributes to improve the basis of decision-making with reference to local land-use policies.
Die Rheumatoide Arthritis (RA) ist die häufigste chronisch-entzündliche Gelenkerkrankung, die inadäquat therapiert zu Gelenkzerstörung und resultierender Invalidität führen kann. Genetische Risikofaktoren sowie Lebensstileinflüsse führen in präklinischen Erkrankungsstadien zu posttranslationalen Modifikationen körpereigener Strukturen, die die immunologische Selbst-Toleranz brechen und zur immunologischen Fehlerkennung von Gelenkstrukturen durch B- und T-Lymphozyten führen.
Das Ziel der hier vorliegenden Arbeit war die Aufklärung von Wirkmechanismen eines für die immunmodulatorische Therapie der RA entwickelten innovativen Ansatzes zur Rekonstitution der immunologischen Autotoleranz mittels rekombinant hergestellter MHC-Klasse-II/Peptidkomplexe durch Induktion regulatorischer T-Zellen. Im Mittelpunkt der in vitro Studien steht hierbei eine über Speziesbarrieren hinweg evolutionär konservierte, von T-Lymphozyten auf dem Kollagen Typ-II (CII) erkannte, durch Glykosylierung posttranslational modifizierte, autoantigene Strukturdeterminante. Dieses T-Zellepitop (CII-Peptid) stellt sowohl in der humanen RA als auch in der murinen Experimentalerkrankung der CIA (Collagen induced arthritis) eine immunodominante Struktur der arthritogenen Autoimmunität dar. Für die modellhaften in vitro Studien zur Aufklärung der Wirkweise rekombinanter MHC-II/Peptidkomplexe auf humane T-Zellen, standen über eine Kooperation mit Prof. Rikard Holmdahl (Karolinska Institut, Stockholm) T-Zell-Hydridome mit transgener Expression des humanen MHC-II/Moleküls DR4 (DRA1/DRB1*04:01) mit unterschiedlicher Epitopspezifität (T-Zell-Hybridom 3H8, Spezifität: unmodifiziertes CII-Peptid und mDR1.1, Spezifität: galaktosyliertes CII-Peptid an Position K264) zur Verfügung. Das aus einer α- und β-Kette bestehende MHC-II/Molekül DR4 ist durch das DRA1-Gen und allelische Varianten des DRB1-Locus (stärkste RA-Assoziation: DRB1*04:01) kodiert und bildet die Form seiner Bindungstasche für die Präsentation antigener Peptide an den T-Zell-Rezeptor (TCR) auf der Oberfläche antigenpräsentierender Zellen (APC). In den Studien zur Stimulation der Hybridomzellen konnte gezeigt werden, dass die T-Zellstimulation und die daraus resultierende Zytokinausschüttung (IL-2 und IL-10) kontextabhängig ist. Je nach Stimulationsart, ob festphasengebunden- oder löslich, erfolgt die Stimulusperzeption über differente TCR-Anordnungen in Mikrodomänen der Zelloberfläche und resultiert in entsprechend modulierten Signalstärken. So führt die Zellaktivierung über die festphasengebundene Stimulation mittels MHC-II/Peptidkomplexen zur Ausbildung einer hohen TCR-Dichte, die über hohe Signalstärken zu einer spezifischen IL-2 Sekretion als Antwort führen. Die Stimulation mit monomeren DR4/CII-Peptidkomplexen in gelöster Form adressiert dagegen die auf der gesamten Zelloberfläche verteilten T-Zell-Rezeptoren, was in einer geringeren Aktivierungsdichte und einer attenuierten Gesamtsignalstärke sowie der Sekretion des immunsupressiv wirkenden IL-10 resultiert. Für den angestrebten pharmakologischen Einsatz der DR4/CII-Peptidkomplexe ist bedeutsam, dass die aktivierende TCR-Bindung der gelösten monomeren Komplexe nur partiell agonistisch wirkt und die Induktion immunregulatorischer IL-10 Zytokinantworten begünstigt. Neben der direkten T-Zellinteraktion konnte auch die Möglichkeit einer indirekten Aktivierung unter Vermittlung von APCs nach Endozytose der DR4/CII-Peptidkomplexe, ihrer lysosomalen Prozessierung und Präsentation auf endogenen neusynthetisierten DR4/Molekülen experimentell u.a. unter Verwendung der HLA-DR4- exprimierenden murinen Makrophagenlinie BL25 als APC-Modell belegt werden. Im Hinblick auf die intendierte Weiterentwicklung zu therapeutischen Anwendungen der MHC-II/CII-Peptidkomplexe unter Gesichtspunkten der Arzneimittelsicherheit ist wichtig, dass der aufgezeigte indirekte Weg der T-Zellaktivierung nach vorausgehender Prozessierung durch APCs ineffizient ist. Dieser Weg erfordert nämlich sehr hohe Konzentrationen an MHC-II/Peptidkomplexen, welche weit oberhalb der in tierexperimentellen Studien unter therapeutisch wirksamen Dosierungen erreichten Gewebespiegel liegen.
Darüber hinaus ist es uns gelungen, methodisch den Nachweis CII-spezifischer T-Zellen, die im Gesamtrepertoire der CD4+ T-Zellen im peripheren Blut von RA-Patienten (HLA-DRB1*04:01) nur in sehr niedriger Frequenz vorkommen, mittels T-Zellaktivierung und spezifischer Tetramerbindung als phänotypischen Marker zu verbessern. Für die Tetramerbindung wurden Monomere mit dem galaktosylierten CII-Peptid (CIIgal259-273) beladenen DR4/Moleküle über einen aminoterminal konjugierten Biotinrest mittels eines Fluorochromgekoppelten Streptavidins tetramerisiert. Unter Einsatz dieser Methoden ist es gelungen, aus den durchflusszytometrisch sortierten CII-spezifischen Zellen, mittels Nukleotidsequenzierung, ihr TCR-Repertoire zu analysieren und hinsichtlich präferentieller V-Genverwendung zu charakterisieren. Für zwei humane DR4-restringiert gal264CII-spezifische T-Zell-Rezeptoren aus RA-Patienten konnte die Funktionalität und Epitopspezifität durch rekombinante Expression demonstriert werden. Auf Basis der gemeinsamen Vorarbeiten mit Prof. Rikard Holmdahl im murinen CIA-Modell und den bekannten Daten zur Induktion regulatorischer T-Zellen (Tr1-Zellen) durch MHC-II/CII-Peptidkomplexe, wurden in vitro Differenzierungsexperimente an humanen PBMCs DR4-positiver RA-Patienten unter dem Einfluss von DR4/gal264CII-Peptidkomplexen durchgeführt. Die Studien belegen, dass die Komplexe mit den antigenspezifischen T-Zellen interagieren und zur Induktion von Markern eines Tr1-Phänotyps, darunter PD-1 und IL-10 führen. Zukünftige Kristallstrukturanalysen eines TCR/DR4/gal264CII-Komplexes sollen dem verbesserten molekularen Verständnis der TCR-Erkennung von CII als Autoantigen insbesondere bzgl. des flexibleren Galaktoserestes für Arthritogenität und Tolerogenität dienen. Fernziel ist die Entwicklung einer wirksamen und sicheren immunmodulatorischen Therapie der RA durch Induktion regulatorischer T-Zellen.
Tissue translocation, multigenerational and population effects of microplastics in Daphnia magna
(2021)
The last century saw the widespread adoption of plastic materials throughout nearly every aspect of our lives. Plastics are synthetic polymers that are made up of monomer chains. The properties of the monomer in conjunction with chemical additives allow plastics to have a sheer endless variety of features and use cases. They are cheap, lightweight, and extremely durable. Plastic materials are often engineered for single-use and in conjunction with high production volumes and insufficient waste management and recycling across the globe, this leads to a large number of plastics entering the environment. Marine ecosystems are considered sinks. However, freshwater ecosystems as entry pathways are highly affected by plastic waste as well. Throughout the past decade, the impact of plastic waste on human and environmental health has received a lot of attention from the ecotoxicological community as well as the public. Small plastic fragments (< 1 mm called microplastics) are a large part of this emerging field of research. Within this, the water flea Daphnia magna is probably the most common organism that is used to assess microplastics toxicity. As a filter-feeding organism, it indiscriminately ingests particles from the water column and is thus highly susceptible to microplastics. For this thesis, we identified some gaps in the available data on the ecotoxicity of microplastics to daphnids. To illuminate some of those gaps the present thesis was aimed at five main aspects:
(1) Tissue translocation of spherical microplastics in Daphnia magna
(2) Investigation of the toxicity of irregularly shaped microplastics
(3) Multigenerational and population effects of microplastics
(4) Comparison of the toxicity of microplastics and natural particles
(5) Effects of particle-aging on microplastics toxicity
The thesis is comprised of three peer-reviewed articles and one so-far unpublished study as “additional results”. The first study was aimed at understanding tissue translocation of spherical microplastics to lipid storage droplets of daphnids. The crossing of biological membranes is discussed as a prerequisite to eliciting tissue damage and an inflammatory response. Previously, researchers reported the translocation of fluorescently labeled spherical microplastics to lipid storage droplets of daphnids, even though no plausible biological mechanism to explain this occurrence. Therefore, in order to learn more about this process and potentially illuminate the mechanism we replicated the study. We were able to observe a fluorescence signal inside the lipid droplets only after increasing the exposure concentrations. Nonetheless, it appeared to be independent of particles. This led to the hypothesis, that the lipophilic fluorescent dye uncoupled from the particles and subsequently accumulated in lipid storage droplets. The hypothesis was further confirmed through an additional experiment with a silicone-based passive sampling device showing that the fluorescence occurred both independent of particles and digestive processes. Accordingly, we concluded that the reported findings were a microscopic artifact caused by the uncoupling of the dye from the particles. Therefore, a fluorescence signal alone is not a sufficient proxy to assume that particles have translocated. It needs to be coupled with additional methods to ensure that the observation is indeed caused by the translocation of particles.
It is still unclear whether the toxicity profile of microplastics is different from that of naturally occurring particles or if they are “just another particle”, as there are innumerable amounts in the natural environment surrounding an organism. The goal of the second study was to compare the toxicity of irregularly shaped polystyrene microplastics to that of the natural particle kaolin. The environment is full of natural non-food particles that daphnids ingest more or less indiscriminately and therefore are well adapted to deal with. Daphnids have a short generation time and usually experience food limitation in nature. Therefore, short-term studies only looking at acute toxicity with ad libitum food availability are not representative of the exposure scenario in nature. For a more realistic scenario, we, therefore, used a four-generation multigenerational design under food limitation to investigate how effects translate from one generation to the next. We observed concentration-dependent effects of microplastics but not of natural particles on mortality, reproduction, and growth. Some of the effects increased from generation to generation, leading to the extinction of two treatment groups. Here, microplastics were more toxic than natural particles. At least part of this difference can be explained by physical properties leading to the quick sedimentation of the kaolin, while microplastics remained in the water column. Nonetheless, buoyancy and sedimentation would also affect exposure in the environment and are likely different for most microplastics than for most naturally occurring particle types.
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Microsporidia are a group of parasites that infect a wide range of species, many of which play important roles in agriculture and human disease. At least 14 microsporidian species have been confirmed to cause potentially lifethreatening infectious diseases in both immunocompromised and immunocompetent humans. Approximately 1,400 species of microsporidia have been described. Depending on their host and habitat they are classified into three groups, the aquasporidia, the terresporidia and the marinosporidia.
Microsporidia were originally classified as fungi by Naegeli (1857). However, their lack of typical eukaryotic components – such as mitochondria, Golgi bodies or peroxisomes – suggested to place the microsporidia together with other amitochondriate protists within the Archezoa kingdom. This "microsporidia-early" hypothesis was further supported by molecular phylogenies inferred from individual genes. Despite this evidence, the placement of microsporidia as an early branching eukaryote remained a topic for debate. The phylogeny of microsporidia is prone to suffer from biases in their reconstruction. The high evolutionary rate of microsporidian proteins tends to place these proteins together with other fast evolving lineages, a phenomenon known as long-branch attraction. In 1996, the first molecular phylogenetic studies placed the microsporidia inside the fungi.
Subsequently, several further studies located the microsporidia at different positions inside the fungal clade. Since then, microsporidia have been considered as members of the Ascomycota, Zygomycota, Cryptomycota, or as a sister group to the Ascomycota and Basidiomycota, or even as the sister group of all fungi.
The difficulties in determining the evolutionary origin of microsporidia are not only caused by their lack of several cellular components but also by their reduced genomes and metabolism. Being obligate intracellular parasites, microsporidia successfully reduced their genome sizes, down to the range of bacteria. As the smallest eukaryotic genome described so far, the genome of Encephalitozoon intestinalis is just 2.3 Mbp, about half the size of the one of Escherichia coli. Due to their low number of protein coding genes (less than 4,000), microsporidia are thought to retain only genes essential for their survival and development. Furthermore, several key metabolic pathways are missing in the microsporidia, such as the citric acid cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, or the de novo biosynthesis of nucleotides. As a result they are in an obligatory dependence on many primary metabolites from the hosts. However, the presence of hsp70 protein suggests a more complex genome of the microsporidian ancestor. Consequently, the small microsporidian genomes and the reduced metabolism would be consequences of a secondary loss process that molded the contemporary microsporidia from a functionally more complex ancestral species. However, it remains unclear whether the last common ancestor (LCA) of the microsporidia was already reduced, or whether the genome compaction was lineage-specific and started from a more complex LCA.
We investigated the evolutionary history of the contemporary microsporidia through the reconstruction and analysis of their LCA. As a first step in our analysis, we have developed and implemented a software facilitating an intuitive data analysis of the large presence absence-patterns resulting from the tracing of microsporidian proteins in gene sets of many different species. These so called phylogenetic profiles can now be dynamically visualized and explored with PhyloProfile. The software allows the integration of other additional information layers into the phylogenetic profile, such as the similarity of feature architecture (FAS) between the protein under study and its orthologs. The FAS score can be displayed along the presence-absence pattern, which can help to identify orthologs that have likely diverged in function. PhyloProfile closes the methodological gap that existed between tools to generate large phylogenetic profiles to delineate the evolutionary history and the contemporary distribution of large – and ultimately complete – gene sets, and the more function-oriented analysis of individual protein. In the next step we tackled the problem of how to transfer functional annotation from one protein to another. We have developed HamFAS that integrates a targeted ortholog search based on the HaMStR algorithm with a weighted assessment of feature architecture similarities (FAS) between orthologs. In brief, for a seed protein we identify orthologs in reference species in which proteins have been functionally annotated based on manually curated assignments to KEGG Ortholog (KO) groups. The FAS scores between the orthologs and seed proteins are calculated. Subsequently, we compute pairwise FAS scores for all reference proteins within a KO group. A group's mean FAS score serves then as cutoff that must be exceeded to warrant transfer of its KO identifier to the seed. A benchmark using a manually curated yeast protein set showed that HamFAS yields the best precision (98.5%) when compared with two state-of-the-art annotation tools, KAAS and BlastKOALA. Furthermore, HamFAS achieves a higher sensitivity. On average HamFAS annotates almost 50% more proteins than KAAS or BlastKOALA.
With this extended bioinformatics toolbox at hand, we aimed at reconstructing the evolutionary history of the microsporidia. We generated a robust phylogeny of microsporidia using a phylogenomics approach. As a data basis, we identified a set of microsporidian proteins encoded by 80 core genes with one-to-one orthologs. A maximum likelihood analysis of this data
with 48 fungi and additionally in 13 species from more distantly related such as animals and plants combined in a supermatrix strongly supported the hypothesis that microsporidia form the sister group of the fungi. We confirmed that the data explains this microsporidia-fungi relationship significantly better than any other of the previously proposed phylogenetic hypotheses.
On the basis of this phylogeny, and of the phylogenetic profiles of microsporidian proteins, we then focused on reconstructing the dynamics microsporidian genome evolution. Between 2% of the proteins in the compact microsporidia Encephalitozoon intestinalis and up to 49% of the proteins of Edhazardia aedis are private for individual microsporidian species. A comparison of the sequence characteristics of these proteins to that of proteins with orthologs in other microsporidian species revealed individual differences. Yet, without further evidences it remains unclear whether these private genes are indeed lineage-specific innovations contributing to the adaptation of each microsporidium to its host, or whether these are artifacts introduced in the process of gene annotation. A total of 14,410 microsporidian proteins could then be grouped into 1605 orthologous groups that can be traced back to the last common ancestor of the microsporidia (LCA set). We found that 94% of the microsporidian LCA proteins could be tracked back to the last eukaryotic common ancestor. The high evolutionary age of these proteins, together with the resistance against gene loss in the microsporidia suggests that the corresponding functions are essential for eukaryotic life. Further 3% of the LCA proteins could be dated to the common ancestor microsporidia share with the fungi. Only 3% of the LCA proteins appear as microsporidia specific inventions. These proteins are potentially of importance for the evolutionary of the obligate parasitic lifestyle nowadays shared by all microsporidia.
The functional annotation and metabolic pathway analysis of the microsporidian LCA protein set gave us more insight into the adaptation of the microsporidia to their parasitic lifestyle and the origin of the microsporidian genome reduction. The presence of E1 and E3 components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex and the mitochondrial hsp70 protein support an ancestral presence of mitochondria in the ancestral microsporidia. In addition, several ancient proteins that complement gapped metabolic pathways were found in the microsporidian LCA. They suggested a more complex genome and metabolism in the LCA. However, our reconstruction of the metabolic network of the microsporidian LCA still lacks many main pathways. For example, the TCA cycle for effective energy production, and key enzymes that are required for in vivo synthesis of critical metabolites like purines and pyrimidines appear absent. We therefore find that the parasitic lifestyle and the genome reduction already occurred in the microsporidian LCA. This ancestral state was followed by further losses and gains during the evolution of each individual microsporidian lineage.
The increasing demand of the high value ω-3 fatty acids due to its beneficial role for human health, explains the huge need for alternative production ways of ω-3 fatty acids. The oleaginous alga Phaeodactylum tricornutum is a prominent candidate and has been investigated as biofactory for ω-3 fatty acids, e.g. the synthesis of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). In general, the growth and the lipid content of diatoms can be enhanced by genetic engineering or are influenced by environmental factors, e.g. nutrients, light or temperature.
In this study, the potential of P. tricornutum as biofactory was improved by heterologously expressing the hexose uptake protein 1 (HUP1) from the Chlorophyte Chlorella kessleri.
An in situ localization study revealed that only the full length HUP1 protein fused to eGFP was correctly targeted to the plasma membrane, whereas the N-terminal sequence of the protein is only sufficient to enter the ER. Protein and gene expression data displayed that the gene-promoter combination was relevant for the expression level of HUP1, while only cells expressing the protein under the light-inducible fcpA promoter showed a significant expression. In these mutants an efficient glucose uptake was detectable under mixotrophic growth condition, low light intensities and low glucose concentrations leading to an increased cell dry weight.
In a second approach, the growth and lipid content of wildtype cells were analyzed in a small 1l photobioreactor. Here, a commercial F/2 medium and a common culture medium, ASP and modified versions were compared. There was neither a significant impact on the growth and lipid content in P. tricornutum cells due to the supplemention of trace elements nor due to elevated salt concentrations in the media. In a modified version of ASP medium, with adapted nitrate and phosphate concentration a constantly high biomass productivity was achieved, yielding the highest value of 82 mg l-1 d-1 during the first three days. This was achieved even though light intensity was reduced by 40%. The differences in biomass productivity as well as the lipid content and the lipid composition underlined the importance of the choice of culture medium and the harvest time for enhanced growth and EPA yields in P. tricornutum.
Plastics contain a complex mixture of chemicals including polymers, additives, starting substances and side-products of processing. These plastic chemicals are prone to leach into the packaged goods, in the case of food contact materials (FCMs), or into the natural environment, in the case of plastic debris. Thus, plastics represent an exposure source of chemicals for humans and wildlife alike. While it is widely known that individual plastic chemicals, such as bisphenol A and phthalates, are hazardous, little is known on the overall chemical composition and toxicity of plastics. When fragmented into smaller particles, referred to as microplastics (< 5 mm), the plastic itself can be ingested by many species. It is well established that microplastic ingestion can have negative consequences for a wide range of organisms including invertebrates, but the contribution of plastic chemicals to the toxicity of microplastics is unclear.
Given the above, the present thesis aimed at a comprehensive toxicological, ecotoxicological and chemical characterization of everyday plastics. For a comparative evaluation, 77 plastic products were selected covering 16 material types (e.g., polyethylene) made from petroleum or renewable feedstocks. These products included biodegradable products, FCMs and non-FCMs, as well as raw materials and final products, respectively. In the first two studies, the chemical mixtures contained in the 77 products were extracted with methanol and extracts were analyzed in a set of four in vitro bioassays and by non-target high-resolution gas or liquid chromatography mass spectrometry. Since an exposure only occurs if chemicals actually leach under realistic conditions, in a third study migration experiments with water were conducted for 24 out of the 77 products. The aqueous migrates were assessed in the same way as the methanolic extracts. In addition, the freshwater invertebrate Daphnia magna was exposed chronically to microplastics made of polyvinylchloride (PVC), polyurethane (PUR) and polylactic acid (PLA) to investigate the contribution of chemicals in microplastic toxicity, in a fourth study.
The experimental findings demonstrate that a wide variety of chemicals is present in plastics. A single plastic product can contain up to several thousand chemical features, most of which unique to that product and at the same time unknown. The results also indicate that the majority of these chemical mixtures are toxic in vitro. Accordingly, 65% of the plastic extracts induced baseline toxicity and 42% an oxidative stress response, while 25% had an antiandrogenic and 6% an estrogenic activity. This implies that chemicals causing unspecific toxicity are more prevalent in plastics than such with endocrine effects. These chemicals can also leach from plastics under realistic conditions. Between 17 and 8936 chemical features were detected in a single migrate sample and all 24 tested migrates induced in vitro toxicity. This means that humans and wildlife can actually be exposed to toxic plastic chemicals under realistic conditions. Generally, each product has its individual toxicological and chemical fingerprint. Thus, neither material type, feedstock, biodegradability nor the food contact suitability of a product can serve as a predictor for the toxicity, the chemical composition or complexity of a product. Likewise, this means that bio-based and biodegradable materials are not superior to their petroleum-based counterparts from a toxicological perspective despite being promoted as sustainable alternatives to conventional plastics.
Moreover, the present thesis demonstrates that plastic chemicals can be the main driver for microplastic toxicity. Irregular microplastics made of PVC, PUR and PLA adversely affected life-history traits of D. magna in a polymer type- and endpoint-dependent manner at concentrations between 100 and 500 mg L-1 and with a higher efficiency than natural kaolin particles. While the toxicity of PVC was triggered by the chemicals used in the material, the effects of PUR and PLA were induced by the physical properties of the particle.
In addition, in the fifth study, results and observations made during this thesis were integrated inter- and transdisciplinarily with the perspectives of a social scientist and a product manufacturer. This elucidated that knowledge on plastic ingredients is often concealed, is lacking or not applicable in practice. These intransparencies hinder the safety evaluation of plastic products as well as the choice and sale of the least toxic packaging material.
Overall, the present thesis highlights that the chemical safety of plastics and their bio-based and biodegradable alternatives is currently not ensured. Thus, chemicals require more consideration in the toxicity and risk assessment of plastics and microplastics. Product-specific and complex chemical compositions, including unknown compounds, pose a challenge here. Two essential steps towards non-toxic products are to increase transparency along the product life cycle and to reduce the chemical complexity of plastics by communication and regulation. The results of the present thesis indicate that products exist which do not contain toxic chemicals. These can serve to direct the design of safer plastics. Since toxicity and chemical complexity seem to increase with processing, the integration of toxicity testing during the production steps would further support the safe and sustainable production and use of plastic products.
The metabolome of any live cell consists of several hundred, if not thousands of different molecules at any given moment, be it a relatively small bacterial cell or a whole multicellular organism. Although there are continuous attempts to differentiate between primary and secondary metabolites, the borders often blur in the eye of almost perfect interconvertability of all such matter. With chemistry and physics dominating this domain of biology it is an interdisciplinary endeavor to tackle the questions surrounding the workings of the metabolic pathways involved, searching for answers that ultimately help us to better understand life and find solutions to problems that affect us humans. One area of biochemistry that serves as a formidable example of the intertwined primary and secondary metabolic pathways are fatty acids, essential components of bacterial membranes, sources of energy and carbon but also important building blocks of several natural products. The second area to be mentioned is the metabolism of amino acids, the basic components of proteins and enzymes, which also serve as precursors to a diverse set of metabolites with many biological purposes.
This work focuses on these two areas of biochemistry, as several intermediates of their metabolism serve as building blocks for complex secondary metabolites whence many interesting and bioactive natural products are derived. The powerful and relatively novel tool of click-chemistry is employed to track azide-labeled precursors of primary and secondary metabolism in various bacterial strains to observe biochemistry at work and adds to the knowledge gained through other methods. The methods presented in this work serve the observation of fatty acid biosynthesis, degradation, modification and transport through direct ligation of azido fatty acids with cyclooctynes on one hand, leading to a revision of fatty acid transport in general. On the other hand a cleavable azide-reactive resin is devised to generally track the fate of azidated compounds through the myriads of metabolic pathways offered by entomopathogenic bacteria possessing a rich secondary metabolism. The resulting findings led to the identification of several antimicrobial peptides, amides and other compounds of which many had remained so far undetected in the strains that underwent investigation, underlining the worth of this method for future metabolomic research and beyond.
Trait-dependent effects of biotic and abiotic filters on plant regeneration in Southern Ecuador
(2024)
Tropical forests have always fascinated scientists due to their unique biodiversity. However, our understanding of ecological processes shaping the complexity of tropical rainforests is still relatively poor. Plant regeneration is one of the processes that remain understudied in the tropics although this is a key process defining the structure, diversity and assembly of tropical plant communities. In my dissertation, I combine experimental, observational and trait-based approaches to identify processes shaping the assembly of seedling communities and compare associations between environmental conditions and plant traits across plant life stages. By working along a steep environmental gradient in the tropical mountains of Southern Ecuador, I was able to investigate how processes of plant regeneration vary in response to biotic and abiotic factors in tropical montane forests.
My dissertation comprises three complementary chapters, each addressing an individual research question. First, I studied how trait composition in plant communities varies in relation to the broad- and local-scale environmental conditions and across the plant life cycle. I measured key traits reflecting different ecological strategies of plants that correspond to three stages of the plant life cycle (i.e., adult trees, seed rain and recruiting seedlings). I worked on 81 subplots along an elevational gradient covering a large climatic gradient at three different elevations (1000, 2000 and 3000 m a.s.l.). In addition, I measured soil and light conditions at the local spatial scale within each subplot. My findings show that the trait composition of leaves, seeds and seedlings changed similarly across the elevational gradient, but that the different life stages responded differently to the local gradients in soil nutrients and light availability. Consequently, my findings highlight that trait-environment associations in plant communities differ between large and small spatial scales and across plant life stages.
Second, I investigated how seed size affects seedling recruitment in natural forests and in pastures in relation to abiotic and biotic factors. I set up a seed sowing experiment in both habitat types and sowed over 8,000 seeds belonging to seven tree species differing in seed size. I found that large-seeded species had higher proportions of recruitment in the forests compared to small-seeded species. However, small-seeded species tended to recruit better in pastures compared to large-seeded species. I showed that high surface temperature was the main driver of differences in seedling recruitment between habitats, because it limited seedling recruitment of large-seeded species. The results from this experiment show that pasture restoration requires seed addition of large-seeded species and active protection of recruiting seedlings in order to mitigate harmful conditions associated with high temperatures in deforested areas.
Third, I examined the associations between seedling beta-diversity and different abiotic and biotic factors between and within elevations. I applied beta-diversity partitioning to obtain two components of beta-diversity: species turnover and species richness differences. I associated these components of beta-diversity with biotic pressures by herbivores and fungal pathogens and environmental heterogeneity in light and soil conditions. I found that species turnover in seedling communities was positively associated with the dissimilarity in biotic pressures within elevations and with environmental heterogeneity between elevations. Further, I found that species richness differences increased primarily with increasing environmental heterogeneity within elevations. My findings show that the associations between beta-diversity of seedling communities and abiotic and biotic factors are scale-dependent, most likely due to differences in species sorting in response to biotic pressures and species coexistence in response to environmental heterogeneity.
My dissertation reveals that studying processes of community assembly at different plant life stages and spatial scales can yield new insights into patterns and processes of plant regeneration in tropical forests. I investigated how community assembly processes are governed by abiotic and biotic filtering across and within elevations. I also experimentally explored how the process of seedling recruitment depends on seed size-dependent interactions, and verified how these effects are associated with abiotic and biotic filtering. Identifying such processes is crucial to inform predictive models of environmental change on plant regeneration and successful forest restoration. Further exploration of plant functional traits and their associations with local-scale environmental conditions could effectively support local conservation efforts needed to enhance forest cover in the future and halt the accelerating loss of biodiversity.
Across the entire animal kingdom, sociality, i.e. the tendency of individual animals to form a group with conspecifics, is a common trait. Environmental changes have to be met with corresponding, quick adaptations. For social species, the presence of conspecifics is important for survival and if social animals are deprived of access to conspecifics, this can lead to strong and lasting changes on a physiological level as well as behaviour. Gene expression changes responsible for these adaptations have so far not been understood in detail. As social isolation leads to changes on a neuronal level, it is important to investigate the gene expression changes that are induced in the brain. In this thesis, next-generation RNA-sequencing was applied to zebrafish, a well-established model organism characterized by its high degree of companionship. Within the entire brain, gene expression was analysed in zebrafish that were raised either with conspecifis or in isolation, ranging from 5 to 21 days post fertilization. Using this approach, several genes were identified that were downregulated by social isolation. In this thesis, I focused on one of these consistently downregulated genes, parathyroid hormone 2 (pth2). The expression of pth2 was demonstrated to be bidirectionally regulated by the number of conspecifics present and to be responsive to changes in the social environment within 30 minutes. Regulation of pth2 does not occur by visual or chemosensory access to conspecifcs, but is mediated by mechanosensory perception of other fish via the lateral line. In an experiment using an artificial mechanical stimulation paradigm, it was shown that the features necessary to elicit pth2 transcription closely mimick the locomotion of actual zebrafish. Other, similar stimulation paradigms are not capable to induce this transcriptional response.
Neurodevelopmental psychiatric disorders (NPDs) like attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and schizophrenia, affect millions of people worldwide. Despite recent progress in NPD research, much remains to be discovered about their underpinnings, therapeutic targets, effects of biological sex and age. Risk factors influencing brain development and signalling include prenatal inflammation and genetic variation. This dissertation aimed to build upon these findings by combining behavioural, molecular, and neuromorphological investigations in mouse models of such risk factors, i.e. maternal immune activation (MIA), neuron-specific overexpression (OE) of the cytoplasmatic isoforms of the RNA-binding protein RBFOX1, and neuronal deletion of the small Ras GTPase DIRAS2.
Maternal infections during pregnancy pose an increased risk for NPDs in the offspring. While viral-like MIA has been previously established elsewhere, this study was the first in our institution to implement the model. I validated NPD-relevant deficits in anxiety- and depression-like behaviours, as well as dose- and sex-specific social deficits in mouse offspring following MIA in early gestation. Proteomic analyses in embryonic and adult hippocampal (HPC) synaptoneurosomes highlighted novel and known targets affected by MIA. Analysis of the embryonic dataset implicated neurodevelopmental disruptions of the lipid, polysaccharide, and glycoprotein metabolism, important for proper membrane function, signalling, and myelination, for NPD-pertinent sequelae. In adulthood, the observed changes encompassed transmembrane trafficking and intracellular signalling, apoptosis, and cytoskeletal organisation pathways. Importantly, 50 proteins altered by MIA in embryonic and adult HPC were enriched in the NPD-relevant synaptic vesicle cycle. A persistently upregulated protein cluster formed a functional network involved in presynaptic signalling and proteins downregulated in embryos but upregulated in adults by MIA were correlated with observed social deficits. 49/50 genes encoding these proteins were significantly associated with NPD- and comorbidity-relevant traits in human phenome-wise association study data for psychiatric phenotypes. These findings highlight NPD-relevant targets for future study and early intervention in at-risk individuals. MIA-evoked changes in the neuroarchitecture of the NPD-relevant HPC and prefrontal cortex (PFC) of male and female mice highlighted sex- and region-specific alterations in dendritic and spine morphology, possibly underlining behavioural phenotypes.
To further investigate genetic risk factors of NPDs, I performed a study based on the implications of RBFOX1’s pleiotropic role in neuropsychiatric disorders and previous preclinical findings. Cytoplasmatic OE of RBFOX1, which affects the stability and translation of thousands of targets, was used to disseminate its role in morphology and behaviour. RBFOX1 OE affected dendritic length and branching in the male PFC and led to spine alterations in both PFC and HPC. Due to previously observed ASD-like endophenotypes in our Rbfox1 KO mice and the importance of gene × environment effects on NPD susceptibility, I probed the interaction of cytoplasmatic OE and a low-dose MIA on offspring. Both RBFOX1 OE alone and with MIA led to increased offspring loss during the perinatal period. Preliminary data suggested that RBFOX1 OE × MIA might increase anxiety- and anhedonia-like behaviours. Morphological changes in the adult male OE HPC and PFC suggested increased spine density and reduced dendritic complexity. A small post-mortem study in human dorsolateral PFC of older adults did not reveal significant effects of a common risk variant on RBFOX1 abundance.
To expand upon NPD genetic risks, I evaluated the effects of a homo- (KO) or heterozygous (HET) Diras2 deletion in a novel, neuron-specific mouse model. DIRAS2’s function is largely unknown, but it has been associated with ADHD in humans and neurodevelopment in vitro. In adult mice, there were subtle sex-specific effects on behaviour, i.e. more pronounced NPD-relevant deficits in males, in keeping with human data. KO mice had subtly improved cognitive performance, while HET mice exhibited behaviours in line with core ADHD symptoms, e.g. earning difficulties (females), response inhibition deficits and hyperactivity (males), suggesting Diras2 dose-sensitivity and sex-specificity. The morphological findings revealed multiple aberrations in dendritic and spine morphology in the adult PFC, HPC, and amygdala of HET males. KOs changes in spine and dendritic morphology were exclusively in the PFC and largely opposite to those in HETs and NPD-like phenotypes. Region- and genotype-specific expression changes in Diras2 and Diras1 were observed in six relevant brain regions of adult HET and KO females, also revealing differences in the survival and morphology regulator mTOR, which might underlie observed differences.
In conclusion, the effects of MIA and partial Diras2 knockdown resembled each other in core, NPD-associated behavioural and morphological phenotypes, while cytoplasmatic RBFOX1 OE and full Diras2 KO differed from those. My findings suggest complex dose- and sex-dependent relationships between these prenatal and genetic interventions, whose NPD-relevant influences might converge onto neurodevelopmental molecular pathways. An assessment of such putative overlap, based on available data from the MIA proteomic analyses of embryonic and adult HPC, suggested the three models might be linked via downstream targets, interactions, and upstream regulators. Future studies should disseminate both distinct and shared aspects of MIA, RBFOX1, and DIRAS2 relevant to NPDs and build upon these findings.
In allen drei Domänen des Lebens ist in der Translation die Initiation der geschwindigkeits-bestimmende Schritt. Die Effizienz der Translationsinitiation und ihre unterschiedliche Regula-tion ist von Translationsinitiationsfaktoren (IFs) abhängig. Bakterien enthalten nur drei IFs, während die Anzahl bei Archaeen (aIFs) und Eukaryoten (eIFs) deutlich höher ist.
Das Archaeon Haloferax volcanii beispielsweise besitzt 14 Gene, die für aIFs bzw. deren Untereinheiten kodieren. Eine Deletionsanalyse ergab, dass fünf aIFs essenziell und neun aIFs nicht essenziell sind. Um einen Einblick in die Funktions- und Interaktionsbereiche der aIFs in H. volcanii zu erhalten, wurden die aIFs mit einem His-Tag versehen und überexpri-miert. Die Überexpression erfolgte in der jeweiligen Deletionsmutante. Für essenzielle aIFs fand sie im Wildtyp statt. Durch Affinitätsaufreinigungen wurden die aIFs und ihre Bindungs-partner isoliert und mittels Massenspektrometrie (MS) identifiziert. Für den Ausschluss unspe-zifischer Proteine dienten zwei stringente Kontrollen als Referenz, das Reportergen Dihydro-folatreduktase (HVO_1279) mit His-Tag und das Expressionsplasmid ohne Gen.
Die ersten Arbeiten konzentrierten sich auf den heterotrimeren Faktor aIF2. Er bindet die Ini-tiator-tRNA und ist damit für die Bildung des Präinitiationskomplexes von zentraler Bedeu-tung. Der Faktor aIF2 besteht aus jeweils einer α-, β- und γ-Untereinheit. In H. volcanii existie-ren zwei Orthologe für aIF2β. Die Überexpressionen der α-, β1-, β2- und γ-Untereinheiten führten zur Co-Isolation der jeweils anderen Untereinheiten des aIF2 (α, β1/ β2, γ).
Die Strategie der Co-Affinitätsaufreinigung und MS wurde auf alle weiteren annotierten aIFs ausgedehnt, um mögliche Funktionen zu identifizieren und ein potenzielles Interaktionsnetz-werk der aIFs zu erstellen. Für alle aIFs konnte ein unterschiedliches Muster an co-gereinigten Proteinen festgestellt werden. Mitgereinigte Proteine waren aIFs, Proteine der Translation, Transkription, Replikation und ribosomale Proteine. Auch RNA-Polymerase-Untereinheiten (RNAPUs) konnten co-isoliert werden. Mit 13 der 14 aIFs konnten andere Ini-tiationsfaktoren co-gereinigt werden. Sechs aIFs konnten zu Beginn bei keinem weiteren Initi-ationsfaktor mitgereinigt werden. Einer dieser Faktoren war aIF2β-1, der jedoch in den Affini-tätsaufreinigungen mit nachfolgender FPLC von aIF2β-2 identifiziert werden konnte. Der Fak-tor aIF1 konnte nur in der stationären Phase von aIF2α mitgereinigt werden.
Die am häufigsten co-gereinigten Proteine waren aIF2Bδ-1 und aIF5B. Für aIF2Bδ-1 kam dies überraschend, da er bereits als Translationsinitiationsfaktor ausgeschlossen wurde. Mit dem Faktor aIF2Bδ-1 selbst konnten fünf aIFs co-gereinigt werden.
Da mit den aIFs auch RNAPUs co-gereinigt werden konnten, wurden sieben RNAPUs ebenfalls mit einem His-Tag versehen und überexprimiert. Auch mit den RNAPUs konnten aIFs, sowie weitere Proteine der Translation mitgereinigt werden.
Diese Umstände legen nahe, dass es möglicherweise eine engere Verbindung der Tran-skription und Translation in H. volcanii geben könnte, als bisher angenommen.
Operons wurden zuerst im Jahre 1961 beschrieben. Bis heute ist bekannt, dass die prokaryotischen Domänen Bacteria und Archaea Gene sowohl in monocistronischen als auch in bi- oder polycistronischen Transkripten exprimieren können. Häufig überlappen Gene sogar in ihren Sequenzen. Diese überlappenden Genpaare stehen nicht in Korrelation mit der Kompaktheit ihres Genoms. Das führt zu der Annahme, dass eine Art der Regulation vorliegt, welche weitere Proteine oder Gene nicht benötigt. Diese könnte eine gekoppelte Translation sein. Das bedeutet die Translation des stromabwärts-liegenden Gens ist abhängig von der Translation eines stromaufwärts-liegenden Gens. Diese Abhängigkeit kann zum Beispiel durch lang reichende Sekundärstrukturen entstehen, bei welchen Ribosomenbindestellen (RBS) des stromabwärts-liegenden Gens blockiert sind. Die de novo-Initiation am stromabwärts-liegenden Gen kann nur stattfinden, wenn das erste Gen translatiert wird und dabei die Sekundärstruktur an der RBS aufgeschmolzen wird. Für Genpaare in E. coli ist dieser Mechanismus gut untersucht. Ein anderes Beispiel für die Translationskopplung ist die Termination-Reinitiation, bei welcher ein Ribosom das erste Gen translatiert bis zum Stop-Codon, dort terminiert und direkt am stromabwärts-liegenden Start-Codon reinitiiert. Der Mechanismus via Termination-Reinitiation ist bis jetzt nur für eukaryontische Viren beschrieben worden. Im Gegensatz zu einer Kopplung über Sekundärstrukturen kommt es bei der Termination-Reinitiation am stromabwärts-liegenden Gen nicht zu einer de novo-Initiation sondern eine Reinitiation des Ribosoms findet statt. Diese Arbeit analysiert jene Art der Translationskopplung an Genen polycistronischer mRNAs in jeweils einem Modellorganismus als Vertreter der Archaea (Haloferax volcanii) und Bacteria (Escherichia coli). Hierfür wurden Reportergenvektoren erstellt, welche die überlappenden Genpaare an Reportergene fusionierten. Für diese Reportergene ist es möglich die Transkriptmenge zu quantifizieren sowie für die exprimierten Proteine Enzymassays durchgeführt werden können. Aus beiden Werten können Translationseffizienzen berechnet werden indem jeweils die Enzymaktivität pro Transkriptmenge ermittelt wird. Durch ein prämatures Stop-Codon in diesen Konstrukten ist es möglich zu unterscheiden ob es für die Translation des zweiten Gens essentiell ist, dass das Ribosom den Überlapp erreicht. Hiermit konnte für neun Genpaare in H. volcanii und vier Genpaare in E. coli gezeigt werden, dass eine Art der Kopplung stattfindet bei der es sich um eine Termination-Reinitiation handelt. Des Weiteren wurde analysiert, welche Auswirkungen intragene Shine-Dalgarno Sequenzen bei dem Event der Translationskopplung besitzen. Durch die Mutation solcher Motive und dem Vergleich der Translationseffizienzen der Konstrukte, mit und ohne einer SD Sequenz, wird für alle analysierten Genpaare beider Modellorganismen gezeigt, dass die SD Sequenz einen Einfluss auf diese Art der Kopplung hat. Zwischen den Genpaaren ist dieser Einfluss jedoch stark variabel. Weiterhin wurde der maximale Abstand zwischen zwei bicistronischen Genen untersucht, für welchen Translationskopplung via Termination-Reinitiation noch stattfinden kann. Hierfür wird durch site-directed mutagenesis jeweils ein prämatures Stop-Codon im stromaufwärts-liegenden Gen eingebracht, welches den intergenen Abstand zwischen den Genen in den jeweiligen Konstrukten vergrößert. Der Vergleich aller Konstrukte eines Genpaars zeigt in beiden Modellorganismen, dass die Termination-Reinitiation vom intergenen Abstand abhängig ist und die Translationseffizienz des stromabwärts-liegenden Reporters bereits ab 15 Nukleotiden Abstand abnimmt.
Eine weitere Fragestellung dieser Arbeit war es, den genauen Mechanismus der Termination-Reinitiation zu analysieren. Für Ribosomen gibt es an der mRNA nach der Termination der Translation zwei Möglichkeiten: Entweder als 70S Ribosom bestehen zu bleiben und ein weiteres Start-Codon auf der mRNA zu suchen oder in seine beiden Untereinheiten zu dissoziieren, während die 50S Untereinheit die mRNA verlässt und die 30S Untereinheit über Wechselwirkungen an der mRNA verbleiben kann. Um diesen Mechanismus auf molekularer Ebene zu untersuchen, wird ein Versuchsablauf vorgestellt. Dieser ermöglicht das Event bei der Termination-Reinitiation in vitro zu analysieren. Eine Unterscheidung von 30S oder 70S Ribosomen bei der Reinitiation der Translation des stromabwärts-liegenden Gens wird ermöglicht. Die Idee dabei basiert auf einem ribosome display, bei welchem Translationskomplexe am Ende der Translation nicht in ihre Bestandteile zerfallen können, da die eingesetzte mRNA kein Stop-Codon enthält Der genaue Versuchsablauf, die benötigten Bestandteile sowie proof-of-principal Versuche sind in der Arbeit dargestellt und mögliche Optimierungen werden diskutiert.