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Computational estimation is an important skill in everyday life as well as in educational contexts. In the last decades, research has found that children use several strategies in computational estimation and that children’s strategy use depends on different parameters. Still, little is known about the underlying cognitive processes. In the present work, we addressed this issue by investigating (1) the influence of individual differences in children’s executive functions on their strategy use and (2) the influence of varying specific task and problem characteristics that are discussed to involve different cognitive processes.
In four studies, we asked third and fourth graders to solve computational estimation tasks by rounding the summands. Study 1 addressed the influence of working memory updating. The study found that efficient updating contributed to children’s strategy use and moderated relations with problem characteristics. A deliberate feature of Study 1 was to restrict participants’ strategy choice to the rounding-down and rounding-up strategies. Study 2 in turn investigated children’s strategy use when mixed-rounding was allowed. Results indicated that children did not consider unit digits of both operands jointly. Also, no influence of executive functions could be found. Consequently, in Study 3, children’s strategy selection when they could choose between three versus only two strategies was contrasted and the role of working memory updating was investigated. Indeed, children chose the best available strategy more often when three strategies were available. Importantly, relative strategy selection performance differed with children’s updating capacities.
Finally, Study 4 addressed another task variation that is important in everyday life and educational contexts. That is, presentation duration and modality were varied. Data showed that a permanent, written format was most beneficial for children’s strategy use and that children’s updating moderated presentation effects.
In sum, the results of the present work could shed some light onto cognitive processes in children’s strategy use in computational estimation. Specifically working memory updating
seems to contribute to third and fourth graders strategy use. Interpreting interactions with different task variations, updating most likely influences associative processes, long term memory consolidation and retrieval as well as encoding and calculation processes.
H/ACA-RNPs are involved in RNA guided pseudouridylation of rRNAs and snRNAs. In this thesis I reconstituted active and labeled archaeal as well as eukaryotic H/ACA-RNPs and studied the structural dynamics of complex assembly and pseudouridine formation. Single molecule FRET spectroscopy was used as method of analysis to study structure, assembly and dynamics of these important complexes.
Das Mammakarzinom ist die häufigste Krebserkrankung der Frau. Aufgrund der zu ver-zeichnenden steigenden Erkrankungs- als auch Überlebensraten werden stetig mehr Frauen mit der Diagnose Brustkrebs und ihren Folgen konfrontiert. Seit den 1990er Jah-ren wird eine kognitive Dysfunktion von Patientinnen nach Krebstherapie in der For-schung diskutiert, wobei die Hintergründe und Zusammenhänge dieses Phänomens bis heute strittig sind. Ziel dieser Arbeit ist die Untersuchung der kognitiven Leistungsfä-higkeit mit einem Fokus auf Aufmerksamkeitsleistungen vor und nach einer adjuvanten Krebstherapie. In diesem Zusammenhang soll besonders der Einfluss von psychischem Stress auf die Aufmerksamkeit und ferner auch die subjektive kognitive Leistungsfähig-keit von Brustkrebspatientinnen beleuchtet werden.
Dazu wurde die Aufmerksamkeitsfähigkeit von 20 Patientinnen, die in der Klinik für Frauenheilkunde und Geburtshilfe des Universitätsklinikums Frankfurt am Main ange-bunden waren, zu jeweils zwei Messzeitpunkten anhand einer neuropsychologischen Testbatterie (Trail-Making Test, NeuroCogFX) untersucht. Die erste Messung erfolgte vor Therapieeinleitung, eine zweite Messung nach Beendigung einer adjuvanten Krebs-therapie. Gleichzeitig wurden Werte zu Depressivität, Angst, krankheitsbezogener Le-bensqualität und der kognitiven Funktionsfähigkeit mittels verschiedener Fragebögen (HADS, EORTC-QLQ C30, EORTC-QLQ BR23) erhoben. Eine Kontrollgruppe von gesunden Probandinnen (N=13) wurde nach den gleichen Vorgaben untersucht.
30% der Patientinnen hatten eine kombinierte Chemotherapie erhalten, eine Radiatio war bei 70% und eine antihormonelle Therapie bei 75% erfolgt. Die Testungen der Pati-entinnen fanden im Mittel 12 (SD 15,4) Tage nach OP statt. Die T2-Messungen erfolg-ten im Mittel 10,3 (SD: 3,2) Monate nach den T1-Messungen für Patientinnen und 7,3 (SD: 1,8) Monate für Kontrollprobandinnen. Alter, IQ und Bildungsniveau waren zwi-schen beiden Gruppen gleich, Unterschiede zeigten sich hinsichtlich der BMI- Werte und der sportlichen Aktivität. Es zeigten sich weder zum ersten noch zum zweiten Messzeitpunkt signifikante Unterschiede der Aufmerksamkeitsleistungen zwischen Pati-entinnen und der Kontrollgruppe. Unterschiede fanden sich lediglich zwischen beiden Zeitpunkten in der einfachen Reaktionszeit mit schlechteren Testleistungen während T2 sowie im TMT Teil B mit besseren Ergebnissen während T2 für beide Gruppen. Hoch-signifikant unterschieden sich dagegen Patientinnen von der Kontrollgruppe mit schlechteren Werten hinsichtlich Angst und Depression, der Lebensqualität sowie der empfundenen kognitiven Funktionen. Dabei war keine signifikante Veränderung der Werte zwischen T1 und T2 messbar. Eine Korrelation zwischen aufmerksamkeitsbezo-genen Testleistungen und psychischem Stress bestand nicht, weiterhin fand sich kein Zusammenhang zwischen subjektiver kognitiver Leistungsfähigkeit und objektiven Testergebnissen. Hochsignifikant korrelierten dagegen schlechtere Werte der subjektiven kognitiven Fähigkeiten mit erhöhten Werten für Angst und Depression.
Auf Grundlage dieser Arbeit lässt sich kein relevanter Einfluss einer adjuvanten Krebs-therapie auf die Aufmerksamkeitsleistungen ableiten. Die Ergebnisse belegen aber signi-fikant erhöhte Werte für Depression und Angst von Brustkrebspatientinnen und den Einfluss von erhöhtem psychischem Stress auf die subjektive kognitive Funktionsfähig-keit. Diesbezüglich sollten zukünftige Behandlungsstrategien auch die subjektive kogni-tive Funktionsfähigkeit und in diesem Zusammenhang auch die spezifische Therapie von psychischem Stress in den Fokus rücken.
Syntactic and semantic aspects of supplementary relative clauses in English and Sōrānī Kurdish
(2020)
In this thesis, I examine and analyse supplementary relative clauses(SRCs), also known as non-restrictive relative clauses. SRCs have received considerably less attention in the study of relative clauses than integrated, or restrictive, relative clauses (IRCs). The (surface) syntactic structure of the two types of relative clauses (RCs) is largely identical. Therefore, it is not straightforward to determine where to locate the difference in the interpretation between IRCs and SRCs.To address this question, I focus on two types of English SRCs: determiner-which RCs, and SRCs introduced by that. Determiner-which RCs can only be interpreted as SRCs. Previous HPSG approaches built on the generalisation that that RCs cannot be SRCs. Hence there is no HPSG analysis for relative that in SRCs. In this thesis I show the acceptability of the two constructions by the American native speakers and provide both structures with an HPSG analysis.I extend my discussion beyond English by looking at relative clauses in Sorānī Kurdish. I argue that RCs in Sorānī Kurdish share essential properties withEnglish bare RCs and that RCs, though Sorānī Kurdish has no equivalent of wh-RCs. I also provide Sorānī Kurdish with an HPSG analysis.
The analysis of the global stratospheric meridional circulation, known as the Brewer-Dobson circulation, is an essential part of both experimental and theoretical atmospheric sciences. This large-scale circulation has a crucial influence on the global burden of greenhouse gases and ozone depleting substances throughout the complete atmosphere. This makes it an important factor for the Earth’s radiative budget, which is perceptible at the Earth’s surface despite the remote location of the stratosphere. In the course of climate change it is generally expected that also the Brewer-Dobson circulation undergoes significant changes in structure and strength, although the exact repercussions are still uncertain and thus remain an open scientific question. A general problem for the observational investigation of the dynamical processes in the stratosphere is that residual mean transport cannot be measured directly and hence requires the use of sophisticated proxies. Many studies in the past consider the so-called mean age of air, which is a measure of the average time an air parcel has spent in the stratosphere since passing a certain reference point. While changes in the strength and structure can be detected and visualized using mean age of air, a more thorough distinction between the different involved transport mechanisms of the circulation (residual circulation, mixing) cannot be made. For that, consideration of a full distribution of all relevant transit times through the stratosphere, an age spectrum, is favorable and a powerful tool to analyze the spatial structure as well as possible future changes in detail. Mean age of air and age spectra can be readily derived in atmospheric modeling studies, but an observationally based retrieval is challenging. Mean age of air is usually approximated from measurements of very long-lived trace gas species that act as a dynamical tracer for the stratosphere. The retrieval of age spectra from observations, however, remains an open task for which different methods have been proposed in the past, that often require a combination of strong assumptions and model data explicitly. This is a major issue for a precise and independent investigation of stratospheric dynamics based on measurements. The focus of this cumulative dissertation is on the development process and application of an inversion method to derive stratospheric age spectra from mixing ratios of chemically active substances that combines an applicable and precise ansatz with a minimized amount of necessary model data. Chemically active species have the important benefit that chemistry and transport in the stratosphere are strongly correlated so that the state of depletion of a trace gas can give some information on certain parts of the age spectrum. Considering a sufficient number of distinct trace gases simultaneously, a full approximation of the age spectrum should be possible. The main section of this thesis is split into three parts, which follow the main aspects and key results of the three publications involved (Hauck et al., 2019, 2020; Keber et al., 2020). The newly developed inverse method is based upon the previously established ansatz by Schoeberl et al. (2005), but constrains the shape of the age spectrum by a single parameter inverse Gaussian function. This keeps the balance between applicability and accuracy with a limited amount of measurement data. Additionally, the method introduces a seasonal scaling factor that imposes higher order maxima and minima onto the intrinsically monomodal spectrum based on the seasonal cycle of the tropical upward mass flux to incorporate phases of weaker and stronger transport. A proof of concept of the inverse method is provided using an idealized simulation of the ECHAM/MESSy Atmospheric Chemistry (EMAC) model, where the method is applied to a set of artificial radioactive trace gases with known chemical lifetime. The results imply that the method works properly and retrieves age spectra that match the EMAC reference spectra significantly well on the global and seasonal scale. Only in the lower stratosphere, the performance of the inverse method on the seasonal scale decreases as entrainment into the stratosphere is considered only across the tropical tropopause. Transport across the local extratropical tropopause, however, is a key feature for trace gases in the extratropical lowermost stratosphere so that this entrainment must be included explicitly.
In the second part, the discovered problems are approached to make the inverse method applicable to observations. The formulation of the method is extended to incorporate transport explicitly across the tropical (30° S – 30° N), northern extratropical (30° N – 90° N), and southern extratropical tropopause (30° S – 90° S) each with a single age spectrum that can be inverted independently.
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Mesenchymale Knochenmarksstammzellen (engl. Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells (BMSCs)) sind hochproliferative multipotente Progenitorzellen mit einem hohen Regenerationspotential. Sie können aus dem Knochenmark in geschädigte Knorpelareale migrieren und dort zu Chondrozyten differenzieren. Somit können sie zur Reparatur traumatisch oder osteoarthrotisch bedingter Knorpelschäden beitragen. In verschiedenen Bereichen des Gelenks konnten zudem sympathische Nervenfasern sowie der sympathische Neurotransmitter Noradrenalin (NE) nachgewiesen werden. NE inhibiert die chondrogene Differenzierungskapazität von BMSCs und kann so zur Pathogenese der Osteoarthrose (OA) beitragen. Unbekannt ist zum derzeitigen Zeitpunkt, inwiefern NE die Proliferation von humanen BMSCs beeinflusst. Ziel unserer Studie war, den Einfluss von NE auf die Proliferationskapazität humaner BMSCs zu untersuchen und beteiligte intrazelluläre Signalwege zu identifizieren.
Zu diesem Zweck wurden BMSCs von Patienten nach stattgehabtem Gelenktrauma (Trauma BMSCs) und von Patienten mit diagnostizierter OA (OA BMSCs) untersucht. Zunächst erfolgte eine Analyse des Genexpressionsmusters der verschiedenen Adrenorezeptoren (ARs). Anschließend wurden sowohl Trauma als auch OA BMSCs mit NE in unterschiedlichen Konzentrationen sowie mit NE in Kombination mit verschiedenen AR-Antagonisten (Doxazosin (α1), Yohimbin (α2) oder Propranolol (β2)) behandelt. Die Aktivierung der AR-gekoppelten Signalwege wurde anhand der Phosphorylierung der beiden Hauptsignalwege der extrazellulären signalregulierten Kinasen 1/2 (ERK1/2) und der Proteinkinase A (PKA) via Western Blot untersucht.
Die Genexpression diverser AR-Subtypen konnte in Trauma (α2B-, α2C- und β2-AR) und OA BMSCs (α2A-, α2B- und β2-AR) nachgewiesen werden. Die Behandlung mit NE in hohen Konzentrationen führte zu einer statistisch signifikanten Inhibition der Proliferation von Trauma und OA BMSCs. Die Behandlung mit NE in niedrigen Konzentrationen hatte hingegen keinen Einfluss auf die Proliferation von Trauma und OA BMSCs. Sowohl ERK1/2 als auch PKA wurden in Trauma und OA BMSCs nach Behandlung mit NE aktiviert. Lediglich der β2-Antagonist Propranolol konnte sowohl die Effekte auf die Proliferation als auch auf die Aktivierung von ERK1/2 und PKA aufheben. Doxazosin und Yohimbin hatten hingegen keinen signifikanten Einfluss auf die Proliferation sowie die ERK1/2- und PKA-Phosphorylierung.
Unsere Untersuchungen zeigen, dass NE die Proliferation von Trauma und OA BMSCs konzentrationsabhängig inhibiert. Dieser Effekt wird vornehmlich über eine β2-AR-gekoppelte ERK1/2- und PKA-Aktivierung vermittelt. Über diesen Mechanismus kann NE das regenerative Potential von humanen BMSCs verringern und somit zur Pathogenese der OA beitragen. Über eine zielgerichtete Beeinflussung des β2-Signalweges könnten sich zukünftig neue therapeutische Optionen bei der Behandlung osteoarthrotisch oder traumatisch bedingter Knorpelschäden ergeben.
Die afrikanische Schlafkrankheit (HAT), übertragen durch die Tsetse Fliege und ausgelöst durch den einzelligen Parasit Trypanosoma brucei, wird vor über 100 Jahren entdeckt. Diese unbehandelt immer tödlich verlaufende Erkrankung zählt zu den Neglected Tropical Diseases. Es existiert keine Impfung und die Behandlung ist nebenwirkungsreich. Das weltweite Forschungsaufkommen zu diesem Thema wird von 1900 bis 2016 anhand von Metadaten untersucht, die aus dem Web of Science Core Collection (Clarivate Analytics) extrahiert wurden. Die 5079 Publikationen werden mittels bibliometrischer Parameter ausgewertet. Diese umfassen chronologische Publikationsparameter, Analysen der Länder, Institutionen, Autoren, Fachzeitschriften, Fachbereiche, Kooperationen und Geschlechterparität. Die Analyse zeigt ein aufkommendes Forschungsinteresse der Kolonialmächte Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts in den okkupierten Koloniegebieten Afrikas. Zu dem Zeitpunkt als der Erreger entdeckt wird, grassiert eine Epidemie der Ost-und Westafrikanischen Schlafkrankheit. Mit Beginn des Ersten Weltkrieges brechen die Publikationszahlen ein. Erst ab den 1970ern steigen die Artikelzahlen kontinuierlich. Die Vernachlässigung der Erkrankung resultiert in einer Epidemie mit geschätzt 300.000 Fällen (1998). In den letzten Jahren verringerte sich die Anzahl der Neuinfektionen erheblich, im Jahr 2016 werden 2184 Fälle gemeldet. Zwischen 1964 und 2013 kommt es zu einer mehr als 11-fachen Steigerung der Publikationen. Ab 1980 nehmen die Zitierungen sprunghaft zu, wahrscheinlich konnten viele neue Erkenntnisse aufgrund der hohen Prävalenz gewonnen werden. Der meistzitierte und produktivste Fachbereich ist die Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Der Anteil Pharmacology and Pharmacy nimmt kontinuierlich zu. Die Popularität könnte auf 2 Faktoren zurückgeführt werden, den steigenden Bedarf an neuen Medikamenten und den Einfluss der WHO. 2009 wird NECT als Kombinationstherapie zugelassen, 2018 folgt Fexinidazole. Das durchschnittliche Literaturverzeichnis vergrößert sich, ebenso die Forschungsgruppen, denn die durchschnittliche Autorenzahl steigt von 2,5 (1975) auf 8,03 (2014). Die Zahl der internationalen Kooperationsartikel wird innerhalb der letzten 30 Jahre versechsfacht. Die publikationsstärkste Nation ist die USA, gefolgt von
Großbritannien, weiteren westeuropäischen Staaten sowie Kenia und Nigeria. 36% der 25 produktivsten Länder sind afrikanische. Gemessen an ihren ökonomischen Daten ist die Forschungsleistung extrem hoch. Unter den 15 produktivsten Institutionen ist als einziges afrikanisches das International Livestock Research Institut (Nairobi) vertreten. Diese Forschungseinrichtung wird durch Stiftungen wie Wellcome Trust finanziell unterstützt, welche bei mehreren hundert Publikationen als Funding Agency dient. Zwei weitere außeruniversitäre Institutionen zählen zu den produktivsten: Das Center of Infectious Disease Research (USA) sowie das Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp (Belgien). Die zehn produktivsten Länderkooperationen finden innereuropäisch oder mit den USA statt, darunter existiert eine europäisch-afrikanische Kollaboration (ITM Antwerp, Ministry for für Public Health (DR Kongo)). Bei Analyse der europäisch-afrikanischen Kooperationen fällt auf, dass diese mit der ehemaligen Kolonialpolitik korrelieren könnten. Die meisten afrikanischen Nationen publizieren in Kooperationen, eine Ausnahme bildet Nigeria. Sie veröffentlichen nur 18,7% der Artikel in Zusammenarbeit. Sie sind das Land mit dem höchsten BIP der ausgewerteten afrikanischen Nationen. Der produktivste Autor ist E. Pays der an der Université Libre de Bruxelles forscht. Der meistzitierte Autor G.A.M. Cross von der Rockefeller University ist Verfasser von zwei der meistzitierten Artikel. Die erfolgreichsten Wissenschaftler stehen eher am Ende ihrer Karriere und fungieren meist als Letztautoren und als Leiter einer Einrichtung. Obwohl in den letzten Jahren eine zunehmende Geschlechterparität auf dem Forschungsgebiet identifiziert werden konnte, ist die Chancengleichheit für Frauen abhängig vom Land. In Brasilien überwiegt als einzige Nation der Anteil weiblicher Autoren, während Japan den geringsten Frauenanteil besitzt. 11,2% der Artikel erscheinen in der Fachzeitschrift Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology und deckt somit die beiden meistzugewiesenen Themenfelder ab. Infektiöse Erkrankungen, die vor allem Drittweltländer mit geringen finanziellen Möglichkeiten betreffen, müssen im Interesse der Weltgemeinschaft weiter intensiv erforscht werden. Um dies zu ermöglichen ist eine Finanzierung und Stärkung der Wissenschaft in den betroffenen Ländern vor Ort nötig.
Current research on medical biomaterials have shown that the physical and chemical characteristics of biomaterials determine the body inflammatory cellular reaction after their implantation. The aim of this study was to evaluate the individual effects of the physical characteristics over the initial biomaterial-cellular interaction and the inflammatory cellular reaction. For this purpose, an equine-derived collagen hemostatic sponge (E-CHS) was modified by pressing and evaluated using ex vivo, in vitro and in vivo methods.
The E-CHS was pressed by applying constant pressure (6.47± 0.85 N) for 2 min using a sterile stainless-steel cylinder and cut in segments of 1cm2. Subsequently, E-CHS and the pressed equine-derived collagen hemostatic sponge (P-E-CHS) were studied as two independent biomaterials and compared to a control group (CG).
A blood concentrate containing inflammatory cells known as platelet rich fibrin (PRF) was used to mimic the initial biomaterial-cell interaction and to measure the absorption coefficient of the biomaterials to liquid PRF (iPAC). Additionally, the biomaterials were cultivated together with PRF for 3 and 6 days to measure the induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α and IL-8). The results were obtained through enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and histological methods. PRF cultivated without biomaterials served as the CG. Additionally, the biomaterials were evaluated in vivo using a subcutaneous model in Wistar rats and compared to sham operated animals (CG) representing physiologic wound healing. After 3, 15 and 30 days, the explanted samples were evaluated using histochemical and immunohistochemical (IHC) staining using the following markers: CD68 (pan macrophages), CCR7 (pro-inflammatory macrophages, M1), CD206 (pro-wound healing macrophages, M2) and α-Smooth Muscle Actin (α-SMA; vessel identification).
After the mixture of liquid PRF with both biomaterials for 15 minutes, the ex vivo results showed that E-CHS was penetrated by cells, whereas P-E-CHS was cell-occlusive. Additionally, P-E-CHS induced a higher release of pro-inflammatory cytokines compared to liquid PRF alone (CG) and E-CHS after 3 days (P< 0.05). Although the biomaterial was pressed, the difference of the iPAC value did not show statistical differences. In vivo, the CG induced at day 3 a higher inflammatory response compared to the experimental groups (EG) (P< 0.05). The intergroup comparison showed that P-E-CHS induced a higher presence of macrophages (CD68+/CC7+) compared to E-CHS at day 3 (P< 0.05). Only CD68+/CCR7+ mononuclear cells (MNCs) were observed without multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs). After 15 days, the presence of macrophages (CD68+ P<0.01 /CCR7+ P<0.001 /CD206+ P<0.05) reduced considerably in the CG. On the contrary, the inflammatory response increased in the EGs (CD68+/CCR7+). The intergroup comparison showed that this increment was statistically significant when comparing E-CHS and P-E-CHS to the CG at day 15 (P<0.01 and P< 0.05 respectively). At this time point, a reduced number of MNGCs were observed in the EGs. In the CG no MNGCs were observed. Furthermore, E-CHS showed a faster degradation rate and was fully invaded by cells and vessels formed in its interior region. On the other hand, P-E-CHS remained occlusive to cell penetration and vessels were formed only in the periphery. After 30 days, the cellular reaction shifted to a higher number of M2 macrophages (CD260+) in all groups and a reduced presence of CD68+ and CCR7+ MNCs. Both biomaterials degraded and only small fragments were found in the implantation bed surrounded by MNGCs (CCR7+).
These results are of high clinical relevance and show that changes in biomaterial properties have a significant impact on their interaction with the body. They also serve as insight into the possibility to develop versatile biomaterials with different applications. For example, E-CHs can be applied to support hemostasis in a bleeding alveolar socket and P-E-CHs by being cell occlusive and having a delayed degradation rate can be applied for guided bone and tissue regeneration.
As fossil resources are diminishing, environmental concerns arise and chemical synthesis often involves expensive catalysts or extensive extraction procedures, the demand for production of industrially relevant compounds from renewable resources increases. In this context, engineering microorganisms for production of specialty chemicals, such as 3-alkylphenols, presents an attractive, environmental-friendly approach. 3-alkylphenols have various applications: due to their antiseptic and stabilizing properties many 3-alkylphenols, including 3-methylphenol (3-MP), are utilized as additives in disinfectant reagents and biological products, while they can be also implemented as platform chemicals for production of lubricating oil additives or flavors. Some 3-akylphenols have potential for transmission control of the disease sleeping sickness that is transmitted by tsetse flies in sub-saharan Africa, since 3-ethylphenol (3-EP) and 3-propylphenol (3-PP) and to a lesser degree 3-MP were found to attract tsetse flies and improved catch rates in impregnated tsetse fly traps. Microbial fermentation of 3-alkylphenols would provide a simple and inexpensive way for local communities in Africa to produce these compounds and prepare their own tsetse fly traps.
Some molds synthesize 3-MP as an intermediate during biosynthesis of the mycotoxin patulin. However, the heterologous host Saccharomyces cerevisiae has advantageous traits for industrial application, since it is well characterized, robust, simple to handle and easily genetically accessible. In this thesis, genetical engineering approaches were utilized to establish the yeast S. cerevisiae for biotechnological production of 3-alkylphenols. As a proof of concept, the iterative polyketide synthase from Penicillium patulum, 6-methylsalicylic acid synthase (MSAS), and 6-methylsalicylic acid (6-MSA) decarboxylase PatG from Aspergillus clavatus were heterologously expressed in S. cerevisiae resulting in the first reported de novo biosynthesis of 3-MP via 6-MSA in yeast from sugars (Hitschler & Boles, 2019). It was shown that codon-optimization and genomic integration of heterologous genes, high initial cell densities and a balanced expression of PatG were beneficial for heterologous production of up to 589 mg/L 3-MP in S. cerevisiae. However, toxicity of 3-MP limited higher product accumulation.
Different in vivo detoxification strategies were implemented to face this bottleneck. Growth tests revealed that 3-methylanisole (3-MA) is less toxic to the yeast cells than 3-MP. Expression of an orcinol-O-methyltransferase from chinese rose hybrids (OOMT2) was combined with in situ extraction converting the toxic 3-MP product into the volatile 3-MA and accumulating up to 211 mg/L 3-MA in the dodecane phase. Alternatively, up to 533 mg/L 3-MP glucoside were synthesized by expression of a UDP-glycosyltransferase (UGT72B27) from Vitis vinifera in the 3-MP producing strain, revealing saccharose as beneficial carbon source and ethanol growth phase as essential for high 3-MP production, although 3-MP conversions were not yet complete. Both detoxification strategies allowed circumvention of the toxicity imposed limited product accumulation. This was demonstrated when both detoxification strategies were combined with redirection of the carbon flux through deletion of phosphoglucose isomerase gene PGI1 and feeding a mixture of fructose and glucose leading to majorly improved product formation, with up to 899 mg/L 3-MA/3-MP and 873 mg/L 3-MP/3-MP glucoside, compared to less than 313 mg/L product titers in the wild type controls (Hitschler & Boles, 2020).
For provision of the tsetse fly attractants 3-EP from propionyl-CoA and 3-PP from butyryl-CoA, the substrate promiscuities of MSAS and PatG were exploited. However, slower formation rates with the alternative substrates propionyl-CoA and butyryl-CoA suggested that competing formation of 6-MSA from the preferred priming unit acetyl-CoA was dominating in vivo. Indeed, 3-EP or 3-PP formation was not observed in 3-MP producing yeast strains. Assuming that intracellular levels of propionyl-CoA and butyryl-CoA were limiting 3-EP and 3-PP formation, different strategies were implemented to raise the supply of these alternative priming units and successfully compete with acetyl-CoA for MSAS priming.
Supplementation of propionate increased propionyl-CoA levels by endogenous pathways sufficiently to enable 3-EP formation in yeast mediated by MSAS and PatG. Deletion of the 2-methylcitrate synthases CIT2 and CIT3 revealed that degradation of propionyl-CoA was not limiting 3-EP formation at this stage. In order to raise propionyl-CoA levels further, a heterologous propionyl-CoA synthase (PrpE) was expressed in the 3-MP producing yeast strain leading to up to 12.5 mg/L 3-EP with propionate feeding and blockage of degradation. Moreover, PrpE enabled also 3-EP formation without propionate supplementation suggesting that an endogenous supply of propionate existed that was reactivated by PrpE. As threonine or 2-ketobutyrate feeding increased 3-EP titers in combination with PrpE, this indicated that threonine degradation via 2-ketobutyrate was responsible for the endogenous propionate supply. Moreover, expression of branched-chain ketoacid dehydrogenase complex from Pseudomonas putida combined with PrpE provided propionyl-CoA from endogenous 2-ketobutyrate and raised 3-EP titers up to 5.9 mg/L compared to 2.8 mg/L with only PrpE indicating a potential route for optimization of 3-EP titers independent of propionate or threonine feeding.
For 3-PP production from butyryl-CoA, a heterologous ‘reverse ß-oxidation’ pathway was introduced in the 3-MP producing yeast strain providing sufficient butyryl-CoA for biosynthesis of up to 2 mg/L 3-PP. Degradation of the precursor via ß-oxidation was slightly limiting, since deletion of fatty acyl-CoA oxidase POX1 increased 3-PP titers slightly to 2.6 mg/L.
As the concentrations of 3-alkylphenols are close to the concentrations implemented in tsetse fly traps, the engineered yeast strains have the potential for simple and inexpensive on-site production of 3-alkylphenols as tsetse fly attractants by local rural communities in Africa. In spite of this success, 3-MP remained the main product in the developed yeast strains. Since 3-EP and 3-PP are more efficient tsetse fly attractants, a shift in substrate specificities of MSAS and PatG is desirable for a more favorable 3-EP/3-MP and 3-PP/3-MP product ratio regarding tsetse fly attraction. During rational engineering of MSAS, the MSASQ625A/I752V mutant showed a beneficial shift of product ratios with up to 11 mg/L 3-EP/63 mg/L 3-MP and 4.5 mg/L 3-PP/116 mg/L 3-MP, compared to a higher proportion of 3-MP with up to 343 mg/L, 11 mg/L 3-EP and 1.5 mg/L 3-PP in the wild type controls. Further engineering of MSAS and PatG might majorly improve production of 3-EP and 3-PP.
In summary, this thesis successfully established the yeast S. cerevisiae as cell factory for production of different 3-alkylphenols optimizing expression of the heterologous production pathway, elucidating means to detoxify products and establishing different approaches to increase intracellular levels of acyl-CoA precursors. The engineered yeast strains can be potentially implemented for simple and inexpensive fermentation of tsetse fly attractants in Africa.
Freshwater is one of the most fundamental resources for life and is the habitat for a wide diversity of species. One of the most diverse aquatic insect taxa is Trichoptera Kirby, 1813, caddisflies. These semi-aquatic insects have aquatic larvae and terrestrial adults and are found all around the globe in freshwater habitats. Water is also one of the most important natural resources for the human population, but alarmingly, freshwaters are among the most threatened natural habitats. Thus, the monitoring and preservation of the quality of freshwater habitats should have a high priority. In order to track changes in the biota a baseline reference is necessary, but freshwater biodiversity is under-studied in many parts of the Earth such as the biodiversity hotspots of the Himalaya and the Hengduan Mountains. This thesis treats the trichopteran genus Himalopsyche Banks, 1940 (Rhyacophilidae) which has its diversity center in the Himalayas and the Hengduan Mountains. Himalopsyche larvae are large and conspicuous and only occur in clean, unpolluted streams. This makes Himalopsyche potentially suited as indicator organisms for freshwater quality monitoring, but taxonomic knowledge is yet insufficient. Based on samples from a field survey in the Hengduan Mountains targeting both larvae and adults I uncovered three new Himalopsyche species which are described in this thesis (Chapter II), and with the aid of molecular data I associated larvae of Himalopsyche to adult species (Chapter I). The molecular association enabled the first comparative morphological study of Himalopsyche species in the larval stage, and the morphological study in Chapter II revealed that there are four distinct larval types of Himalopsyche. However, no diagnostic characters to identify Himalopsyche larvae to species level were found. To understand Himalopsyche larval morphology from an evolutionary perspective, I reconstructed the first molecular phylogeny of the genus (Chapter III). This demonstrated that each larval type corresponds to a deep phylogenetic split, indicating that larval types evolved early in Himalopsyche evolution and remained constant since. Based on the phylogenetic results as well as larval and adult morphology, I re-defined five species groups of Himalopsyche: H. kuldschensis Group, H. lepcha Group, H. navasi Group, H. phryganea Group, and H. tibetana Group. The species groups differ with respect to their diversity centers. The monotypic H. lepcha Group resides in the Himalayas, and the monotypic H. phryganea Group inhabits Western Nearctic. The H. kuldschensis and H. tibetana Groups are geographically overlapping with distributions in the Himalayas, but the distribution of H. kuldschensis Group stretches more to the west to include the Tian Shan, and the H. tibetana Group is more concentrated around the eastern Himalayas and the Hengduan Mountains. The H. navasi Group has a more eastern distribution than most Himalopsyche including isolated areas such as Japan and Indonesia. The earliest split in Himalopsyche divides the H. navasi Group from remaining Himalopsyche, suggesting a more eastern area of origin of Himalopsyche than its current diversity center, with subsequent radiations in the Himalayas and Hengduan Mountains. In addition to the three chapters, in this thesis I discuss further aspects of Himalopsyche biology including genital evolution, species complexes, and Himalopsyche ecology.