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Institute
- Biowissenschaften (543) (remove)
Snake bite envenoming often results in disability or death of breadwinners of poor families in the rural tropics and the subtropics of Nepal. Identification of the medically relevant snake species, circumstances of venomous snake bites, prehospital care of their bites and human responses to snakes and snake bite is, therefore, crucial to enable victims or first aider to select the appropriate first aid measures, physicians to anticipate complications and to use appropriate treatment protocols as well as the local community to implement prevention strategies. Inadequate educational gaps exist in Nepal and hinder identification of snakes involved in bites. To fill this gap, I aim to provide an evidence-based list of medically relevant snake species. Snake specimens brought by patients bitten or their attendants from the tropical and subtropical regions in southeastern, southcentral, and southwestern Nepal to snake bite treatment centres over a period from 2010 through 2014, were taxonomically identified and medical records of envenoming were evaluated.
In Nepal, the epidemiology of snake bite is poorly known. Here I describe the ecological circumstances of proven krait (Bungarus spp.) and Russell´s Viper (Daboia russelii) bites to elucidate and examine, whether environmental circumstances or human behaviour contributed to envenoming. In a cross-sectional study, data about prehospital care, environmental circumstances of 46 krait and 10 Russell´s Viper bites were evaluated. Patients were interviewed using structured interview forms. Snake bite prone communities were surveyed to test people´s knowledge on snakes and their attitude towards venomous snakes in general.
Of 349 snakes involved in bites, 199 (57%) specimens were found to be medically relevant venomous snakes that included 11 species belonging to six genera and two families. Among them, Naja naja (n = 76, 22%), Bungarus caeruleus (n = 65, 19%) and Trimeresusurs albolabris (n = 10, 3%) were the most widely distributed snakes. Daboia russelii (n = 10, 3%) was found to be restricted to the southwestern part of Nepal. For B. walli, a previously poorly known species, 13 voucher specimens represent the first country records of this species as well as the first documented cases of involvement in snake bite envenoming by this species in Nepal.
Numerous snake bites (33%) occurred at night, during the rainy season, and are mainly due to Bungarus species, particularly B. caeruleus. Bites of cobras and Russell’s Vipers are a risk at daytime. Evaluation of data regarding the place where the bite happened, indicates that the snake bite risks appear to be as high in residential areas, in and around houses, as in rural areas. In cases of kraits (n = 46), 61% of the bites occurred while the victim was sleeping indoors, those of Russell´s Vipers mainly during agricultural activities in the fields. Analysis of socio-demographic data revealed that both krait and viper bites predominantly affected farmers or their family members. However, snake bites involved also people of higher socio-economic status, which suggests that it is not a health problem of poor people only living in the rural areas of Nepal.
A small number of snake bite victims (n = 7) sought help from traditional healers, but most patients went to hospitals for medical treatment using motorbikes (65%) or were transferred by ambulance cars (22%). As a first aid measure, most patients (78%) had used a tourniquet, which is of doubtful value and has often severe sequelae, instead of applying the WHO recommended pressure immobilisation bandage or local compression pad. The overall case fatality rate was calculated to be 10%, but up to 17% in cases of Bungarus spp. bites.
Rural community people were found to be extremely afraid of snakes, a major reason for indiscriminate killing of even harmless snakes, e.g., Lycodon aulicus, which were wrongly considered to be venomous. This is mainly due to the poor knowledge on snakes in general and on their role in providing ecological services, which may eventually lead to a decline in snake populations and even the extinction of rare species.
The results of the present study strongly emphasize that snake bite is an important public health issue in Nepal. There is an urgent need to improve the knowledge of people on snakes and to try changing their attitudes towards these reptiles, in addition to documenting the biodiversity and distribution of medically relevant snakes, the epidemiology and circumstances of their bites. Avoiding high-risk behaviour (e.g., killing of snakes), using screened doors and windows are some of the suggested measures preventing snake bite. Early and accurate identification of the snakes involved should help physicians to apply timely treatment, eventually referring the patient to the appropriate hospital. This also has important implications in developing public health and conservation strategies, to the benefit of the people of Nepal.
Die Parkinson Erkrankung ist die zweithäufigste neurodegenerative Erkrankung in industrialisierten Ländern. Die charakteristischen Symptome sind schwere Beeinträchtigungen des Bewegungsablaufes welche auf den Verlust dopaminerger Neurone der Substantia nigra und der damit einhergehenden Reduktion des striatalen Dopamin Gehaltes zurückzuführen sind. Alpha-Synuklein (SNCA) ist ein Protein welches zum einen mit sporadischen aber auch mit idiopathischen Erkrankungen assoziiert ist. Mutationen welche einen Funktionsgewinn von SNCA zur Folge haben konnten mit autosomal dominanten Varianten der Parkinson Erkrankung assoziiert werden und genetische Veränderungen an beiden Genenden agieren als Risikofaktor für sporadische Formen der Erkrankung. Des Weiteren wird SNCA als Hauptbestandteil der Lewy Körperchen gefunden, einem pathologischen Kennzeichen der parkinsonschen Erkrankung. Die charakteristischen Bewegungsstörungen können mittels L-DOPA, einer metabolischen Vorstufe von Dopamin, behandelt werden. Neben dem enorm positiven Effekt auf die Bewegungsstörungen, geht die Behandlung mit L-DOPA jedoch auch mit ernsten Nebenwirkungen einher, welche als Levodopa induzierte Dyskinesien (LID) beschrieben werden.
Ziel der Arbeit war die Analyse von Effekten eines SNCA Funktionsgewinns sowie des Pink1 Funktionsverlustes auf molekulare Signalwege der synaptischen Plastizität unter Verwendung dreier PD Mausmodelle (A53T-SNCA überexprimierendes Modell (PrPmtA), Pink1KO Modell sowie A53T-SNCA + Pink1KO Doppelmutante (DM)). Es wurden Kandidatengene welche eine Rolle für synaptische Plastizität spielen in 6 Monate alten Mäusen aller drei PD Mauslinien untersucht. Die Analyse von PrPmtA zeigte erhöhte mRNA Spiegel von Glutamatrezeptor-Untereinheiten und von Kandidatengenen welche eine Rolle bei der synaptischen Signalweiterleitung spielen, sowie reduzierte mRNA Spiegel von IEGs und Transkriptionsfaktoren. Die Analyse der DM zeigte nur geringe Expressionsänderungen der Glutamatrezeptor-Untereinheiten und die Analyse von IEGs und Transkriptionsfaktoren zeigte erneut reduziert mRNA Spiege. In Pink1KO Tieren konnten nur minimale Expressionsveränderungen der Kandidatengene gefunden werden, was den Schluss zulässt, dass die zuvor beschriebenen Expressionsveränderungen in PrPmtA und DM Mäusen eindeutig auf den SNCA Funktionsgewinn zurückzuführen sind. Um frühe Effekte des SNCA Funktionsgewinns zu studieren wurde die Analyse auf 3 Monate alte PrPmtA Mäuse ausgeweitet. Diese ergab, Expressionsveränderungen für Homer1, cFos, NOR1, Nurr1 und Nur77.
In einem weiteren Versuchsansatz wurde die Auswirkung des SNCA Funktionsgewinns auf das Verhalten sowie auf molekulare Parameter nach Apomorphin Behandlung analysiert. Die Analyse ergab ein erhöhtes Niveau an unwillkürlichen Bewegungsmustern mit stereotypen und dystonischen Eigenschaften in PrPmtA im Vergleich zu Wildtypen (wt). Die molekulare Analyse von striatalem Gewebe wurde zu zwei Zeitpunkten durchgeführt, 30 min nach Apomorphin Injektion und 100 min nach Injektion. Die Analyse von striatalem Gewebe welches zum Zeitpunkt 30 min nach Injektion entnommen wurde ergab eine erhöhte Apomorphin abhängige Phosphorylierung von ERK1/2, sowie eine erhöhte Apomorphin abhängige Expression von Dusp1, Dusp6 und cFos in transgenen und wt Tieren. Genotyp abhängige Unterschiede ergaben sich für cFos, welches signifikant höher in PrPmtA induziert wurde. 100 min nach Apomorphin Injektion ergab die gleiche Analyse eine erhöhte Apomorphin abhängige Phosphorylierung von ERK1 und eine erhöhte Apomorphin abhängige Expression von Dusp1, Dusp6, cFos und Nur77 in PrPmtA im Vergleich zu wt. Die Daten unterstreichen die fundamentale Rolle von SNCA auf die Neurotransmission und synaptische Plastizität und zeigen auf, dass PrPmtA ein zuverlässiges Modell für die Analyse von präsynaptischer Dysfunktion in Frühstadien der Parkinson Erkrankung darstellt.
Der letzte Versuchsansatz stellt die Charakterisierung des DM-Mausmodells welches sich durch einen starken Phänotyp auszeichnet, sowie die Analyse des Pink1 Effektes auf die SNCA induzierte Neurotoxizität dar. DM-Tiere zeigen deutlich reduzierte Spontanmotorik im Alter von 3 Monaten sowie einer progressiven Lähmung der Hinterläufe, was Anlass zu einer immunhistologischen Charakterisierung mittels Schnitten des Gehirns und Rückenmarks gab. Die histologische Analyse zeigte pSer129-SNCA, p62/SQSTM1 und Ubiquitin positive Aggregate innerhalb der grauen Substanz des Rückenmarks sowie innerhalb einer neuronalen Zellpopulation welche dorsal der Substantia nigra angeordnet ist. Das histologische Erscheinungsbild wurde spezifisch in gelähmten DM-Tieren gefunden und nicht in Einzelmutanten oder DM-Tieren ohne Lähmung. Dieses Modell stellt ein wertvolles Instrument für die Identifizierung von pathologischen Mechanismen und Signalkaskaden welche beiden Parkinson relevanten Genen gemeinsam sind, dar.
Die vorliegende Dissertation mit dem Titel: Ecophysiological monitoring of Oaks in Central Europe, introduced in the framework of proactive climate change mitigation beschäftigt sich mit der Anwendung zerstörungsfreier, radiometrischer Methoden zur Bestimmung von Pigment- und Stickstoffkonzentrationen und der photosynthetischen Funktionalität in Blättern von heimischen und gebietsfremden Eichen und ihre Beeinflussung durch Trocken-, Hitze- und Kältestress.
Die Eichenarten Quercus robur L. (Stieleiche), Q. pubescens Willd. (Flaumeiche), Q. frainetto Ten. (Ungarische Eiche), Q. ilex L. (immergrüne Steineiche) und Q. rubra L. (amerikanische Roteiche) wurden im Frühjahr 2011 auf einer Versuchsfläche im Frankfurter Stadtwald gepflanzt, um ihre Nutzung als potentielle Waldbäume in einem sich ändernden Klima zu untersuchen. Über eine Dauer von zwei Jahren wurden diese Arten mit einem hohen Maß an blattspezifischer Merkmalsvariabilität beobachtet und beprobt. Ziel war es, die interspezifischen Unterschiede und die jahreszeitliche Dynamik von morphologischen und chemischen Blattmerkmalen sowie die Beeinflussung der radiometrischen Bestimmung des Chlorophyllgehaltes (und damit assoziierten Komponenten wie z.B. Blattstickstoffgehalt und Karotinoiden) und der photosynthetischen Funktionalität durch klimatische Umweltbelastungen in Eichen zu untersuchen. Die Analyse der Blattproben zielte neben der Bestimmung der Beziehung zwischen absoluten und optisch ermittelten Pigmentgehalten auf die Ermittlung des Einflusses der Blattstruktur auf die Lichttransmission im roten und infrarotem Bereich des Elektromagnetischen Spektrums ab, sowie auf die artspezifische Korrelation von Blattstickstoff zu Blattchlorophyll zu dessen indirekte Quantifizierung. Des Weiteren wurden Versuche zur Trocken- und Hitzestressanpassung durchgeführt, um eine potentiell artspezifische Stressantwort, sowie eine mögliche Beeinflussung der aufgenommenen radiometrischen Messwerte zu ermitteln. Ein zusätzliches Monitoringprogramm im Winter 2012/2013 mit einer Dauer von sechs Monaten ermöglichte die Überprüfung der Anpassungsfähigkeit der immergrünen Steineiche (Q. ilex) an mitteleuropäische Winterbedingungen und die Veränderung der photosynthetischen Funktionalität unter Kältestress. Messungen im Zusammenhang mit der praktischen Anwendbarkeit der zerstörungsfreien, optischen Methode und zur Bereitstellung von Referenzdaten für zukünftige Evaluierungen komplementieren die Untersuchungen.
Signifikante, artspezifische Unterschiede wurden in den blattmorphologischen Schlüsselmerkmalen in den Quercus-Arten ermittelt. Die artspezifischen Unterschiede in den morphologischen Blattmerkmalen beeinflussten auf signifikante Weise die Beziehung zwischen absoluten, massebasierten Pigment- und Stickstoffgehalten und deren radiometrischen Bestimmung. Wurden die Pigmentgehalte hingegen auf die Blattfläche bezogen und die Stickstoffgehalte mittels des Verhältnisses von Blattfläche zu Trockenmasse korrigiert, zeichnete sich eine Beziehung zwischen absoluten und optisch ermittelten Werten ab, der jegliche jahreszeitliche oder artspezifisch morphologische Variabilität fehlte und die somit für alle Quercus-taxa anwendbar ist. Koeffizienten für die Berechnung von flächenbezogenen Gehalten von Gesamtchlorophyll, Chl a, Chl b und Carotinoiden für die jeweiligen Quercus-taxa, wie auch für ein artübergreifendes Modell wurden ermittelt, um die Bestimmung dieser Gehalte während aller Entwicklungsstufen zu ermöglich. Aus der jahreszeitlichen Entwicklung der Pigmentgehalte konnten drei deutliche Phasen abgeleitet werden: Die Phase der Blattentwicklung im Frühling, einer Plateauphase mit geringen Veränderungen (“core vegetation time”) und die Phase des Pigmentabbaus während der Herbstlaubfärbung. Die Übergänge zwischen diesen Phasen variierten zum Teil erheblich zwischen einzelnen Individuen einer Art sowie zwischen den Arten, was Unterschiede in der potentiellen, jährlichen Kohlenstoffaufnahme nach sich zieht. Stressbedingungen, wie Hitze- Kälte- oder Trockenstress, können zu Veränderung von Fluoreszenzparametern ohne gleichzeitige Änderung des Pigmentgehaltes führen, wie auch die indirekte Bestimmung von mit Chl assoziierten Komponenten (Carotinoide, Chl a, Chl b) mittels optischer Bestimmung (durch die Veränderungen von Pigmentverhältnissen) beeinflussen.
Im Rahmen des Forschungsprojektes konnten, Modelle zur Berechnung von Blattpigmenten und Blattstickstoff aus optischem Messdaten, Veränderungen der photosynthetischen Funktionalität, sowie Referenzdaten für die zukünftig nutzbaren Eichenarten hinsichtlich artspezifischer und jahreszeitlicher Variabilität unter mitteleuropäischen Umweltbedingungen ermittelt werden, die eine Nutzung und Einordnung von zerstörungsfreien, optischen Messwerten zur Ermittlung von Vitalitätsunterschieden in Eichen ermöglichen.
Die Spinozerebelläre Ataxie Typ 2 (SCA2) ist eine autosomal dominant vererbte neurodegenerative Krankheit, welche durch die Expansion des Trinukleotids Cytosin-Adenin-Guanin von ~22/23 auf >32 im Ataxin-2 Gen (ATXN2) verursacht wird. Dieses Trinukleotid codiert für die Aminosäure Glutamin weshalb SCA2 auch zu den Polyglutaminerkrankungen zählt. Zu dieser Gruppe zählen außerdem fünf weitere SCA-Subtypen sowie drei weitere neurodegenerative Erkrankungen, darunter die Huntington-Krankheit.
SCA2 wurde 1971 zum ersten Mal von Wadia und Swami beschrieben und unterscheidet sich von den anderen SCAs aufgrund der typischen Störung der sakkadischen Augenbewegungen. Weitere klinische Symptome von SCA2 sind Ataxie, Tremor, Dysmetrie, Dysarthrie, Hyporeflexie und Dysdiadochokinese. Die Symptome gehen auf einen neuronalen Verlust insbesondere im Cerebellum, aber auch in anderen Hirnregionen wie zum Beispiel dem Hirnstamm zurück.
Atxn2 wird in weiten Teilen des Zentralnervensystems aber auch in vielen nicht-neuronalen Geweben exprimiert. Es handelt sich um ein überwiegend cytoplasmatisch lokalisiertes Protein, welches im Gegensatz zu vielen anderen SCA-Proteinen cytoplasmatische und nur selten nukleäre Aggregate bildet. Die exakte Funktion von Atxn2 ist bisher unklar, es wurde allerdings mehrfach gezeigt, dass es in die mRNA Translation involviert ist aufgrund seiner Interaktion mit dem PolyA-bindenden Protein PABPC1.
Eine Expansion des Trinukleotids in Ataxin-2 kann nicht nur zu SCA2 führen, sondern stellt bei Wiederholungen zwischen 27 und 32 CAGs auch ein erhöhtes Risiko für eine Erkrankung an Amyotropher Lateralsklerose (ALS) und anderen neurodegenerativen Krankheiten dar. Eine Interaktion zwischen ATXN2 und dem ALS-verursachenden TDP43 (Tardbp) wurde bereits zahlreich beforscht, da Aggregate von ATXN2 in Motoneuronen des Rückenmarks von ALS-Patienten und aggregiertes TDP43 in SCA2-Neuronen beobachtet wurden.
Generell sind die Mechanismen, die zur Pathologie von SCA2 und ALS führen, noch weitgehend unklar. Ziel dieser Arbeit war es daher auf der einen Seite einen Einblick in den Pathomechanismus von SCA2 zu erhalten, indem mögliche oder bereits bekannte Interaktoren in etablierten Atxn2-Mausmodellen untersucht wurden. Auf der anderen Seite wurden zwei neue Mausmodelle charakterisiert, um ihre Eignung für die Erforschung von ALS und SCA2 zu prüfen.
Für den ersten Teil der Arbeit dienten Daten aus mehreren Transkriptomstudien von Atxn2-Knock-Out (KO) und Atxn2-CAG42-Knock-In (KIN) Mäusen als Grundlage. Konnten die Daten mit einer unabhängigen Methode bestätigt werden, folgten weitere Untersuchungen auf mRNA und Proteinebene sowie unter zusätzlicher Verwendung von Zellkultur und Patientenmaterial. Dadurch konnten neue Interaktionspartner von ATXN2 identifiziert und bereits bekannte in diesen Mausmodellen bestätigt werden.
So wurde zum Beispiel eine Interaktion von ATXN2 mit der E3-Ubiquitin-Protein-Ligasekomponente FBXW8 gezeigt und deren Beteiligung am Abbau von expandiertem ATXN2. Außerdem wurde eine Interaktion von FBXW8 mit dem bereits bekannten ATXN2-degradierenden Protein PARK2 gezeigt. Eine Hochregulierung des Fbxw8 Transkripts wurde sowohl im Atxn2-CAG42-KIN-Mausmodell als auch in SCA2-Patientenfibroblasten gefunden, während Park2 in keinem der Modelle signifikant veränderte Transkriptspiegel aufwies. Diese Daten belegen die Relevanz von Fbxw8 für den Abbau von moderat-expandiertem Atxn2 und begründen weitere Studien zur genauen Funktion dieses Proteins im Pathomechanismus von Atxn2.
Des Weiteren wurden diverse Kalziumhomöostasefaktoren untersucht, welche eine konsistente Herunterregulierung der Transkripte in beiden Mausmodellen aufwiesen. Auf Proteinebene zeigten sich jedoch Unterschiede zwischen den Modellen. Diese Daten belegen, dass zwar ähnliche Transkriptveränderungen im KIN- und KO-Modell auftreten, diesen aber vermutlich verschiedene Mechanismen zugrunde liegen. Welche Mechanismen dies genau sind bleibt zu klären, es ist jedoch wahrscheinlich, dass im KIN-Modell die Aggregatbildung sowie in beiden Modellen die Beteiligung von ATXN2 an der Translationregulation eine Rolle spielen. Die Ergebnisse dieser Studie unterstreichen die Relevanz des Ca2+ Signalwegs für die Entwicklung von SCA2.
Der zweite Teil der Arbeit beinhaltet die Charakterisierung einer ATXN2/TDP43 Doppelmutante auf Verhaltensebene sowie die gründliche Evaluierung des Phänotyps einer vollkommen neuen SCA2 Mausmutante. Während in der Doppelmutante trotz doppelter Genmutation nur ein sehr schwacher Phänotyp auf Verhaltensebene festgestellt werden konnte und bis zu einem Alter von 12 Monaten keine Potenzierung der Mutationen zu beobachten war, zeigte die Atxn2-CAG100-KIN Maus signifikante und früh auftretende Pathologie. Neben einer verminderten Überlebensrate, einem Gewichtsverlust und diversen motorischen Störungen, konnten auch Aggregate des mutierten Proteins in diversen Hirnregionen identifiziert werden. Der Atxn2-CAG100-KIN Phänotyp spiegelt die humanen Symptome daher recht gut wider, weshalb diese Mausmutante ein wertvolles Modell für die weitere SCA2-Forschung darstellt.
Zusammengefasst zeigt diese Arbeit die Bedeutung des ATXN2-Interaktors FBXW8 im SCA2-Mausmodell als auch im Patientenmaterial. Sie betont die Relevanz des Atxn2-KO-Modells in Bezug auf Störungen der Kalziumhomöostase und dokumentiert die Alters- und Gewebespezifität dieser Veränderungen. Außerdem beinhaltet sie die vorläufige Beschreibung eines kombinierten Atxn2/TDP43-Mausmodells und schließlich die ausführliche Charakterisierung eines vollkommen neuen und äußerst wertvollen SCA2-Mausmodells.
Amphibians have existed on the planet for over 300 million years and are today one of the most diverse vertebrate classes in the world with over 7000 known species and still many more to be discovered. However, several studies assume that approximately one third of the world´s known living amphibians are directly threatened with extinction, making it the most endangered vertebrate class. In relation to the relatively small land mass that is occupied by the state of Panama, it supports one of the most diverse amphibian faunas. However, in many cases the ecological role of single species in a wider context and their habitat preferences are still poorly understood and subject to ongoing research. Modern taxonomic approaches in other tropical regions have shown that former assumptions of amphibian diversity were distinct underestimations of the actual species diversity; a situation that is probably also true for Panama. Concurrently, the collection of amphibian diversity data and the description of new species is a race against time. The amphibian fauna of the world and that of Panama in particular, has suffered from an unprecedented loss of diversity over the last 30 years. The reasons are manifold and include destruction, alteration, and fragmentation of their natural habitats as the main causes, but also the deadly amphibian disease chytridiomycosis caused by the fungal pathogen Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd). In Panama and Costa Rica, this Emerging Infectious Disease (EID) spread in a wave-like manner from west to east causing mass die-offs and reduced amphibian diversity even in well-preserved habitats. The disease has primarily affected stream-associated highland species. The last large-scale evaluation of the conservation status of Panama´s amphibians through the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in 2004 concluded that approximately 30% of the known species are acutely threatened with extinction. Furthermore, around 17% of the amphibian species that have been known back then lacked adequate data to be assessed. In view of Panama´s already overwhelming amphibian diversity, as well as the variety of habitats and the large number of sites that have not been examined with regard to amphibians before, I started this study with the conviction that the inventory of Panama´s amphibian diversity is far from being completed. Furthermore, when I started this study, it was uncertain if there would be any surviving amphibian species in areas where chytridiomycosis had emerged. The loss of whole amphibian communities in upland western Panama following Bd arrival led to a shift of amphibian research to lowland sites in central and eastern Panama aiming primarily on pathogen arrival and the documentation of epizootic outbreak and subsequent population decline. The situation of amphibian communities in areas post-decline was therefore largely unknown. Accordingly, the main goals of my study were to add to the taxonomic inventory of amphibians in Panama and to assess the situation of amphibian populations in habitats where chytrid-driven declines have been observed. To address these tasks I conducted fieldwork in western Panama with a focus on mountainous elevations between 1000 and 3475 m asl. Additionally, I visited different lowland sites between sea level and 1000 m asl to collect comparative material. In the period between 2008 and 2013, I conducted five collection trips to Panama that add up to a total of approximately 13 months in the field. I have sampled nine regions in western Panama and collected 767 specimens together with student collaborators, 531 of which were collected under my personal field number. Additional data obtained from those specimens include 68 male anuran call recordings, 102 standardized color descriptions of specimens in life, and 259 tissue samples that to date yielded 185 16S mtDNA sequences. This comprises the most comprehensive data set for amphibians of Panama and the first large-scale DNA barcoding approach for western Panama to date. After a preliminary DNA barcoding and subsequent comparative examination of morphological und bioacoustic data of all specimens collected, the number of taxonomic problems that needed to be addressed was higher than I previously anticipated. For most genetic lineages deeper taxonomic analyses were required to reach conclusive results. A selection had to be made with which lineages to proceed in the analyses, in view of the substantial financial and time expenditure that would be needed for a complete taxonomic revision. Therefore, I chose to run deeper analyses on one genus from each of the three amphibian orders in Panama. The genera selection depended largely on the availability of sufficient material and the scientific relevance of the respective genus.
I selected the genus Diasporus from the order Anura. These small frogs are omnipresent in many habitats and thus relatively easy to find. In addition, the genus is underrepresented in taxonomic studies. This is the first taxonomic study on the genus Diasporus to include a molecular phylogeny and the first comparison of advertisement calls between several populations from western Panama. In total, I collected 67 Diasporus specimens throughout western Panama and compared them morphologically with 49 additional specimens from Central America in collections, including the primary types of D. diasporus and D. hylaeformis. Additional comparative data were taken from literature. The DNA barcoding analysis of a fragment of the 16S rRNA gene included 43 own sequences that were complemented with 15 relevant GenBank sequences. In addition, I compared the advertisement calls of 26 male individuals among each other and with call descriptions from the literature. The DNA barcoding approach revealed several unnamed genetic lineages, but in some cases also resulted in the lumping of morphologically and bioacoustically distinct specimens. Generally, the morphological examination of the collected material revealed almost no specific characters that could be used to distinguish between genetic lineages. However, it was possible to identify species using a combination of several morphological characteristics. Which ones are relevant in the individual case depends on the respective species. My extensive collection of call recordings made it possible to test for the first time the intraspecific call variation of D. hylaeformis in dependency of various parameters. This analysis showed that the dominant frequency depends significantly on the body size of the calling male; the smaller the calling male, the higher the frequency of the call. A similar relationship was observed between the call rate and temperature: the lower the temperature during calling, the lower the call rate. I suppose that these general patterns, which have already been observed in other anuran genera, are also true in other Diasporus species that could not be tested in this study. Taking into account the intraspecific variation of Diasporus advertisement calls, I consider comparative call analyses to be the best way to distinguish between species. This is especially true in syntopic species. Integration of the three lines of evidence (i.e., morphology, DNA barcoding, and bioacoustics) led to the identification of four new species, two of which (i.e., D. citrinobapheus and D. igneus) colleagues and I have already formally described.
I conducted an integrative taxonomic analysis of the western Panamanian representatives of the genus Bolitoglossa from the order Caudata, the larger of the two Panamanian salamander genera. Bolitoglossa is very species-rich with a centre of diversification in the high mountains of Costa Rica and western Panama. I collected 53 Bolitoglossa specimens and compared them to twelve specimens in collection, including the holotype and one paratype of B. gomezi. The dataset was complemented with information from the literature. Among the sampled specimens were two species considered to be endangered that have not been collected or observed for several decades; B. magnifica has not been seen for 34 years and B. anthracina has not been seen for 22 years. Further, I collected salamanders at several new locations. To date, my 16S mtDNA barcoding analysis represents the densest taxon sampling for Panamanian Bolitoglossa composed of 21 own sequences that were combined in the final alignment with 47 GenBank sequences. Even though the molecular phylogeny is based only on a single marker, the received trees largely coincide with previous studies and the nodes received high statistical support. In these trees, I retrieve all previously defined subgenera and species groups. On the basis of this molecular phylogeny, I placed B. anthracina, here sequenced for the first time, in the B. subpalmata species group. Due to the fact that B. anthracina is a large and dark colored species it had previously been placed by implication in the B. schizodactyla species group along with other large black salamanders of the B. nigrescens species complex. Moreover, I found deep divergent genetic lineages among geographically separated populations of B. minutula. However, until now there were no additional morphological characteristics detectable to distinguish between these lineages. Additionally, my colleagues and I described a new deep divergent lineage in the B. robinsoni species group as B. jugivagans, a species new to science. In contrast, I found only minor genetic differences between specimens of B. sombra and B. nigrescens. After combining morphometric data and tooth counts from literature of both species with additional data from specimens of B. sombra that I collected near the type locality, the distinguishing features blurred. In particular, including much larger specimens of B. sombra, not yet known at the time of its description, showed that the tooth count difference is dependent on the size and age of the specimen examined. Larger specimens have more maxillary and vomerine teeth. Based on this evidence I regard B. sombra as a junior synonym of B. nigrescens. Further, I revised the Panamanian distribution of the two relatively common lowland salamanders, B. colonnea and B. lignicolor. Besides filling the gaps in the fragmentary known distributions of these species, I assessed the molecular and morphological variation of both species among populations in Panama. While there was little variation in B. lignicolor, I found divergent genetic lineages among geographically distinct populations of B. colonnea that require further taxonomic examination.
Caecilians (order Gymnophiona) are among the least investigated terrestrial vertebrates. After I received a first specimen of the predominantly South American genus Oscaecilia (family Caeciliidae) in western Panama, I started to work more extensively on the taxonomy of Caeciliidae in Central America. The specimens from western Panama were not readily assignable to a single described species, but shared characters with O. elongata and O. osae. While O. osae was only known from the holotype, the type material of O. elongata was destroyed during World War II. On the basis of the original description, the unique feature in O. elongata within Oscaecilia is the absence of subdermal scales in the posterior part of the body. In a referred specimen of O. elongata mentioned in the original description from eastern Panama, this characteristic cannot be examined as it consists of head and neck only. Therefore, I used non-destructive high-resolution, synchrotron-based X-ray micro CT imaging (HRμCT) to examine cranial characters in the specimens in question and took normal radiographs to count vertebrae and to make subdermal scales visible. I found that the fragmented specimen from eastern Panama likely belongs to the well-sampled species O. ochrocephala and has not much in common with O. osae or the specimens from western Panama. Contrarily, O. osae and the specimens from western Panama share many morphological characters, but also show some differences. Genetic barcoding revealed that both species are close relatives, but the genetic distance could not be finally resolved, because 16S sequences obtained from blood samples of living O. osae were of poor quality. Thus, I compare the Oscaecilia from western Panama to O. osae in this study, but postpone a taxonomic decision until further material becomes available. Further, I designate O. elongata a nomen dubium, because the type material is lost, the type locality is not defined in more detail than “Panama”, and the original description does not allow for a definite assignment. Since previous molecular studies only considered O. ochrocephala, the monophyly of Oscaecilia was never tested before. So far, the genus Oscaecilia is based largely on a single cranial character, the eyes covered with bone. Here, I combined two 16S mtDNA sequences of O. osae from Costa Rica and two sequences from O. sp. from western Panama with two sequences of O. ochrocephala and ten sequences of four species of the genus Caecilia, the sister genus of Oscaecilia. The resulted phylogeny contains two well-supported clades, one clade containing two species of Caecilia, one from Panama and one from western Ecuador and all species of Oscaecilia tested. The other clade consists of two species of Caecilia from the Amazon basin. I therefore assume that the split in both clades is due to the rise of the Andes, what led to today’s cis-trans-Andean distribution of the two clades. For now, to restore monophyly, I suggest to place Oscaecilia within the synonymy of Caecilia until more taxa have been tested. When assessing the conservation status of the amphibian species in mountainous western Panama, I first compiled a list of known species that I potentially could have found during my fieldwork. Using the IUCN categories, I analyzed how many of the endangered species I actually found and how these are distributed over families and species groups. Surprisingly, my rediscoveries of lost species were not equally distributed among the four families that comprise most endangered amphibian species (i.e., Bufonidae, Craugastoridae, Hylidae, and Plethodontidae). While I discovered ten of eleven endangered hylids and six of nine endangered plethodontids, I found only one of four endangered bufonids and none of the nine endangered craugastorids. I assume that the secretive living plethodontids, for which no Bd related declines have been documented, were just overlooked in the past decades. In contrast, I propose that hylids, in which Bd related population decline is well documented, developed distinct evolutionary solutions permitting coexistence with the pathogen. The situation is obviously different in bufonids and craugastorids, where I found no signs of population recoveries at present. So far, the only surviving populations of species from these families exist in climatic or physiographic niches that have probably shielded them from Bd. My data confirm the current view that the risk for naïve amphibian populations to decline during Bd epizootics is predicted by ecological traits (e.g., aquatic index, vertical distribution) and not dependent on taxonomic affiliation. However, I propose that only certain amphibian families (e.g., hylids and centrolenids) have the ability to acquire immunity solutions to coexist with the pathogen during enzootic stages. This is a very new perspective on the worst infectious disease in amphibians worldwide, allowing for new research approaches to understand the host-pathogen dynamics. Moreover, I examined where the share of surviving endangered amphibian species is particularly high in mountainous western Panama. As was to be expected, most of the endangered species are found within the boundaries of protected areas. One exception is the unprotected Cerro Colorado region in the Comarca Ngöbe-Buglé that provides habitat for a wide variety of endangered and undiscovered amphibian species. Nonetheless, planned open pit mining would destroy the forests in a large part of the area. This demonstrates once again that human activities are the biggest threat to amphibians in Panama and elsewhere.
In the interest of understanding the development of a multicellular organism, subcellular events must be seen in the context of the entire three-dimensional tissue. In addition, events that occur within a short period of time can be of great importance for the relatively long developmental process of the organ. Thus, it is required to capture subcellular events in a larger spatio-temporal scale context, which has been up to now a technical challenge. In developmental biology, light microscopy has always been an important tool. The dilemma of light microscopy, in particular fluorescence microscopy, is that molecules receive high light intensities that might change the conformation of molecules, which can have signaling or toxic effects. In Light Sheet-based Fluorescence Microscopy (LSFM), the energy required for a single recording is reduced by several orders of magnitude compared to other fluorescence microscopy techniques. During the last ten years, LSFM has emerged as a preferred tool to capture all cells during embryogenesis of the zebrafish Danio rerio, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster or recently the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum for a period of several days. The motivation of this work was to gain new insights in developmental related processes of plant organs. The aim of this work was to establish a protocol for imaging plant growth over a long period of time using LSFM and perform comprehensive analyses at the cellular level. Plants have to cope with a variety of environmental conditions, therefore the conditions inside the microscope chamber had to be brought under control. The sample preparation methods and the standardized conditions at a physiological level allowed the study of gravity response, day-night rhythms, organ shape development as well as the intracellular dynamic events of the cytoskeleton and endosomal compartments in an unprecedented manner. Several of these projects were successfully published in collaborations with Prof. Jozef Šamaj (Palacký University Olomouc, Czech Republic), Prof. Niko Geldner (University of Lausanne, Switzerland), Prof. Malcom Bennett (University of Nottingham, UK) and Dr. Jürgen Kleine-Vehn (University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Austria). The main part of my work focused on the formation of lateral roots in Arabidopsis thaliana and was conducted in close collaboration with Dr. Alexis Maizel (University of Heidelberg, Germany). Previously, most experiments that describe lateral root formation have been performed on a small number of cells and for short periods of time. Capturing the complete process of lateral roots is an ambitious goal, because first, the primordium of a lateral root is located deep inside the primary root and imaging quality is impaired due to scattering of the overlaying tissue. Second, the process takes about 48 h, i.e. the plant has to be kept healthy for the whole period. Third, the amount of excitation light required for the spatio-temporal might have phototoxic effects that lead to a stop of growth at least in conventional microscopic techniques. In Arabidopsis embryogenesis, the sequence of cell divisions is relatively invariant. However, whether lateral root organogenesis follows particular cell division patterns has been unknown. The complete process of lateral root formation was captured from the first cell division until after the emergence from the main root. Images of a nuclei marker and a plasmamembrane marker were recorded every 5 min for a time period of up to 64 h. The positions and cell divisions of all cells were tracked manually. In collaboration with Alexander Schmitz (Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Germany) and Dr. Jens Fangerau (University of Heidelberg, Germany), comprehensive analyses of the data were performed. A lateral root forms from initially 8-15 founder cells, arranged in a patch of 5-8 parallel files. The occurrence of new cell layers by periclinal divisions, as well as the sequence of layer generation was conserved and resembles the sequence suggested by Malamy and Benfey in 1997. Besides this stereotyped occurrence of periclinal divisions, radial divisions were found to appear stochastically, following no particular pattern. A large variability was also found in the contribution of founder cells and cell files to the final lateral root. In summary, the results suggest that a stereotyped pattern of cell divisions at particular developmental stages and a dynamically adapted control of cell divisions exist in parallel. Both properties allow a controlled but flexible development of the organ according to variations in cell topology and mechanical properties of the surrounding tissue. This work shows that LSFM, the sample preparation methods and controlled environmental conditions allow to capture and analyse the development of plants over several days at high resolution in an unprecedented manner.
By far not all genetic information is expressed by mRNA coding regions of the DNA. 98% of the human genome is not encoding for proteins. Therefore, these non-coding regions have been considered as “junk DNA” for a long time [1, 2]. The last years, new high throughput sequencing techniques have allowed the elucidation of the heterogeneous population of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs, Table 1). RNAs longer than 200 nucleotides (nt) belong to the family of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs). They can exhibit numerous functions: The biggest family of RNAs is represented by the ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs). Together with the transfer RNAs (tRNAs) they are essential for the translation of mRNA into an amino acid sequence.
Myxobacteria are on order of Gram-negative, soil dwelling bacteria that feature an impressive number of properties: they can glide on solid surfaces by using two different motility motors, subsist by preying on other microorganisms, are often producers of multiple natural products, and upon adverse environmental conditions, they are able to form multicellular structures called “fruiting bodies”. The process, in which these macroscopically visible structures arise from independent single cells, has been the predominant subject of myxobacterial research for many decades. More precisely, researchers have strived for the discovery of genes, proteins and small molecules that act as signals, receivers or modulators of this complex process. In this regard, the species Myxococcus xanthus has evolved into the model organism due to its relatively simple and reliable handling in a laboratory environment. The research underlying this thesis focused on the identification and biosynthesis of lipids that may act as intercellular signaling molecules during the course of fruiting body formation of the myxobacterium Myxococcus xanthus as part of the “E-signal” system. In general, lipids containing branched-chain fatty acids with an uneven number of carbon atoms were found to be important players in this particular process. Nevertheless, their exact roles remain largely unknown as of this day. The first publication that is part of this thesis deals with an aspect that even strengthened the importance of role of iso-branched compounds in myxobacteria: myxobacterial metabolism is able to transform precursors of iso-lipids to isoprenoids. It addresses the question whether isoprenoids in general are important for fruiting body formation. Phenotypic analysis of mutants impaired in the biosynthesis of the central isoprenoid precursor 3-hydroxymethylglutaryl-Coenzyme A (3-HMG-CoA) from acetate and/or branched chain keto acids and their genetic and metabolic complementation clearly showed that isoprenoids are essential for fruiting body formation and confirmed that leucine derived isovalerate is an important source for isoprenoid precursors in myxobacteria. The second, and by far and away most tedious and sophisticated study, addressed the question as to how myxobacteria form fatty acid derived iso-branched ether lipids and to what extent they are important for fruiting body formation and sporulation. In a previous study, those unusual lipids were identified as specific biomarkers for myxobacterial development. No biochemical pathways to ether lipids specific for prokaryotes were known by then. In this study, a putative candidate gene that may be in involved in ether lipid biosynthesis was investigated. A combination of gene disruption and complementation experiments, phenotypic analysis and monitoring of ether lipid formation by means of GC-MS demonstrated its involvement in myxobacterial ether lipid biosynthesis and the importance of these lipids for the developmental process. Heterologous expression and biochemical testing of this gene together with in-silico sequence analysis and docking experiments confirmed the functions of its predicted domains. The discussion section provides an additional suggestion on how the ether bond formation is performed. Furthermore and most importantly, iso-branched ether lipids were found to be essential for sporulation but not for fruiting body formation. In summary, one or several molecules derived from an iso-branched alkylglycerol seem to play a role during sporulation in M. xanthus and a multidomain enzyme unique for myxobacteria is involved in their biosynthesis. The last manuscript addresses the complexity of lipid metabolism in myxobacteria. Prior to this work, there was limited knowledge about the exact composition of the myxobacterial lipidome and no method was available to monitor putative changes in the myxobacterial lipidome down to the single molecular species for studying lipid biosynthesis or regulation. An ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry based method with electrospray ionization (UPLC-ESI-MS) utilizing standard equipment and a water/acetonitrile/isopropanol based eluent system proved to be geared for the construction of lipid profiles for wild type and mutant cells of M. xanthus and to show their differences. Fragmentation spectra based structure elucidation of lipid molecular species resulted in the identification of 99 molecular species comprising glycerophosphoethanolamines, glycerophosphoglycerols, glycerolipids, ceramides and ceramide phosphoinositols. The latter have never been described for any prokaryotes before. Three dimensional plots were created from the relative intensity differences of the single molecular ion species between the different samples to provide an efficient and versatile visualization of the data and enable the researcher to quickly detect differences.
RNA modifications are present in all three kingdoms of life and detected in all classes of cellular RNAs. RNA modifications are diverse, with more than 100 types of chemical modifications identified to date. These chemical modifications expand the topological repertoire of RNAs and are expected to fine-tune their functions. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) contains two types of covalent modifications, either methylation on the sugar (Nm) or bases (mN), or base isomerization (conversion of uridine into pseudouridines, "). Pseudouridylations and ribose methylations are catalyzed by site-specific H/ACA and C/D box snoRNPs, respectively. The RNA component (snoRNA) of both types of snoRNPs is responsible for the site selection by base pairing with the rRNA substrate, whereas the protein component catalyzes the modification reaction: Nop1 in C/D box and Cbf5 in H/ACA box snoRNPs. Contrastingly, base methylations are performed by snoRNA independent, ‘protein-only’, methyltransferases (MTases). rRNA modifications occur at highly conserved positions, all clustering around functional ribosomal sites. Mutations in factors involved in rRNA modification have been linked to severe human diseases (e.g. X-linked Dyskeratosis congenita). Emerging evidences indicate that heterogeneity in RNA modification prevails, i.e. not all positions are modified at all time, and the concept of ‘specialized ribosomes’ has been coined. rRNA modification heterogeneity has been correlated with disease etiology (cancer), and shown to play a role in cell differentiation(hematopoiesis). Remarkably, alteration in rRNA modification patterns profoundly affects the preference of ribosomes for cap- versus IRESdependent translation initiation, with major consequences on cell physiology.
Fungal organisms, including the most common human pathogens Candida spp., are commensal organisms that are widely present as part of the human flora. Fungal infections are, most frequently, local infections that do not compromise the life of patients. However, mycotic diseases can be life-threatening if they become systemic infections. Systemic fungal infections have risen over the last three decades in parallel to the increased immune-compromised population as a consequence of diseases (e.g. HIV/AIDS) or therapeutic interventions that affect the immune system (e.g. chemotherapy for cancer treatment and immunosuppressors used for patients with organ transplants). This has resulted in the demand of new antifungal drugs that can eradicate the new infections caused by these opportunistic fungal pathogens. However, most of the current compounds have poor pharmaceutical properties such as narrow spectrum of activity, susceptibility to be extruded by efflux pumps or lack of specificity, which make them not suitable for human clinical applications. The treatment of fungal and parasitic infections has been traditionally difficult because the infective organisms are eukaryotic cells that share most of the pathways and enzymes with human cells. To avoid side effects and to develop a targeted therapy, the research has traditionally been centered on the very few enzymes and pathways existing in the infectious organism but absent in humans. Until now, antifungal therapeutic options are limited and are almost dominated by azole class of sterol biosynthesis inhibitors affecting the synthesis of ergosterol, a major constituent of the fungal cell membrane. Because human cells do not have a cell wall, the development of effective and safe antifungal agents has also been directed to enzymes required for the synthesis of the cell wall. Alternatively, it is theoretically possible to target enzymes that are present in fungal organisms and in humans, when: 1) sufficient selectivity can be achieved, and 2) inhibition of the fungal enzyme is lethal to the fungus but does not produce major side effects to humans. In this line, it would be ideal to evaluate the development of selective inhibitors of enzymes which are already known to be drug targets, like protein kinases.