Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1138)
- Doctoral Thesis (832)
- Preprint (71)
- Book (59)
- Contribution to a Periodical (44)
- Conference Proceeding (10)
- Diploma Thesis (10)
- Review (8)
- diplomthesis (4)
- Report (3)
Has Fulltext
- yes (2180) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (2180) (remove)
Keywords
- Podospora anserina (17)
- aging (17)
- mitochondria (12)
- autophagy (10)
- Archaea (9)
- Haloferax volcanii (9)
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae (9)
- Phylogeny (8)
- heat stress (8)
- Mitochondria (7)
Institute
- Biowissenschaften (2180) (remove)
RBFOX1 is a highly pleiotropic gene that contributes to several psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders. Both rare and common variants in RBFOX1 have been associated with several psychiatric conditions, but the mechanisms underlying the pleiotropic effects of RBFOX1 are not yet understood. Here we found that, in zebrafish, rbfox1 is expressed in spinal cord, mid- and hindbrain during developmental stages. In adults, expression is restricted to specific areas of the brain, including telencephalic and diencephalic regions with an important role in receiving and processing sensory information and in directing behaviour. To investigate the effect of rbfox1 deficiency on behaviour, we used rbfox1sa15940, a rbfox1 loss-of-function line. We found that rbfox1sa15940 mutants present hyperactivity, thigmotaxis, decreased freezing behaviour and altered social behaviour. We repeated these behavioural tests in a second rbfox1 loss-of-function line with a different genetic background, rbfox1del19, and found that rbfox1 deficiency affects behaviour similarly in this line, although there were some differences. rbfox1del19 mutants present similar thigmotaxis, but stronger alterations in social behaviour and lower levels of hyperactivity than rbfox1sa15940 fish. Taken together, these results suggest that rbfox1 deficiency leads to multiple behavioural changes in zebrafish that might be modulated by environmental, epigenetic and genetic background effects, and that resemble phenotypic alterations present in Rbfox1-deficient mice and in patients with different psychiatric conditions. Our study thus highlights the evolutionary conservation of rbfox1 function in behaviour and paves the way to further investigate the mechanisms underlying rbfox1 pleiotropy on the onset of neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders.
Establishing and maintaining protected areas (PAs) is a key action in delivering post-2020 biodiversity targets. PAs often need to meet multiple objectives, ranging from biodiversity protection to ecosystem service provision and climate change mitigation, but available land and conservation funding is limited. Therefore, optimizing resources by selecting the most beneficial PAs is vital. Here, we advocate for a flexible and transparent approach to selecting PAs based on multiple objectives, and illustrate this with a decision support tool on a global scale. The tool allows weighting and prioritization of different conservation objectives according to user-specified preferences as well as real-time comparison of the outcome. Applying the tool across 1,346 terrestrial PAs, we demonstrate that decision makers frequently face trade-offs among conflicting objectives, e.g., between species protection and ecosystem integrity. Nevertheless, we show that transparent decision support tools can reveal synergies and trade-offs associated with PA selection, thereby helping to illuminate and resolve land-use conflicts embedded in divergent societal and political demands and values.
Attitude polarization describes an increasing attitude difference between groups and is increasingly recognized as a multidimensional phenomenon. However, a unified framework to study polarization across multiple dimensions is lacking. We introduce the attitudinal space framework (ASF) to fully quantify attitudinal diversity. We highlight two key measures—attitudinal extremization and attitudinal dispersion—to quantify across- and within-group attitudinal patterns. First, we show that affective polarization in the US electorate is weaker than previously thought based on mean differences alone: in both Democrat and Republican partisans, attitudinal dispersion increased between 1988 and 2008. Second, we examined attitudes toward wolves in Germany. Despite attitude differences between regions with and without wolves, we did not find differences in attitudinal extremization or dispersion, suggesting only weak attitude polarization. These results illustrate how the ASF is applicable to a wide range of social systems and offers an important avenue to understanding societal transformations.
In natural environments, background noise can degrade the integrity of acoustic signals, posing a problem for animals that rely on their vocalizations for communication and navigation. A simple behavioral strategy to combat acoustic interference would be to restrict call emissions to periods of low-amplitude or no noise. Using audio playback and computational tools for the automated detection of over 2.5 million vocalizations from groups of freely vocalizing bats, we show that bats (Carollia perspicillata) can dynamically adapt the timing of their calls to avoid acoustic jamming in both predictably and unpredictably patterned noise. This study demonstrates that bats spontaneously seek out temporal windows of opportunity for vocalizing in acoustically crowded environments, providing a mechanism for efficient echolocation and communication in cluttered acoustic landscapes.
One Sentence Summary Bats avoid acoustic interference by rapidly adjusting the timing of vocalizations to the temporal pattern of varying noise.
In natural environments, background noise can degrade the integrity of acoustic signals, posing a problem for animals that rely on their vocalizations for communication and navigation. A simple behavioral strategy to combat acoustic interference would be to restrict call emissions to periods of low-amplitude or no noise. Using audio playback and computational tools for the automated detection of over 2.5 million vocalizations from groups of freely vocalizing bats, we show that bats (Carollia perspicillata) can dynamically adapt the timing of their calls to avoid acoustic jamming in both predictably and unpredictably patterned noise. This study demonstrates that bats spontaneously seek out temporal windows of opportunity for vocalizing in acoustically crowded environments, providing a mechanism for efficient echolocation and communication in cluttered acoustic landscapes.
One Sentence Summary: Bats avoid acoustic interference by rapidly adjusting the timing of vocalizations to the temporal pattern of varying noise.
Eine überlebenswichtige Eigenschaft von Mensch und Tier ist es, sich bei Gefahr durch eine Schreckreaktion in Sicherheit zu bringen. Doch woran erkennt ein Organismus, in welcher Situation es „sinnvoll“ wäre, sich zu erschrecken und welche Eigenschaften sensorischer Stimuli tragen zu dem Gefahreneindruck bei? Bei plötzlich eintretenden, lauten auditorischen Reizen kann es zur Auslösung der akustischen Schreckreaktion kommen. Dies führt bei Menschen, aber auch bei kleineren Säugetieren zu einer reflexartigen Kontraktion der Nacken-, Gesichts- und Skelettmuskulatur. Die Erforschung der akustisch evozierten Schreckreaktion (ASR) dient dem besseren Verständnis der neurobiologischen Grundlagen sensorischer Verarbeitung. Modulationen der ASR mithilfe von Präpulsen (Präpulsinhibition) ermöglichen Einblicke in die Funktion der Kochlea, des Hörnervs, der Hirnstammstrukturen und anderer beteiligter Gehirnregionen.
In dieser Arbeit wurden kurzzeitige Änderungen von Frequenz oder Intensität des akustischen Hintergrundes als neuartige Präpulse untersucht. Die Bedeutung verschiedener Reizparameter dieser Präpulse wurde in der vorliegenden Arbeit zum ersten Mal systematisch erforscht. Um zu prüfen, welche Präpulsstimulationen eine Inhibition der ASR auslösen können, wurde eine Reihe von Parametern umfassend getestet. In einem weiteren Schritt wurde analysiert, ob es mithilfe von gezielten Änderungen von Frequenz oder Intensität möglich sein könnte, Unterscheidungsschwellen, oder gar Hörschwellen von Versuchstieren zu bestimmen.
Die Experimente zur Modulation der ASR wurden mit weiblichen Sprague Dawley-Ratten durchgeführt. Dabei wurde eine Vielzahl von Verhaltensparadigmen untersucht. Dazu zählten Präpulse mit unterschiedlichem Frequenzgehalt und variabler Dauer. Zusätzlich wurden neuartige Paradigmen etabliert, um die Fähigkeit zur Frequenz- und Intensitätsdiskriminierung zu untersuchen. Hierbei wurde der Frequenzgehalt oder die Intensität einer kontinuierlichen Hintergrundstimulation verändert, um eine Präpulswirkung zu erzeugen. Um die Möglichkeiten der Bestimmung von Hörschwellen mittels der Präpulsinhibition (PPI) zu ergründen, wurde die Intensität von Präpulsen systematisch verändert. Die so generierten Schwellenwerte wurden durch die Messung früher akustisch evozierter Hirnstammpotenziale verifiziert. Schließlich sollten, unter Zuhilfenahme der Signaldetektionstheorie, aus den erhobenen Daten diverse Schwellen bestimmt werden: Für die Intensitätsänderungen der Präpulse in Stille wurden Hörschwellen bestimmt, während bei Änderungen der Frequenz und Intensität Unterscheidungsschwellen bestimmt werden sollten.
Mit steigender Größe eines Frequenzsprungs in einer kontinuierlichen Hintergrundstimulation war eine stärkere Inhibition der ASR feststellbar; ein Effekt, der stark von der Hintergrundfrequenz abhängig war. Bei einer Stimulation mit 8 kHz konnten signifikant höhere Inhibitionswerte erzielt werden als mit 16 kHz. Bei der Untersuchung des Zeitablaufs der Stimulation ergab sich, dass eine abgesetzte Stimulation mit einer Abweichung von 80 ms Dauer bis 50 ms vor dem Schreckreiz für die höchsten Inhibitionen sorgte.
Die durch eine Intensitätsänderung einer kontinuierlichen Hintergrundstimulation ausgelöste PPI hing primär von der Größe und Richtung des Intensitätssprungs ab. Mit zunehmender Sprunggröße stiegen die Inhibitionswerte an. Eine Erhöhung der Hintergrundintensität um 10 dB hatte einen signifikanten Einfluss auf die Inhibitionswerte. Auch hier zeigte sich eine höhere Sensitivität in Form von höheren Inhibitionen für Stimuli mit einer Hintergrundfrequenz von 8 kHz als für alle anderen getesteten Hintergrundfrequenzen.
Die Bestimmung von Hörschwellen mittels intensitätsabhängiger PPI wies im Vergleich mit den elektrophysiologisch bestimmten Hörschwellen ein heterogenes Bild mit starken individuellen Schwankungen auf: Bei etwa der Hälfte der Tiere waren die Hörschwellen beider Messungen sehr vergleichbar, bei den übrigen Tieren konnten mittels PPI für eine oder mehrere Frequenzen keine aussagekräftigen Hörschwellen erzielt werden. Die elektrophysiologisch bestimmten Hörschwellen waren am sensitivsten, während PPI-Stimulationen signifikant höher waren. Außerdem bewirkten PPI-Stimulationen mit Reintönen signifikant sensitivere Hörschwellen im Vergleich zu einem Schmalbandrauschen.
Für die Bestimmung der Unterscheidungsschwellen von Frequenzänderungen konnte beobachtet werden, dass die Tiere auf Frequenzsprünge hin zu niedrigeren Frequenzen signifikant sensibler reagierten, als hin zu Aufwärtssprüngen (-1.2 bzw. +4.5%). Bei der Intensitätsunterscheidung hingegen konnte beobachtet werden, dass die Tiere signifikant sensitiver auf Intensitätserhöhungen als auf Erniedrigungen reagierten (-5.9 bzw. +2.7 dB).
Zusammenfassend konnte in der vorliegenden Arbeit festgestellt werden, dass die PPI zur Bestimmung von absoluten Hörschwellen starken Schwankungen unterlag, sodass diese Methode nur eingeschränkt als Alternative zu operanter Konditionierung oder elektrophysiologischen Ableitungen in Frage kommt. Des Weiteren erzeugten bereits kleine Änderungen des Frequenzgehalts oder der Intensität einer Hintergrundstimulation eine robuste PPI. Somit können reflexbasierte Messungen mit überschwelligen Stimuli genutzt werden, um Unterscheidungsschwellen in Versuchstieren zu bestimmen. Diese Herangehensweise stellt also eine vielversprechende Methode dar, um Hörstörungen zu untersuchen, die nach einem Schalltrauma auftreten können. In einem nächsten Schritt könnte sie zur weiteren Charakterisierung von verstecktem Hörverlust beitragen.
The negative effect of fossil-based industrial processes on the environment, especially the contribution to global warming by emitting greenhouse gases such as CO2 causes a global threat to mankind. Therefore, technologies are demanded by the society for a sustainable and environmentally friendly economy. The biotechnological use of sugar-based feedstocks to produce valuable products are in conflict with, for example, food production. In order to overcome this issue, waste products such as syngas (H2, CO and CO2) or CO2 taken from the atmosphere are of increasing interest for biotechnological applications. Acetogenic bacteria are already used at industrial scale to produce sustainable and environmentally friendly biofuels from syngas. A promising candidate due to its physiological flexibility is the thermophilic acetogen Moorella thermoacetica. In contrast to most acetogens M. thermoacetica is not restricted to one energy conserving system. In addition to the Ech complex, cytochromes and quinones may be involved in energy conservation by, for example, DMSO respiration. The extra energy conserved can be used to form highly valuable but energy demanding products. In this review we give insights into the physiology of this acetogen, the current state of the art of M. thermoacetica as a platform for biotechnological applications and discuss future perspectives.
Biotechnological processes offer better production conditions for a wide variety of goods of industrial interest. The production of aromatic compounds, for example, involves molecules of great value for cosmetic, plastic, agrochemical and pharmaceutic industries. However, the yield of such processes frequently prevents a proper implementtation that would allow the replacement of traditional production processes.
Numerous rational engineering approaches have been attempted to enhance metabolic pathways associated with desired products. Unfortunately, genetic modifications and heterologous pathway expression often lead to a higher metabolic burden on the producing organisms, ultimately leading to reduced production levels and fitness.
This project utilised adaptive laboratory evolution to better understand the development of synthetic cooperative consortia, using S. cerevisiae as a model organism. Specifically, a synthetic cooperative consortium was developed around the exchange of lysine and tyrosine, which was subjected to adaptive laboratory evolution aiming to induce mutations that would improve the system’s fitness either by enhanced production or upgraded stress resistance. Consequently, the mutant strains isolated after the evolution rounds were sequenced to identify relevant variations that could be related to the growth and production phenotypes observed.
The insights derived from this project are expected to contribute to further developing synthetic cooperative consortia with utilitarian purposes.
Meliolales (black mildews) is an order of plant parasitic ascomycetous fungi in the tropics and subtropics. They are frequently overgrown and parasitized by other fungi, known as hyperparasites. During the last few years, species of hyperparasitic fungi on Meliolales have been collected in Benin and Panama. A new species of Paranectria and seven new reports of hyperparasites of different systematic groups are presented here with detailed descriptions and illustrations, together with new data concerning fungal hosts and host plants. The new species is called Paranectria longiappendiculata, characterized by exceptionally long appendages carried by the ascospores. New records for Benin and Panama are Calloriopsis herpotricha, Dimerosporiella cephalosporii, Isthmospora glabra, Isthmospora trichophila, Malacaria meliolicola, Paranectriella hemileiae, and Paranectriella minuta. Calloriopsis herpotricha is recorded for Africa and D. cephalosporii and P. hemileiae for America for the first time, suggesting an apparently pantropical distribution. Findings show a blatant lack of investigation on hyperparasitic fungi in the tropics. The phylogenetic positions of three of these newly reported species, C. herpotricha, D. cephalosporii, and P. minuta, are shown based on the analysis of internal transcribed spacer (ITS), large subunit (LSU), and small subunit (SSU) rDNA sequences. These sequences were generated in the context of the present study for the first time.
Substantial progress in the field of neuroscience has been made from anaesthetized preparations. Ketamine is one of the most used drugs in electrophysiology studies, but how ketamine affects neuronal responses is poorly understood. Here, we used in vivo electrophysiology and computational modelling to study how the auditory cortex of bats responds to vocalisations under anaesthesia and in wakefulness. In wakefulness, acoustic context increases neuronal discrimination of natural sounds. Neuron models predicted that ketamine affects the contextual discrimination of sounds regardless of the type of context heard by the animals (echolocation or communication sounds). However, empirical evidence showed that the predicted effect of ketamine occurs only if the acoustic context consists of low-pitched sounds (e.g., communication calls in bats). Using the empirical data, we updated the naïve models to show that differential effects of ketamine on cortical responses can be mediated by unbalanced changes in the firing rate of feedforward inputs to cortex, and changes in the depression of thalamo-cortical synaptic receptors. Combined, our findings obtained in vivo and in silico reveal the effects and mechanisms by which ketamine affects cortical responses to vocalisations.