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Trotz aller Unsicherheit und kritischer Infragestellung sind Kunstlandschaftsbezeichnungen – und damit auch der „Mittelrhein“ – als Hilfsbegriffe für die Lokalisierung der Kunstwerke noch immer gebräuchlich. Aber es ist ganz besonders problematisch, vom Mittelrhein um 1500 als „Kunstlandschaft“ zu sprechen. Schon die Umgrenzung der Region fällt unterschiedlich aus, und noch mehr sind die Kriterien schwankend, die im Vergleich zu anderen Regionen den Mittelrhein definieren sollen. Vorherrschend sind bei solchen Vergleichen nach wie vor Stilbegriffe, welche Vorbehalte gegenüber dem Begriff des Stils auch geäußert werden. So ist die Frage, ob die für den Mittelrhein vorgeschlagene Kennzeichnung „Stilheterogenität“ als Kriterium der Abgrenzung tauglich ist oder mehr eine methodische Verlegenheitslösung darstellt.
Die Untersuchung konzentriert sich auf das Schnitzretabel, das als Leitmedium der spätgotischen Kunst im deutschsprachigen Raum zu betrachten ist. Die analysierten Schnitzretabel sind als Fallstudien anzusehen, wobei hier vor allem jene analysiert worden sind, die einen guten Erhaltungszustand aufweisen. Zwar haben die wenigsten ihr ursprüngliches Aussehen bewahrt, aber entweder sind die Veränderungen nur minimal oder der originale Zustand ist gut rekonstruierbar, sodass die Werkgruppe trotz der Eingriffe als repräsentativ gelten kann. Neben den traditionellen Untersuchungsmethoden konnte die Infrarotreflektographie mit beweglicher Kamera (Osiris) eingesetzt werden. Es soll mit der Vorstellung einer Gattung ein Ausschnitt der in der Region präsenten Kunst ohne „mittelrheinische Vorentscheidungen“ gezeigt werden.
Die meisten analysierten Retabel entstammen der Rhein-Main-Region mit Frankfurt und Mainz als Oberzentren des Mittelrheins; Oberwesel, Speyer und Gelnhausen markieren die Grenze für die Auswahl. Die 27 Einzeluntersuchungen finden sich im Katalogteil der Arbeit, während deren zusammenfassende Darstellung – im Hinblick auf Methode, Standort, Auftraggeber, Künstler, Retabeltyp, Bildprogramm sowie Einflüsse – sowie Ergebnisse im Hauptteil besprochen werden.
The article is designed to introduce and analyze authoritarian constitutionalism as an important phenomenon in its own right, not merely a deficient or deviant version of liberal constitutionalism. Therefore it is not adequate to dismiss it as sham or window-dressing. Instead, its crucial features – participation as complicity, power as property and the cult of immediacy – are related to the basic assumption that authoritarian constitutions are texts with a purpose that warrant careful analysis of the domestic and transnational audience.
This dissertation discusses the mutual influence between leaders and followers on perception, emotion and behavior, using an attachment theory perspective. Some individuals are more likely to be seen as leaders than others. On the one hand this is determined by the characteristics or attributes as well as skills of the person in question. However, on the other hand, followers’ perception and expectations play a big role as well, in particular which expectations of an ideal leader can be fulfilled by followers’ current leader. Although attachment theory and – styles have only recently entered the organizational psychology literature, this dissertation advances that literature by looking at the role of attachment orientations between leaders and followers. In doing so, this dissertation answers several recent research calls on this topic. The three main subsequent chapters discuss the predictive role of attachment orientations with regard to leader preferences, the transference of behavioural expectations from one leader to another, and the perception of leader prototypicality in groups. The first chapter discusses the connection between implicit leader preferences and attachment orientations as predictors. Results show that avoidant attached individuals prefer a more autonomous and independent leadership style, whereas anxious attached individuals prefer a supportive and team-oriented leadership style. In the second chapter I study the transference of behavioural expectations from one leader to another. Results show that avoidant attached individuals are more likely to engage in this transference process. In addition, I discuss and empirically test the influence of culture with regard to leader transference. In the final chapter, I examine the behavioural influence of attachment orientations on how likely someone is perceived to be a leader in groups. Based on 57 project groups, I find that team members actually perceive avoidant attached individuals to be the most leader-like. Put differently, given certain environmental conditions, insecure attachment orientations can be perceived as leaders. These results show that it is even more important that leaders somewhat adapt to their followers’ preferences and not commit to merely one particular leadership style.
Cells within a tissue form highly complex, cellular interactions. This architecture is lost in two-dimensional (2D) cell cultures. To close the gap between 2D cell cultures and in vivo tissues, three-dimensional (3D) cell cultures such as spheroids or embryoid bodies were developed. To fully take advantage of the third dimension, imaging techniques are essential. The emerging field of "image-based systems biology" exploits the information in images and builds a connection between experimental and theoretical investigation of biological processes. Such interdisciplinary approaches strongly depend on the development of protocols to establish 3D cell cultures, innovations in sample preparation, well-suited imaging techniques and quantitative segmentation methods.
Although 3D cell cultures and image-based systems biology provide a great potential, 2D methods are still not completely replaced by 3D methods. This is mainly due to methodical and technical hurdles. Therefore, this thesis provides a significant contribution to overcome these hurdles and to further develop 3D cell cultures. I established computational and experimental methods related to 3D aggregates and investigated fundamental, cellular processes such as adhesion, growth and differentiation.
The automatic segmentation method "PAS" and "LoS" were developed in the context of this thesis. They extract essential biological properties such as the projected area or features of cell nuclei from 2D or 3D images of 3D aggregates. Both algorithms show their accuracy robustly over image data from different samples and different microscopes. In addition, the superior performance of PAS and LoS was proven in a comparison with state-of-the-art methods.
The PAS approach served as an essential basis for investigating cellular processes such as adhesion and growth which are tightly regulated to contribute to tissue integrity. These processes are involved in the formation of spheroids. The temporally resolved data of spheroid formation of three mammary epithelial cell lines revealed differences in their formation dynamics as well as in the onset of spheroid formation phases (aggregation, compaction and growth). Despite these differences, adhesion- and growth-associated proteins such as E-cadherin, actin, microtubules, and the focal adhesion kinase show similar importance in a particular phase. Notably, certain proteins (e.g. E-Cadherin) contribute differently to spheroid formation of cells from different cell types in terms of cell adhesion and growth. Overall, analyses of the individual phases of spheroid formation revealed the temporal coordination of fundamental tissue-specific processes. The results contribute to a better understanding of the maintenance and disruption of tissue integrity.
An important but yet unknown process is how cells accomplish to arrange themselves against the gravitational force to form a spheroid. Live imaging with light sheet-based microscopy provides the best solution for a temporally and in particular spatially resolved investigation of spheroid formation. Although the imaging possibilities increase with this particular microscopy technique, available sample preparation methods are rare. Therefore, I have significantly optimized "agarose beaker" as preparation method for 3D long-term imaging of spheroid formation. The data show that upward movement of the cells takes place early. This movement is initiated in the centre of the initially flat cell layer. Subsequently, the cells move from the periphery of the cell layer toward the centre. Cells rearrange within the spheroid which is followed by growth. It is very likely that 3D aggregates form by adopting an energetically favoured, spherical shape by increasing cell-cell or cell-matrix contacts.
Besides the knowledge gained from the examination of the self-assembly process in different contexts, fully formed cellular aggregates can serve as basis to investigate differentiation processes. Differentiation guide cell fate specification during early embryonic development (i.e. preimplantation) and is not fully understood yet. Due to the lack of an in vitro system for preimplantation, I have developed "blastoids". These are 3D multicellular aggregates of mouse embryonic stem cells which represent important phases of preimplantation and beyond. In qualitative and quantitative analyses, a strong similarity was proven between blastoids and the inner cell mass of in vivo mouse embryos. Further results strongly suggest that both, the cell number and the trophectoderm play a subordinate role for cell fate decision during preimplantation. Furthermore, 3D neighbourhood analyses have shown that both, blastoids and mouse embryos, do not show a random "salt-and-pepper" pattern during differentiation. Instead, they show a yet unknown local clustering of cells with identical fates, suggesting local cell interactions that influence cell fate decision. Furthermore, the data indicate that the maturation of the epiblast in the later stages of preimplantation is initiated by an interaction between cells of the epiblast and the primitive endoderm.
Using image-based systems biology, I have investigated fundamental cellular processes such as adhesion, growth and differentiation in the context of tissue integrity and early embryonic development using 3D cellular aggregates. This highly interdisciplinary work is a major contribution to 3D cell biology and demonstrates how cells bind and interact within a complex system. The main methods developed in this thesis as well as the biological findings can be used not only in further biological but also in medical and pharmacological studies. They have the potential to advance our understanding of complex biological systems and to provide new opportunities for practical applications.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a clonal malignancy of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) characterized by expansion of myeloid blasts in the bone marrow. It has been shown that autophagy is a degradative process, which delivers cytoplasmic components to lysosomes to prevent malignant transformation by maintaining HSC integrity. Besides its function as a bulk degradation machinery to recycle cytoplasmic components during limited energy supply, autophagy also serves as an intracellular quality control mechanism. Selective autophagy requires autophagy receptors such as p62 to specifically bridge the targeted cargos into autophagosomes. p62 is known as a central signaling hub involved in pro-oncogenic signaling pathways and autophagic degradation pathways. However, little is known about the role of p62 as a selective autophagy receptor in AML. This study aims to elucidate the precise function of p62 as an autophagy receptor in leukemia development and maintenance.
In silico analysis revealed that high p62 expression was significantly associated with poor overall survival of adult patients with de novo AML, suggesting that p62 may promote leukemia maintenance. To address the functional role of p62 in leukemia, genome editing by CRISPR/Cas9 was used to knockout p62 in four human AML cell lines. Importantly, p62 loss reduced cell proliferation in all four cell lines. This observation could be transferred to a murine leukemia cell model in which leukemic transformation of lineage-depleted bone marrow (ldMBM) cells was induced by overexpression of the human transcriptional coactivator MN1. Knockdown of p62 by shRNA in MN1-driven leukemia cells impaired proliferation and decreased colony forming ability without altering apoptosis. This indicates that p62 is crucial for leukemia proliferation in vitro. To further characterize the role of p62 in leukemia development and maintenance a murine AML transplantation model was established. Therefore, ldMBM cells isolated from WT and p62-/- mice were transduced with MN1 and transplanted into lethally irradiated mice. As expected, all mice developed fatal myeloid proliferation. Notably, p62 loss in MN1-driven leukemia significantly prolonged survival in mice and caused a more immature phenotype. Consistent with the in vitro results, ex vivo analysis of p62-/- leukemic cells displayed decreased colony-forming ability, although p62 loss did not affect composition and function of HSCs. Moreover, re-transplantation of primary MN1-driven leukemia cells attenuated leukemia progression upon p62 loss. These findings support a decisive role of p62 in leukemia development and maintenance.
To gain molecular insight into the function of p62 during myeloid transformation an interactome analysis of murine MN1-driven leukemia cells was performed. This revealed first that p62 predominantly interacts with mitochondrial proteins and second that inhibition of autophagic degradation causes accumulation of p62-bound mitochondria. This leads to the first assumption that loss of p62 may provoke mitochondrial accumulation with increasing mitochondrial damage and second that p62 may mediate degradation of mitochondria by mitophagy. Indeed, in the absence of p62, accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria was detected by morphological changes of the mitochondria, increased mitochondrial ROS and impaired mitochondrial respiration capacity. Furthermore, induction of PINK1/Parkin-independent mitophagy revealed that loss of p62 caused impaired degradation of mitochondrial proteins and reduced translocation of damaged mitochondria into autophagosomes. Taken together, p62 is required for effective degradation of dysfunctional mitochondria by mitophagy in AML.
Due to the fact that p62 is a multifunctional protein, rescue experiments with different mutants of p62 were performed to clarify if p62-mediated mitophagy contributes to leukemia proliferation. Notably, the autophagy-deficient mutant (disabled to bind autophagosomes) reduced cell growth and colony-forming ability to the same extent as knockdown of p62, as the clustering-deficient mutant (disabled to form aggregates) displayed an intermediate phenotype. Strikingly, only the autophagy-deficient mutant failed to rescue mitophagy.
In conclusion, this study demonstrates the prominent role of p62 as a selective autophagy receptor for mitochondrial quality control which contributes to leukemia development and maintenance. Therefore, targeting selective autophagy opens new venues in the treatment of AML.
The pyrrolobenzodiazepine tilivalline (1) was originally identified in the human gut pathobiont Klebsiella oxytoca, the causative agent of antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis. Here we show the identification of tilivalline and analogs thereof in the entomopathogenic bacterium Xenorhabdus eapokensis as well as the identification of its biosynthesis gene cluster encoding a bimodular non-ribosomal peptide synthetase. Heterologous expression of both genes in E. coli resulted in the production of 1 and from mutasynthesis and precursor directed biosynthesis 11 new tilivalline analogs were identified in X. eapokensis. These results allowed the prediction of the tilivalline biosynthesis being similar to that in K. oxytoca.
Im Kindes- und Jugendalter gehoert das Rhabdomyosarkom zu den haeufigsten Weichteilsarkomen. Bisher belaeuft sich das Therapieverfahren auf chirurgische Entfernung, gefolgt von Chemotherapie, bzw. bei nicht-operablen Faellen auf Radiotherapie und Chemotherapie, jedoch haben sich die Ueberlebenschancen fuer Patienten mit einer Erkrankung in metastasiertem oder rezidiviertem Stadium trotz intensiver Forschung ueber mehrere Jahrzehnte hinweg kaum gebessert und bleiben bei unter 30%. Neue therapeutische Strategien versuchen das Immunsystem des Patienten zu modulieren und dieses gezielter oder aggressiver gegen Tumorzellen zu machen. Nebst direkter Injektion von Zytokinen oder Antikoerpern bietet die adoptive Immunzelltherapie einen vielversprechenden Ansatz. In der vorliegenden Arbeit lag der Fokus auf Natuerlichen Killer- (NK) Zellen, da diese ein hohes zytotoxisches Potential gegenueber Tumorzellen aufweisen. Eine der groessten Herausforderungen der NK-Zellforschung ist die Breitstellung ausreichender Mengen an NK-Zellen mit optimaler antitumoraler Funktion fuer den klinischen Einsatz. Viele aktuell erprobte NK-Zellexpansionsstrategien basieren auf der Verwendung von Hilfs- oder Feeder-Zellen (Versorgerzellen), die jedoch vor der Applikation in Patienten aus dem finalen Produkt entfernt werden muessen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit sollten Feeder-zellfreie NK-Zellexpansionsprotokolle unter Verwendung von Gammakettenzytokinen getestet werden.
Interleukin (IL-) 15 erwies sich dabei vor allem fuer die Vermehrung der NK-Zellen als besonders foerderlich. Im Vergleich dazu fielen die Expansionsraten mit IL-2 oder IL-21 geringer aus. Interessanterweise wurde der expansionsfoerdernde Effekt von IL-15 durch dauerhafte Anwesenheit von IL-21 im Kulturmedium gehemmt. Ein kurzer, dreitaegiger IL-21-Boost am Ende der Expansionsphase wirkte sich wiederum positiv auf die NK-Zellexpansionsraten aus. Zudem zeigte sich durch IL-21 ein vermehrtes Auftreten von NK-Zellen des reiferen CD16posCD56dim Phaenotyps, der die zytotoxische Funktion vermittelt. Bei Degranulationsuntersuchungen wurden eine IL-21-induzierte Exozytoseaktivitaet und die vermehrte Ausschuettung von Perforin und Granzym B, welche Apoptose in den Zielzellen ausloesen, beobachtet. Vor allem der dreitaegige Boost mit IL-21 bewirkte eine gesteigerte Zytotoxizitaet gegenueber Tumorzellen, insbesondere gegenueber Rhabdomyosarkomzellen.
Auf dieser Grundlage bot es sich an fuer die NK-Zellexpansion ein Zwei-Phasen-Protokoll anzuwenden, bestehend aus einer initialen Proliferationsphase mit IL-15 und einem anschliessendem IL-21-Boost, durch den die antitumorale Funktionalitaet der NK-Zellen gesteigert wurde. Dieses IL-15+21boost-Protokoll wurde mit anderen Kombinationen aus den Gammakettenzytokinen IL-2, IL-15 und IL-21 verglichen und stellte sich hinsichtlich der NK-Zellexpansionsraten, der Degranulationskapazitaet und der damit verbundenen Zytotoxizitaet als den anderen Protokollen ueberlegen heraus.
Zytokinexpandierte NK-Zellen zeigten eine hoehere Rezeptorexpression an ihren Oberflaechen als unstimulierte Zellen. Die Expansion mit dem IL-15+21boost-Protokoll bewirkte die hoechste Dichte des Todesrezeptors TRAIL, jedoch auch der inhibitorischen KIR2D-Rezeptorfamilie. Fuer andere Oberflaechenmarker ergab sich jeweils eine mittlere Expressionsdichte verglichen mit dem IL-15- bzw. dem IL-15+21-Expansionsprotokoll. Die Sekretion von proinflammatorischen Zytokinen wie Interferon-gamma (IFN-g) und Tumor-Nekrose-Faktor-alpha (TNF-a) wurde zudem verstaerkt durch IL-21 angeregt, aber ebenso die Sekretion des immunsupprimierenden IL-10.
Weiter wurden die zytoinexpandierten NK-Zellen zur UEberpruefung ihrer in vivo Funktionalitaet anhand eines praeklinischen Xenograftmodells unter Verwendung von NOD SCID IL-2-Rgamma-/- (NSG) Maeusen und der Technologie der in-vivo-Biolumineszenzbildgebung getestet. Dabei konnte beobachtet werden, dass die NK-Zellen das Wachstum luciferaseexprimierender humaner Rhabdomyosarkome verlangsamten. Die Wirksamkeit der IL-15+21boost-expandierten NK-Zellen zeigte sich vor allem in einem kombinierten Ansatz, bei dem die Tumore zunaechst mit ionisierender Strahlung behandelt wurden und residuale Rhabdomyosarkomzellen anschliessend durch den adoptiven Transfer von humanen NK-Zellen in ihrem Wachstum gehemmt waren, solange die NK-Zelltherapie andauerte. Somit stellte sich die Kombination aus Bestrahlung und NK-Zelltransfer als wirksamer im Einsatz gegen Rhabdomyosarkome heraus als die alleinige Behandlung der Tumore durch Radiotherapie.
Zusammengefasst konnte in dieser Arbeit ein NK-Zellexpansionsprotokoll entwickelt werden, dass durch den ausschliesslichen Einsatz von Gammakettenzytokinen zu einem funktionalen NK-Zellprodukt fuehrte, welches auch in vivo lytische Aktivitaet gegenueber Rhabdomyosarkomzellen aufwies.