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The rate of species extinctions due to anthropogenic activities has dramatically increased within the past few centuries (Dirzo & Raven, 2003; Novacek & Cleland, 2001). Although the mechanisms and ultimate causes leading to the extinction of species remain largely unclear (Frankham et al., 2002), five threats to global biodiversity have frequently been referred to as the most important: habitat destruction and fragmentation, global climate change, hunting and overuse of food resources, biological invasions and environmental pollution (Dudgeon et al., 2006; Lewis, 2006; Novacek & Cleland, 2001). Different research fields, as conservation biology, ecology and ecotoxicology, investigate the effects of these factors on organisms and found strong evidence for their negative impact on regional and global biodiversity.
In most cases, natural populations will be impacted not only by one threat, but rather a combination of them (Buckley & Roughgarden, 2004; Kappelle et al., 1999). Multiple environmental stress factors can have cumulative negative effects on the survival of populations (Sih et al., 2004). To understand, how natural populations respond to combinations of different stress factors is thus of crucial importance in order to understand our present and future impact on all scales of biodiversity (Warren et al., 2001).
The effects of anthropogenically introduced chemicals on organisms and ecosystems are investigated in the field of ecotoxicology. Research in this area has led to a large body of information concerning the impact of chemical stress on the fitness of model species in the laboratory. In contrast to this, there is an obvious lack of knowledge on the effects of contaminants on natural populations and communities (Bickham et al., 2000; Bourdeau et al., 1990). For instance, ecotoxicologists have just started to investigate the impact of environmental pollution on the genetic variability of natural populations (Bickham et al., 2000; Whitehead et al., 2003). Genetic variation provides the raw material for populations in order to adapt to changing environmental conditions and is thus the substrate for evolution and long-term survival of populations and species (Frankham, 2005). The amount of genetic variation in populations is positively correlated with the effective population size (Frankham, 1996). Habitat destruction and fragmentation has divided the ranges of many species into small and isolated refuges. Without migration from adjacent habitats, isolated populations will decrease in their level of genetic diversity through random loss of alleles (Hedrick, 2000). Frankham (1995) for instance, showed that 32 of the 37 endangered species (which occur in small populations per definition) of different animals and plant taxa display reduced levels of heterozygosity compared to closely related and more frequent species.
In strongly human impacted landscapes, both factors, environmental pollution and habitat destruction, can be expected to occur frequently together. It is thus of crucial importance to investigate the impact of reduced genetic diversity and inbreeding on the response to chemical stress. In addition, chemical exposure has frequently been discussed to have an impact on the extent of genetic variability in exposed populations (Guttman, 1994; Staton et al., 2001; van Straalen & Timmermans, 2002). However, evidence for this 'genetic erosion hypothesis' remained scarce to date, most likely because of the difficulty to single out the impact of pollution stress from a background of multiple factors which influence patterns of genetic variability in natural populations (Belfiore, 2001; Staton et al., 2001; van Straalen & Timmermans, 2002).
Experimente zum radiativen Elektroneneinfang (REC, Radiative Electron Capture), der Zeitumkehrung der Photoionisation, wie er in Stößen hochgeladener, relativistischer Schwerionen mit leichten Gasatomen auftritt, ermöglicht einen einzigartigen Zugang zum Studium der Photonen-Materie-Wechselwirkung im Bereich extrem starker Coulombfeldern. So ist die REC-Strahlung im relativistischen Bereich zum einen geprägt durch das Auftreten von höheren elektrischen und magnetischen Multipolordnungen und zum anderen durch starke Retardierungseffekte. In Folge dessen wurde der REC-Prozeß in den vergangen Jahren sehr detailliert untersucht, wobei sich die experimentelle und theoretische Forschung auf die Emissionscharakteristik der REC-Photonen konzentrierte, wie z.B. auf Untersuchungen von Winkelverteilungen und Linienprofilen. Mittlerweile kann der REC-Prozeß als ein - selbst für die schwersten Ionen - wohlverstandener Effekt angesehen werden. Allerdings entzog sich den Experimenten bislang eine zur Beschreibung der Photonenmission wesentlich Größe, näamlich die Polarisation der Strahlung. Die lineare Polarisation der REC-Strahlung, wie sie in Stößen zwischen leichten Atomen und den schwersten, hochgeladenen Ionen vorhergesagt wird, war der Gegenstand der vorliegende Arbeit, in der es erstmals gelang, die diese für den konkreten Fall des Einfangs in die K-Schale von nackten Uranionen nachzuweisen und im Detail zu untersuchen. Die hierzu notwendigen experimentellen Untersuchungen erfolgten am Speicherring ESR der GSI-Darmstadt für das Stoßsystem U92+ -> N2 und für Projektilenergien, die im Bereich zwischen 98 und 400 MeV/u lagen. Besonders hervorzuheben ist der Einsatz eines segmentierten Germaniumdetektors, der speziell für den Nachweis linear polarisierter Strahlung im Energiebereich oberhalb 100 keV entwickelte wurde. Die lineare Polarisation der Strahlung wurde hierbei durch eine Analyse der Comptonstreuung innerhalb des Detektors gewonnen. Die durch eine präzise Analyse der Comptonstreuverteilungen gewonnenen Daten zeigen eine ausgeprägte lineare Polarisierung der REC-Strahlung in der Streuebene, die zudem eine starke Abhängigkeit als Funktion der Stoßenergie und des Beobachtungwinkels aufweist. Der detaillierte Vergleich mit nicht-relativistischen und relativistischen Vorhersagen ermöglichte darüberhinaus den Nachweis für das Auftreten starker relativistischer Effekte, die sich allerdings depolarisierend auswirken. Das Experiment wurde am internen Target des ESR-Speicherrings durchgeführt, wobei der Photonennachweis mittels mehrerer Ge(i)-Detektoren erfolgte, die die Ionen-Target-Wechselwirkungszone unter Beobachtungswinkeln zwischen nahe Null und 150 Grad einsahen. Alle Photonendetektoren wurden in Koinizidenz mit einem Teilchendetektor betrieben, um so die volle Charakteristik des REC-Prozesses zu erfassen, also den Einfang eines Targetelektrons in die nackten Uranionen (U92+) unter Emission eines Photons. Für den Polarisationsnachweis entscheidend war der Einsatz eines Germanium-Pixel-Detektors, der abwechselnd unter den Winkeln von 60 und 90 Grad betrieben wurde. Dieser Detektor verfügt über eine 4x4 Pixelmatrix (Pixelgröße: 7x7 mm), wobei die elektronische Information jedes Pixels (Energiesignale und schnelle Zeitsignale) separat registriert und aufgezeichnet wurde. Hierdurch war es möglich Ereignisse, die koinzident in zwei Pixeln erfolgten, zu detektieren und zu analysieren. Dies ist die eigentliche Voraussetzung für den Nachweis der linearen Polarisation bei hohen Photonenenergien, bei dem die Abhängigkeit des differenziellen Wirkungsquerschnitts für Comptonstreuung von der linearen Polarisation der einfallenden Photonen ausgenutzt wird (siehe Klein-Nishina Formel Eq. 2.7). Der Nachweis der Comptonstreuung erfolgt hierbei durch die Detektion des Compton-Rückstoßelektrons (deltaE) und des gestreuten Comptonphotons (hw'), die jeweils separat, aber koinzident in zwei unterschiedlichen Segmenten des Detektors nachgewiesen werden. Hier sei betont, dass für Germanium bereits ab Photonenenergien von ca. 160 keV die Absorption der Strahlung durch den Compton-Effekt über die Photoabsorption dominiert und somit das Ausnutzen des Compton-Effekts prinzipiell eine sehr effektive Technik ist. Der Auswertung der Datenfkam wesentlich zugute, dass der Germanium-Detektor über eine im Vergleich zu Szintillations- oder Gaszählern gute Energieauflösung von ca. 1.8 keV bei 122 keV verfügt. Somit kann durch Bilden der Summenenergie hw = hw' + deltaE für koinzidente Ereignisse die Energie des einfallenden Photons (hw) rekonstruieren werden und als zwingende Bedingung dafür herangezogen werden, dass es sich bei dem Ereignis im Detektor um ein Compton-Event gehandelt hat. Für den Fall linearer Polarisation ist eine wesentliche Aussage der Klein-Nishina-Formel, dass die maximale Intensität für die Compton gestreuten Photonen senkrecht zur Polarisationsebene zu erwarten ist. Tatsächlich zeigen bereits die während des Experiments aufgenommenen Rohdaten für den Fall der untersuchten REC-Strahlung, die durch den Einfang in die K-Schale des Projektils entsteht, dass es sich hierbei um eine stark polarisierte Strahlung handelt, wobei eine erhöhte Intensität für Comptonstreuung senkrecht zur Stoßebene (für den REC-Prozeß definiert durch die Ionenstrahlachse und den Impuls des REC-Photons) festgestellt wurde (vgl. Fig. 7.3). Zur genauen qualitativen Analyse der Meßdaten wurden alle möglichen Pixelkombinationen der (4x4) Detektorgeometrie ausgewertet, wobei jedoch koinzidente Ereignisse benachbarter Segmente ausgeschlossen wurden, um den hier vorhandenenen Einfluß elektronischer Übersprecher zu eliminieren. Zudem erfolgte die Analyse der Daten unter Berücksichtigung verschiedenster Effekte, die einen Einfluß auf die Nachweiseffizienzen für die Compton gestreuten Photonen haben könnten. An prominenter Stelle ist hier die Korrektur zu nennen, die durch die Detektordicke von 1,5 cm und der Pixelgröße von 7x7 cm2 hervorgerufen wird. Zu betonen ist hier, dass für die Auswertung nur relative Effizienzen eine Rolle spielen und so der Einfluß systematischer Fehler, hervorgerufen durch Effizienzkorrekturen, stark reduziert werden konnte (für eine so gewonnene, vollständige Compton-Streuverteilung sei auf Abbildung 9.1 verwiesen, in der die Intensitätsverteilung für Compton-Streuung dargestellt ist). Es sei auch hervorgehoben, dass der Nachweis der Polarisation durch Messungen von vollständigen Compton-Intensitätverteilung im Detektor erfolgte, was das hier diskutierte Experiment wesentlich von konventionellen Polarisationsexperimenten für harte Röntgen- und gamma-Strahlung unterscheidet. Üblicherweise wird in diesen Experimenten die Comptonstreuung ausschließlich in der Reaktionsebene und senkrecht dazu nachgewiesen. Generell weisen die in der vorliegenden Arbeit gewonnen Compton-Streuverteilungen für den K-REC-Prozeß ein ausgeprägtes Maxium senkrecht zur Reaktionsebene auf und bestätigen somit den bereits aus den Rohdaten abgeleiteten Befund, dass die Polarisationsebene der KREC Strahlung in der Reaktionsebene des Stosses liegt. In der Tat kann dieser Befund für alle Energien und Beobachtungswinkel bestätigt werden, die in dem hier diskutierten Experiment verwendet wurden. Hier sei zudem darauf hingewiesen, dass es durch die Erfassung der vollständigen Compton-Streuverteilung möglich war, die Orientierung der Polarisationsebene in Bezug auf die Stoßebene mit hoher Präzision zu erfassen. So konnte z.B. bei der Stossenergie von 400 MeV/u und dem Winkel von 90 Grad, die Orientierung der Comptonstreuverteilung in Bezug auf die Stoßebene zu ph=90 Grad bestimmt werden. Dieser Befund könnte für die Planung zukünftiger Experimente zum Nachweis polarisierter Ionenstrahlen entscheidend sein, da eine Abweichung von der ph = 90 Grad Symmetrie nur durch das Vorhandensein polarisierter Teilchen erklärt werden kann. Dieser Effekt, der in neuesten theoretischen Behandlungen im Detail untersucht wurde, stellt gleichsam einen neuen Zugang zur Bestimmung des Polarisationsgrads der Projektile dar. Hierdurch wird die Stärke der hier angewandten Technik verdeutlicht, die auf dem Einsatz eines ortsempfindlichen Germanium-Pixel- Detektors beruht. Die Bestimmung des genauen Polarisationsgrades für die K-REC-Strahlung erfolgte durch eine X2-Anpassung der Klein-Nishina-Formel an die experimentellen Daten. Die hieraus resultierenden Daten zeigen für alle Strahlenergien und Beobachtungsgwinkel eine starke Polarisation von etwa 80%, wobei die experimentelle Unsicherheit im 10% Bereich liegt. Letztere ist im wesentlichen auf die statistische Genauigkeit zurückzuführen. Die Daten wurden zudem eingehend mit theoretischen Vorhersagen verglichen. Die Theorie stützt sich auf eine vollständige relativistische Beschreibung des REC-Prozesses unter Verwendung exakter Wellenfunktionen für das Kontinuum und den 1s Zustand in wasserstoffartigem Uran. Typischer weise mußten bei den Rechnungen sowohl elektrische wie auch magnetische Multipolterme bis hin zu L=20 verwendet werden, um Konvergenz zu erreichen. Der Vergleich zeigt eine hervorragende Übereinstimmung zwischen Experiment und Theorie. Zudem verdeutlicht der Vergleich mit der ebenfalls diskutierten Vorhersage der nicht-relativistischen Dipolnäherung die Bedeutung relativistischer Effekte (vor allem das Auftreten höherer elektrischer und magnetischer Multipole), die für die Emission der REC-Strahlung bei hohen, relativistischen Energien und hohem Z charakteristisch sind. Offensichtlich wirken sich diese Effekte stark depolarisierend aus. Dass in der Tat eine Zunahme der depolarisierenden Effekte mit einer Zunahme der Strahlenergie verbunden ist, wird auch durch die Daten dokumentiert, die für den Beobachtungswinkel von 60 Grad als Funktion des Projektilenergie untersucht wurden. Die in der vorliegenden Arbeit gewonnenen Resultate für die Polarisation der REC-Strahlung ebenso wie die neuartige Experimenttechnik, die hierbei zum Einsatz kam, lassen für die nahe Zukunft eine Serie von weiteren Polarisations-Experimenten erwarten. Hierbei könnte der REC-Strahlung und deren Polarisation als Mittel zur Diagnostik und zum Nachweis des Polarisationsgrades gespeicherter Ionenstrahlen eine Schlüsselrolle zukommen. Als Detektorsysteme werden hierzu zwei-dimensionale Germanium- und Silizium-Streifen-Detektoren zum Einsatz kommen bzw. Kombinationen aus zweidimensionalen Silizium- und Germanium-Detektoren, sogenannte Compton-Teleskope. Diese Compton-Polarimeter, die gegenwärtig für neue Experimentvorhaben am ESR-Speicherring entwickelt werden, verfügen über eine wesentlich verbesserte Ortsauflösung (z.B. 1x1 mm2) und somit über eine wesentlich gesteigerte Nachweiseffizienz für die Comptonstreuung (ein bis zwei Größenordnungen). Hierdurch sollte es möglich sein, den für Polarisationexerperimente zugänglichen Energiebereich wesentlich auszudehnen, sodass selbst die charakteristische Strahlung der Schwerionen (ca. 50 bis 100 keV) für solche Experimente zugänglich wird.
Physical soil properties feature high spatial variabilities which are known to affect geophysical measurements. However, these variations are not considered in most cases. The challenging task is to quantify the influence of soil heterogeneities on geophysical data. This question is analysed for DC resistivity and GPR measurements which are frequently used for near-surface explorations. To determine the pattern of electric soil properties in situ with the required high spatial resolution, geophysical measuring techniques are methodically enhanced. High-resolution dipole-dipole resistivity measurements are used to determine the electric conductivity distribution of the topsoil. Due to the small electrode separations, the actual electrode geometry has to be considered and an analytic expression for geometric factors is derived instead of assuming point electrodes. Two methods are used to determine soil permittivity with GPR:(i) the coefficient of reflection at the interface air-soil is measured with an air-launched horn antenna, (ii) the velocity of the groundwave is measured with a new setup using two receiver antennas enhancing the lateral resolution from in the best case 0.5 m for standard techniques to approximately 0.1 m with the new technique. With the optimised measuring techniques, the electric properties of sandy soils are determined in the field. Conductivity and permittivity show high spatial variability with correlation lengths of a few decimetres. Geostatistical simulation techniques are used to generate synthetic random media featuring the same statistical properties as in the field. FD calculations are carried out with this media to provide realistic synthetic data of resistivity and GPR measurements. Conductivity variations as determined in the field generate significant variations of simulated Schlumberger sounding curves resulting in uncertainties of the inverted models. Even in pedologically homogeneous sandy soil, moisture pattern and resulting permittivity variations cause strong GPR diffractions as demonstated by FD calculations. This influences the detectability of small objects such as e.g. landmines or of large reflectors as e.g. the groundwater table. Conductivity variations as typical for soils showed to have a minor effect on GPR measurements than variations of permittivity. In summary, geostatistical analysis and simulation provide a powerful tool to simulate geophysical measurements under field conditions including soil heterogeneity which can be used to quantify the uncertainty of field measurements by geologic noise.
Shaped by some of the most dramatic tectonic events of the Cenozoic, the parts of southern and eastern Asia that have become known as the Oriental faunal region comprise vast areas of great geological complexity and ecological diversity. One of the four major groups of terrestrial elapid snakes in this region is the genus Bungarus. These nocturnal and predominantly ophiophagous snakes are widely known as kraits and are an important cause of snakebite mortality throughout their wide range that extends from Afghanistan to Vietnam and eastern China, and south to the Indonesian islands of Java and Bali. Although present on Borneo, kraits have not been found on any island of the Philippines, nor on Lesser Sunda Islands east of Bali. Despite their medical significance and the great importance of Bungarus toxins as tools in neuropharmacology, krait systematics and taxonomy have remained largely unstudied. Twelve species of Bungarus were recognized at the beginning of the present study. Many of these are rare in collections, and most aspects of their biology are unknown. While some species are highly distinct, most kraits are conservative morphologically, rendering molecular methods invaluable for the study of their diversity and biogeography. This study is the first to address the relationships within Bungarus and the historical biogeography of kraits based on molecular evidence. I inferred phylogeographic relationships based on analyses of new nucleotide sequences of the entire mitochondrial cytochrome b gene of 51 kraits and partial NADH dehydrogenase subunit 4 sequences of 40 kraits which I analyzed together with a representative sample of 32 published elapid and non-elapid outgroup taxa using Bayesian, maximum-likelihood, maximum-parsimony and neighbor-joining methods. I then used the recovered phylogeny to investigate the evolution of selected morphological characters and, together with collections-based geographical distribution information, in dispersal-vicariance analyses with models of variable taxonomic and biogeographic complexity. The phylogenetic analyses demonstrate that the current taxonomy of kraits does not adequately represent either the relationships or the genetic diversity in this genus. In contrast, I identified monophyletic groups that are congruent with recognized biogeographic units as well as extensive ecomorph evolution and morphologically cryptic speciation. The following additional conclusions are collectively supported by the mitochondrial phylogeny and morphological as well as biochemical synapomorphies: (1) Kraits are monophyletic with respect to the remaining taxa of the Elapidae; (2) Bungarus flaviceps and Bungarus bungaroides form the monophyletic sister clade of a clade formed by B. fasciatus, black-and-white-banded, and uniformly black taxa; (3) the remaining taxa are divisible into two sister clades, the South Asian species (Bungarus sindanus (Bungarus caeruleus, Bungarus ceylonicus)) vs. Himalayan, Burmese, Southeast and East Asian taxa; (4) within the latter, Burmese taxa form the sister clade to Southeast and East Asian taxa; (5) the widespread and medically significant species Bungarus candidus and Bungarus multicinctus are paraphyletic. The results of this study highlight the importance of vicariant geological events and sea level fluctuations for the cladogenesis of kraits. Events of particular importance in the evolution of kraits include the uplift of the Indo-Burman ranges (Arakan-Naga Hills) which separated black-and-white banded kraits in India and Southeast Asia, and the uplift of mountain ranges in Yunnan, China (e.g., the Gaoligong Shan), which coincided with lineage separation in two distantly related clades of kraits. Alternating dispersal and vicariance events due to Pleistocene climatic and sea level changes have caused complex phylogeographic patterns in kraits in Southeast Asia. Zones of contact between closely related evolutionary lineages of the B. candidus complex are identified in Thailand, Vietnam, and southern China (Hainan). Within this complex, two main clades are revealed. One includes populations from the Southeast Asian mainland and is in contact with B. multicinctus in southern China. The other consists of populations from Thailand, southern Vietnam, Java, and Bali. The phylogeny as well as genetic distances suggest a scenario in which a Pleistocene southward dispersal of B. candidus to Sumatra, Java, and Bali during times of low sea levels was temporarily interrupted by vicariant events (rising sea levels, especially flooding of the Malacca Strait between Sumatra and the Malay Peninsula, and of the Bali Strait between Java and Bali). In this context, the close phylogenetic relationship between haplotypes from southern Vietnam and those from Java and Bali suggests that "southern" B. candidus dispersed directly via colonization of the widely receded South Chinese Sea, and not by taking a detour via the Malay Peninsula and Thailand, which were already inhabited by other populations of B. candidus. Using these phylogenetic estimates as the framework for a study on the diversity and evolution of krait venom components, I applied biochemical and molecular genetic approaches to identify and quantify polypeptide and protein toxins in krait venom, focusing on the distribution and molecular evolution of alpha-bungarotoxin, an irreversible competitive antagonist of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors with an exceptionally high applied significance as a receptor probe. I was specifically interested in the medically relevant question of intraspecific and interspecific variability in toxin diversity, and whether receptor-binding postsynaptic toxins evolve at rates different from those of presynaptic neurotoxins like beta-bungarotoxin, which act by destroying the nerve terminal and are believed to exhibit hypervariable functional diversification due to an accelerated mode of molecular evolution. In the context of this question, I isolated and purified the major lethal neurotoxins from B. candidus venoms by sequential steps of liquid chromatography for structural and functional characterization studies. Cloning and sequence analysis of toxin-coding genomic DNAs showed that the gene encoding the alpha-bungarotoxin alanine-31 variant, originally isolated from B. multicinctus venom, is widely present and highly conserved in multiple populations of B. candidus and is expressed as the principal postsynaptic neurotoxin at least in Javan B. candidus. In addition to the widespread presence of genomic DNAs encoding the alpha-bungarotoxin alanine-31 variant, the present study also revealed the partial genes of three novel alpha-bungarotoxin isoforms in addition to the previously known alanine-31 and valine-31 variants, all of which share an invariant exon 3 coding region. While alpha-bungarotoxin is the principal postsynaptic neurotoxin of Taiwanese B. multicinctus and Javan B. candidus, the main postsynaptic neurotoxin of Thai B. candidus both by quantity and lethality was a novel polypeptide of similar toxicity with a mass of 8030 Da and 73 amino acid residues, whose characterization at the genetic and protein levels revealed a novel subgroup of krait neurotoxins, here named alpha-delta-bungarotoxins and represented by four sequences from Bungarus caeruleus and B. candidus. alpha-delta-Bungarotoxins share high sequence homology with alpha-bungarotoxins but the purified, 8030 Da alpha-delta-bungarotoxin-1 exhibits only reversible, low affinity binding to nicotinic receptors and high site-selectivity for the acetylcholine binding site at the alpha-delta-subunit interface of the receptor. These properties render alpha-delta-bungarotoxin not only the first snake long-chain neurotoxin with reversible binding and binding-site selectivity, but also an exciting natural tool with which to address structure-function relationships at the subunit interfaces of the human receptor. The results of comparisons of the number of non-synonymous nucleotide substitutions per nonsynonymous site (dN) to the number of synonymous nucleotide substitutions per synonymous site (dS) strongly suggest that positive selection is acting on exon 2 of the alpha-bungarotoxin and probably also of the alpha-delta-bungarotoxin genes. In addition, the numbers of nucleotide substitutions per site of intron (dI) compared to the dS value of the toxin-coding exon regions provide strong evidence for accelerated molecular evolution in exon 2 of alpha-delta-bungarotoxins —whose value of dI is only one-eighth of the value of dS—whereas the hypothesis of accelerated evolution is rejected for 13 unique genomic DNAs encoding five alpha-bungarotoxin isoforms from B. candidus and B. multicinctus....
Metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 7 (mGluR7) belongs to the family of G-protein coupled receptors. mGluR7 is widely distributed in the brain and primarily localized at presynaptic terminals, where it is thought to regulate neurotransmitter release and synaptic plasticity. Studies have shown that the intracellular C-terminal tail of mGluR7 binds a variety of proteins in addition to trimeric G-proteins. These newly identified protein interactions are believed to play a key role in the synaptic targeting and G-protein dependent signaling of mGluR7. Protein interacting with C kinase 1 (PICK1), a PDZ-domain protein, is a strong interaction partner of mGluR7a. In order to investigate the role of PICK1 in the synaptic trafficking and signaling of mGluR7a, a knock-in mouse line in which the interaction of mGluR7a and PICK1 is disrupted was generated. Analysis of the mutant mice by immunocytochemistry and immunoelectron microscopy showed that the synaptic targeting and clustering of mGluR7a was not altered, indicating that PICK1 is not required for mGluR7a receptor membrane trafficking and synaptic localization. However, when the spontaneous synaptic activity of cerebellar granule cell cultures prepared from both wild-type and knock-in mice was monitored, and L-AP4 (400μm) was found to decrease the frequency, but not the amplitude, of spontaneous excitatory currents in wild-type neurons, while no effect of L-AP4 on spontaneous synaptic activity was observed in knock-in neurons. This indicates that PICK1 binding to the C-terminal region of mGluR7a plays an essential role in mGluR7a mediated G-protein signaling. We examined the threshold sensitivity for the convulsant pentetrazole (PTZ) in knock-in mice. It was found that mGluR7a knock-in mice had a greater sensitivity to PTZ than wild-type mice. Moreover, the surface parietal cortex EEG recordings of the mutant mice revealed spontaneous synchronous oscillation, or "spike-and-wave discharges" (SWD), which displayed similar characteristics to absence-like seizures. It was also observed that the knock-in mice responded to pharmacology as human absence epilepsy. These data suggests that the knock-in mice displayed the phenotype of absencelike epilepsy. Furthermore, the behavioral analysis of the mGluR7a knock-in mice showed no deficits in motor coordination, pain sensation, anxiety as well as spatial learning and memory, thus the interaction of mGluR7a and PICK1 appears not to contribute to these physiological processes. Taken together, our data provides evidence for an important role of PICK1 in Gprotein dependent signaling of mGluR7a, whereas PICK1 is not required for synaptic targeting and clustering of mGluR7a. Our results also provide an animal model of absencelike epilepsy generated by disruption of a single mGluR7a-PDZ interaction, thus creating a novel therapeutic target against this neurological disease.
The main subject of the thesis is the investigation of low-temperature-grown (LTG) GaAs-based photoconductive switches used in the generation of continuous-wave (CW) and pulsed terahertz (THz) radiation. The use of photoconductive switches based on low-temperature-grown GaAs proved to be a viable option in generating electromagnetic transients on a subpicosecond time-scale, corresponding to frequencies of ~1012 Hz (between microwave and far-infrared). The most appealing property of LTG-GaAs is the ultra-short carrier lifetime obtained by incorporation of a large number of As defects when GaAs is grown at low temperatures. However, the reason for poor THz emission efficiency (low CW-THz power lrvrls) is still up to this date not fully understood. The various reasons are to be found in both, optoelectronic properties of the active layer (photoconducting material) as well as in the device characteristics. The thesis focuses primarily on the limitation imposed to the performance of the THz emitters by the material of choice for the active layer (LTG-GaAs) and secondarily, on the impact of a particular emitter design on the THz radiation efficiency. In the beginning of the thesis one finds an ample overview on the electrical and optical properties of the LTG-GaAs material. A special chapter deals with the main features of current-voltage and CW-THz emission characteristics measured from a photoconductive antenna employed as photomixer. We observed deviations from the theoretical predictions of photomixing theory which were explained by considering the high-field electrons effects (velocity overshoot and elongation of the carrier trapping time). With the scope to provide a better understanding of the correlation between device and material properties when the LTG-GaAs material is integrated with a planar antenna (photoswitch), a special THz double-pulse technique (THz-pump and -probe) was implemented. The experimental results assisted by modeling of the double-pulse THz data provide a gainful insight into the ultrafast dynamics of the electrical field and photogenerated carriers. The outcome of the double-pulse experiments is the evidence for long-living carriers in the LTG-GaAs-based photoconductive antenna under applied bias, with a deleterious impact upon the emitter performance (especially for the CW case). Additionally, by measuring the THz transients generated by a constant laser pulse with and without a CW laser background illumination, we obtained further evidence of strong field-screening effects. This phenomenon was also attributed to the existence of long-living space-charge effects. For both cases (pulsed as well as CW) we derived the de-screening time constant. The principal conclusion of the present study is that, besides shortcomings imposed by the THz-circuitry, photomixers based on materials with traps (defects) exhibit great “affinity” for space-charge screening effects with cumulative and therefore long-lived deleterious impact upon device’s performance. An alternative would be the usage of a transient-time limited device where the response time is given by the carrier collection time, possibly with only one type of carrier responsible for THz signal generation.
As if to bear out the tenet of this study, the field of black British literature has been transformed enormously over the last ten years or so, while this book was in the making. And for myself, too, this has been a formative process. During this time I’ve been supported, challenged, and encouraged by more colleagues and friends than I can acknowledge here. ...
Safety concerns associated with the use of viral vectors in gene therapy applications have attracted considerable attention towards the development of nonviral vectors as alternatives for DNA delivery. While nonviral vectors are commonly not associated with safety problems, they are still very inefficient compared to viral vectors, and require significant improvements to approach the efficiency of their viral counterparts. Meanwhile ligands or single-chain antibody fragments that bind to cell surface receptors for increased and/or specific cellular uptake, endosome escape activities, and nuclear localization sequences (NLSs) to enhance transport of plasmid DNA into the nucleus, have become available that can be incorporated into nonviral vectors to improve their efficacy. However, as gene delivery is a multistep process, the challenge is to incorporate multiple of these functional elements into a single nonviral vector system, while retaining their specific activities. A promising method to attach such entities to plasmid DNA is the use of multifunctional fusion proteins that bind to DNA through a DNA-binding domain. In principle, two types of DNA-binding domains/proteins can be used to anchor additional functional domains or peptides to a plasmid, namely sequence-specific DNA-binding domains, described in the first part of this thesis, or those that bind DNA independent of its sequence, exemplified in the second part of this work by a derivative of the human HMGB2 protein. The first fusion protein constructed and analyzed contained the E. coli LexA repressor as a sequence-specific DNA-binding domain. In addition, this DNA-carrier protein, termed TEL, included a bacterial translocation domain as an integrated endosome escape activity, and human TGF-a for specific targeting to the EGF-receptor (EGFR). TEL was expressed in E. coli and purified under both native and denaturing conditions. Purified, denatured TEL was refolded and subsequently shown to bind specifically to EGFR-expressing cells. However, inclusion of TEL in complexes of plasmid DNA and poly-L-lysine (pL) did not lead to increased gene delivery into EGFR-expressing COS-1 cells. Most likely this was due to the absence of DNA-binding activity of the LexA moiety in TEL. In contrast, native TEL was able to interact specifically with DNA. Nevertheless, since this interaction was rather weak, and refolding of denatured TEL had not resulted in functional activity of all of its protein domains, it seemed unlikely that fusion proteins containing LexA would exhibit gene transfer capabilities superior to those of similar DNA-carrier proteins previously constructed in our group. Further work therefore focused on the use of the E2C-Sp1C protein as an alternative sequencespecific DNA-binding domain. This artificial zinc-finger protein was fused to the single-chain antibody fragment scFv(FRP5), directed against the human ErbB2 growth factor receptor. The resulting 5-E2C fusion protein was expressed in E. coli and purified under native and denaturing conditions. Refolded and native 5-E2C were found to bind specifically to ErbB2-expressing cells, indicating that scFv(FRP5) in 5-E2C was functional in both preparations. In contrast, whereas refolded 5-E2C bound DNA only weakly, significant DNA binding was observed for native 5-E2C. In addition, it could not only be shown that the interaction of native 5-E2C with DNA containing its recognition sequence was specific, but also that this protein was able to bind DNA and recombinant ErbB2 simultaneously, demonstrating the functionality of both domains in native 5-E2C. Despite these encouraging results, the inclusion of native 5-E2C in pL- or polyethyleneimine (PEI)-DNA complexes did not lead to an (5-E2C-specific) enhancement of gene transfer efficiency, irrespective of the presence of the endosome-disruptive reagent chloroquine during transfection. In the second part of this thesis an alternative approach for the development of DNA-carrier proteins for nonviral gene delivery is described, based on human HMGB2, a DNA-binding protein without sequence specificity. HMGB2 contains an acidic C-terminus that has been found to decrease the affinity of the protein for DNA. Therefore, this C-terminal tail was deleted, resulting in an HMGB2-variant consisting of amino acids 1-186. HMGB2186, purified under native conditions from E. coli lysates, was able to interact with DNA and bound to the surface of different cell lines. Importantly, after binding to plasmid DNA HMGB2186 mediated gene delivery into COS-7 cells with higher efficiency than pL. In addition, HMGB2186-mediated gene transfer was strongly enhanced in the presence of chloroquine, indicating that the endocytic pathway was involved in cellular uptake. To improve internalization and intracellular routing of HMGB2186 as a DNA-carrier, a derivative containing the TAT47-57 cell-penetrating peptide (CPP), reported to facilitate cell entry independent of endocytosis, was constructed. Since this peptide also contains an NLS, in addition an HGMB2186-variant containing the SV40-NLS was constructed to investigate the effect of a peptide that has only nuclear localizing properties. Interestingly, the resulting TAT-HMGB2186 and SV40-HMGB2186 fusion proteins displayed DNA-binding activities similar to HMGB2186, but mediated gene delivery into different cell lines clearly more efficiently than the parental molecule. Furthermore, the efficacy of both fusion proteins was enhanced markedly in the presence of chloroquine, an indication that endocytosis was involved in the transfection process mediated by these proteins. This suggests that the increased transfection efficiency observed for TAT-HMGB2186 was more likely due to the NLS function present in the TAT47-57 peptide, rather than to its ‘cell penetrating properties’. Finally, the incorporation of functional peptides derived from human proteins into HMGB2186 was investigated. An uncharged CPP originating from Kaposi-FGF, reported to facilitate efficient cellular uptake of fused protein domains in an endocytosis-independent manner, was fused to HMGB2186 together with the SV40-NLS. Interestingly, the resulting KSV40-HMGB2186 fusion protein bound DNA similarly as previously tested DNA-carrier proteins, but did not mediate enhanced transfection compared to HMGB2186. In addition, the importin-b-binding (IBB) domain derived from human importin-a2 was investigated as a component of a DNA-carrier protein. Since the IBB domain can function as an NLS, it was fused to HMGB2186 resulting in the DNA-carrier protein IBBHMGB2186. Although IBB-HMGB2186 bound DNA in a similar manner as the other HMGB2186-derivatives, gene delivery mediated by IBB-HMGB2186 was only as effective as HMGB2186 mediated transfection, suggesting no significant role of the IBB domain. However, addition of chloroquine resulted in a remarkable enhancement of IBB-HMGB2186-mediated gene transfer, which was now more efficient than with any other HMGB2186-variant tested, and not much lower than gene transfer mediated by PEI, one of the most efficient transfection reagents available to date. To enhance nonviral gene delivery even further, the HMGB2186-based DNA-carrier proteins described in this thesis might now serve as building blocks for novel fusion proteins that include additional complementing activities. In this respect it seems particularly promising that, under conditions of effective end some escape, IBB-HMGB2186, which consists entirely of protein domains of human origin, was the most efficient of all proteins tested in this work.
RcsB is a central transcriptional regulator in enteric bacteria involved in exopolysaccharide (EPS) biosynthesis, in cell division, in the expression of osmoregulated genes, and regulates at least 20 other genes and operons. It is a member of a phosphorelay system and signal transfer is mediated by phosphorylation through the RcsC/YojN phosphorelay. RcsB proteins modified with the phosphorylation mimic BeF3- as shown by its conformational changes and DNA binding properties and resulted phosphorylated RcsB derivatives with sufficient stability. Both, the wild type RcsB protein and the mutant RcsBD11A could be modified with BeF3-. Non-phosphorylated RcsB has been shown to bind as a heterodimer with the coinducer RcsA at the conserved RcsAB box in Rcs regulated promoters. In this study, it has been shown that the modification of RcsB by BeF3 - (I) has a negative effect on its homodimerization, (II) abolishes the complex formation of RcsAB with the RcsAB box as shown by the EMSA and SPR technique. All the effects were found to be reversible by increasing the NaF concentration in the assays presumably leading to the formation of the inactive BeF4 2- salt. This hypothesis of RcsB being modified by BeF3- was also supported by other phosphodonors like ATP and acetyl phosphate, both of them showed the same negative effect on DNA binding by RcsAB heterodimer giving evidence that BeF3- could be used as a phosphorylation mimic. In addition, the phosphorylation mimic BeF3- was found to be a better phosphorylating agent than ATP and acetyl phosphate. This is the first evidence that phosphorylation of RcsB might have a negative effect on the activation of RcsAB regulated operons. Autophosphorylation of RcsB proves that it has the ability to take up phosphoryl groups and the mutant protein also become autophosphorylated with less efficiency or stability than the wild type protein. RcsB probably takes up phosphoryl groups through RcsC -> YojN -> RcsB phosphorelay pathway. To study the interaction among the proteins in this pathway, fluorescence spectroscopy, NMR spectroscopy, and an in vivo ß galactosidase assay were performed by using two domains of RcsC (T-RcsC and R-RcsC), HPt domain of the protein YojN, and RcsB. The interactions between R-RcsC/YojN-HPt and YojN-HPt/RcsB supports the proposed pathway of phosphorylating RcsB. RcsB might also be phosphorylated by YojN-HPt that is phosphorylated by other sensor kinase other than RcsC in a cross-talk mechanism. The phosphorylation of RcsB by YojN-HPt probably has the same negative effect on cps induction as obtained with BeF3 - effect on DNA binding by RcsAB heterodimer.
The biomarker record in two different lakes in central Europe, Lake Albano and Lake Constance, is used to reflect environmental changes and lake system response during the Late Glacial and Holocene. Extractable organic compounds in lake sediments, which can be assigned to their biological source (biomarkers) function as fingerprints of past aquatic or land plant organisms. Using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry, 21 different biomarkers (predominantly steroids and triterpenoids) as well as a variety of n-alkanes, nalkanols, and n-alkanoic acids could be identified in the sediment records of Lake Albano and Lake Constance. In the Holocene sediments of Lake Albano, the distribution of biomarkers such as dinosterol (dinoflagellates), isoarborinol, and diplopterol (aquatic organisms) indicate three biomarker zones: The period between 0-3,800 years BP (zone 3) is characterized by high concentrations of these biomarkers and others such as tetrahymanol and diploptene. Conversely, zone 2 (3,800-6,500 years BP) shows very low concentrations of all autochthonous biomarkers. In zone 1 (6,500–11,480 years BP), dinosterol, isoarborinol, and diplopterol range on a relatively high level, whereas diploptene and tetrahymanol display comparatively low concentrations. The results suggest at least two distinct changes in the predominance of primary producers during the Holocene, which are related to changes in the lake system such as lake mixing and water column stratification. This interpretation is consistent with previous investigations of Lake Albano sediments including pigment and hydrogen index data (Ariztegui et al., 1996b; Guilizzoni et al., 2002). Allochthonous biomarkers such as long-chain n-alkanes, amyrenones and friedelin indicate a development from forest to a more open landscape from 6,000 and 5.000 years BP, respectively. After a period of high concentrations during the first half of the Holocene, all biomarkers derived from deciduous trees exhibit relatively low values until around 1,000 years BP. Again, this is consistent with results from previous pollen investigations (Ariztegui et al., 2000). The sediment core from Upper Lake Constance comprises the Late Glacial and Holocene. It was analysed for biomarkers and inorganic tracers in order to compare the biomarker results with other proxy data from the same core. Magnetic susceptibility (MS) was measured to get a high-resolution stratigraphic framework of the core and to obtain further information about changes of the proportions of allochthonous and autochthonous input. Enhanced concentrations and accumulation rates of dinosterol (biomarker for dinoflagellates) and biogenic calcite give evidence of increasing lake productivity at the beginning of the Holocene followed by a decrease in bioproductivity after around 7,000 years BP. Younger Dryas sediments are characterized by low amounts of both dinosterol and biogenic calcite indicating a low productivity. The comparison of the concentrations and accumulation rates of b-sitosterol and stigmastanol with parameters reflecting lake productivity suggests that both steroids in Lake Constance sediments are mainly derived from terrigenous sources. Biomarkers as well as concentrations and accumulation rates of allochthonous inorganic compounds such as titanium, magnesium and strontium indicate a slightly enhanced allochthonous input after 8,500 years BP. Significant increase of erosive matter input from enhanced soil erosion is not observed before 4,000 years BP. This can be attributed to the combined effects of precipitation increase as a result of climatic deterioration and anthropogenic deforestation which is consistent with observations from other lakes in Central Europe. The MS record of Lake Constance confirms these results by tracing the climatically induced shifts of more intense bioproduction (low MS caused by increased calcite deposition) during the ‘climatic optimum’. This is followed by increasing input of terrigenous sediment compounds during colder and wetter periods which lead to higher MS values in the lake sediments. The occurrence of tetrahymanol in Lake Constance sediments questions the unambiguous use of tetrahymanol as an indicator for water column stratification. Anaerobic organic macroaggregates within the oxygenated, photic zone of the water column have to be considered as a possible living space for anaerobic microorganisms containing tetrahymanol. The direct comparison of two very different lakes Albano and Constance with respect to biomarkers indicating climate or environmental change provides a contribution to the recent biomarker research for a better understanding of biomarkers in lacustrine sediments.
P2X receptors are ligand (ATP)-gated ion channels that open an intrinsic cation permeable pathway in response to extracellular ATP released from both neuronal and non-neuronal cells. P2X receptors are abundantly distributed and mediate a wide variety of physiological functions, ranging from fast synaptic transmission in the central, peripheral, and enteric nervous system, to proinflammatory cytokine release from immune cells. The primary aim of this work was to elucidate the pathway that leads to the finally assembled trimeric P2X receptors, including the assessment of a possible role of ER chaperones and folding factors in this process. Additionally, the study was conducted to investigate the various ER quality control processes involved in the selection of “properly folded and assembled” P2X receptors that are suitable for the surface expression.
The heat stress (hs) response is universal to all organisms. As the cell senses increase in temperature, heat stress transcription factors (Hsfs) are activated to upregulate the expression of a number of genes encoding heat stress proteins (Hsp) which act as molecular chaperones to protect cells against heat damages. In higher plants, the phenomenon seems to be unusually complex both at the level of Hsfs and Hsps (e.g., 21 Hsf encoding genes in Arabidopsis and at least 17 in tomato). Upon prolonged hs, another characteristic property of plant cells is the assembly of large cytosolic aggregates called heat stress granules (HSG), which are composed of Hsps, HsfA2, RNA and RNA-binding proteins. The present work was aimed to understand plant hs response using tomato as a model system. To study the function of tomato Hsfs in their native system, we generated transgenic tomato lines altered in expression of HsfA1, HsfA2, and HsfB1. Tomato plants with 10-fold overexpression of HsfA1 (OE plants) were characterised by integration of a single HsfA1 expression cassette, whereas the plants harbouring a tandem inverted repeat (IR) of the cassette showed cosuppression of HsfA1 (CS plants). The lack of HsfA1 expression in CS plants results from posttranscriptional gene silencing connected with the formation of small interfering RNA (siRNA). Under normal growth conditions, major developmental features were similar for wild-type (WT), OE and CS plants. However, in contrast to the former two, CS plants and fruits were extremely sensitive to elevated temperature because hs-induced synthesis of major chaperones and Hsfs was strongly reduced or lacking. Despite the complexity of the plant Hsf family, the function of tomato HsfA1 is unique as master regulator of induced thermotolerance. On the other hand, maintenance of essential chaperones in CS plants during seed development suggests involvement of other Hsfs and/or transcription factor(s). HsfB1 and HsfA2 transgenic tomato plants, unaffected in thermotolerance, further supported the function of HsfA1 as the major factor regulating hs-inducible genes. Hs87 independent phenotypes of plants with altered expression of HsfB1 indicates developmental role of this Hsf. Using transient reporter assays with mesophyll protoplasts from WT tomato, we demonstrated that plasmids encoding Hsfs A1, A2 and A3 were well expressed which could function as activators for reporter gene expression. However, in protoplasts derived from CS plants, plasmids encoding HsfA2 and HsfA3 were normally expressed but even higher amounts of HsfA1 expression plasmids were completely silenced. Therefore, silencing of HsfA1 in CS plants was also reproduced in its mesophyll protoplasts. Lacking thermotolerance in CS protoplasts could be restored after transformation with expression plasmids encoding functionally equivalent HsfA2 or HsfA3 resulting in (i) expression of chaperones, (ii) survival of the cells at otherwise lethal temperature, (iii) thermoprotection of firefly luciferase, and (iv) assembly of heat stress granules (HSGs). The strong silencing caused by an IR in CS plants opened the possibility of a broad use of RNAi for gene knock-down also in the transient system of mesophyll protoplasts. Using this technology, we attempted to dissect essential components of thermotolerance and HSG assembly. We demonstrated the previously reported function of chaperones such as Hsp70 and Hsp101, and could discriminate the in vivo chaperone functions of different isoforms of Hsp20 and Hsp70 proteins. Hsp17-CI, Hsp70 (hs-inducible isoforms), and Hsp101 are absolutely essential chaperones for thermotolerance in plants. Furthermore, the results also show that despite Hsp17-CI and -CII being major components of HSG complexes, they are dispensable for assembly of these complexes. Based on these results, it is proposed that in the transient protoplast system an approach with gene-specific IRs can be used to discriminate functions of closely related isoforms among protein-families and to dissect complex protein networks.
Vascular occlusive diseases are one of the leading mortality causes in westernised countries. Occlusions of one of the major arteries can be overcome without devastating consequences provided a timely induction of compensating collateral arteries occurs. Perhaps the most outstanding feature of collateral vessel growth is the proliferation of smooth muscle cells (SMCs). Understanding the molecular mechanisms and identifying key molecular players of SMC proliferation would contribute significantly to the development of efficient therapies to intervene with all processes involving neointima formation, including collateral growth. mRNA and protein coding for co-transcription factor Egr1 were found to be up-regulated in growing collateral vessels 6, 12 or 24 hours following femoral artery ligation in mice. Since Egr1 is required for SMC proliferation in vitro and in vivo and likely to be implicated in the initiation of collateral artery growth, the key signalling mediators regulating Egr1 expression specifically in proliferating vascular SMCs were investigated. Northern blot and Western blot analysis revealed a strong up-regulation of Egr1 within 2 hours of stimulation with PDGF-AB and FGF-2. These two potent SMC mitogens involved in neointima formation were used to stimulate vascular SMCs not only to delineate the regulators of Egr1 expression but also to identify additional key mediators of SMC proliferation. FGF-2 but not PDGF-AB led to a drastic reduction of desmin amount in proliferating SMCs, correlating closely with the phenotypic modulation of SMCs in vivo. Both growth factors triggered a dramatic increase in DNA-synthesis rate with a concomitant loss of p27 exp Kip1. Stimulation with PDGF-AB and FGF-2 triggered a rapid and transient activation of PDGFRβ and FGFR1 respectively, thus providing the basis for activation of down-stream targets. Analysis of an array of signalling pathways demonstrated a strong activation of the Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK cascade in response to both factors as measured by the level of phosphorylation of prominent members MEK, ERK1/2 and c-Myc. SAPK/JNK and p38, which also belong to the superfamily of MAP kinases, did not become activated following stimulation with either PDGF-AB or FGF-2. The analysis of various PKC isoforms identified PKCδ and PKCθ to be the key mediators of PDGF-AB- and FGF-2-induced mitogenesis in proliferating SMCs. Whereas PDGF-AB potently stimulated PKB/Akt with concomitant GSK3β phosphorylation, FGF-2-induced inactivation of GSK3β was independent of PKB/Akt. Specific inhibition in order to evaluate the contribution of individual pathways to Egr1 expression and vascular SMC proliferation revealed that inhibition of the Raf-MEK-ERK module by UO126 completely abolished DNA-synthesis and Egr1 expression without a compensation by alternative pathways. Surprisingly, inhibition of PI3K led to a switch to the mitogenic RafMEK-ERK signalling cascade which resulted in an augmented Egr1 expression. In conclusion, in porcine vascular SMCs, activation of the Ras-Raf-MEK-ERK signalling module appears to be the main prerequisite for Egr1 expression and DNA synthesis induction in response to PDGF-AB and FGF-2 whereas related kinases SAPK/JNK and p38 play no significant role. Inhibition of the PI3K-Akt cascade represents an alternative way to activate ERK1/2 and induce Egr1 expression. Whereas MEK is the central regulator of mitogenic effects in proliferating vascular SMCs, the PI3K-Akt pathway most likely exerts survival function. Inactivation of MEK by its specific inhibitors identified hyperphosphorylation as ayet unknown mechanism of kinase inhibition.
Summary and Outlook The aim of this work was the investigation of the Mn2+ binding sites in hammerhead and the Diels-Alder ribozymes. This project consists of three main topics. In the first part quantification and structural characterization of Mn2+ binding sites in the m- and the tsHHRz using Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy are described. The second part summarizes the newest results obtained for the cleavage activity of both mand tsHHRzs in the presence of different Mg2+ and Mn2+ and Na+ ion concentrations using the new method with fluorescent-labeled RNAs. Here the influence of neomycin B on the structure of Mn2+ binding pockets and on the catalytic activity of both HHRzs is discussed. In addition, a possible role of Mn2+ ions is suggested from correlation of the EPR data with the kinetic results. The last chapter is devoted to quantification and differentiation of Mn2+ binding sites of the Diels-Alder ribozyme using continuous wave (cw) EPR experiments in solution. In this work EPR spectroscopy was used to study the binding of Mn2+ ions to the cis tsHHRz and to compare it with the binding to the trans mHHRz and to the Diels-Alder ribozyme. Cw EPR measurements showed that the tsHHRz possesses a single highaffinity Mn2+ binding site with a KD of < 10 nM at a NaCl concentration of 0.1 M. This dissociation constant is three orders of magnitude smaller than the KD determined for the single high-affinity Mn2+ site in the mHHRz (KD = 4.4 μM). The measurements of catalytic activity have been performed using fluorescent-labeled RNAs. Compared to the mHHRz, the cis tsHHRz cleaves up to 20-fold faster in the presence of Mg2+/Mn2+ ions with no saturation of the cleavage rates at high metal(II) ion concentrations. This is in good agreement with the last investigations on the trans tsHHRz (Nelson et al. 2005). Thus, the much stronger Mn2+ binding and higher cleavage activity were attributed to the interaction between the two external loops of the tsHHRz which reduces the RNA dynamics and traps the Mn2+ in the tightly folded conformation. Intriguingly, according to the EPR studies the binding constants for Mn2+ ions are several orders higher than the concentration of Mn2+ ions required for the catalytic activity (mHHRz: KD = 4.4 ± 0.5 μM and the Mn2+ concentration required to achieve half of the maximum cleavage rate [Mn2+]1/2 = 4.1 ± 0.6 mM respectively). Therefore, strongly bound Mn2+ ions seem to be needed for the folding of the HHRz, whereas weakly bound metal(II) ions are required to achieve full catalytic activity, and may be directly involved in catalysis. A comparison between the Electron Spin Echo Envelope Modulation (ESEEM) and Hyperfine Sublevel Correlation (HYSCORE) spectra of m- and tsHHRz demonstrates that both binding sites in HHRzs are structurally very similar. This suggests that the Mn2+ is located in both ribozymes between the bases A9 and G10.1 of the sheared G•A tandem basepair, as shown previously and in detail for the mHHRz (Vogt and DeRose 1998, Schiemann et al. 2003). However, the hyperfine spectra of the tsHHRz with 15N labeled G10.1 revealed no difference in comparison with the ones with 14N. This leads to an interpretation that the Mn2+ binding sites in both ribozymes are not identical. In addition, aminoglycoside antibiotic neomycin B inhibits the cleavage activity of both despite of the fact that it displaces the high-affinity Mn2+ ion only from the mHHRz. Hence, binding of neomycin B to the m- and the tsHHRzs probably occurs at different sites and neomycin B displaces only loosely bound Me2+ ions from the tsHHRs, whereas in the mHHRz both the high-affinity ion and the weakly bound ions are replaced. Therefore, it cannot be excluded that weakly bound Mg2+/Mn2+ ions, together with looploop interactions, induce a structural rearrangement which brings the high-affinity ion closer to the cleavage site. In the case of the Diels-Alder ribozyme it possesses five Mn2+ binding sites with KD = 0.6 ± 0.2 μM in solution under conditions where it is catalytically active. The competition experiment with Cd2+ allows to distinguish three different types of Mn2+ binding sites in the Diels-Alder ribozyme including inner-sphere monomeric Mn2+, monomeric Mn2+ bound through water-mediated contacts and electronically coupled dimeric Mn2+. Three Mn2+ ions are more strongly bound to the ribozyme via inner-sphere contacts, whereas two other Mn2+ ions form water-mediated outer-sphere contacts with the nucleotides of the ribozyme. The inner-sphere Mn2+ with the highest affinity and the fourth Mn2+ ions added to the ribozyme form a dimer with a Mn2+-Mn2+ distance of ~6 Å (as arises from simulations). Moreover, an addition of the product analog inhibitor (AMDA) to the [Diels-Alder ribozymes/ Mn2+] complex shows no conformational changes in the Mn2+ binding pockets. This is in good agreement with the recent studies which suggest that the Diels-Alder ribozyme is preorganized (Keiper et al. 2004). Some considerations on the evolution of the project (Outlook) There may be several venues of continuation of this project, which exploit on unique combination of EPR experiments and biochemical studies on RNA. This combination may allow us to significantly contribute to understanding of metal role in HHRz catalysis. Since the tsHHRz possesses the high affinity Mn2+ binding site (Kd < 10 nM) it creates a possibility to find conditions where the structural site is occupied by Mn2+, while catalytic sites are occupied by Mg2+ ions. If these conditions will be established by EPR titration, a set of standard biochemical experiments may be designed to look at the kinetic of cleavage and differentiate the “structural” and catalytic effects. The other experiment would be to look at the Mn2+ binding site in the tsHHRz in comparison with P1 and P1/P2 complexes and compare the results with the ones for the mHHRz. No matter the answer, P1 can be used as a simpler model to study the effect of tertiary structure on Mn2+ binding. A set of the tsHHRz mutants can be created to observe the mutations affect on Mn2+ binding sites, Mn2+ affinity and correlate the data with the kinetic analysis. FRET-based kinetic assay with fluorophore pairs on P1 and P2 can be designed for the kinetic experiments. Having this system one will be able to perform kinetic measurements 100-fold faster comparing to standard gel procedures (everything will be done in 96-wells). By manipulating the lengths and the sequence of P2 we most likely will be able to use FRET assay for the chemical step analysis (provided Kd > k2), and measure it using stop-flow system with time resolution of microseconds. And finally, one will be able to quantitatively measure the effect of neomycin B on the tsHHRz. Another interesting possibility would be to look at the state of metal(II) in the tsHHRz – enzyme alone (dissociated product) and in the enzyme-product complex and compare with the full-length tsHHRz. It will provide the information about the local rearrangements upon catalysis and the role of metal(II) ions. Furthermore, additional pulse-EPR experiments using 15N labeling have to be performed in order to reveal the location of the high-affinity Mn2+ binding site in the tsHHRz. Additionally, paramagnetic Mn2+ ions can be localized within the global fold of HHRzs using PELDOR and site-directed spin labeling. Further characterization of the high-affinity binding site in the tsHHRz can be performed using high-field ENDOR measurements in order to obtain the 14N and 31P tensors.
Unlimited self-renewal is an absolute prerequisite for any malignancy, and is the ultimate arbiter of the continuous growth and metastasis of tumors. It has been suggested that the self-renewal properties of a tumor are exclusively contained within a small population, i.e., the so-called cancer stem cells. Enhanced self-renewal potential plays a pivotal role in the development of leukemia. My data have shown that APL associated translocation products PML/RARalpha and PLZF/RARalpha increased the replating efficiency of mouse lin-/Sca1+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). This effect is partly mediated by induction of gamma–catenin which is an important mediator of the Wnt signaling pathway and has been shown to be up regulated by the AML associated translocation products(AATPs). Suppression of gamma–catenin by siRNA can abrogate the increased replating efficiency induced by AATPs. Transduction of gamma–catenin in lin-/Sca1+ HSCs led to increased replating efficiency and the expression of stem cell markers Sca1 and c-kit. Additionally it induced accelerated cell cycle progression of mouse bone marrow HSCs. Transduction/transplantation mouse models have shown that ectopic expression of gamma–catenin in HSCs led to acute myeloid leukemia without maturation. These data suggest important roles of Wnt signaling pathway in the leukemogenesis induced by PML/RARalpha, PLZF/RARalpha and AML1/ETO. In contrast to AATPs, CML and Ph+-ALL associated translocation products p185(BCR-ABL) and p210(BCR-ABL) did not affect the self-renewal potential of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. However my studies indicated that their reciprocal translocation products p40(ABL/BCR) and p96(ABL/BCR) actually increased the replating efficiency of hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. The effect is stronger when induced by p96(ABL/BCR) than by p40(ABL/BCR). It is very intriguing that p96(ABL/BCR) can activate Wnt signaling and up regulate the expression of HoxB4. Transduction/transplantation mouse model has shown that p40(ABL/BCR) and p96(ABL/BCR) both have their own leukemogenic potential. Given the fact that leukemic stem cells maintain the growth of tumor and are the origin of relapse, the cure of leukemia is dependent on the eradication of the leukemic stem cell and abrogation of aberrantly regulated self-renewal capability. Both t-RA and As2O3 have been shown to induce complete remission in APL patients with PML/RARalpha translocation product. However, t-RA as a single agent achieves completeremission (CR) but not complete molecular remissions (CMR). Therefore, virtually all patients will experience a relapse within a few months. In contrast to t-RA, As2O3 as a single agent is able to induce CR as well as CMR followed by long-term relapse-free survival in about 50% of APL patients even if relapsed after treatment with t-RA-containing chemotherapy regimens. Nothing is known about the mechanisms leading to the complete different clinical outcomes by the two compounds although both have been shown to induce differentiation of blast cells, proliferation arrest, induction of apoptosis and degradation of PML/RARalpha. We investigated the effect of t-RA and arsenic on PML/RARalpha-expressing cell population with stem cell capacity derived from the APL cell line NB4 as well as Sca1+/lin- murine bone marrow cells. We found that t-RA did not reduce the replating efficiency in PML/RARalpha- and PLZF/RARalpha-infected Sca1+/lincells whereas it selected small compact colonies representing very early progenitor cells. T-RA was unable to reduce the capacity to form colony forming units-spleen (CFU-S) of Sca1+/lin-cells expressing PML/RARalpha, additionally t-RA did not impair the capability of engraftment of NB4 cells in NOD/SCID mouse. On the contrary to t-RA, As2O3 abolished the aberrant self-renewal potential of Sca1+/lin- cells expressing PML/RARalpha. As2O3 not only abolished the replating efficiency of PML/RARalpha positive cells but also completely abrogated the ability of PML/RARalpha-positive HSC to produce CFU-S in vivo. On the contrary to As2O3, t-RA increased the absolute cell number and the percentage of cells in the side population with respect to the whole cell population in NB4 cells. Taken together these data suggest that arsenic but not all-trans retinoic acid overcomes the aberrant stem cell capacity of PML/RARalpha positive leukemic stem cells. My data prove for the first time that there is a direct relationship between the capacity of compounds to effectively target the LSC and their capacity to eradicate the leukemia, and, thereby, to induce complete molecular remission and long-term relapse-free survival. Thus, in order to increase the curative potential of leukemia therapies, future studies need to include the effect of given compounds on the stem cell compartment to determine their ability to eradicate the LSC.
Membranes are essential for life, because a cell must separate itself from the environment to keep its molecules from dissipating away and also must keep out foreign molecules that disturb them or their cell components. However, the cell must communicate with the environment and adapt to the external conditions, needs to pump in nutrients and release toxic products of its metabolism. Membrane proteins present in the membranes of the cell and cell organelles, help the cell to gather information about the environment and perform various biological processes. Membrane proteins perform a wide range of biological functions including respiration, signal transduction and transport. Despite their high importance in biological function, only few structures have been determined because of the difficulties in producing high amounts of membrane proteins and obtaining good quality crystals. This Ph. D. thesis involves the study of different kinds of cytochrome oxidases and a membrane anchored cytochrome oxidase electron donor. Though structures of many cytochrome oxidases are known to date, there exist many different types of oxidases in different organisms, which help the organism to survive under unfavorable environmental conditions. The structural differences between these terminal oxidases which make the organism to survive in extreme environments are unclear. To investigate these, structures of different types of oxidases are necessary. Therefore, we are interested in revealing the structural details of different types of oxidases. The different types of oxidase I worked with were the caa3 HiPIP:oxygen oxidoreductase from Rhodothermus marinus, the aa3-type quinol oxidase from Acidianus ambivalens and bd-type quinol oxidase from three different organisms (Escherichia coli, Bacillus thermodenitrificans and Aquifex aeolicus). Besides the protein from E. coli all other proteins are from thermophilic organisms from which the proteins obtained are generally believed to be highly stable. The presence of a high content of charged amino acids that enhances the occurrence of salt bridges contributes to the stability of thermophilic proteins. ....
In this thesis the three dimensional solution strucutre of the RbfA protein from Thermotoga maritima was solved using multidimensional heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy. The RbfA protein binds to the helix I region of the 16S rRNA. To gain insights into the binding mode of RbfA to its target, a second RbfA construct from Helicobacter pylori was used. Comparison of the RbfA proteins with the published structure of RbfA from Escherichia coli, led to studies concerning the differences between proteins from thermophile and mesophile systems. In the second part of this thesis the native binding motive of the RbfA protein was identified. The RbfA protein binds to an alternate helix fold within the pre-sequence of the immature 16S rRNA.
Membrane proteins play vital role in a variety of cellular processes, such as signal transduction, transport and recognition. In turn they are involved in numerous human diseases and currently represent one of the most prevalent drug targets. A comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms mediated by membrane proteins requires information about their structures at near-atomic resolution, although structural studies of membrane proteins remain behind those of soluble proteins. A bottleneck in the study of membrane proteins resides in the difficulties that are encountered during their high-level production in cell based systems. However, many toxic effects attributed to the over production of membrane proteins are eliminated by cell-free expression, as viable host cells are no longer required. Therefore, the objective of this study was to obtain adequate amounts of selected membrane transport proteins for their structural studies using a cell-free expression system. For the establishment of the cell-free system for membrane proteins, the transporters YbgR and YiiP from Salmonella typhimurium LT2, PF0558 and PF1373 from Pyrococcus furiosus, from the cation diffusion family (CDF), BetP from Corynebacterium glutamicum from the betaine/carnitine/choline transporter (BCCT) family and Aq-2030 from Aquifex aeolicus VF5 from the monovalent cation/proton antiporter-2 (CPA2) family were selected. An Escherichia coli S-30 extract based cellfree system was established by generating the best expression constructs of the target proteins, preparing T7 RNA polymerase and an S-30 extract with high translation efficiency. The functionality of the S-30 extract was shown by the cell-free expression of correctly folded Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP). Essential factors of the cell-free system such as the Mg2+ concentration, the bacterial S-30 extract proportion in the reaction mixture and the time-course of cell-free reactions have been optimized. For the cell-free production of membrane proteins in soluble form, the possibility to supplement cell-free reactions with detergents was explored. A wide range of non-ionic or zwitterionic detergents, were found to be compatible with cell-free synthesis, while ionic detergents and non-ionic detergents at high concentrations had an inhibitory effect. Moreover, high concentrations of polyoxyethylene-alkyl-ethers (Brij) detergents were found to have enhancing effect on the production levels as well as on the solubility of cell-free produced proteins. As membrane proteins tend to misfold and aggregate in a membrane-free translation system, the possibility to supplement the cell-free reactions with inner membrane vesicles (IMVs) to obtain correctly folded target transport proteins was explored. All the target proteins were successfully produced in the batch cell-free reactions and were found to be incorporated in the IMVs. A continuous exchange cell-free (CECF) system was established, where consumable substrates (amino acids, nucleotides and energy regenerating compounds) were supplied to the cell-free reaction mixture through a dialysis membrane, which in consequence resulted in high-level production of target proteins compared to the batch system. The osmosensing and osmoregulated sodium-coupled symporter BetP from C. glutamicum was chosen for the large scale production in CECF set-up. The protein is easily produced in E. coli and is functional as assayed by its transport activity, after purification and reconstitution in liposomes. It is therefore possible to compare in-vivo and cell-free production. High-level cell-free production of BetP was achieved in CECF mode in different forms: (i) as precipitate, (ii) as soluble form in detergent, and (iii) incorporated in IMVs. Cell-free production of BetP resulted in the yield of about 0.5 mg of purified BetP from 1 ml of CECF reaction. The yield of purified BetP was increased to 1.6 fold by addition of 1% polyoxyethylene-(20)-cetyl-ether (Brij58) detergent in the reaction mixture. Moreover, the high level cell-free production of BetP (0.5 mg purified BetP/ml reaction mixture) incorporated in IMVs was shown for the first time in this work.However, it was observed that oligomerization of BetP was not efficient in the cell-free system. Factors that can promote the folding of membrane proteins such as lipids and chaperones were investigated. Addition of lipids and molecular chaperone GroE facilitated correct folding of BetP resulting in increased yield and stability of cell-free produced BetP. The results obtained indicate that most of the cell-free produced BetP exists in functional oligomeric form. The possibility of obtaining milligram amounts of BetP, a 12 trans-membrane protein from the cell-free reactions holds promise for structural and functional studies of other membrane proteins. In any case, the strategies adapted in this study should prove extremely valuable for the production of membrane proteins in the E. coli cell-free expression system.
First milestone of this Ph.D. thesis was the successful extension of conventional NTA/His-tag technique to self-assembling, multivalent chelator thiols for high-affinity recognition as well as stable and uniform immobilization of His-tagged proteins on chip surfaces. Bis-NTA was linked via an oligoethylene glycol to alkyl thiols by an efficient modular synthesis strategy yielding a novel, multivalent compound for formation of mixed SAMs with anti-adsorptive matrix thiols on gold. Multivalent chelator chips allow a specific, high-affinity, reversible, long-term immobilization of His-tagged proteins. In AFM studies reversibility of the specific protein immobilization process was visualized at single molecule level. The entire control over the orientation of the immobilized protein promotes this chip surface to an optimal platform for studies focusing on research targets at single molecule level and nanobiotechnology. Based on the constructed protein chip platform above and a novel AFM mode (contact oscillation mode, COM) – developed during the current Ph.D. work – protein nanolithography under physiological conditions enabling fabrication of active biomolecular patterns in countless variety has been established. Reversible COM-mediated nanostructuring is exceptionally suitable for multiplexed patterning of protein assemblies in situ. The first selfassembled protein layer acts as a biocompatible and ductile patterning material. Immobilized proteins can be replaced by the AFM tip applying COM, and the generated structures can be erased and refilled with different proteins, which are immobilized in a uniform and functional manner. Multi-protein arrays can be systematically fabricated by iterative erase-and-write processes, and employed for protein-protein interaction analysis. Fabrication of two-dimensionally arranged nanocatalytic centres with biological activity will establish a versatile tool for nanobiotechnology. As an alternative chip fabrication approach, the combined application of methodologies from surface chemistry, semiconductor technology, and chemical biology demonstrated successfully how pre-patterned templates for micro- and nanoarrays for protein chips are fabricated. The surface physical, as well the biophysical experiments, proved the functionality of this technology. The promises of such process technology are fast and economic fabrication of ready-to-use nanostructured biochips at industrial scale. Membrane proteins are complicated in handling and hence require sophisticated solutions for chip technological application. A silicon-on-insulator (SOI) chip substrate with microcavities and nanopores was employed for first technological investigation to construct a protein chip suitable for membrane proteins. The formation of an artificial lipid bilayer using vesicle fusion on oxidized SOI cavity substrates was verified by CLSM. Future AFM experiments will give further insights into the chip architecture and topography. This will provide last evidence of the sealing of the cavity by the lipid bilayer. Transmembrane proteins will be employed for reconstitution experiments on this membrane protein chip platform. Highly integrated microdevices will find application in basic biomedical and pharmaceutical research, whereas robust and portable point-of-care devices will be used in clinical settings.
Die Verarbeitung von Informationen im zentralen Nervensystem beruht auf dem Zusammenspiel von erregender und hemmender Neurotransmission. Die Übertragung von Signalen zwischen Neuronen erfolgt chemisch über die Ausschüttung von Neurotransmittern an spezialisierten Kontaktstellen, den Synapsen. Glyzin und gamma-Aminobuttersäure (GABA) sind die bedeutendsten inhibitorischen Neurotransmitter im zentralen Nervensystem von Säugern, welche Rezeptoren vom Glyzin- (GlyR) und GABAA-Typ (GABAAR) aktivieren. Diese ligandengesteuerten Ionenkanäle sind in postsynaptischen Membranen angereichert und mit intrazellulären Proteinen assoziiert. Die Rekrutierung der Rezeptoren in postsynaptischen Domänen ist ein an das zytoplasmatisch lokalisierte Protein Gephyrin gekoppelter Prozess. So bindet Gephyrin spezifisch an die intrazelluläre Domäne der beta-Untereinheit des GlyR (GlyR beta) und bildet für die Verankerung des Rezeptors ein gerüstartiges Netzwerk unterhalb der synaptischen Membran. Die gezielte Inaktivierung des Gephyrin-Gens führt in Mäusen zu einem postnatal letalen Phänotyp und zu dem Verlust der synaptischen Anreicherung des GlyR und bestimmter GABAA-Rezeptoren auf zellulärer Ebene. Gephyrin ist ein 93 kDa großes Protein, das nicht nur im zentralen Nervensystem (ZNS), sondern auch in anderen Organen wie Leber und Niere exprimiert wird, in denen es an der Synthese des Molybdän-Kofaktors von Oxido-Reduktasen beteiligt ist. Das Gephyrin-Protein wird durch 30 Exons codiert, von denen zehn als sogenannte Kassetten alternativ gespleißt werden können. Die bestuntersuchte Spleißvariante besitzt 736 Aminosäuren und ist in eine N- und eine C-terminale Domäne (Aminosäuren 1-181 bzw. 318-736) sowie eine zentrale Linker-Domäne unterteilt. Die N- und die C-terminalen Bereiche von Gephyrin sind den Proteinen MogA und MoeA aus E. coli homolog und werden daher auch als G-Domäne (N-terminal) bzw. E-Domäne (C-terminal) bezeichnet. In kristallographischen Untersuchungen wurde gezeigt, dass die G- und E-Domänen zur Tri- bzw. Dimerisierung befähigt sind. Diese speziellen Oligomerisierungseigenschaften der beiden Gephyrindomänen bilden wahrscheinlich die Grundlage für die Entstehung von Gephyrin-Clustern sowie eines hexagonalen Gephyrin-Gerüstes. Dieses Gerüst stellt den Verknüpfungspunkt zwischen Rezeptoren und dem Zytoskelett dar und ermöglicht somit die effiziente Clusterbildung und die zielgerichtete Anordnung einer großen Anzahl inhibitorischer Rezeptoren. In der vorliegenden Arbeit sollten die Rolle dieser beiden Domänen bei der Bildung membranassoziierter Gephyrinaggregate und die molekularen Mechanismen der Clusterbildung des Gephyrinmoleküls untersucht werden. Zu diesem Zweck wurden durch zielgerichtete Mutagenese unterschiedliche Gephyrin-Mutanten hergestellt, um die Fähigkeit der Oligomerisierung der G- und E-Domäne gezielt zu modifizieren. Dadurch sollte die Bedeutung der Oligomerisierung hinsichtlich der Aggregat- bzw. Clusterbildung untersucht werden. Außerdem sollten die Wechselwirkungen zwischen Gephyrin und anderen Proteinen und deren Einfluss auf die synaptische Lokalisation analysiert werden. Für diese Untersuchungen wurden auf der Basis von Röntgenstruktur-Daten spezifische Aminosäurereste an den bei der Oligomerisierung beteiligten Kontaktstellen ausgetauscht. In der G-Domäne wurden zu diesem Zweck vier separate Aminosäuren des Trimer-Interface durch Arginin ersetzt (GephRRRR). Analog hierzu wurden in der EDomäne einzelne Aminosäuren durch Arginin bzw. Glutamat substituiert (GephRER), um dadurch eine Dimersierung zu verhindern. Für die Kassette C5’ wird angenommen, dass deren Vorhandensein die Interaktion zwischen Gephyrin und GlyR beeinträchtigt, wodurch GlyR aus GABAergenen Synapsen ausgeschlossen wird. Daher wurde der Einfluss dieser Gephyrin-Spleißvariante (GephC5’), die zu einer Peptidinsertion innerhalb der G-Domäne führt, und einer Gephyrin-Mutante (Gephmut), die den Verlust der Wechselwirkung mit dem GlyR bedingt, auf die Aggregatbildung von Gephyrinoligomeren untersucht. Bei dem Konstrukt Gephmut wurden, basierend auf Daten von Röntgenstrukturuntersuchungen, neun Aminosäuren (713-721) am Cterminalen Ende der E-Domäne durch den homologen Bereich des bakteriellen MoeA Proteins aus E. coli ersetzt. Zunächst wurden die einzelnen isolierten Domänen mittels Gelfiltration hinsichtlich ihres Oligomerisierungsverhaltens untersucht. Die Mutationen wurden hierzu in verkürzte Proteine eingeführt, bei denen nur die G- bzw. die E-Domäne exprimiert wurden. Diese Konstrukte wurden daher als GRRRR, GC5’ bzw. ERER und Emut bezeichnet. Bei diesen zeigte sich, dass die G-Domäne des Gephyrin-Wildtyps zu trimeren Proteinkomplexen oligomerisiert. Im Gegensatz hierzu war die Mutante GRRRR nicht in der Lage, Trimere zu bilden. Das Einfügen der C5’-Kassette führte ebenfalls zu einer Störung der Trimerisierung. Gelfiltrationsexperimente mit der E-Domäne ergaben, dass die mutierte Domäne ERER, im Gegensatz zum Wildtyp-Konstrukt, keine Dimere ausbildet. Bisherige Studien haben jedoch gezeigt, dass das Emut Polypeptid zur Dimerisierung befähigt ist. Das Oligomerisierungsverhalten des kompletten Gephyrin-Proteins wurde mittels blauer nativer Gelelektrophorese (BN-PAGE) analysiert. Für die hier beschriebenen Untersuchungen mit BN-PAGE wurde rekombinantes Gephyrin in Xenopus laevis Oozyten heterolog exprimiert. Die Analyse ergab, dass Wildtyp Gephyrin nativ als Hexamer vorliegt, welches durch ansteigende Konzentrationen des Detergenzes Natriumdodecylsulfat (SDS) in Trimere, Dimere und Monomere zerfällt. Sowohl GephRRRR und GephC5’ liegen nativ fast ausschließlich als Dimere vor, während GephRER nur trimere Aggregate formt. Die entsprechende Doppelmutante mit Mutationen in Gund E-Domäne war wie erwartet nur noch als Monomer existent. Die als Kontrolle eingesetzte Glyzinrezeptor-Bindungsmutante Gephmut bildete, ebenso wie der Wildtyp, Hexamere aus. Daraus folgt, dass die Oligomere der G- bzw E-Domäne Zwischenprodukte der Hexamerbildung darstellen. Die Analyse der Oligomerisierungseigenschaften der Mutanten wurde nachfolgend in humanen embryonalen Nierenzellen (HEK 293T) untersucht. Nach heterologer Expression von Wildtyp Gephyrin in HEK 293T-Zellen formen sich große, charakteristische Gephyrinaggregate. Die Oligomerisierungs-Mutanten GephRRRR, GephRER und GephC5’ aggregierten jedoch nicht, sondern waren diffus im Zytoplasma verteilt. Die wiederum als Kontrolle eingesetzte Bindungsmutante Gephmut hingegen wies eine normale Aggregation auf. Diese Ergebnisse bestätigen die grundlegende Rolle der Oligomerisierung von G- und E- Domänen für die Aggregatbildung von Gephyrin. Mittels GST-Pulldown und Kolokalisationsanalysen in HEK Zellen wurde die Wechselwirkung der Gephyrinmutanten mit der GlyR beta, dem Motorkomplexprotein Dynein light chain-1 (Dlc-1) und dem Guanin-Nukleotid-Austauschfaktor Collybistin (Cb) untersucht. Beide Ansätze weisen darauf hin, dass die Trimerisierung der G-Domäne an der Interaktion von Gephyrin mit Dlc-1 und die Dimerisierung der E-Domäne bei der Bindung an GlyR beta und Cb beteiligt ist. Die Mutante Gephmut zeigte in beiden Fällen einen totalen Verlust der Bindungsfähigkeit sowohl an das GlyR beta Bindungsmotiv als auch an Cb. Der Einbau der C5’ Kassette in Gephyrin scheint jedoch nicht dessen Bindung an den GlyR zu beeinflussen. Für die Analyse der Clusterbildung und des zielgerichteten Transports in Neuronen wurden Wildtyp und mutiertes Gephyrin in hippocampalen und spinalen Primärkulturen der Ratte exprimiert. Zur Überprüfung einer synaptischen Lokalisation wurde Gephyrin gemeinsam mit dem vesikulären inhibitorischen Aminosäure-Transporter (VIAAT), einem präsynaptischen Marker-Protein, detektiert. In beiden Kulturen wies Gephyrin eine punktartige Verteilung in den Neuriten auf und wurde gezielt an Synapsen angereichert. Im Kontrast dazu zeigten alle Oligomerisierungsmutanten, GephRRRR, GephC5’ und GephRER keine Ausbildung von Clustern sondern eine diffuse Verteilung im Zellkörper und in Dendriten. Das Konstrukt Gephmut wies jedoch Clusterbildung und eine punktförmige Verteilung auf. Diese Daten belegen, dass die Oligomerisierung der G- wie auch der E-Domänen für die Clusterbildung und synaptische Lokalisation von Gephyrin unerlässlich ist. Die Wechselwirkung mit dem GlyR und/oder Collybistin ist ebenfalls für die Anreicherung in der Synapse erforderlich, nicht jedoch für die Bildung der Gephyrin-Cluster. Die dargestellten Ergebnisse belegen die Rolle der spezifischen Oligomerisierungseigenschaften der G- und E-Domäne für die Ausbildung des hexagonalen Gephyringerüstes und dessen grundlegende Bedeutung für die spezifische Anreicherung von Gephyrin an inhibitorischen Synapsen in Neuronen.
The Indian IT industry has received great attention. Although most studies cover South Indian locations, clustering has rarely been a topic. This study focuses on Bangalore addressing questions related to Bangalore’s successful development and lessons thereof for other regions in and outside India. The approach pertains to economic geography and international business; hypotheses have been developed from a multi-disciplinary literature survey and interview fieldwork in Bangalore. I emphasize human and social capital and networks. While the first chapter delineates cultural foundations of human capital formation, the second and third deal with bonding and bridging social capital (or dense and loose networks), respectively; the fourth is an outlook on future opportunities through intersectoral upgrading. The main hypothesis is that a combination of both forms of social networks - contingent upon sub-sectors – has helped Bangalore developing a successful IT industry. Positive attitudes towards education led to relatively more human capital spawning two positive feedbacks: 1) establishment of national research and educational institutes resulting in large inflows of a diversity of people providing the required setting for creativity and innovation; 2) transnational networks linking to Silicon Valley are dominated by people from South India, allowing for additional knowledge spillovers corroborating the regional clustering.
The goal of this thesis was to gain further insight into the binding behavior of ligands in the heptahelical domain (HD) of group I metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs). This was realized by the establishment of strategies for the detection and optimization of molecules acting as non-competitive antagonists of group I mGluRs (mGluR1/5). These strategies should guarantee high diversity in the retrieved chemotypes of the detected compounds not resembling original reference molecules (“scaffold-hopping”). The detection of new scaffolds, in turn, was divided into two approaches: First the development of pharmacological assays to screen compounds at a certain target for bioactivity (here: affinity towards the allosteric recognition site of mGluR1 and mGluR5), and second the evaluation of computer assisted methods for the identification of virtual hits to be screened afterwards on the pharmacological assays established before. Promising molecules should be optimized with respect to activity/affinity and selectivity, their binding mode investigated and, finally, compared to existing lead compounds. Initially, membrane based binding assays for the HD of mGlu1 and mGlu5 receptors with enhanced throughput (shifting from 24-well plates to 96-well plates) were set up. For the mGluR1 assay the potent antagonist EMQMCM exhibited high affinity towards the binding site (Ki ~3nM), which is in accordance with published data from Mabire et al. (functional IC50 3nM). For mGluR5 the reference antagonist MPEP binds with high affinity to the receptor (binding IC50 13.8nM), which confirmed earlier findings from Anderson et al. (binding IC50 15nM). In another series of experiments the properties of rat cerebellar (mGluR1) and corticalmembranes (mGluR5) as well as of radiotracers were investigated by means of binding saturation studies and kinetic experiments. Furthermore, the influence of the solvent DMSO, necessary for compound screening of lipophilic substances, on positive and negative controls was evaluated. As the precise architecture of the HD of mGluR1 is still not known our efforts in identifying new ligands for this receptor focused on the ligand-based approach. All computer assisted methods that were applied to virtually screen large compound collections and to retrieve potential hits (“activity-enriched subsets”) acting at the heptahelical domain of mGluR1 relied on the existence of a valid dataset of reference molecules. This was realized by an initial compilation of a mGluR reference data collection comprising in total 357 entries predominantly negative but also some positive allosteric modulators for mGluR1 and mGluR5. In the next step a pharmacophore model for non-competitive mGluR1 antagonists was constructed. It was based upon six selective, potent and structurally diverse ligands. Prospective virtual screening was performed using the CATS atom-pair descriptor. The Asinex Gold-Collection was screened for each seed compound and some of the most similar compounds (according to the CATS descriptor) were ordered and tested forbinding affinity and functional activity at mGluR1. A high hit rate of approximately 26% (IC50 < 15 micro M) was yielded confirming the applicability of this method. One compound exerted functional activity below one micro molar (IC50-value of C-07:362nM ± 0.03). Moreover, non-linear principal component analysis was employed. Again the Asinex vendor database served as test database and was filtered by the pharmacophore model for mGluR1 established before. Test molecules that were adjacently located with mGluR1 antagonist references were selected. 15 compounds were tested on mGluR1 in binding and functional assays and three of them exhibited functional activity (IC50) below 15 micro M. The most potent molecule P-06 revealed an IC50-value of 1.11 micro M (± 0.41). The COBRA database comprising 5,376 structurally diverse bioactive molecules affecting various targets was encoded with the CATS descriptor and used for training two selforganizing maps (SOM). The encoded mGluR reference data collection was projected onto this map according to the SOM algorithm. This projection allowed to clearly distinguish between antagonists of mGluR1 and mGluR5 subtype. 28 compounds were ordered and tested on activity and affinity for mGluR1. They exhibited functional activity down to the sub-micro molar range (IC50-value of S-08: 744nM ± 0.29) yielding a final hit rate of 46% (<15 micro M). Then, the Asinex collection was screened using the SOM approach. For a predicted target panel including the muscarinic mACh (M1) receptor, the histamine H1-receptor and the dopamine D2/D3 receptors, the tested mGluR ligands exhibited the calculated binding pattern. This virtual screening concept might provide a basis for early recognition of potential sideeffects in lead discovery. We superimposed a set of 39 quinoline derivatives as non-competitive mGluR1 antagonists that were recently published by Mabire and co-workers. A CoMFA model (QSAR) was established and the influence of several side chains on functional activity was investigated. The coumarine derivative C-07 was obtained as a result of similarity searching. Starting from this compound a series of chemical derivatives was synthesized. This led to the discovery of potent (B-28, IC50: 58nM ± 0.008; Ki: 293nM ± 0.022) and selective (rmGluR5 IC50: 28.6 micro M) mGluR1 antagonists. From a homology model of mGluR1 we derived a potential binding mode for coumarines within the allosteric transmembrane region. Potential interacting patterns with amino acids were proposed considering the difference of the binding pockets between rat and human receptors. The proposed binding modes for quinolines (here:EMQMCM) and coumarines (here:B-04) were compared and discussed considering in particular the influence on activity of several side chains of quinolines obtained from the QSAR studies. The present studies demonstrated the applicability of ligand-based virtual screening for non-competitive antagonists of a G-protein coupled receptor, resulting in novel, potent and selective agents.
The strong nuclear force is described by Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD), the parallel field theory to Quantum Electrodynamics (QED) that describes the electromagnetic force. It is propagated by gluons analogously to photons in the electromagnetic force, but unlike photons, which do not carry electric charge, gluons carry color, and they can self-interact. However, as individual quarks have never been observed in nature, it is postulated that the color charge itself is confined, and hence all baryons and mesons must be colorless objects. To study nuclear matter under extreme conditions, it is necessary to create hot and dense nuclear matter in the laboratory. In such conditions the confinement between quarks and gluons is cancelled (deconfinement). This state is characterized with a qusi-free behavior of quarks and gluons. The strange (s) and anti-strange (anti-s) quarks are not contained in the colliding nuclei, but are newly produced and show up in the strange hadrons in the final state. It was suggested that strange particle production is enhanced in the QGP with respect to that in a hadron gas. This enhancement is relative to a collision where a transition to a QGP phase does not take place, such as p+p collisions where the system size is very small. Therefore the energy- and system size dependence is studied to receive a picture about the initial state. In this thesis experimental results on the energy- and system size dependence of Xi hyperon production at the CERN SPS is shown. All measurements were performed with the NA49 detector at the CERN SPS. NA49 took central lead-lead collisions from 20 - 158 AGeV, minimus bias lead-lead collisions at 40 and 158 AGeV, and semi-central silicon-silicon colisions at 158 AGeV. The NA49 experiment features a large acceptance in the forward hemisphere allowing for measurements of Xi rapidity spectra. At the SPS accelerator at CERN Pb+Pb collisions are performed with beam energies to 158 AGeV. The analyzed data sets were taken in the period from 1999 to 2002. The NA49 experiment is a large acceptance hadron spectrometer, which measures charged hadrons in a wide acceptance. The main components are the four TPCs (Time Projection Chamber). The centrality of nucleon-nucleon collisions was done by measuring the not in the collision participating (spectator-) nucleons in the VETO-calorimeter. The study of strangeness is motivated by its role as a signature for the Quark Gluon Plasma. Any enhancement in the yield must be with respect to a ’normal’ yield, where a QGP is not formed. This is usually taken to mean suitably scaled p+p collisions, where the volume of the system created is too small for a QGP to occur. The results at SPS and RHIC energies show an enhancement, with the doubly strange Xi? being enhanced more than the Lambda, in accordance with the original prediction. However, the enhancement at SPS energies is higher than at RHIC energies.
Chalcogen-based species are common ligands in transition-metal chemistry and display a variety of coordination modes. Like alkyl- and arylchalcogenolates, silylchalcogenolates are able to stabilize transition-metal complexes. Metal chalcogenolates LnM-ESiR3 with small organic residues R can serve as precursors for larger metal–chalcogenide clusters, which can be accessed by cleaving the E-Si bond. Furthermore, large silyl residues at the chalcogen atom serve to kinetically stabilize reactive systems. To explore the diverse chemistry of this class of compounds, a number of different silyl chalcogenolates were synthesized, including the sodium siloxide Ph2MeSiONa and the chalcogen derivatives of the extremely sterically hindered silyl residues tBu2PhSi- und tBu3Si-. The anionic silyl species tBu2PhSiNa and tBu3SiNa nucleophilically degrade elemental chalcogens (S, Se, and Te), thus producing the silyl chalcogenolates tBu2PhSiENa and tBu3SiENa (E = S, Se, Te). The chemical and structural properties of these compounds were studied. Protonolysis produces the corresponding chalcogenols tBu2RSiEH, while oxidation leads to the dichalcogenides tBu2RSiE-ESiRtBu2 (R = tBu, Ph; E = S, Se, Te). Oxidative addition of the dichalcogenides to metal centers in low oxidation states offers one route to chalcogenolate complexes. To investigate the realm of this approach, three oligochalcogen compounds R3SiE-E′n-ESiR3 were synthesized. The tetrasulfane tBu3SiS-S2-SSitBu3 and the chalcogen(II)dithiolates (tBu3SiS)2Se and (tBu3SiS)2Te were produced, and their stability was investigated. The direct comparison of isoelectronic species allows for a deeper understanding of their similarities and differences. The silanides R3Si– can be considered as anionic phosphane analogues in which a phosphorus atom has been formally replaced with a Si– unit. Phosphanylborhydrides R2BH3P– also belong to this isoelectronic series. The same analogy holds true for the chalcogen derivatives related to the phosphane chalcogenides R3P=E. With this in mind, complexes of the CpFe(CO)2 fragment with the different isoelectronic ligands were synthesized and compared. The silyl-based ligands were found to be the strongest donors of the two isoelectronic series. The differences in donor strength were roughly twice as large for the nonchalcogen species as for the chalcogen-based ligands. To further investigate the chemistry of transition-metal silyl chalcogenolate complexes, the coordination behavior of the chalcogenolates tBu2RSiE– (R = tBu, Ph; E = S, Se, Te) was studied. Salt metathesis of silyl thiolates with appropriate metal halides leads to the multinuclear complexes [Cu(SSitBu2Ph)]4 and [ZnCl(SSitBu3)(THF)]2. Metathesis products were identified in the reactions of BrMn(CO)5 with one or two equivalents of tBu3SiSNa(THF)2. Diproporationation of these compounds leads to dimeric Mn(I)Mn(II) complexes. The crystal structure of the dinuclear disproportionation product [(CO)3Mn(mu-SSitBu3)3Mn(SSitBu3)]– displays a terminal tBu3SiS– ligand, which coordinates with a Mn-S-Si angle of 180°. This geometry indicates that the thiolate can be considered as a six-electron donor (2 sigma e–, 4 pie–), analogous to the cyclopentadienyl ligand. Photoinduced oxidative addition of the dichalcogenides to Fe(CO)5 leads to the dimeric complexes [(CO)3Fe(ESitBu3)]2 (E = S, Se, Te). The tellurolate complex forms quantitatively within 8 h. The thiolate complex, on the other hand, is formed slowly over a period of six months. IR-spectroscopic investigation of the CO vibrations of the three homologous complexes indicates that the tellurolate is the strongest donor of the series.
Koalas are popular zoo animals, but difficult in husbandry. In addition to their specialised diet of eucalyptus leaves, they are prone to “stress” and disease. Particularly in European zoos, themonitoring of theirwell-being has high priority and they are protected from possible stressors. However, stress signs in koalas are vague and monitoring techniques like weighing might result in discomfort itself. Additionally, husbandry routines are planned according to keeper’s schedule, not to the endogenous rhythms of the koalas. Therefore it is necessary to investigate activity pattern in captive koalas and the signals influencing them. These signals have to be assessed on the strength and quality of their impact. A total of 17 koalas have been observed in three zoological gardens in Australia and Europe. Koalas kept in outdoor enclosures with little human contact (Koala Walkabout, Taronga Zoo, Sydney) showed a uniform activity pattern, which was clearly entrained by light. Activity levels were higher during the night, and there was a pronounced resting period in the morning which corresponds with low body temperature measured by Degabriele and Dawson (1979). Activity peaks were related to twilight and changed during the year related to day lengths. However, there was a clear influence from the introduction of fresh browse which resulted in a distinct feeding peak in the afternoon. With short day lengths, this stimulus competed with dusk. Activity patterns from koalas in indoor enclosures (Zoo Duisburg, Vienna Zoo) varied between individuals and in some cases lacked a detectable rhythm. Though activity peaks were related to light, entrainment to sunlight was weak. In winter, koalas reacted primarily to the artificial light, but some also showed activity peaks related to sunlight. Activity patterns in these koalas were less structured and differed severely from patterns expected according to literature. Activity was often related to the keeper’s presence and food introduction. Frequency of feeding bouts was considerably higher at Vienna Zoo compared to the other zoos and the bouts were shorter in duration. Time budgets of the koalas were within the range given in free-range studies. Feeding showed seasonal changes and was increased in lactating females. Koalas at Vinna Zoo had a high level of locomotor activity compared to the size of the enclosure. Koalas at Koala Walkabout were not used to handling, so they resisted the keeper. The koalas at the two European zoos were handled regularly and settled down quickly. However, handling took place in the morning; in most koalas, there was no activity prior to it. In Vienna, resting periods were interrupted daily due to weighing. Food introduction at KoalaWalkabout took place in the afternoon. It was preceded by locomotor activity and triggered a long feeding bout in the koalas. It is not clear, whether food had true Zeitgeber properties or masked the endogenous rhythm. In the two European zoos, food was introduced in the morning. The peaks related to this were smaller than those at Koala Walkabout. Activity was rarely observed prior to food introduction. The koalas at Koala Encounter, Taronga Zoo (Sydney),were regularly confronted with visitors, though no contact was allowed. Direct observation by the keepers did rarely show any stress signs. Activity patterns at night were strikingly similar to Koala Walkabout, but differed dramatically during the day. Food was introduced three times a day, which usually resulted in activity that interrupted a resting period. Generally, the koalas at Koala Encounter were more active than those at KoalaWalkabout. They also displayed a high level of locomotor activity, especially on the ground, which is an accepted sign of discomfort in koalas (Wood 1978; Zoological Society of San Diego 2001; Yusuf& Rosenthal unpublished data). In summary, this chronoethological study of the captive koalas showed that there are several problems with koala husbandry. Artificial light regimes for koalas are not sufficient for entrainment and result in unstructured activity pattern. This is especially the case in winter, when the day in Europe is artificially extended. Due to the mainly nocturnal behaviour of koalas, such an extension might not be necessary and therefore should be avoided. Handling in Europe took place during the physiological resting time of the koalas. Interruptions of resting times are considered as stressors (Wood 1978) and should be avoided. Handling in the afternoon would be more suitable for the koalas and triggered activity in the two koalas at Vienna Zoo. It is also arguable if daily weighing is necessary to monitor health in captive koalas or if the frequent interruption of resting countervail the advantages of constant monitoring. Frequent contact with visitors, evenwithout the so-called cuddling, has a considerable impact on activity patterns and time budget of koalas, even if no immediate stress signs are displayed. Such contact should therefore be reduced to a minimum and chronoethological observations of the koalas should be used. A study on koalas with direct visitor contact is also advisable to revise the current legislation on “koala cuddling”. Koalas frequently rested in living trees if they had access to it. Since no food-poisoning has been reported from koalas using living non-food trees, the provision of living trees with an appropriate canopy should be included in the husbandry guidelines. Increased locomotor activity has been shown to be related to conditions of discomfort or stress and possibly to oestrus. This is in accordance with literature (Wood 1978; Zoological Society of San Diego 2001). Further observation, combined with hormone analysis, are advisable to establish this parameter for evaluation of well-being. Chronoethology has proven to be useful for the evaluation of husbandry conditions and group dynamics. Different to other, traditional ethologicalmethods, it indicated problems and enabled me to advise more appropriate times for handling and food introduction. It is desirable that zoos already using 24-hour video observation include chronoethological aspects into their analysis.
The development of a drug product, beginning with the synthesis of the drug substance through approval for marketing, may take up to 15 years and a total amount of investment of up to half a billion Euro. After the discovery of a potential drug substance, many different investigations have to be performed: e.g. characterization of the physical-chemical properties, the pharmacological and toxicological profile and, especially relevant for this work, the development of the first dosage forms. After achieving these steps, first investigations in human studies can be carried out. After a positive assessment of the benefit to risk ratio, further investigations, such as food effects on the pharmacokinetics, multiple dosing studies and further studies on patients can be implemented. After successfully completing this second part the new drug product can be approved. With broader clinical experience it often becomes apparent that changes in relevant aspects of the formulation of the registered drug product e.g. excipients, concentration of the drug substance or excipient versus drug substance ratio, are necessary to optimise the therapy. This often leads to additional clinical investigations and a new registration, a procedure which is time and cost intensive. A possible way to reduce the financial and time investments, is to establish an appropriate in vivo- in vitro correlation (IVIVC). If it is possible to predict the in vivo performance of a drug product adequately with in vitro methods (dissolutions tests), it will no longer be necessary to perform additional clinical investigations. In this work, IVIVCs were investigated for three different drug substances and several different types of formulations.... ...Results of this work clearly show that successful IVIVCs can be achieved for the fasted state using biorelevant dissolution media. A prerequisite of achieving a good IVIVC is the availability of in vivo data of a reference product (i.v., oral solution or IR) tested within the same group of volunteers as the product of interest. Only with this procedure, one can obtain adequate IVIVCs for drug substances with high inter-individual variability of the plasma concentrations and with high first-pass metabolism. This work also shows that predictions of the in vivo behavior of a modified release dosage form after administration with a high fat meal are more difficult to obtain. This is mainly related to an absence of a medium, which could mimic the situation of the fed stomach adequately. Ensure plus®, which was chosen in this work, failed to simulate the fed stomach adequately in several cases; it suppressed the release of rosiglitazone from lipid formulations and led to rapid disruption of the HPMC-matrix of the 5-ISMN Geomatrix formulations. Future work should be directed towards optimization of the test media in the BioDis apparatus. This work clearly shows the inability of Ensure plus® to predict the in vivo performance of a drug under fed state conditions and indicates that alternative media must be developed. It is known that the pH of the stomach rises up to six after the intake of a meal. During the following hours the pH decreases until reaching the baseline value of approximately 1.8. One possibility of simulating the fed state stomach more precisely will be to divide the overall residence time into 4 different parts: 1. half a hour at pH 6 2. half a hour at pH 4 3. one hour at pH 3 4. two hours at pH 1.8 Another option is not only to modify the pH of the medium, but also to change its composition. During the decomposition of the food contents, the composition of the gastric juice changes, the ionic strength, the buffer capacity and the osmolarity rises, while the pH value decreases. A third possibility will be the addition of enzymes, mainly pepsin, lipases and amylases. Again, the quantity of the enzymes differs during the residence time of the food in the stomach. Highest quantities are expected in the first two hours after food intake and decreases in the remaining two hours. Another issue of this work was an assessment of the two dissolution apparatus, Paddle and BioDis. In general, the choice of the dissolution apparatus should be done primarily with respect to the solubility behavior of the drug substance. For high soluble drugs the USP apparatus II, Paddle, is sufficient (e.g. diltiazem or 5-ISMN). In cases of a poorly soluble drug (rosiglitazone), where the release strongly depends on the medium used, the USP apparatus III (BioDis) is favored, due to the advantage of simulating the GI-tract with a gradient of different dissolution media, each simulating one part of the GI-tract. In summary, the results of this work indicate that it is acurrently possible to predict fasted state behavior of a variety of controlled release products using in vitro tests. Prognoses was also made in terms of predicting food effects on the behavior of controlled release products, although it is clear that the media compositions will have to be revised to establish releiable predictive methods for the fed state.
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) comprise the largest membrane protein family and play an essential role in signal transduction through the cell membrane. They are currently the targets of approximately 50 % of the pharmaceuticals on the market (Klabunde and Hessler, 2002). However, only one high-resolution GPCR structure has been determined up to now, that of bovine rhodopsin (Palczewski et al., 2000). The GPCR activation and regulation mechanisms are still unknown and other GPCR structures are thus required. MePNet (Membrane Protein Network) was a European consortium dedicated to structural studies of GPCRs. The approach was to produce 100 GPCRs in three expression systems (Escherichia coli, Pichia pastoris and Semliki Forest Virus infected mammalian cells) in order to select at each step of the process (production, solubilization, purification) the constructs that fulfilled quantity and quality (functionality) requirements for crystallization trials. In our team, we screened 38 of the 100 targets in P. pastoris. For each receptor, the clone with the highest production level was identified by dot-blot. The size and homogeneity of each receptor were then analyzed by Western-blot. The human adenosine A2A receptor showed a well-defined and pronounced single band and was thus selected for further characterization. The adenosine A2A receptor is a GPCR mainly localized in the central nervous system and, as it antagonizes dopaminergic activity, it has great potential as a drug target for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease. Functional characterization by binding assays with the specific antagonist [3H]-ZM241385 demonstrated a Bmax of 56 +/- 3 pmol/mg i.e. pmol of binder per milligram of total membrane protein, and a KD of 0.40 +/- 0.02 nM. Receptor production was then improved by lowering the induction temperature, decreasing the induction time and adding DMSO to the medium. For large-scale production, fermention reached around 300 g cells (wet weight)/L culture, which provided 43 mg of functional receptor in membranes per liter of culture. Functional solubilization was achieved with dodecyl-β-D-maltoside and the soluble yield was increased to 70-80 % of the membrane content by addition of cholesteryl hemisuccinate and increasing the ionic strength. The receptor was successfully purified via Ni-NTA and monomeric avidin chromatography in the presence of the antagonist ZM241385. This strategy produced a pure, homogeneous and stable receptor preparation with functionality demonstrated by radioligand binding assays. The total receptor yield after purification was routinely around 20 % of the membrane functional receptor content and 2 g of membranes provided 4 mg of pure receptor for crystallization trials. GPCRs are very difficult targets for crystallization, and co-crystallization with antibody fragments has been shown to be a successful method for crystallization of membrane proteins. In order to develop such a tool for the adenosine A2A receptor, a single-chain Fv (scFv) fragment specific to the purified receptor was selected by phage display. The receptor was functionally immobilized on the surface of streptavidin beads and after two rounds of selection, 6 different phages were identified several times. After production in E. coli and purification via Ni-NTA affinity chromatography, 4 out of the 6 scFv fragments were sufficiently enriched to be tested by ELISA. For the ELISA, the receptor was functionally immobilized via the biotinylation domain of the construct in a 96-well streptavidin-coated plate. The antibody fragments binding to the receptor were identified based on interaction with HRP-conjugated protein L. One scFv fragment gave a positive ELISA signal 10 fold above background and titration of the scFv fragment binding to the receptor was specific and saturable. However no complex of scFv fragment and receptor was observed on gel filtration. In order to have a more sensitive detection method, the scFv fragment was labeled with fluorescein: a complex was then observed up on gel filtration but the binding appeared to be non-specific. A pull-down assay with immobilized non-labeled scFv fragment finally confirmed the specificity of the binding, but also the low affinity of the interaction. Affinity maturation of this specific scFv fragment by a random mutagenesis and selection process should improve this parameter in order to obtain an adapted tool for co-crystallization.
Synaptopodin is the founding member of a family of actin-associated proline-rich proteins. It is present in a subset of telencephalic dendritic spines, where it is tightly associated with the dendritic spine apparatus, a putative calcium store. Synaptopodin-deficient mice lack the spine apparatus and show deficits in long-term potentiation and spatial memory. Thus, synaptopodin appears to play a role in synaptic plasticity. In the present thesis, three major questions were addressed: (1) What is the distribution of synaptopodin and the spine apparatus in identified hippocampal neurons? (2) Is the distribution of synaptopodin affected by denervation? (3) Is synaptopodin involved in the regulation of denervation-induced spine loss? The major findings of this thesis are: (1) Immunohistochemistry in the hippocampus of wildtype and EGFP-transgenic mice revealed significant layer-specific differences in the prevalence of synaptopodin at the level of individual neurons. (2) Light and electron microscopic analysis also revealed the presence of synaptopodin in axon initial segments of cortical and hippocampal principal neurons. There, it was found to be an essential component of the cisternal organelle, a putative axonal homologue of the dendritic spine apparatus. (3) Immunohistochemistry in the rat fascia dentata before and following entorhinal deafferentation revealed changes in synaptopodin expression in denervated and non-denervated layers of the hippocampus, suggesting that the distribution of synaptopodin in hippocampal neurons is regulated by presynaptic signals. (4) The dynamics of denervation-induced spine plasticity were studied in vitro using confocal live imaging of organotypic entorhino-hippocampal slice cultures. Whereas spines were remarkably stable under control conditions, spine loss and spine formation were seen following denervation. No significant differences were observed between cultures from wildtype and synaptopodin-deficient mice, suggesting that synaptopodin is not involved in lesion-induced spine plasticity. (5) Finally, a set of transgenic mice expressing fluorescently tagged synaptopodin were generated to facilitate future experiments on the dynamics and function of synaptopodin. In summary, this thesis presents novel findings on (1) the subcellular distribution of synaptopodin in spines and the axon initial segment, (2) the molecular composition of the cisternal organelle, and (3) the dynamics of spines and the spine apparatus organelle following deafferentation in vivo and in vitro.
A new technique for precision ion implantation has been developed. A scanning probe has been equipped with a small aperture and incorporated into an ion beamline, so that ions can be implanted through the aperture into a sample. By using a scanning probe the target can be imaged in a non-destructive way prior to implantation and the probe together with the aperture can be placed at the desired location with nanometer precision. In this work first results of a scanning probe integrated into an ion beamline are presented. A placement resolution of about 120 nm is reported. The final placement accuracy is determined by the size of the aperture hole and by the straggle of the implanted ion inside the target material. The limits of this technology are expected to be set by the latter, which is of the order of 10 nm for low energy ions. This research has been carried out in the context of a larger program concerned with the development of quantum computer test structures. For that the placement accuracy needs to be increased and a detector for single ion detection has to be integrated into the setup. Both issues are discussed in this thesis. To achieve single ion detection highly charged ions are used for the implantation, as in addition to their kinetic energy they also deposit their potential energy in the target material, therefore making detection easier. A special ion source for producing these highly charged ions was used and their creation and interactions with solids of are discussed in detail.
Since its recognition as an endothelium-derived relaxing factor, the control and consequences of nitric oxide (NO) production have been investigated intensely. We know now that NO is not simply a vasodilator or regulator of smooth muscle tone but is a potent anti-platelet agent, neuromodulator and regulator of gene expression. NO is synthesized from the amino acid Larginine by a family of enzymes termed NO synthases (NOS). The ‘endothelial’ (eNOS or NOS III) and ‘neuronal’ (nNOS, NOS I or bNOS) NOS isoforms, which were named after the tissues in which they were first identified, are expressed constitutively and are generally regulated by Ca2+/calmodulin (CaM). Endothelium-derived NO is thought to be responsible for maintaining the vasculature in an anti-atherosclerotic state and a decrease in the bioavailability of NO (a state generally referred to as endothelial dysfunction) results in “proatherosclerotic” alterations in vascular gene expression. Recently it has become clear that the activity of eNOS is largely determined by its association with regulatory proteins as well as by the phosphorylation of the enzyme on serine, threonine and possibly tyrosine residues. Moreover, the enzyme can be “uncoupled” i.e. transformed from a NO generating to a superoxide (O2-)-generating enzyme, which would be expected to attenuate vasodilator responses and enhance vascular inflammation. The aim of this thesis was to study the consequences of phosphorylation on specific serine, threonine and tyrosine residues on the activity and intracellular localisation of eNOS and in particular to determine whether a phospho-switch for eNOS uncoupling exists. eNOS is phosphorylated under basal conditions and its serine phosphorylation can be enhanced following cell stimulation with hemodynamic stimuli such as cyclic stretch and fluid shear stress as well as by hormonal stimuli such as histamine and bradykinin. Our group has previously demonstrated the importance of Ser1177 in the activation of eNOS and here I set out to determine the relative importance of phosphorylation on Ser633 and Ser114. By generating point mutants in which serine was replaced by either alanine (nonphosphorylatable mutants) or aspartate (phosphomimetic mutants) it was observed that the activity of the S633D and S114A eNOS mutants exhibited an 2-fold increase over the activity of the wild-type enzyme or either of the S633/634A or S114D eNOS mutants as determined by monitoring the conversion of L-arginine to L-citrulline. eNOS is basally phosphorylated on Thr495 and stimulation of endothelial cells with Ca2+-elevating agonists generally results in the transient dephosphorylation of this residue. The latter is essential to allow the binding of calmodulin to the enzyme and is the actually initiating step in the generation of NO. Correspondingly, the T495A eNOS mutant can be activated at lower Ca2+ and calmodulin concentrations than the T495D mutant. However, some eNOS mutants (T494A/S1177D and T495A) showed an enhanced ability to generate O2- in a NOS inhibitor-sensitive manner suggesting that the phosphorylation of the enzyme may also play a role in the uncoupling process. To determine the physiological relevance of eNOS dephosphorylation on Thr495 we assessed the consequences of treating cells with oxidised low-density lipoprotein (ox-LDL) on eNOS phosphorylation as well as on the eNOS-dependent generation of NO and O2-. Oxidised LDL concentration- and time-dependently decreased phosphorylation of eNOS on Thr495 and led to a concomitant decrease in cellular levels of cyclic GMP and an enhanced production of O2 - compared to cells treated with native LDL. Alterations in the activity of protein kinase C (PKC) were related to the change in eNOS Thr495 phosphorylation. There was not only the basal activity of PKCα inhibited by ox-LDL but the PKC activator phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate also failed to elicit the phosphorylation of Thr495 in ox-LDL-treated endothelial cells. The dephosphorylation of eNOS on Thr495 in response to the addition of ox-LDL was not associated with an increase in the binding of calmodulin to eNOS, an association usually necessary for the activation of eNOS. Moreover, following treatment with ox-LDL for 24 hours eNOS was no longer detected at the plasma membrane but was redistributed to the cytosol indicating that ox-LDL may disrupt the eNOS signalling complex or signalosome. To date the role played by the tyrosine phosphorylation of eNOS in the regulation of its activity or intracellular association is controversial. However, during the preparation of this thesis we have been able to demonstrate a link between the tyrosine phosphorylation of eNO and the activation of the tyrosine kinases Src and PYK2. The application of fluid shear stress to endothelial cells resulted in the activation of Src and PYK2 as well as in the association of PYK2 with eNOS. Co-expression of eNOS and PYK2 led to the putative identification of Tyr657 as a potential modulatory site. Mutating eNOS at Tyr657 to Asp or Glu resulted in the localisation of the mutant eNOS predominantly in the cytoskeleton and also in a complete inactivation of the enzyme. The Y657F mutants, on the other hand, did not demonstrate any marked alteration in the activity when compared with the wild-type eNOS. However, the In conclusion, the results describe in this thesis indicate that eNOS is regulated by phosphorylation at multiple sites. Depending on the phosphorylation site involved phosphorylation can inhibit or activate NO production or even uncouple the enzyme so that it generates O2-. While the phosphor-status of eNOS on Ser114 and Ser633 influenced NO release they did not contribute to O2 - production and the dephosphorylation of Thr495 seems sufficient to uncouple eNOS. Cell treatment with ox-LDL, which is known to increase eNOS-derived O2- output was correlated with a dephosphorylation of Thr495 as well as a decrease in the activity of the kinase that phosphorylates this site i.e., PKCα. The phosphorylation status of all the eNOS serine and threonine residues studied however did not influence the ability of the enzyme to dimerise, indicating that contrary to previously published reports the eNOS dimer is highly stable in endothelial cells. The tyrosine phosphorylation of eNOS was not initially expected to play a determinant role in the regulation but rather to facilitate the docking of associated regulatory proteins. However, Tyr657 seems to play a critical role in the generation of NO as its mutation resulted in the generation of a completely inactive enzyme as well as in an apparent intracellular mislocalisation of the protein. The physiological relevance of these findings remain to be further elucidated.
In the present work we applied the Optically read out PArticle track Chamber, OPAC, for the measurement of radial dose distributions, d(r), around tracks of heavy ions passing through the gas-filled sensitive volume of the chamber. The measured data were compared with d(r) functions derived from data calculated with the Monte Carlo particle transport code, TRAX – which is used for the heavy ion therapy planning at GSI. To measure this quantity we have used here an optically read out time projection chamber (OPAC) with a parallel-drift field and one or several electron and light amplification stages. The two dimensional projection of the three dimensional ionization pattern caused by the ionizing particle passing through the chamber is captured by an image intensified CCD camera. The work is motivated by the role the radial dose distribution plays in the estimation of the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of heavy ions, e.g. in radiation therapy and in radiation protection. The most successful model for high-dose irradiation with ions (applicable e.g. for heavy ion therapy) is found to be the local effect model (LEM). The present work intends to deliver measured data for one of the basic physical parameters which serve as input for the application of the local effect model: the radial dose distribution, d(r). The first goal of our measurement program was the measurement of d(r) distributions around carbon ions of different energies from 400 MeV/u down to the Bragg peak regions. We found an excellent agreement between the measured and simulated distributions at all carbon energies for the r–range in which the measurements deliver useful results. The lower limit of this range is about 100 nm and the upper limit is 6000 nm at a resolution of down to 33 nm - if scaled to water density. Despite the simplifications in the TRAX code (e.g. binary encounter theory for the emission ionization electrons), the discrepancies between the simulated and measured d(r) distributions are found to be lower than the measurement uncertainties at most measured carbon ion energies in almost the whole observed r-range. Hence, within the limitations of our measurements we can conclude that the precision of TRAX is sufficient to simulate the d(r) distributions around carbon ions to serve as input parameter for therapy planning. However, this conclusion is only valid for larger radial distances (r >100 nm). For smaller radial distances the measured data are dominated by the diffusion. Apart from carbon ion tracks, tracks of very heavy ions (40Ar, 84Kr and 238U) were also measured with OPAC. The simulated d(r) values were typically slightly or significantly higher than the measured data in the 100 nm < r < 5000 nm region. The experience has shown: the heavier or the faster the ion, the higher the discrepancies. On the one hand, we found a surprisingly good agreement between measurements and simulations if the ions had energies of around 50 MeV/u (i.e. relatively low energy). On the other hand, at higher energies, simulated data underestimate the measured ones by up to a factor of two in the region of 100 nm < r < 1000 nm for 84Kr (E = 650 MeV/u) or in the region of 100 nm < r < 6000 nm for 238U (E = 1 GeV/u). A possible reason for these discrepancies is that the BEA model, used in TRAX for the production ionization electrons, is not adequate for very heavy projectiles. The energy values of the very heavy ions were selected with the aim of comparing the track structures - and namely the d(r) distributions - of ions with largely different atomic mass but similar LET values. From the Z-dependency of the stopping power we know that for heavier ions a higher specific ion energy (expressed in MeV/u) is required to provide the same LET. For example the common LET of 315 keV/micro-m was achieved at largely different specific energy levels of 4,4 MeV/u for 12C, 65 MeV/u for 40Ar and 650 MeV/u for 84Kr ions. The difference in the track structures was expected mainly due to the different ion velocities and thus e.g. different ranges of d-electrons. This expectation could be confirmed by the measurements. The reason why - in line with the simulations - no strong differences could be observed in the d(r) distributions of the argon and krypton ions is the relatively small difference in the velocities of the both ion types in conjunction with the limited range in r, where the data can be compared. In contrary, the d(r) function of the carbon ion shows a qualitatively different behavior than the heavier ions inside the observable radius-range - in agreement with the simulations.
An application of EPR spectroscopy that is becoming increasingly important is the measurement of distances between electron spins. Several EPR methods have been developed for this purpose, all based on measuring the dipolar coupling between two spins. Due to the specific nature of the sample, we applied dipolar relaxation enhancement measurements to study the geometry of a protein-protein complex. The paramagnetic centers in question had EPR spectra that were too broad and had such short relaxation time that they could not be studied using the more straightforward PELDOR technique. EPR spectral resolution can be increased appreciably by measuring at a frequency higher than conventional X-band (9 GHz) frequency. The spectra of many paramagnetic species can only be resolved at frequencies higher than 90 GHz. For accurate measurement of the orientation of the vector between two dipolar coupled spins with respect to the g-tensors of the spins, high spectral resolution is required. We therefore performed our EPR measurements at G-band (180 GHz) frequency. Dipolar relaxation measurements were applied to study the complex that is formed by the two electron-transfer proteins cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) from the soil bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans. We were able to detect dipolar relaxation enhancement due to complex formation of soluble subunit II of P.d. CcO (CcOII) with two substrate cytochromes, which was practically absent in a mixture of CcOII with the negative control protein cytochrome c1. This complex formation was characterized by a pronounced temperature dependence that could be simulated using a home-written computer program. The G-band EPR measurements could not be simulated with a single complex geometry. This provided evidence for the hypothesis that electron-transfer protein complexes are short-lived and highly dynamic; they do not seem to form one specific electron-transfer conformation, but rather move around on each other’s binding surfaces and transfer an electron as soon as the distance between donor and acceptor is short enough. As a test of our simulation program, we also applied dipolar relaxation measurements to specially synthesized organic molecules that contained a nitroxide radical and a metal center. The transverse relaxation of Cu2+-OEP-TPA was compared to the relaxation of Ni2+-OEP-TPA at temperatures between 20 and 120 K. In this temperature range, the nitroxide relaxation was enhanced due to the presence of Cu2+, but not by Ni2+. Similarly, relaxation enhancement was found in the nitroxide-Mn2+ pair in Mn2+-terpyridine-TPA with respect to the terpyridine-TPA ligand. Due to the fast T2 relaxation of the nitroxide radical at high temperatures, the measurements were all performed in the low-temperature regime where the T1 relaxation rate of the metal ion was smaller than the dipolar coupling frequency. In this region, no structural information about the molecule can be deduced, since the dipolar relaxation enhancement is only determined by the T1 of the metal ion. The dipolar relaxation measurements we performed at high field indicated a difference in relaxation times between X-band and G-band frequencies. Extensive T1 - measurements of different paramagnetic centers (CuA, Cu2+) confirmed a strong dependence of T1 on magnetic field in the temperature range where the direct process is the dominating T1 relaxation process. This dependence is very strong (factor of 103 with respect to X-band), but does not follow the B04 dependence predicted in literature. The T1 relaxation of low-spin iron in cytochrome c at high magnetic field, estimated from dipolar relaxation data, is also in agreement with a larger contribution by the direct process (factor of 104). Dipolar relaxation enhancement was found to be a technique that is useful for measuring distances between paramagnetic centers, but only for systems where several important conditions are met, such as: the system exists in one certain static geometry, and the relaxation rate of the fast-relaxing spin is faster than the dipolar coupling frequency within the accessible temperature range. Additionally, it is a great advantage for the analysis of dipolar relaxation data if the procedure of dividing the relaxation trace of the dipolar-coupled slow-relaxing spin by the relaxation trace of the slow-relaxing spin in absence of dipolar coupling can be applied. Another useful application of dipolar relaxation enhancement measurements is the measurement of T1 relaxation of extremely fast-relaxing spins, or spins that are otherwise difficult to detect.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit der BFV-Reduktion von Hamiltonschen Systemen mit erstklassigen Zwangsbedingungen im Rahmen der klassischen Hamiltonschen Mechanik und im Rahmen der Deformationsquantisierung. Besondere Aufmerksamkeit wird dabei Zwangsbedingungen zuteil, die als Nullfaser singulärer äquivarianter Impulsabbildungen entstehen. Es ist schon länger bekannt, daß für Nullfasern regulärer äquivarianter Impulsabbildungen die in der theoretischen Physik gebräuchliche Methode der BFV-Reduktion zur Phasenraumreduktion nach Marsden/Weinstein äquivalent ist. In [24] konnte gezeigt werden, daß in dieser Situation die BFV-Reduktion sich auch im Rahmen der Deformationsquantisierung natürlich formulieren läßt und erfolgreich zur Konstruktion von Sternprodukten auf Marsden/Weinstein-Quotienten verwendet werden kann. Ein Hauptergebnis der vorliegenden Arbeit besteht in der Verallgemeinerung der Ergebnisse aus [24] auf den Fall singulärer Impulsabbildungen, deren Komponenten 1.) das Verschwindungsideal der Zwangsfläche erzeugen und 2.) einen vollständigen Durchschnitt bilden. Die Argumentation von [24] wird durch Gebrauch der Störungslemmata aus dem Anhang A.1 systematisiert und vereinfacht. Zum Existenzbeweis von stetigen Homotopien und stetiger Fortsetzungsabbildung für die Koszulauflösung werden der Zerfällungssatz und der Fortsetzungssatz von Bierstone und Schwarz [20] benutzt. Außerdem wird ein ’Jacobisches Kriterium’ für die Überprüfung von Bedingung 2.) angegeben. Basierend auf diesem Kriterium und Techniken aus [3] werden die Bedingungen 1.) und 2.) an einer Reihe von Beispielen getestet. Als Korollar erhält man den Beweis dafür, daß es symplektisch stratifizierte Räume gibt, die keine Orbifaltigkeiten sind und dennoch eine stetige Deformationsquantisierung zulassen. Ferner wird (ähnlich zu [92]) eine konzeptionielle Erklärung dafür gegeben, warum im Fall vollständiger Durchschnitte das Problem der Quantisierung der BRST-Ladung eine so einfache Lösung hat. Bildet die Impulsabbildung eine erstklassige Zwangsbedingung, ist aber kein vollständiger Durchschnitt, dann ist es im allgemeinen nicht bekannt, wie entsprechende Quantenreduktionsresultate zu erzielen sind. Ein Hauptaugenmerk der Untersuchung wird es deshalb sein, in dieser Situation die klassische BFV-Reduktion besser zu verstehen – natürlich in der Hoffnung, Grundlagen für eine etwaige (Deformations-)Quantisierung zu liefern. Wir werden feststellen, daß es zwei Gründe gibt, die Tate-Erzeuger (alias: Antigeister höheren Niveaus) notwendig machen: die Topologie der Zwangsfläche und die Singularitätentheorie der Impulsabbildung. Die Zahl der Tate-Erzeuger kann durch Übergang zu projektiven Tate-Erzeugern, also Vektorbündeln, verringert werden. Allerdings sorgt Halperins Starrheitssatz [57] dafür, daß im wesentlichen alle Fälle, für die die Zwangsfläche kein lokal vollständiger Durchschnitt ist, zu unendlich vielen Tate-Erzeugern führen. Erzeugen die Komponenten einer Impulsabbildung einer linearen symplektischen Gruppenwirkung das Verschwindungsideal der Zwangsfläche, so kann man eine lokal endliche Tate-Auflösung finden. Diese besitzt nach dem Fortsetzungssatz und dem Zerfällungssatz von Bierstone und Schwarz stetige, kontrahierende Homotopien. Ausgehend von einer solchen Tate-Auflösung konstruieren wir, die klassische BFV-Konstruktion für vollständige Durchschnitte verallgemeinernd, eine graduierte superkommutative Algebra. Wir können zeigen, daß diese graduierte Algebra auch im Vektorbündelfall eine graduierte Poissonklammer besitzt, die sogenannte Rothstein-Poissonklammer. Die Existenz einer solchen Poissonklammer war bereits von Rothstein [87] für die einfachere Situation einer symplektischen Supermannigfaltigkeit bewiesen worden. Darüberhinaus werden wir sehen, daß es auch im Vektorbündelfall eine BRST-Ladung gibt. Diese sieht im Fall von Impulsabbildungen etwas einfacher aus als für allgemeine erstklassige Zwangsbedingungen. Insgesamt wird also die klassische BFV-Konstruktion [95] auf den Fall projektiver Tate-Erzeuger verallgemeinert, und als eine Homotopieäquivalenz in der additiven Kategorie der Fréchet-Räume interpretiert.
Die vorliegende Arbeit behandelt die Entwicklung und Überprüfung von Modellen zur Berechnung von Schwingungspektren von Peptiden und Proteinen. Solche Modelle verbinden die Konformationsstruktur eines Moleküls mit seinen Schwingungseigenschaften und sind demzufolge wichtig für die Interpretation der Schwingungspektren. Die im Rahmen dieser Arbeit durchgeführte theoretische Erforschung dieses Gebietes beschränkt sich auf die Betrachtung der Amide-I-Moden, welche aufgrund ihrer physikalischen Eigenschaften sich zur Untersuchung der Peptidkonformationen eignen. Die Arbeit kann prinzipiell in zwei Teile separiert werden. In dem ersten Teil werden Fragen betrachtet, die mit der Entwicklung des Schwingungshamiltonian verbunden sind. Im zweiten Teil wurden die erhaltenen Hamiltonian für die Berechnung der Schwingungspektren verwendet. Bei der Berechnung der Schwingungspektren wurden verschiedene spektroskopische Näherungen verwendet und erforscht. Die Entwicklung des Schwingungshamiltonian beinhaltet zwei Aufgaben. Die ab initio Parametrisierung des Schwingungshamiltonian von Dipeptiden, sowie die Analyse der Entwicklungsmethoden für Schwingungshamiltonian von Polypeptiden. Die Entwicklungsmethoden stützen sich auf ab initio berecheten Schwingungseigenschaften von Dipeptiden und/oder elektrostatische Modelle. Die ab initio Parametrisierung basiert auf einer Geometrieoptimierung und anschließender Berechnung von Normalmoden. Hierbei wurde die Abhängigkeit der Ergebnisse vom theoretischen Niveau und dem verwendeten Basissatz untersucht. Die Transformation der errechneten Normalmoden lieferte die Schwingungseigenschaften der lokale Amide-I-Mode. Die Lokalisierung der Normalmode folgt diversen Kriterien. Sie ist von der Wahl der Lokalmoden und somit implizit auch von der Art der Geometrieoptimierung abhängig. Mit dieser Arbeit konnte die Abhängigkeit der Ergebnisse von der Parameterwahl weitgehend aufgeklärt und eine für das Amide-I-System geeignet Parametrisierung gefunden werden. Im nächsten Arbeitsschritt wurde die Abhängigkeit der Amide-I-Schwingungseigenschaften von den Peptidseitenketten und terminalen Gruppen untersucht. Desweiteren wurden Methoden zur Formulierung der Hamiltonian für Polypeptide konzeptionell entwickelt. Diese Untersuchung ist außerordentlich wichtig, da direkte quantenmechanische Berechnungen von Polypeptiden zu zeitaufwendig sind. Solche Methoden beruhen auf dem sogenannten “Building-Block”-Ansatz und verschiedenen elektrostatischen Modellen. In dieser Arbeit wurden sowohl die einzelnen Methoden als auch ihre Kombination für die Entwicklung des Hamiltonians verwendet. Zur Abschätzung der Genauigkeit der verwendeten Methoden wurden Vergleichsrechnungen durchgeführt. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurden die erhaltenen Schwingungshamiltonian zur Berechnung von Schwingungsspektren diverser gelöster Peptide angewandt. In diesem Zusammenhang konnte die Genauigkeit unterschiedlicher spektroskopischer Approximationen überprüft werden. Auf Grundlage der erhaltenen Ergebnisse können wir sagen, dass eine angemessene Beschreibung der konformationellen Verteilung und eine korrekte Berechnung des dynamischen Absorptionsspektrum gewährleistet ist. Was noch fehlt, ist ein hinreichend genaues quantenchemisches Modell für die Schwingungsfrequenzen eines gelösten Peptids. Diese Aufgabe stellt zur Zeit ein aktives Forschungsgebiet dar. Zuletzt wurde das Schwingungsspektrum eines sogenanten “Photoschaltbaren”-Peptids simuliert. Mit Hilfe des dafür aufgestellten Hamiltonians ist man in der Lage spektroskopische Beobachtungen auf Konformationsänderungen direkt zu übertragen.
The aim of the thesis was to identify structure activity relationships (SAR) in the primary screening data of high-throughput screening (HTS) assays. The strategy was to perform a hierarchical clustering of the molecules, assign the primary screening data to the created clusters and derive models from the clusters. The models should serve to identify singletons, clusters enriched with actives, not confirmed hits and false-negatives. Two hierarchical clustering algorithms, NIPALSTREE and hierarchical k-means have been developed and adapted for this purpose, respectively. A graphical user interface (GUI) has been implemented to extract SAR from the clustering results. Retrospective and prospective applications of the clustering approach were performed. SAR models were created by combining the clustering results with different chemoinformatic methods. NIPALSTREE projects a data set onto one dimension using principle component analysis. The data set is sorted according to the scoring vector and split at the median position into two subsets. The algorithm is applied recursively onto the subsets. The hierarchical k-means recursively separates a data set into two clusters using the k-means algorithm. Both algorithms are capable of clustering large data sets with more than a million data points. They were validated and compared to each other on the basis of different structural classes. NIPALSTREE provided with the loading vectors first insights into SAR whereas the hierarchical k-means yielded superior results. A GUI was developed allowing the display of and the navigation in the clustering results. Functionalities were integrated to analyse the clusters in the dendrogram, molecules in a cluster, and physicochemical properties of a molecule. Measures were developed to identify clusters enriched with actives, to characterize singletons and to analyse selectivity and specificity. Different protease inhibitors of the COBRA database were examined using the hierarchical k-means algorithm. Supported by similarity searches and nearest neighbour analyses thrombin inhibitor singletons were quickly isolated and displayed in the dendrogram. By scaling enrichment factors to the logarithm of the dendrogram level, clusters enriched with different structural classes of factor Xa inhibitors were simultaneously identified. The observed co-clustering of other protease inhibitors provided a deeper insight into selectivity and specificity and shows the utility of the approach for constructing focussed screening libraries. Specificity was analyzed by extracting and clustering relative frequencies of the protease inhibitors from the clusters of dendrogram level 7. A unique ligand based point of view on the pocketome of the protease enzymes was obtained. To identify not confirmed hits and false-negatives in the primary screening data of HTS assays, three assays were retrospectively analysed with the hierarchical k-means algorithm. A rule catalogue was developed judging hits in terminal clusters based on the cluster size, the percent control values of the entries in a cluster, the overall hit rate, the hit rate in the cluster and the environment of a cluster in the dendrogram. It resulted in the identification of a high proportion of not confirmed hits and provided for each hit a rating in context of related non-hits. This allows prioritizing compounds for follow-up studies. Non-hits and hits were retrieved from terminal clusters containing hits. Molecules bearing false-negative scaffolds were co-extracted and enriched. To minimize the number of false-positives in the extracted lists, Bayesian regularized artificial neutral network classification models were trained with the data. Applying the models marked improvement of enrichment factors for the false-negatives was obtained. It proofs the scaffold-hopping potential of the approach. NIPALSTREE, the hierarchical k-means algorithm and self-organising maps were prospectively applied to identify novel lead candidates for dopamine D3 receptors. Compounds with novel scaffolds and low nanomolar binding affinity (65 nM, compound 42) were identified. To provide a deeper insight into the SAR of these molecules, different alternative computational methods were employed. Support vector-based regression and partial least squares were examined. Predictive models for dopamine D2 and D3 receptor binding affinity values were obtained. Important features explaining SAR were extracted from the models. The prospective application of the models to the diverse and novel virtual screening data was of limited success only. Docking studies were performed using a homology model of the dopamine D3 receptor. The visual inspection of the binding modes resulted in the hypothesis of two alternative binding pockets for the aryl moiety of dopamine D3 receptor antagonists. A pharmacophore model was created simultaneously requiring both aryl moieties. Virtual screening with the model identified a nanomolar hit (65 nM, compound 59) corroborating the hypothesis of the two binding pockets and providing a new lead structure for dopamine D3 receptors. The presented data shows that the combined approach of hierarchically clustering a data set in combination with the subsequent usage of the clusters for model generation is suited to extract SAR from screening data. The models are successful in identifying singletons, clusters enriched with actives, not confirmed hits and false-negative scaffolds.
The development of novel drugs targeting GPCRs is of particular interest since modulation of subfamilies of this receptor class highly influences neurotransmission in the central nervous system. This study has focused on the development of ligands for the dopamine D3 receptor. The receptor belongs to the dopamine D2-like family among the biogenic amine binding GPCRs. The dopamine D3 receptor is involved in neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders such as Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia and drug addiction. Due to its close structural similarity to the dopamine D2 receptor subtype, it is still a challenge to identify and further optimize new leads. Therefore an in vitro screening assay, which also allows elucidating comprehensive structure-affinity relationships, is required. In this investigation the implementation and evaluation of radioligand binding assays for human dopamine D2S and dopamine D3 receptors and for the related aminergic human histamine H1 receptor stably expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells has been performed. Saturation binding experiments with [³H]spiperone at dopamine D2S and D3 receptors and with [³H]mepyramine at histamine H1 receptors were carried out. The determined equilibrium dissociation constant of radioligands (Kd) and the total number of specific binding sites (Bmax) of the receptor membrane preparations were in good agreement with reference data. Inhibition constants (Ki) of reference ligands obtained in radioligand competition binding experiments at dopamine hD2S, hD3 and histamine H1 receptors validated the reliability and reproducibility of the assay. In order to discriminate agonists from antagonists, a GTP shift assay has been investigated for dopamine D2S and D3 receptors. In competition binding studies at dopamine D2S receptors the high- and low affinity state in the absence of the GTP analogue Gpp(NH)p has been recognized for the agonists pramipexole and the seleno analogue 54. In the presence of Gpp(NH)p a decrease in affinity, referred to as “GTP shift”, has been revealed for agonists at dopamine D2S and D3 receptors. An effect of Gpp(NH)p on dopamine D2S receptor binding has not been observed for the antagonists ST 198 and BP 897, while a reverse “GTP shift” has been noticed at the dopamine D3 receptor. For the development of novel ligands with high affinity and selectivity for dopamine D3 receptors, investigation in refined structure-affinity relationships (SAR) of analogues of the lead BP 897 has been performed. Replacement of the naphthalen-2-carboxamide of BP 897 by aryl amide residues (1 - 4) had a clear influence on affinity binding and selectivity for dopamine D3 receptors. Introduction of the benzo[b]thiophen-2-carboxamide (1) has markedly improved binding with subnanomolar affinity and enhanced selectivity for dopamine D3 receptors. Exchanging the aryl substituted basic alkanamine residue of 1 by a 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline moiety (6) emphasized the benefit of the 4-(2-methoxyphenyl) piperazine residue of BP 897 regarding dopamine D2 and D3 receptor affinities. The change of particular elements of BP 897 and the rearrangement of the amide functionality resulted in inverse amide compounds with new chemical properties. Moderate affinity binding data, as obtained for the isoindol-1-carbonyl compound 11, suggest that inverse amides provide a worthwhile new lead structure with a novel structural scaffold. A hybrid approach combining privileged scaffolds of histamine H1 receptor antagonists and fragments of dopamine D3 receptor-preferring ligands, related to BP 897and analogues has been investigated. Various benzhydrylpiperazine derivatives and related structures have shown moderate to high affinities for dopamine D3 receptors with the impressive enhancement of the cinnamide substituted bamipine-related hybrid 39, exhibiting the highest affinity and selectivity for dopamine D3 receptors. Improved affinity profiles of structural modified histamine H1 receptor antagonists for dopamine D2 and D3 receptors and a refined SAR has been achieved. A SAR of derivatives of the dopamine agonist pramipexole and the related etrabamine has been studied. The propargyl substituted etrabamine derivative 61 demonstrated highest affinity and selectivity. The ligand attracts attention since neuroprotective properties have been reported for the propargyl functionality. Further development resulted in the most promising compound 64, a cinnamide derivative with 4-fluoro substitution on the phenyl ring. Subnanomolar affinity and remarkable selectivity for dopamine D3 receptors has aroused particular interest in this ligand due to its development potential as a radioligand for PET studies. Radioligand binding studies in combination with virtual screening and different classification techniques of chemoinformatic methods resulted in further elucidation of SAR. New leads with novel chemical scaffolds have been found in the bicycle[2.2.1]heptane derivative 95 and the benzhydrylidene substituted pyrrolidindione 112 and can be further optimized by chemical modifications. The outcome of the studies provides the development of various novel high affine and dopamine D3 receptor selective ligands. Modifications of lead structures or application of chemoinformatic tools in combination with radioligand competition binding assays have resulted in new leads with different chemical scaffolds. Furthermore, a comprehensive insight into structure-affinity relationships of ligands at dopamine D3 receptors has been revealed. This refined SAR is valuable to develop more affine and selective drug candidates with a designed pharmacological receptor profile.
In the first part of the present work (Chapter 3), EPR spectroscopy at different microwave frequencies, namely at 9 GHz (X-band), 34 GHz (Q-band) and 180 GHz (G-band), was employed to resolve the g-values and the HFCs of a putative radical intermediate involved in the reduction of benzoyl-CoA catalyzed by benzoyl-CoA reductase. In particular, the effect of 33S-labeling on the EPR line shape was studied at X- and Q-band frequencies in order to gain further evidence for a sulfur centered radical proposed to be the electron donor in the reduction or the aromatic ring of BCoA [I]. The spectral components observed at X-, Q- and G-band were overall consistent and showed at least three overlapping EPR signals. The signal postulated to be due to a disulfide radical anion showed no resolved g-values and a relaxation behaviour faster than expected for such a radical species. These observations together with the simulations suggest that the signal could arise from a radical exchange coupled to an [4Fe-4S] cluster located nearby. In the future, pulsed EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy on the 57Fe-labeled enzyme could help to solve this question. The potential of high-field ENDOR in combination with 13C- and 31P-labeling for investigating the structure at the active site in proteins could be verified in the studies of the ligation sphere of the cofactor Mn2+ in Ras as reported in Chapter 4 [2]. Therein, high-field ENDOR performed at 94 GHz (W-band) was used to detect the hyperfine interactions between the electron spin mainly located on the metal ion and the phosphorous nuclei of the bound GDP and GppNHp as well as the carbon nuclei of bound amino acids in the wild-type Ras protein and its oncogenic mutant G12V. These studies aimed at searching for an additional free phosphate ion or amino acid ligand bound to the metal center in the wild type GDP-bound protein with respect to its oncogenic mutant. Rom the 13C- and 31P-ENDOR spectra, the hyperfine couplings of directly bound amino acids and the bound nucleotides were compatible with the hyperfine couplings obtained from DFT calculations based on the crystal structure data. No differences in the 13C- and 31P-ENDOR spectra could be found for the wild-type GDP-bound protein in comparison to its oncogenic mutant in frozen solution. Therefore, no evidence for binding of an additional free phosphate ion or amino acid ligand in the wild-type GDP-bound protein was found. The distances between the detected nuclei and the meta1 ion were in agreement with the ones extracted from crystal structures reported in the literature. Future 35C1-ENDOR studies could clarify whether a chloride ion from the buffer solution could be the ligand replacing one water molecule in the wild type GDP-bound Ras. In Chapter 5, the implementation of a high-field ENDOR setup into a homebuilt pulsed EPR spectrometer operating at 180 GHz is reported and its performance for 1H-ENDOR demonstrated on the model system BDPA. Mims and Davies ENDOR spectra were also obtained for Ras(wt).Mn2+.DP. The increased nuclear Zeeman resolution at 180 GHz may be further exploited in the future by extending the setup for studying hyperfine couplings of low-y nuclei such as 33S, 15N , 17O or 2H. In the present work, the advantages of performing EPR and ENDOR experiments at high fields and frequencies could be nicely demonstrated with the 94 GHz ENDOR studies of Ras. Furthermore, the complementing information obtained at X- and Q-band frequencies in the multifrequency EPR studies on BCR demonstrated that the analysis of EPR spectra can be greatly facilitated by simulating the spectra measured at different MW frequencies with the same set of parameters consistent with a proposed radical. Overall, it could be shown that the use of different experimental techniques at multiple fields and frequencies renders EPR spectroscopy a powerfull tool for structural studies in biological systems.
Compared to all other organisms with 1 to 3 heat stress transcription factors (Hsfs) or Hsf-related factors, plants have extraordinarily large Hsf families with more than 20 Hsfs. Plant Hsfs are classified into three classes according to their oligomerization domains which is built of hydrophobic heptad repeats (HR) in two parts, HR-A and HR-B. Both parts may be immediately adjacent (class B), or they are separated by insertion of 21 (class A) and 7 amino acid residues (class C). In plant Hsf family, detailed investigations are so far limited to Hsfs A1a, A2, A3, A4d, A9, and B1. They strongly indicate functional diversification to be the main reason for the coexistence of multiple Hsfs. As an example the functional triad of HsfA1a, HsfA2, and HsfB1 is essential for all three phases of the hs response, (i) the triggering of the response by HsfA1a as master regulator, (ii) the maintenance and high efficiency of hs gene transcription by cooperation of HsfA1a with Hsfs A2 and B1, and finally, (iii) the restoration of house-keeping gene transcription during the recovery phase mediated by HsfB1 in cooperation with house-keeping transcription factors. The results presented in this thesis for Hsfs A4 and A5 open completely different aspects of functional diversification and cooperation of Hsfs. HsfA4 and HsfA5 homooligomerize and bind to corresponding HSE motifs. But in contrast to the highly active HsfA4, HsfA5 is completely inactive as transcriptional activator. Yeast two hybrid and GST pull-down techniques showed that both Hsfs have strong tendency for heterooligomerization. Using fluorescence microscopy the HsfA4/A5 heterooligomers were found to localize in the nucleus. These complexes are transcriptionally inactive due to the impairment of DNA binding. The repressor function of HsfA5 requires only its OD and no additional factors, e.g. a putative co-repressor recruited by the C-terminal domain, are involved. Evidently, the repressor effect mainly results from the interference with the oligomeric state of HsfA4b, which is essential for efficient DNA binding and activator functions. EST database search revealed that plants have a single HsfA5 and usually two A4-type Hsfs. Using bioinformatics tools, Hsfs A4 and A5 were found to be phylogenetically closely related and clearly distinct from the other members of the Hsf family. On the basis of RT-PCR and Microarray data the representatives of the A4/A5 group are well expressed in different plant tissues albeit at very different levels which change with the developmental stages and stress conditions In rice and Arabidopsis, HsfA4 functions as an anti-apoptotic factor for stress induced oxidative damages. Based on my results, I hypothesize that HsfA5 functions as a novel type of selective repressor, regulating the function of A4-type Hsfs in plants. Considering the high sequence conservation with in plant Hsf family, it is tempting to speculate that this role of Hsf4/A5 pair is a fundamental feature of the Hsf system in plants.
One of the most important tasks in chemistry and especially in structural biology has always been the elucidation of three-dimensional molecular structures - either of small molecules or large biopolymers. Among the (bio)physical methods to acquire structural data at atomic resolution electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy is the most valuable technique for obtaining structural information about many different kinds of paramagnetic species. In biological systems, either paramagnetic metal ions/clusters, transient paramagnetic intermediates in electron transfer processes or artificially attached stable spin labels can be found. The usual approach to interpret EPR spectra is to perform simulations based on the so-called spin Hamiltonian (SH). This means that the well-defined numerical parameters (tensors) in the SH representing different types of interaction are obtained by fitting the experimental data. The SH parameters include electronic g-values, hyperfine coupling (HFC) and quadrupole coupling (&C) constants, zero-field splittings and constants to describe exchange and dipolar interactions between electron spin systems. However, since the SH only contains spin degrees of freedom, a direct translation of the SH EPR parameters into structural information is not straightforward. Therefore, methods to predict such SH interaction parameters starting from molecular structures are required. In this thesis it was investigated whether quantum chemical calculations of EPR parameters based on density functional theory (DFT) methods may be employed to overcome these problems thus enabling a correlation of experimental EPR data with molecular structure. It was the central goal of this work to point out the potential of a fruitful interplay between quantum chemistry and experiment and to study how both can benefit from each other. For this purpose DFT methods were applied to a variety of organic radical or transition metal systems to calculate different EPR parameters. Using the 'broken symmetry' formalism it was possible to compute the exchange coupling constant for a nitroxide biradical and furthermore decompose the exchange mechanism in different through-bond and through-space interactions. Spin density distributions, 14N and 1H HFC constants as well as dipole moments and polarizabilities were computed for a number of aromatic nitroxides to examine their properties and select promising candidates which may serve as DNA-intercalating spin labels. Systematic investigations of the influence of hydrogen bond geometry on the 14N QC parameters for imidazole-water and methylimidazole-benzosemiquinone complexes lead to the conclusion that especially the imidazole amino nitrogen &C parameters are very sensitive probes of the bond geometry, in particular of the hydrogen bond length. The results of this study may be applied to biological systems, e.g. to gain structural information about quinone binding sites. Moreover, quantum chemical methods were applied to elucidate the structure of a nitrogen-centered radical intermediate in the inhibition process of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR). It was possible to find a molecular structure in accordance with all experimentally available data, thus revealing the longsought structure of the No radical and providing evidence for the trapping of a 3'-ketonucleotide in the reduction process catalyzed by RNR. To test the capability of modern DFT methods to predict g- and molybdenum HFC tensors for MoV complexes, validation studies were carried out. Comparison of computed EPR parameters of a number of MoV compounds with corresponding experimental values showed that g- and HFC tensors could be predicted in good accuracy, although some systematic errors of the computational methods have to be considered for such heavy 4d1 transition meta1 systems. Furthermore, DFT calculations on a Mn2+ binding site model of the hammerhead ribozyme allowed to conclude that the structure of the binding site as studied by EPR spectroscopy in frozen solution is very likely to be identical to the site found occupied by Mn2+ in crystals. Finally, computational methods were employed to aid in the structural characterization of the Mn2+ binding site in Ras (rat sarcoma protein) by providing accurate starting parameters for spectral simulations and furthermore helping to interpret the experimental data. In conclusion, it was demonstrated in this thesis that the combination of sophisticated experimental and quantum chemical methods represents a powerful approach in the field of EPR spectroscopy and that it may be essential to employ EPR parameter computations to extract the full information content from EPR spectra. Therefore, great potential lies in future applications of DFT methods to the large number of systems where detailed and reliable experimental data is available but where an unequivocal correlation of these data with structural information is still lacking.
HELEX Septal Occluder for transcatheter closure of patent foramen ovale : multicenter experience
(2006)
Aims Patients with cryptogenic embolic events and a patent foramen ovale (PFO) are at risk of paradoxical embolism causing recurrent cerebral events; however, transcatheter PFO closure remains controversial. The aim of this multicenter trial was to demonstrate the feasibility and safety of transcatheter closure of PFO with the HELEX Septal Occluder. Methods and results The study enrolled 128 patients (66 female; mean age, 50 years). Mean (± SD) PFO size was 10±3.7 mm; 38 patients also had an atrial septal aneurysm. Device implantation was successful in 127 patients. Device-related events during implantation or follow-up were device embolisation, wire-frame fracture, and retrieval cord breaks (two cases each; no sequelae). Other adverse events included atrial arrhythmia (two patients), migraine, convulsion, and transient ischaemic attack (one case each). There were no recurrent strokes, deaths, perforations, or accumulations of thrombi on the device. Within a mean follow-up period of 21±11 months, complete PFO closure using one device was achieved in 114 patients (90%). Five patients with a moderate to large residual shunt received a second device. Conclusion The HELEX Occluder can be used for PFO closure. Device- and procedure-related complications are rare. The closure procedure appears to reduce recurrence rates of stroke and transient ischaemic attack.
We consider the theory of high temperature superconductivity from the viewpoint of a strongly correlated electron system. In particular, we discuss Gutzwiller projected wave functions, which incorporate strong correlations by prohibiting double occupancy in orbitals with strong on-site repulsion. After a general overview on high temperature superconductivity, we discuss Anderson’s resonating valence bond (RVB) picture and its implementation by renormalized mean field theory (RMFT) and variational Monte Carlo (VMC) techniques. In the following, we present a detailed review on RMFT and VMC results with emphasis on our recent contributions. Especially, we are interested in spectral features of Gutzwiller-Bogoliubov quasiparticles obtained by extending VMC and RMFT techniques to excited states. We explicitly illustrate this method to determine the quasiparticle weight and provide a comparison with angle resolved photoemission spectroscopy (ARPES) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). We conclude by summarizing recent successes and by discussing open questions, which must be solved for a thorough understanding of high temperature superconductivity by Gutzwiller projected wave functions.
Concentration of multivariate random recursive sequences arising in the analysis of algorithms
(2006)
Stochastic analysis of algorithms can be motivated by the analysis of randomized algorithms or by postulating on the sets of inputs of the same length some probability distributions. In both cases implied random quantities are analyzed. Here, the running time is of great concern. Characteristics like expectation, variance, limit law, rates of convergence and tail bounds are studied. For the running time, beside the expectation, upper bounds on the right tail are particularly important, since one wants to know large values of the running time not taking place with possibly high probability. In the first chapter game trees are analyzed. The worst case runnig time of Snir's randomized algorithm is specified and its expectation, asymptotic behavior of the variance, a limit law with uniquely characterized limit and tail bounds are identified. Furthermore, a limit law for the value of the game tree under Pearl's probabilistic modell is proved. In the second chapter upper and lower bounds for the Wiener Index of random binary search trees are identified. In the third chapter tail bounds for the generation size of multitype Galton-Watson processes (with immigration) are derived, depending on their offspring distribution. Therefore, the method used to prove the tail bounds in the first chapter is generalized.
Integral membrane proteins (IMPs) account for 20-40% of all open reading frames in fully sequenced genomes and they are target of approximately 60% of all modern drugs. So far, cellular expression systems are often very insufficient for the high-level production of IMPs. Toxic effects, instability or formation of inclusion bodies are frequently observed effects that prevent the synthesis of sufficient amounts of functional protein. I have successfully established an individual cell-free (CF) expression system to overcome these IMP synthesis difficulties. The CF system was established in two different expression modes. If no hydrophobic compartment is provided, the IMPs precipitate in the reaction mixture. Interestingly, these insoluble proteins are found to differ from inclusion bodies as they readily solubilize in mild detergents and the bacterial small multi drug transporter EmrE, expressed in the insoluble mode was shown to reconstitute into liposomes in an active form. Alternatively, IMPs can be synthesized in a soluble way by supplementing the CF system with detergents. A comprehensive overview of 24 commonly used detergents was provided by analyzing their impact on the CF system as well as their ability to keep three structurally very different proteins in solution. The class of long chain polyoxyethylene-alkyl-ethers turned out to be most suitable for soluble expression of a-helical EmrE, the bacterial b-barrel type nucleoside transporter Tsx and the porcine vasopressin receptor type 2, resulting in several mg of protein per mL of reaction mixture. So far IMPs have almost completely been excluded from solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analyses. I could demonstrate that CF expression enables efficient isotopic labeling of IMPs for NMR analysis and further facilitates selective labeling strategies with combinations of 13C and 15N enriched amino acids that have not been feasible before. Four different G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) were successfully CF expressed in preparative scale and for the human endothelin B receptor (ETB), ligand binding ability was observed. A series of truncated ETB derivatives containing nested terminal deletions have been CF produced and functionally characterized. The core area essential for Endothelin-1 binding as well as a central region responsible for ETB oligomer formation was confined to a 39 amino acid fragment including the proposed transmembrane segment 1. The binding constant (KD) of ETB was determined to 6 nM for circular ET-1 by SPR and 29 nM for linear ET-1 by TIRFS. This data indicate a large potential of the established individual CF expression system for functional IMP synthesis.
The dissertation collects four self-contained essays which contribute to the literature on wage structures, heterogeneous labor demand, and the impact of trade unions. The first paper provides a detailed description of the evolution of wage inequality in East and West Germany in the late years of the twentieth century. In contrast to previous decades, wage inequality has been rising in several dimensions during that period. The second paper identifies cohort effects in the evolution of both wages and employment. Observed structures are consistent with a labor demand framework that incorporates steady skill-biased technical change. Substitutability between skill and age groups in the German labor market is found to be relatively high. Simulations based on estimated elasticities of substitution illustrate that higher wage dispersion between skill groups would have contributed to a reduction in unemployment. The third paper estimates determinants of individual union membership decisions and studies the erosion of union density in East and West Germany. Using corresponding predictions of net union density, the fourth paper analyzes the link between union strength and the structure of wages. A higher union density is associated with lower residual wage dispersion, reduced skill wage differentials, and a lower wage level. This finding is in line with an insurance motive for union action. The thesis comprises the following articles: (1) “Rising Wage Dispersion, After All! The German Wage Structure at the Turn of the Century,” IZA Discussion Paper 2098, April 2006. (2) “Skill Wage Premia, Employment, and Cohort Effects: Are Workers in Germany All of the Same Type?”, IZA Discussion Paper 2185, June 2006, joint with Bernd Fitzenberger. (3) “The Erosion of Union Membership in Germany: Determinants, Densities, Decompositions,” IZA Discussion Paper 2193, July 2006, joint with Bernd Fitzenberger and Qingwei Wang. (4) “Equal Pay for Equal Work? On Union Power and the Structure of Wages in West Germany, 1985–1997,” translation of “Gleicher Lohn für gleiche Arbeit? Zum Zusammenhang zwischen Gewerkschaftsmitgliedschaft und Lohnstruktur in Westdeutschland 1985–1997,” Zeitschrift für Arbeitsmarkt-Forschung, 38 (2/3), 125-146, joint with Bernd Fitzenberger, 2005.
Amblyopia is a developmental disorder of the visual system that leads to reduced vision in one or both eyes. People suffering from amblyopia show different perceptual deficits like reduced contrast sensitivity, reduced or no stereopsis, spatial uncertainty, and spatial and temporal distortions when viewing with the amblyopic eye. In the following thesis, different psychophysical methods are used to investigate anomalous perception of amblyopic participants in detail with the main focus on the perception of temporal instability. In the qualitative experimental paradigms it is shown that temporal instability is mainly perceived by strabismic and strabismic-anisometropic amblyopes. The temporal deficits occur only at spatial frequencies higher than 1.6 c/deg, and are perceived in addition to the spatial distortions. Illusory colours sometimes accompany the temporal distortions. There seems to be a relationship between crossed hand and eye dominance and the perception of temporal instability. In the quantitative experiments it is shown that temporal instability in amblyopic perception has a negative impact on the performance in psychophysical tasks. Amblyopes perceiving temporal instability show enhanced spatial uncertainty and spatial distortions for different types of stimulus presentation (auditive vs. visual) when compared to amblyopes without temporal instability. This might be due to deficits in auditive-visual mapping. These deficits in auditory-to-visual mapping suggest an impairment of the dorsal “where” pathway. Thus, it might be that amblyopes with temporal distortions have deficits in the dorsal pathway that come up in addition to the known deficits of the ventral “what” pathway and are related to the perception of temporal instability. The different results of the experiments found in this thesis seem to confirm this hypothesis. Studies using functional imaging techniques might be appropriate for a further investigation of amblyopic deficits involving the dorsal pathway.
Eine große Zahl natürlicher sekundärer Metabolite sind kleine und strukturell oft sehr verschiedene Polypeptide und Polyketide. Diese bioaktiven Substanzen haben im allgemeinen ein breit aufgestelltes therapeutisches Potential und werden von verschiedenen bakteriellen Stämmen und Pilzen biosynthetisiert. Sie sind sowohl biologisch, als auch therapeutisch wichtig als Cytostatika, Immunsuppressiva und Antibiotika mit einem sehr großen antibakteriellen und antiviralen Potential. Diese oft äußerst komplexen Polypeptide und Polyketide werden von modular aufgebauten Megaenzymen in mehrstufigen Mechanismen synthetisiert. Für die Synthese dieser Peptide sind sehr große Proteincluster verantwortlich, die meistens aus einer begrenzten Anzahl sehr großer, Multidomänen umfassenden, Superenzyme aufgebaut werden. Diese Proteincluster mit einem Molekulargewicht bis in den Bereich von MegaDalton werden als nicht-ribosomale Peptidsynthetasen (NRPS) und Polyketidsynthetasen (PKS) bezeichnet. Die NRPS Systeme zeichnen sich dadurch aus, daß für die biosynthetisierten Polypeptide keine Information in Form von Nukleinsäuren wie DNA oder RNA kodiert (Walsh, C.T., 2004; Sieber & Marahiel, 2005). Für die Synthese der Polypeptide ist eine Aktivierung der einzelnen Bausteine, der Aminosäuren, durch Amino-acyl-adenylierung notwendig. Im Anschluß an die Aktivierung, wird die aktivierte Aminosäure über einen Thioester gebunden weitertransportiert. Die Thioesterbildung erfolgt an Cysteaminthiolgruppen intrinsischer 4’-Phosphopantethein-kofaktoren. Eine Modul einer NRPS stellt eine geschlossene Einheit zum Einbau einer Aminosäure mit einer hohen Spezifität für das Substrat und die biosynthetische Reaktion dar. Diese Module sind aus Domänen aufgebaut, die definierte Funktionen haben und mittels flexibler Linker miteinander verbunden sind. Die Domänen werden nach ihrer Funktion unterschieden. Die Acyl-adenylierung oder Aktivierung eines Substrates, beispielsweise einer Aminosäure, erfolgt durch die A-Domänen. Die Peptidyl- oder Acyltransportfunktion der aktivierten Substrate wird durch Thioester-domänen (T-Domäne), auch PCP (peptidyl carrier domain) genannt, bewältigt. Die Biosynthese der Kopplungsreaktion, beispielsweise die Ausbildung der Peptidbindung in NRPS Systemen, erfolgt an den Kondensations-Domänen (C-Domäne). Für die Substratspezifität eines Synthesemoduls sind die A-Domänen verantwortlich, welche die Aktivierung eines Substrat durch ATP-Hydrolyse ermöglichen. In NRPS Systemen sind auch Zyklisierungsreaktionen, durchgeführt von Cyclase-Domänen (Cy-Domänen), L/D-Epimerase-funktionen (E-Domänen) und N-Methylierungen (M-Domänen) beschrieben. So wird in Tyrocidin A an zwei Positionen spezifisch Phenylalanin in die D-Form epimerisiert und anschließend in der Peptidbiosynthese verwendet. Die Interaktion und Erkennung zwischen den multi-modularen Superenzymen, zum korrekten Aufbau der kompletten Synthetase, wurden in letzter Zeit Kommunikations-Domänen (COM-Domänen) beschrieben. Wie die aufgebaute Synthetase die korrekte Sequenz der biosynthetischen Reaktionsschritte sicherstellt ist nicht bekannt. Die enorme Diversität biosynthetischer Reaktionen in NRPS Systemen und die hohe Substratvielfalt in den verschiedensten Synthetasen unterschiedlicher Stämme eröffnet ein weites Feld für mögliche Neukombinationen von Modulen und Modifikationen von Produkten, um neue bioaktive Polypeptide mit antibiotischen Eigenschaften durch die Gestaltung neuer biosynthetischer Reaktionswege zu erhalten. Die Biosyntheseprodukte der NRPS und PKS Systeme lassen sich Gruppen kategorisieren wie Peptidantibiotika, beispielsweise beta-Lactame und makrozyklischer Polypeptide. Weitere Gruppen sind die makrozyklischen Lactone, beispielsweise Polyene und Makrolide, aromatische Verbindungen, wie Chloramphenicol, und Chinone (Tetracyclin). Die näher diskutierten Beispiele sind die antibakteriellen Polypeptide Surfactin und Tyrocidin A. Surfactin ist ein antibakteriell wirkendes makrozyklisches Lipoheptapeptid, welches von Bacillus subtilis synthetisiert wird und ein enormes antivirales Potential besitzt. Tyrocidin A ist ein antibakteriell wirkendes makrozyklisches Decapeptid und wird von Bacillus brevis und Brevisbacillus parabrevis synthetisiert. Zusätzlich werden viele bakterielle Toxine ebenfalls durch solche Systeme multi-modularer Synthetasen erzeugt. Ein Beispiel ist das Polyketid Vibriobactin, das Toxin des humanpathogenen Bakterium Vibrio cholerae. Ein zunehmendes Problem der wachsenden Weltbevölkerung moderner Gesellschaften und in den Entwicklungsländern ist die wachsende Zahl multiresistenter Bakterienstämme. Die starke Progression in der Entwicklung von Resistenzen gegen Antibiotika ist auch Gegenstand des aktuellen WHO-Reports (2006). Alarmierend ist die beschleunigte Resistenzentwicklung gegen die sogenannten Reserveantibiotika Vancomycin und Ceftazidim. Ein umfangreicheres Verständnis der Interaktion zwischen Domänen in einem Modul und zwischen Modulen eines NRPS Systems ist Grundlage für die Neukombination unterschiedlicher Module zur erfolgreichen Gestaltung neuer Biosynthesen. Da die meisten dieser Biosynthesen oder die Synthese alternativer Substanzen nicht in der Organischen Chemie zu realisieren sind oder die Produkte zu teuer wären, um diese in großen Mengen zu erzeugen, muß das Ziel sein die NRPS und PKS Systeme in ihrem modularen Aufbau und ihre Interaktion zu verstehen, um alternative Antibiotika biosynthetisch herzustellen. Peptidyl Carrier Proteine (PCPs) sind kleine zentrale Transport-Domänen, integriert in den Modulen nicht-ribosomaler Peptidsynthetasen (NRPSs). PCPs tragen kovalent über eine Phosphoesterbindung einen aus dem Protein herausragenden 4’-phosphopantetheinyl (4’-PP) Kofaktor. Der 4’-PP Kofaktor ist an der Seitenkette eines hochkonservierten Serins gebunden, welche ein zentraler Bestandteil der Phosphopantethein-Erkennungs-Sequenz ist. Die Erkennungssequenz ist homolog in vielen Proteinen mit ähnlicher Funktion, inklusive Acyl Carrier Proteinen (ACPs) der Fettsäuresynthetasen (FAS) und der Polyketidsynthetasen (PKS). Die Thiolgruppe des 4’-PP Kofaktors dient zum aktiven Transport der Substrate und der Intermediate der NRPS Systeme. Die generelle Organisation und die Kontrolle der exakt aufeinander folgenden Reaktionsschritte in der Peptidsynthetase, ist die entscheidende Frage für die Funktion des Proteinclusters (assembly line mechanism). In Modulen der NRPS Systeme folgen die PCP-Domänen C-terminal auf die Adenylierungsdomänen (A-Domäne). Die Aufgabe der A-Domänen ist die Selektion and die Aktivierung einer spezifischen Aminosäure für die „assembly line“. Die eigentliche Bildung der Peptidbindung erfolgt an der Kondensations-Domäne (C-Domäne). Der Transfer der Peptidintermediate und der aktivierten Aminosäuren zwischen A-Domänen und C-Domänen ist Aufgabe der PCPs. Um diese Funktion erfüllen zu können, ist eine große Bewegung in PCPs, bzw. des 4’-PP Kofaktors notwendig, welche als „swinging arm model“ (Weber et al., 2001) beschrieben wurde. Die PCPs koordinieren damit die Peptidbiosynthese während sie mit diversen Domänen der Synthetasen spezifisch wechselwirken müssen. Die molekularen Mechanismen des Transportes wurden bisher allerdings nicht untersucht. Eine Dynamik der Transport-Domänen wurde bereits postuliert (Kim & Prestegard, 1989; Andrec et al., 1995), konnte bisher aber nicht gezeigt werden (Weber et al., 2001). Interessanterweise zeigt sowohl apo-PCP (ohne den kovalent gebundenen 4’-PP Kofaktor) also auch holo-PCP langsamen chemischen Austausch, der als jeweils zwei stabile Konformationen beschrieben werden konnte. Diese jeweils zwei stabilen Zustände, welche sich im Austausch befinden, wurden als A und A*, für apo-PCP, und entsprechend H und H* für holo-PCP bezeichnet. Während der A- und der H-Zustand sich sowohl voneinander als auch von den entsprechenden A* und H*-Zuständen unterscheiden und spezifisch für die apo- und die holo-Form von PCP sind, ist die kalkulierte Struktur vom A*-Zustand größten Teils identisch mit der des H*-Zustandes. Die erhaltenen NMR-Strukturen des A-Zustandes, des H-Zustandes und des gemeinsamen A/H-Zustandes beschreiben in ihrer Gesamtheit ein neues Modell für ein allosterie-kontrolliertes System dualer konformationeller Zwei-Zustands-Dynamik. Zu dem beobachteten konformationellen Austausch der PCP-Domäne, konnte die Bewegung des 4’-PP Kofaktors koordiniert werden. Die Bewegung des 4’-PP Kofaktors in Verbindung mit dem konformationellen Austausch der PCP-Domäne charakterisiert die Interaktion mit katalytischen Domänen eines NRPS Moduls. Des weiteren konnte mit Hilfe des Modells die Wechselwirkung mit externen Interaktionspartnern, wie der Thioesterase II und der 4’-PP Transferase, untersucht werden. Die externe Thioesterase II der Surfactin-Synthetase (SrfTEII) von Bacillus subtilis ist ein separat expremiertes 28 KDa Protein. Sie gehört zur Familie der alpha/beta-Hydrolasen und ist verantwortlich für die Regenerierung falsch beladener 4’- PP Kofaktoren der Peptidyl Carrier Domänen. Die SrfTEII wurde mittels Lösungs-NMR untersucht, die Resonanzen wurden zugeordnet, erste strukturelle Modelle konnte berechnet werden und das Interaktionsverhalten mit verschiedenen modifizierten Kofaktoren und PCPs wurde analysiert. Die Spezifität der Substraterkennung durch die SrfTEII kann beschrieben werden. Interessanterweise zeigt auch die SrfTEII Doppelpeaks für einzelne Aminosäuren, diese können als Indikator für eine spezifische Substraterkennung durch das Enzym verwendet werden und helfen den funktionellen Unterschied zwischen der SrfTEI-Domäne und SrfTEII zu verstehen.
The objective of this study is the avifauna of the North American Green River Formation. Five new Green River bird species as well as several new specimens of already known species are described. * Galliformes: Gallinuloides wyomingensis EASTMAN 1900 A second specimen of the galliform Gallinuloides wyomingensis could be identified. Gallinuloides wyomingensis resembles closely Paraortygoides MAYR 1999, which is known from Messel and the London Clay. The new specimen exhibits characters such as a cup-like cotyla scapularis of the coracoid that clearly indicate that Gallinuloides is a stem-group representative of galliforms. * Eurypygidae: Eoeurypyga olsoni gen. et sp. nov. Eoeurypyga is the only fossil representative of the Eurypygidae. Eoeurypyga and the modern sunbittern Eurypyga helias share the typical long bill, the caudally situated neck and the elongated vertebrae cervicales. Additional synapomorph characters were found. The new species indicates a North American origin for the Eurypygidae. * Messelornithidae: Messelornis nearctica HESSE 1992 The original description of Messelornis nearctica was based on a single specimen. Ten new specimens, described in this study, reveal additional information. Messelornis nearctica shows the same large intraspecific size range as Messelornis cristata HESSE 1988 from Messel, the type species of the genus. * Apodidae: Wyomingcypselus pohli gen. nov. sp. nov. Wyomingcypselus pohli is the first described fossil apodiform bird for North American. Due to characters of the wing, especially the position of the processus musculi extensor metacarpi radialis, Wyomingcypselus is referrred to the Apodidae. * Trogoniformes: unnamed species The Green River birds include a poorly preserved, but apparently heterodactyl specimen, which also resembles trogons in overall appearance. * Primobucconidae: Primobucco mcgrewi BRODKORB 1970 Originally, Primobucco mcgrewi was only known from a partial skeleton consisting of the right wing. Three new specimens could be referred to the species. Primobucco mcgrewi clearly exhibits an anisodactyl foot, which makes the assignment to the zygodactyl Bucconidae highly doubtful. Instead, Primobucco mcgrewi is referrred to the Coraciiformes s.s. Thus, Primobucconidae are the first New World representatives of stem-group Coraciiformes. * ?Leptosomidae: Plesiocathartes wyomingensis sp. nov. and Plesiocathartes major sp. nov. Plesiocathartes wyomingensis and Plesiocathartes major represent the first North American record for the genus. Both species exhibit the diagnostic characters for the Leptosomidae as listed by MAYR (2002a, b). * Primoscenidae: Eozygodactylus americanus gen. et sp. nov. and unnamed species Eozygodactylus americanus is the first North American member of this taxon. Both Eozygodactylus americanus and the unnamed species show the zygodactyl foot and the large processus intermetacarpalis of the carpometacarpus, which are typical for Primoscendiae. Due to differences mainly of the humerus, it was placed in a new genus. Besides the descriptionof new species, the avifauna of the Green River Formatin was studied and compared with the avifauna of Messel. The formations show a high concordance, more than 60 % of the Green River taxa also occur in Messel. Such a high concordance is also found for mammals. This is due to the existence of two landbridges, the Thule landbridge and the de Geer landbridge, between Europe and North America during the early Eocene.
Shrew-1 wurde bei der Suche invasivitätsassoziierter Gene mittels eines DDRT-PCR-Ansatzes aus invasiven Zellen isoliert. Wie computergestützte Analysen der Sequenz ergaben, wies das bis dahin unbekannte Protein keinerlei Ähnlichkeiten mit bereits bekannten Proteinen auf und homologe Proteine wurden bisher nur in Vertebraten gefunden. Expressionsanalysen mit einem GFP-markierten shrew-1 zeigten, dass es an der basolateralen Plasmamembran lokalisiert, wo es mit dem E-Cadherin vermittelten Adhäsions-Komplex kolokalisiert. Eine Integration in diesen Komplex geschieht höchstwahrscheinlich durch direkte Interaktion mit β-Catenin. Ein weiteres Molekül das als potenzieller Interaktionspartner von shrew-1 identifiziert wurde und das in der Literatur oft als Tumorsuppressor diskutiert wird, ist Caveolin-1. Ferner konnten Überexpressionexperimente bereits zeigen, dass shrew-1 die Invasivität von HT1080-Zellen erhöhen kann. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit war es, zum einen mit Hilfe des Hefe-Split-Ubiquitin-Systems eine Interaktion von shrew-1 und Caveolin-1 zu bestätigen und zum anderen neue Interaktionspartner zu identifizieren, die helfen könnten, die Rolle von shrew-1 in invasiven Vorgängen zu erklären. Um eine mögliche Verbindung von shrew-1 und einem neuen Interaktionspartner in Bezug auf die Zellinvasivität zu untersuchen, sollten sowohl shrew-1 als auch der potenzielle Interaktionspartner mittels RNAi ausgeschaltet werden. Mit Hilfe des Split-Ubiquitin-Systems war es möglich, die Interaktion zwischen shrew-1 und caveolin-1 zu bestätigen und zu zeigen, dass diese durch die zytoplasmatische Domäne von shrew-1 vermittelt wird. Weiterhin konnte CD147 als neuer Interaktionpartner identifiziert werden. Eine Interaktion beider Proteine konnte ferner mit Hilfe des Bimolekularen-Fluoreszens-Komplementations-Systems (BIFC), des Fluoreszens-Resonanz-Energie-Transfers (FRET) und Coimmunoprezipitationen bestätigt werden. Die Interaktion von shrew-1 und CD147 scheint allerdings abhängig vom zellulären Kontext zu sein, wie die FRET-Analysen vermuten lassen. So konnte nämlich mit diesen Analysen eine starke Interaktion in MCF7-Zellen gezeigt werden, wohingegen die Interaktion in MDCK-Zellen schwächer war. Einer der auffälligsten Unterschiede dieser beiden Zelllinien im Bezug auf diese Interaktion könnte sein, dass MCF7-Zellen im Gegensatz zu MDCK-Zellen kein Caveolin-1 exprimieren. Caveolin-1 konnte seinerseits als Interaktionspartner von shrew-1 mit Hilfe des Hefe-Split-Ubiquitin-Systems bestätigt werden und andererseits wurde von einer anderen Arbeitsgruppe eine Interaktion von CD147 mit Caveolin-1 publiziert. Um dies näher zu untersuchen, wurde Caveolin-1 in MCF7-Zellen exprimiert und die FRET-Analysen in diesen wiederholt. Wie vermutet kam es zu einer Reduktion der Interaktion in Caveolin-1 exprimierenden MCF7-Zellen. CD147 ist neben vielen anderen Funktionen auch maßgeblich an der Regulation von Matrix-Metalloproteinasen beteiligt und kann somit die Invasivität von Zellen beeinflussen. Um einen Einfluß von shrew-1 und CD147 auf die Invasivität zu untersuchen, wurden beide Proteine mittels RNAi in HeLa-Zellen ausgeschaltet. Nachdem ein negativer Einfluss dieses Ansatzes auf das Proliferationsverhalten der Zellen ausgeschlossen werden konnte, wurde ein möglicher Effekt auf die Invasivität der Zellen untersucht. Durch die Analyse in Matrigel-Invasionsassays konnte gezeigt werden, dass das unabhängige Ausschalten beider Proteine die Invasivität der Zellen auf 35-55% im Vergleich zu Kontrollzellen reduziert. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit untermauern die Annahme, dass shrew-1 eine Rolle bei invasiven Vorgängen spielt und weisen darauf hin, dass dies möglicherweise durch eine Interaktion mit CD147 geschieht. Die Interaktion mit CD147 und damit eine mögliche Funktion von shrew-1 bei invasiven Vorgängen scheinen dabei abhängig vom zellulären Kontext zu sein.
Characterisation of cytosolic prion protein-mediated putative cytotoxicity in neuronal cell lines
(2006)
Prion diseases are a complex group of fatal neurodegenerative disorders with a broad host spectrum, which are characterised by strong neuronal cell loss, spongiform vacuolation and astrocytic proliferation. The molecular mechanisms of prion-mediated neurodegeneration are not yet fully understood. Recently, it has been proposed that neuronal cell death might be triggered by cytosolic accumulation of misfolded cellular prion protein (PrPC) due to impairment of proteasomal degradation. Cytosolic PrPC could result from either retro-translocation via the endoplasmatic reticulum-associated degradation system (ERAD) or abortive translocation of PrPC into the ER. Indeed, expression of cytosolic PrP (Cy-PrP) was shown to be neurotoxic both in vivo and in vitro. However, contradicting results on cytosolic PrP-mediated neurotoxicity in cultured cells have been reported. Cytosolic PrP–mediated cytotoxicity may play a central role in the pathogenesis of prion diseases. In order to investigate the molecular mechanisms of this process, a detailed analysis of N2a cells conditionally expressing cytosolic PrP (Cy-PrP) was performed in this study. The following results were obtained: First, Cy-PrP expression is not per se sufficient to trigger cytotoxicity in N2a cells independently of proteasome inhibition. Second, Cy-PrP is degraded with kinetics resembling the degradation of cell membrane-anchored full-length PM-PrP. In this process, the 20/26S proteasome was responsible for Cy-PrP degradation while the proteolysis of matured full length PM-PrP is not affected by the proteasomal system. Third, Cy-PrP accumulates in fine foci when expressed at high levels and co-localises with the cytosolic chaperone Hsc70 in EEA-1 positive endocytic vesicles. From these data it was proposed that the chaperone Hsc70 acts as a regulator for the controlled formation of amorphous Cy-PrP aggregates and their transport to endosomal vesicles. This Hsc70-dependent mechanism may confer protection to N2a cells against toxic accumulation of Cy-PrP in the cytosol.
In this thesis, I study the phase diagram of dense, locally neutral three-flavor quark matter as a function of the strange quark mass, the quark chemical potential, and the temperature, employing a general nine-parameter ansatz for the gap matrix. At zero temperature and small values of the strange quark mass, the ground state of quark matter corresponds to the color–flavor-locked (CFL) phase. At some critical value of the strange quark mass, this is replaced by the recently proposed gapless CFL (gCFL) phase. I also find several other phases, for instance, a metallic CFL (mCFL) phase, a so-called uSC phase where all colors of up quarks are paired, as well as the standard two-flavor color-superconducting (2SC) phase and the gapless 2SC (g2SC) phase. I also study the phase diagram of dense, locally neutral three-flavor quark matter within the framework of a Nambu–Jona-Lasinio (NJL) model. In the analysis, dynamically generated quark masses are taken into account self-consistently. The phase diagram in the plane of temperature and quark chemical potential is presented. The results for two qualitatively different regimes, intermediate and strong diquark coupling strength, are presented. It is shown that the role of gapless phases diminishes with increasing diquark coupling strength. In addition, I study the effect of neutrino trapping on the phase diagram of dense, locally neutral three-flavor quark matter within the same NJL model. The phase diagrams in the plane of temperature and quark chemical potential, as well as in the plane of temperature and leptonnumber chemical potential are presented. I show that neutrino trapping favors two-flavor color superconductivity and disfavors the color–flavor-locked phase at intermediate densities of matter. At the same time, the location of the critical line separating the two-flavor color-superconducting phase and the normal phase of quark matter is little affected by the presence of neutrinos. The implications of these results for the evolution of protoneutron stars are briefly discussed.
On the molecular basis of novel anti-inflammatory compounds and functional leukocyte responses
(2006)
Inflammation is a complex pathophysiological event that can be triggered by activation of a number of distinct activation pathways eventually leading to the release of pro-inflammatory molecules and enzymes. Among all cells involved in inflammatory processes, neutrophils, monocytes and platelets are of major relevance. Activation of leukocytes occurs via binding of agonists to distinct GPCRs leading to activation of G proteins and proximate signaling cascades. In short, GPCR activation by pro-inflammatory agonists such as fMLP, PAF or LTB4 leads to activation of G proteins that are associated with the receptor at the cytosolic side of the plasma membrane. G proteins consist of a Gα- and a Gβγ-subunit which are associated in the inactive state. In this state, G proteins bind GDP. Upon activation, GDP is replaced by GTP that results in the dissociation of the Gα- from the Gβγ-subunit. Both subunits are capable of activating distinct PLC-β isoenzymes that catalyze the turnover of PtdIns(4,5)P2 into the second messengers Ins(1,4,5)P3 and DAG. Every GPCR holds a distinct pattern of associated G proteins which preferentially activate distinct PLC-β isoenzymes. Ca2+ channels within the SR/ER-membrane function as specific receptors for Ins(1,4,5)P3. Ligation of Ins(1,4,5)P3 to this receptor causes a release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores into the cytosol that is subsequently followed by the influx of Ca2+ e through channels in the plasma membrane. Ca2+ represents an important signaling molecule, involved in the regulation of cellular processes and enzymes that mediate inflammatory events such as ROS formation and the release of degradative enzymes. 5-LO and COXs are involved in the biosynthesis of pro-inflammatory eicosanoids and catalyze the turnover of AA into LTs and PGs, respectively. Both enzymes play pivotal roles in the initiation and maintenance of allergic diseases and inflammatory processes. LTB4 is regarded as a potent chemotactic and chemokinetic substance, whereas the cysteinyl-LTs cause smooth muscle contraction and increased vascular permeability. Therefore, 5-LO inhibitors are assumed to possess therapeutic potential for the treatment of diseases related to inflammation. Besides the intervention with 5-LO activity, inhibition of COX-activity is an effective way to suppress inflammatory reactions. The two COX isoenzymes, namely COX-1 and COX-2 show different patterns in terms of tissue expression and sensitivity towards inhibitors. COX-1 is supposed to be constantly expressed whereas COX-2 expression is upregulated at sites of inflammation. The extract of H. perforatum is commonly used for the treatment of mild to moderate depressive disorders, accompanied by a moderate profile of side effects. The extract´s efficacy as an antidepressant can be traced back to the content of the phloroglucinol hyperforin which represents the most abundant lipophilic constituent. However, in folk medicine hypericum extracts are additionally used for the treatment of inflammatory disorders such as rheumatoid arthritis or inflammatory skin diseases. In fact, it was shown that hypericum extracts and hyperforin possess anti-inflammatory potential. Hyperforin was described as a dual inhibitor of 5-LO and COX-1. The phloroglucinols MC and S-MC from M. communis significantly differ from the molecular structure of hyperforin. Hyperforin represents a monomeric prenylated derivative whereas MS and S-MC are non-prenylated oligomeric compounds. To date, the anti-inflammatory potential of SM and S-MC has not been investigated in detail. So far, solely antioxidant activity was attributed to MC and S-MC that indeed might qualify them as anti-inflammatory drugs. The phloroglucinols MC, S-MC and hyperforin are potent inhibitors of ROS formation and HLE release. However, any inhibitory potential of these compounds was only observed when cells were activated by GPCR agonists such as fMLP or PAF. In contrast, when cells were stimulated under circumvention of G protein-associated signaling cascades, the abovementioned inhibitors were not effective at all. In leukocytes, [Ca2+]i plays a pivotal role in signal transduction and regulation of the indicated pro-inflammatory cellular functions. We were able to show that MC, S-MC and hyperforin inhibited GPCR-mediated Ca2+ mobilization with approximately the same potency as the above-mentioned leukocyte responses. However, all of the indicated phloroglucinols were ineffective when cells were stimulated with ionomycin. Since ionomycin as well as GPCR agonists exert their effects by mobilizing Ca2+ i, it seems conceivable that MC, S-MC and hyperforin somehow interfere with G protein-associated signaling pathways. In order to investigate PLC as a potential target of hyperforin, the effects of hyperforin were compared to those of the broad spectrum PLC inhibitor U-73122. We found that both inhibitors acted in a comparable manner in terms of agonist-induced Ca2+ mobilization and in regard of the manipulation of basal Ca2+ levels in unstimulated cells. In this respect, significant differences between hyperforin and U-73122 were obvious for inhibition of total PLC activity in vitro. Thus, U-73122 blocked PLC activity whereas hyperforin was ineffective in this respect. This might indicate that only certain PLC isoenzymes are affected by hyperforin. Alternatively, other components within G protein-associated signaling pathways such as G proteins itself or the Ins(1,4,5)P3 receptor must be taken into account as putative targets of hyperforin. We were able to introduce MC and S-MC as novel dual inhibitors of 5-LO and COX-1. Interestingly, such a pattern was also described for hyperforin. MC and S-MC turned out to be direct inhibitors of 5-LO, based on the fact that they inhibit 5-LO not only in intact cells but also as purified enzyme in vitro. For MC and S-MC, great discrepancies were observed between the IC50 values concerning 5-LO inhibition and the concentrations that exert the antioxidative effects. It seems probable that 5-LO inhibition is not related to reduction of the active site iron as a result of the antioxidant activity of MC and S-MC but rather to direct interference with the 5-LO enzyme. The capability of MC and S-MC to suppress COX-1 activity seems not to be a unique effect of these phloroglucinols because for COX-1, the IBPC, present in both MC and S-MC, turned out to be the most active compound. ....
Die Ursache von Adipositas liegt im übermäßigen Wachstum von Fettgewebe, welches hauptsächlich aus Fettzellen, den Adipozyten, besteht. Die Zellen der stroma-vaskulären Fraktion, welche Vorläuferzellen, Makrophagen und Zellen des lokalen Gefäßnetzwerks enthält, sind außerdem an der Homöostase des Fettgewebes beteiligt. Insbesondere spielt das Gefäßsystem des Fettgewebes in Nagetieren eine wichtige Rolle im Fettgewebewachstum, da die Hemmung der Angiogenese in genetisch- und diät-induzierten fettleibigen Mäusen die Entstehung von Adipositas verhindert. Dennoch wurde das Gefäßsystem des menschlichen Fettgewebes bis heute nicht erforscht. Durch immuno-histochemische Analysen am subkutanen menschlichen Fettgewebe konnten wir zwei verschiedene Gefäßsysteme identifizieren: das vaskuläre Netzwerk des Bluts und das lymphatische vaskuläre Netzwerk. Während die Endothelzellen von beiden Gefäßsystemen die gemeinsamen Endothelzellmarker von Willebrand factor (vWf) und CD31 (PECAM, Platelet Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule) exprimierten, konnten die Endothelzellen der Blutgefäße an der Expression des Markers CD34 (Stamm/Blutgefäß-Endothel-Zell-Marker) und die Endothelzellen der Lymphgefäße an der Expression der beiden lymphatischen Marker Podoplanin und VEGFR3 (Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor 3) spezifisch erkannt werden. Ausschließlich für den Marker CD34-positive Zellen und in Rosetten angeordnete CD31-positive Zellen, welche als residente Makrophagen wurden auch charakterisiert. Um die beiden Gefäßsystemen des menschlichen Fettgewebes weiterhin zu erforschen, haben wir ein auf Immunoselektion basiertes Protokoll entwickelt. Es ermöglicht, Blut- (BEC) und lymphatische (LEC) Endothelzellen aber auch Makrophagen und CD34-positive Zellen spezifisch zu isolieren. Sowohl BEC als auch LEC exprimierten VEGFR1, VEGFR2, vWf und Notch4 und nehmen acetyliertes LDL auf. Darüber hinaus konnte in LEC die Expression von Genen, welche spezifisch für das Lymphgefäßsystem sind, wie Podoplanin, Reelin, VEGFR3, Desmoplakin, LYVE-1 nachgewiesen werden. Durch fluss-cytometrischen Analysen des Anzahls von BEC und LEC im Fettgewebe von Patienten mit unterschiedlichen Body Mass Indices (BMI) wurde entdeckt, dass Fettleibigkeit von einer Erweiterung des vaskulären Netzwerks des Bluts im Fettgewebe begleitet wird, jedoch nicht von einer Erweiterung des lymphatischen vaskulären Systems. Flusscytometrische Analysen belegen, dass es in der CD34-positive Stroma-Zellpopulation Zellen gibt, die den endothelialen Progenitor-Zellmarker CD133 und den primitiven Stammzellmarker ABCG2 exprimieren. Außerdem zeigten die CD34-positive Zellen eine signifikant stärkere Proliferation und Expression von Endothelzellmarkern wie CD31 und vWf, wenn dem Kulturmedium zuvor die Faktoren Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A (VEGF A) und Insulin-Like Growth Factor-1 zugefügt worden waren. Wurden Mäusen mit Hinterbeinischämie CD34-positive Zellen in vivo injiziert, beteiligten sich diese Zellen an der Neovaskularisation des ischämischen Hinterbeins. Eine signifikante Zunahme des Blutflusses im ischämischen Bein, gekoppelt an einer erhöhten Kapillardichte im ischämischen Muskel und einer Integration der menschlichen Zellen in die Vaskulatur der Maus waren erkennbar. Diese Ergebnisse weisen darauf hin, dass es unter den CD34-positive Zellen eine Population von endothelialen Progenitorzellen gibt, die -bei geeigneter Stimulation- zu Endothelzellen differenzieren. Parallel dazu wurden die lokalen Faktoren untersucht, die potentiell an der Wachstumskontrolle, der Migration und der Organisation der ruhenden, aus dem Fettgewebe stammenden, BEC und LEC beteiligt waren. Sekrete der Adipozyten, jedoch nicht der CD34-positive Zellen, induzierten eine signifikante BEC- und LEC-Proliferation. Außerdem induzierte die Kombination von Leptin und VEGF A oder des basic Fibroblast Growth Factor eine signifikante Zunahme der BrdU-Inkorporation in BEC während Adiponectin, VEGF C und VEGF D bereits alleine konzentrationsabhängig die Proliferation von LEC induzierten. Leptin, und nicht Adiponectin, führte zu signifikant höherer BEC-Migration und Röhrenformung, während Adiponectin, und nicht Leptin, die LEC-Migration und -Organisation förderte. Dabei führte Leptin in BEC und Adiponectin in LEC zeitabhängig zu einer signifikanten Zunahme der Phosphorylierung der Kinase Akt. Diese Ergebnisse belegen, dass die beiden aus Adipozyten stammenden Adipokine Leptin und Adiponectin eine tragende Rolle in der Umverteilung von BEC bzw. LEC spielen. Im Rahmen der Adipositas steigt die Plasmakonzentration von Leptin an während die Plasmakonzentration von Adiponectin sinkt. Unsere Ergebnisse deuten daraufhin, dass Leptin als lokaler pro-angiogenetischer Faktor identifizieren und Adiponectin als neuer lymphangiogenetischer Faktor im menschlichen Fettgewebe beschreiben konnte. Demnach könnten Veränderungen, in der Adipositas, der Adipokinfreisetzung durch Adipozyten am Umbau des vaskulären Netzwerks des Bluts und am ausbleibenden Wachstum des lymphatischen vaskulären Systems innerhalb des Fettgewebes beteiligt sein. Schließlich belegen die vorliegenden Ergebnisse das Vorhandensein einer Progenitor-Zell-Population in der Stroma-Fraktion des menschlichen Fettgewebes. Diese Progenitor-Zellen sind in der Lage sich an der Neovaskularisation ischämischen Gewebes zu beteiligen. Diese Population könnte im Hinblick auf zelltherapeutische Strategien eine interessante Alternative zu Stammzellen aus dem Knochenmark darstellen.
Aging and age-related diseases are becoming more and more important for our society and our health care system. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a disorder that destroys some parts of the brain and is characterized by global cognitive decline including a progressive irreversible loss of memory, orientation, and reasoning. “Healthy aging”, therefore, is one of the major aims for modern medicine. Apoptosis, or programmed cell death, plays an important role for example in fetal development, as well as for learning processes. T-lymphocytes usually undergo apoptosis in order to terminate an acute inflammation. The aim of this thesis was to explore the changes in the apoptotic mechanism of peripheral lymphocytes from Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients in contrast to physiological aging. The experiments were conducted with lymphocytes of healthy volunteers of different ages, AD patients and young and aged mice. Moreover, transgenic mice carrying familiar AD-related mutations were examined. The aging study of peripheral cells of ‘healthy’-aged volunteers revealed an age-related increase of basal apoptosis. In addition, spontaneous apoptosis as well as apoptosis induced by oxidative stress (ROS) or by Fas engagement were enhanced in aging. A closer look at the subcellular basis of the lymphocytes (e.g. B-, NK-, CD4+-, and CD8+-T cells) determined that all lymphocyte subsets were affected by aging. Therefore, it could be concluded that the regulation of apoptosis is generally impaired in lymphocytes of aged persons. The increased susceptibility to oxidative stress supports the ‘Free radical theory of aging’ that claims the radicals to be the cause for the aging-process. In mice an increase of basal, spontaneous and ROS-induced apoptosis was detected in T cells from the spleen, as well. An oral treatment over two weeks with the Ginkgo biloba extract EGb761 showed a clear reduction of ROS-induced apoptosis in the treated group. Interestingly, basal and spontaneous apoptosis, e.g. physiological apoptosis, were not effected by the plant extract. This is an important benefit for therapy since physiological apoptosis has a great relevance in the elimination of cancer-cells for example. In conclusion, the antidementive drug EGb761 reduces specifically ROS-induced apoptosis that a plays an important role in aging as shown in this thesis. Based on the data found in healthy aging, lymphocytes from AD patients were assessed for apoptosis. The cells show enhanced levels of basal, spontaneous, and Fas-induced apoptosis. In subsequent experiments it was demonstrated that mainly the T cells were responsible for the findings. However, the NK-cells provided an important impact as well. In concordance with AD-affected neurons, peripheral lymphocytes of AD patients show clear signs of apoptotic cell death. In addition, basal apoptosis of T cells and the CD4/CD8-ratio showed a correlation with the severity of the dementia. Therefore, it could be speculated that apoptosis is due to activation-induced cell death (AICD) that occurs in acute and chronic activation of adaptive immunity. In AD there is a chronic neuroinflammation in the CNS triggering degeneration of neural tissue. In order to explore this, the experimental model of lymphocyte’s activation was established in healthy aging first. The study included the detection of various events of lymphocyte’s activation on the basis of the T cell subsets (CD4+ and CD8+). The inducibility to mitogenic stimulation clearly decreased in both subsets in aging. In contrast, T lymphocytes from AD patients showed an enhanced activation subsequent to mitogenic stimulation compared with age-matched nondemented persons. Only proliferation of CD8+ T cells was clearly reduced in AD. This data could be clues that an increased generation of memory T cells due to chronic neuroinflammation might be evident in AD. Memory T lymphocytes show increased inducibility upon mitogenic activation. Interestingly, CD8+ memory T cells display decreased prolifertive capacity. Due to activation, cells die by apoptosis later on. It could be concluded that AD patients display an increased amount of memory T cells compared to controls. The data implicate that there could be a cross talk between inflammatory within the brain and inflammatory cells of the periphery. This is an interesting point since the brain used to be assumed as immune-privileged zone. According to the experiment, the information of the diseased brain is transferred to white blood cells. The connection of those two compartments might raise the opportunity to observe and probably to influence easily not-accessible regions like the brain. Transgenic mice carrying mutations in familiar AD-relevant genes (Amyloid-Precursor-Protein, Presenilin-1, respectively) displayed enhanced levels of apoptotic T cells from the spleen, as well. It seems that those mutated proteins influence the regulation of apoptosis. Probably, they are involved in the increased cell death of T- and NK-cells, as well. Animals overexpressing Presenilin-1 showed reduced levels of apoptotic cell death. It was demonstrated with molecuar biology tools that Presenilin-1, processed during apoptosis, has an anti-apoptotic effect.
5-LO is the key enzyme in the biosynthesis of proinflammatory leukotrienes, converting arachidonic acid to 5-HPETE, and in a second step 5-HPETE to leukotriene A4. Although the 5-LO promoter possesses characteristics of so called housekeeping genes, such as lack of TATA/CCAAT boxes and existence of several Sp1 binding sites, the 5 -LO gene is tissue specifically expressed in primarily immune competent cells of myeloid origin including granulocytes, monocytes, macrophages, mast cells and B-lymphocytes. 5-LO gene expression in MM6 and HL-60 cells is strongly induced after differentiation of the cells with TGF-beta and 1,25(OH)2D3. In some monocytic cancer cell lines, such as HL-60 TB and U937, TGF-beta and 1,25(OH)2D3 treatment are not able to activate 5-LO gene transcription. It was demonstrated, that in these cell lines the 5-LO core promoter is heavily methylated and that only demethylation by the DNA methyltransferase inhibitor 5-aza-2 deoxycytidine (Adc) upregulated the 5-LO mRNA levels. It was also shown that the histone deacetylase inhibitor TsA could induce 5-LO mRNA levels, but only in 1,25(OH)2D3/TGF-beta inducible MM6 cells. Interestingly the 1,25(OH)2D3/TGF-beta effect on 5-LO expression is reduced, when combined with TsA. Reporter gene assays revealed that 5-LO promoter activity is strongly induced after 24 h treatment with 330 nM TsA (construct N10 up to 35 fold in HeLa cells). The effect is dependent on the presence of the proximal Sp1 binding site GC4 (-53 bp to –48 bp in relation to the major TIS) in both HeLa and MM6 cells. In vitro binding of the transcription factor Sp1 to this site has been demonstrated in gel shift assays and DNase I footprints. Mutation of the binding site resulted in a loss of basal promoter activity in both 5-LO negative HeLa cells and in 5-LO positive MM6 cells, as well as in the loss of TsA inducibility. The mutational study of different Sp1 binding sites in a larger promoter context revealed the interaction or respectively the additive effect of the multiple Sp1 binding sites of the 5-LO promoter on basal as well as on TsA upregulated promoter activity. However, GC4 seems to be of special relevance for both the basal promoter activity, possibly recruiting the basal transcription machinery, as well as for the TsA induced upregulation of 5-LO promoter activity. TsA does not alter the protein expression levels of Sp1 and Sp3 as investigated in Western blot analysis, neither in HeLa nor in MM6 cells. DNA affinity purification assays revealed that TsA had no effect on the DNA affinity of Sp1 or Sp3. In vitro binding of both Sp1 and Sp3 to the 5-fold GC box, GC4 and GC5 was demonstrated by DAPA analysis, but histone deacetylase inhibition did not change the associated protein amounts. Finally, in vivo binding of Sp1 and Sp3 was investigated in chromatin immunoprecipitation assay (ChIP) in MM6 cells. TsA clearly induced the association of both proteins to the promoter area surrounding the TIS. Upon TsA treatment also RNA polymerase II binding to the area surrounding the TIS (-318 to +52 bp) was increased and even initiated in the more distal promoter parts –1049 to –292 bp, which are negatively regulated in reporter gene assays. Interestingly histone H4 is already highly acetylated without TsA treatment and the acetylation status of H4 remains unchanged after histone deacetylase inhibition, indicating an open chromatin structure of the 5-LO gene in MM6 cells. In a cotransfection study with Sp1 and Sp3, the transactivating potential of factors was investigated and in accordance with the ChIP data, Sp1 and Sp3 increased the promoter activity, but only after TsA treatment. In gel shift assays, the influence of DNA methylation on Sp1 binding was investigated. The results indicate different roles for the three proximal promoter sites. Whereas Sp1 binding to the 5-fold GC box and GC4 is impaired by DNA methylation, binding to GC5 is even increased. A cotransfection study with methylated 5-LO promoter constructs and the murine methyl-CpG binding proteins suggest MBD1 involvement in the regulation of the 5-LO promoter. Since in gel shifts Sp1 binding is inhibited by DNA methylation, at least to the 5-fold GC box and the activating element GC4, and similarly the mutation/deletion of the same sites strongly reduces or inhibits promoter activity, it is likely to assume, that the loss of promoter activity after in vitro methylation is in the first place due to impaired Sp1/Sp3 binding. Together the data underline the importance and complexity of Sp1/Sp3 binding to the GC rich sites in the regulation of 5-LO promoter activity in response to the histone deacetylase inhibitor TsA as well as in respect to DNA methylation.
The mitochondrial respiratory chain consists of NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Complex-I), succinate:ubiquinone reductase (Complex-II), ubiquinol:cytochrome c reductase (Complex-III), cytochrome c oxidase (Complex-IV) and cytochrome c as an electron mediator between Complex-III and Complex-IV. Paracoccus denitrificans membranes were used as a model system for the association of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. More than 50 years ago, a model was given for a supercomplex assembly formed by stable associations between these complexes. This model gradually shifted by the model of random diffusion given by Hackenbrock et al. 1986 Different independent approaches were used to further analyze this situation in a native membrane environment, thus avoiding any perturbation caused by detergent solubilization: (a) measuring the distance and orientation of the different complexes by multi-frequency EPR Spectroscopy we started to analyze simple system, the interaction between CuA fragment derived from P. denitrificans and various c type cytochrome by Pulsed X band and G band (180 GHz) EPR. Partner proteins for the CuA (excess negative surface charge) were (i) horse heart cytochrome c which contain a large number of positive charges in heme crevice,(ii) the cytochrome c552 soluble fragment (physiological electron donor and have positive charges), and as a control (iii) the cytochrome c1 soluble fragment (negative surface potential, derived from bc1 complex) The measurements were performed at several magnetic field positions varying temperature between 5 to 30 K. Both the X band and the high-field measurements show the existence of a strong relaxation enhancement of the CuA by the specific binding of the P. denitrificans cytochrome c552 and horse heart cytochrome c. This relaxation enhancement is dependent on temperature and provides information about the distance and relative orientation of the two interacting spins within this protein-protein complex. (b) For quantitative information about lateral diffusion of cytochrome c oxidase in the native membrane Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy (FCS) was used. In this experiment, diffusion coefficients for oxidase differ in the case of supercomplex for wild type membrane and for two deletion mutants lacking either Complex-I or Complex-III. (c) The optical absorption spectroscopy at microsecond level resolution was tried for the translational mobility of oxidase in membrane vesicles. Due to the presence of different hemes in the native membrane, carbon monoxide (CO) used as a probe for the experiment. The optimization of the experimental conditions were carried out to get the optimal signal.
Although in general cells are genetically identical in multicellular organisms, the differential expression of genomic information enables cell type definition and specific organ function. In eukaryotic cells, the DNA is associated with histone and non-histones proteins into a restrictive structure called chromatin. Assembly into chromatin does not only protect and package the linear double stranded DNA into the nucleus but is fundamental for the execution of diverse genetic programs. Posttranslational modifications of histones regulate the accessibility of the DNA to transcription factors and serve as scaffold for binding of regulatory proteins. Nuclear receptors are transcription factors that bind specific target sequences on the DNA and recruit transcriptional coregulators at the promoter. These are able to modify the chromatin structure in an activating or repressing manner. The contribution of corepressors to the biological actions of nuclear receptors has turned out to be essential. Impaired corepressor function can be the cause of endocrine malfunctions, neoplastic diseases or severe developmental abnormalities. To better understand the role of the nuclear receptor corepressor N-CoR the unknown function of the extreme C-terminus was investigated. In this thesis the interaction of N-CoR with the non-POU-domain containing octamer-binding protein Non0/p54nrb, that was found tobe a potential interaction partner in a yeast-two-hybrid screen, was confirmed. This protein contains two RNA recognition motifs (RRM) and is described as a multifunctional protein since it is involved in transcription Initiation as well as in pre-mRNA processing. The RRM1 motif was determined to be essential and sufficient for the interaction with N-CoR. Obtaining dominant negative effect with the Non0/p54nrb RRM1 deletion mutant in functional reporter assays, data support that NonO modulates the capacity of N-CoR to repress and alters the recruitment of N-CoR by nuclear receptors to targeted Promoters. Additional analyses suggest that the N- and C- terminus of N-CoR are involved in intramolecular interactions and that they regulate each other. Taken results together a functional model is proposed that supports the biological relevance of the interaction of N-CoR with NonO and the function of N-CoR C-terminus acting as asensor that evaluates the ratio of corepressors and coactivators in the nuclear receptor environment. N-CoR repressive capacity would be altered by modulating factors like NonO that interacts with N-CoR C-terminus. The mechanism support that splicing and transcription regulation are physically and functionallylinked to ensure the appropriate amount of messager RNA to be transcript and process in response to stimulation intensity and cell context.
The goal of this thesis was the development, evaluation and application of novel virtual screening approaches for the rational compilation of high quality pharmacological screening libraries. The criteria for a high quality were a high probability of the selected molecules to be active compared to randomly selected molecules and diversity in the retrieved chemotypes of the selected molecules to be prepared for the attrition of single lead structures. For the latter criterion the virtual screening approach had to perform “scaffold hopping”. The first molecular descriptor that was explicitly reported for that purpose was the topological pharmacophore CATS descriptor, representing a correlation vector (CV) of all pharmacophore points in a molecule. The representation is alignment-free and thus renders fast screening of large databases feasible. In a first series of experiments the CATS descriptor was conceptually extended to the three-dimensional pharmacophore-pair CATS3D descriptor and the molecular surface based SURFCATS descriptor. The scaling of the CATS3D descriptor, the combination of CATS3D with different similarity metrics and the dependence of the CATS3D descriptor on the threedimensional conformations of the molecules in the virtual screening database were evaluated in retrospective screening experiments. The “scaffold hopping” capabilities of CATS3D and SURFCATS were compared to CATS and the substructure fingerprint MACCS keys. Prospective virtual screening with CATS3D similarity searching was applied for the TAR RNA and the metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGlur5). A combination of supervised and unsupervised neural networks trained on CATS3D descriptors was applied prospectively to compile a focused but still diverse library of mGluR5 modulators. In a second series of experiments the SQUID fuzzy pharmacophore model method was developed, that was aimed to provide a more general query for virtual screening than the CATS family descriptors. A prospective application of the fuzzy pharmacophore models was performed for TAR RNA ligands. In a last experiment a structure-/ligand-based pharmacophore model was developed for taspase1 based on a homology model of the enzyme. This model was applied prospectively for the screening for the first inhibitors of taspase1. The effect of different similarity metrics (Euc: Euclidean distance, Manh: Manhattan distance and Tani: Tanimoto similarity) and different scaling methods (unscaled, scaling1: scaling by the number of atoms, and scaling2: scaling by the added incidences of potential pharmacophore points of atom pairs) on CATS3D similarity searching was evaluated in retrospective virtual screening experiments. 12 target classes of the COBRA database of annotated ligands from recent scientific literature were used for that purpose. Scaling2, a new development for the CATS3D descriptor, was shown to perform best on average in combination with all three similarity metrics (enrichment factor ef (1%): Manh = 11.8 ± 4.3, Euc = 11.9 ± 4.6, Tani = 12.8 ± 5.1). The Tanimoto coefficient was found to perform best with the new scaling method. Using the other scaling methods the Manhattan distance performed best (ef (1%): unscaled: Manh = 9.6 ± 4.0, Euc = 8.1 ± 3.5, Tani = 8.3 ± 3.8; scaling1: Manh = 10.3 ± 4.1, Euc = 8.8 ± 3.6, Tani = 9.1 ± 3.8). Since CATS3D is independent of an alignment, the dependence of a “receptor relevant” conformation might also be weaker compared to other methods like docking. Using such methods might be a possibility to overcome problems like protein flexibility or the computational expensive calculation of many conformers. To test this hypothesis, co-crystal structures of 11 target classes served as queries for virtual screening of the COBRA database. Different numbers of conformations were calculated for the COBRA database. Using only a single conformation already resulted in a significant enrichment of isofunctional molecules on average (ef (1%) = 6.0 ± 6.5). This observation was also made for ligand classes with many rotatable bonds (e.g. HIV-protease: 19.3 ± 6.2 rotatable bonds in COBRA, ef (1%) = 12.2 ± 11.8). On average only an improvement from using the maximum number of conformations (on average 37 conformations / molecule) to using single conformations of 1.1 fold was found. It was found that using more conformations actives and inactives equally became more similar to the reference compounds according to the CATS3D representations. Applying the same parameters as before to calculate conformations for the crystal structure ligands resulted in an average Cartesian RMSD of the single conformations to the crystal structure conformations of 1.7 ± 0.7 Å. For the maximum number of conformations, the RMSD decreased to 1.0 ± 0.5 Å (1.8 fold improvement on average). To assess the virtual screening performance and the scaffold hopping potential of CATS3D and SURFACATS, these descriptors were compared to CATS and the MACCS keys, a fingerprint based on exact chemical substructures. Retrospective screening of ten classes of the COBRA database was performed. According to the average enrichment factors the MACCS keys performed best (ef (1%): MACCS = 17.4 ± 6.4, CATS = 14.6 ± 5.4, CATS3D = 13.9 ± 4.9, SURFCATS = 12.2 ± 5.5). The classes, where MACCS performed best, consisted of a lower average fraction of different scaffolds relative to the number of molecules (0.44 ± 0.13), than the classes, where CATS performed best (0.65 ± 0.13). CATS3D was the best performing method for only a single target class with an intermediate fraction of scaffolds (0.55). SURFCATS was not found to perform best for a single class. These results indicate that CATS and the CATS3D descriptors might be better suited to find novel scaffolds than the MACCS keys. All methods were also shown to complement each other by retrieving scaffolds that were not found by the other methods. A prospective evaluation of CATS3D similarity searching was done for metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGluR5) allosteric modulators. Seven known antagonists of mGluR5 with sub-micromolar IC50 were used as reference ligands for virtual screening of the 20,000 most drug-like compounds – as predicted by an artificial neural network approach – of the Asinex vendor database (194,563 compounds). Eight of 29 virtual screening hits were found with a Ki below 50 µM in a binding assay. Most of the ligands were only moderately specific for mGluR5 (maximum of > 4.2 fold selectivity) relative to mGluR1, the most similar receptor to mGluR5. One ligand exhibited even a better Ki for mGluR1 than for mGluR5 (mGluR5: Ki > 100 µM, mGluR1: Ki = 14 µM). All hits had different scaffolds than the reference molecules. It was demonstrated that the compiled library contained molecules that were different from the reference structures – as estimated by MACCS substructure fingerprints – but were still considered isofunctional by both CATS and CATS3D pharmacophore approaches. Artificial neural networks (ANN) provide an alternative to similarity searching in virtual screening, with the advantage that they incorporate knowledge from a learning procedure. A combination of artificial neural networks for the compilation of a focused but still structurally diverse screening library was employed prospectively for mGluR5. Ensembles of neural networks were trained on CATS3D representations of the training data for the prediction of “mGluR5-likeness” and for “mGluR5/mGluR1 selectivity”, the most similar receptor to mGluR5, yielding Matthews cc between 0.88 and 0.92 as well as 0.88 and 0.91 respectively. The best 8,403 hits (the focused library: the intersection of the best hits from both prediction tasks) from virtually ranking the Enamine vendor database (ca. 1,000,000 molecules), were further analyzed by two self-organizing maps (SOMs), trained on CATS3D descriptors and on MACCS substructure fingerprints. A diverse and representative subset of the hits was obtained by selecting the most similar molecules to each SOM neuron. Binding studies of the selected compounds (16 molecules from each map) gave that three of the molecules from the CATS3D SOM and two of the molecules from the MACCS SOM showed mGluR5 binding. The best hit with a Ki of 21 µM was found in the CATS3D SOM. The selectivity of the compounds for mGluR5 over mGluR1 was low. Since the binding pockets in the two receptors are similar the general CATS3D representation might not have been appropriate for the prediction of selectivity. In both SOMs new active molecules were found in neurons that did not contain molecules from the training set, i. e. the approach was able to enter new areas of chemical space with respect to mGluR5. The combination of supervised and unsupervised neural networks and CATS3D seemed to be suited for the retrieval of dissimilar molecules with the same class of biological activity, rather than for the optimization of molecules with respect to activity or selectivity. A new virtual screening approach was developed with the SQUID (Sophisticated Quantification of Interaction Distributions) fuzzy pharmacophore method. In SQUID pairs of Gaussian probability densities are used for the construction of a CV descriptor. The Gaussians represent clusters of atoms comprising the same pharmacophoric feature within an alignment of several active reference molecules. The fuzzy representation of the molecules should enhance the performance in scaffold hopping. Pharmacophore models with different degrees of fuzziness (resolution) can be defined which might be an appropriate means to compensate for ligand and receptor flexibility. For virtual screening the 3D distribution of Gaussian densities is transformed into a two-point correlation vector representation which describes the probability density for the presence of atom-pairs, comprising defined pharmacophoric features. The fuzzy pharmacophore CV was used to rank CATS3D representations of molecules. The approach was validated by retrospective screening for cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) and thrombin ligands. A variety of models with different degrees of fuzziness were calculated and tested for both classes of molecules. Best performance was obtained with pharmacophore models reflecting an intermediate degree of fuzziness. Appropriately weighted fuzzy pharmacophore models performed better in retrospective screening than CATS3D similarity searching using single query molecules, for both COX-2 and thrombin (ef (1%): COX-2: SQUID = 39.2., best CATS3D result = 26.6; Thrombin: SQUID = 18.0, best CATS3D result = 16.7). The new pharmacophore method was shown to complement MOE pharmacophore models. SQUID fuzzy pharmacophore and CATS3D virtual screening were applied prospectively to retrieve novel scaffolds of RNA binding molecules, inhibiting the Tat-TAR interaction. A pharmacophore model was built up from one ligand (acetylpromazine, IC50 = 500 µM) and a fragment of another known ligand (CGP40336A), which was assumed to bind with a comparable binding mode as acetylpromazine. The fragment was flexible aligned to the TAR bound NMR conformation of acetylpromazine. Using an optimized SQUID pharmacophore model the 20,000 most druglike molecules from the SPECS database (229,658 compounds) were screened for Tat-TAR ligands. Both reference inhibitors were also applied for CATS3D similarity searching. A set of 19 molecules from the SQUID and CATS3D results was selected for experimental testing. In a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) assay the best SQUID hit showed an IC50 value of 46 µM, which represents an approximately tenfold improvement over the reference acetylpromazine. The best hit from CATS3D similarity searching showed an IC50 comparable to acetylpromazine (IC50 = 500 µM). Both hits contained different molecular scaffolds than the reference molecules. Structure-based pharmacophores provide an alternative to ligand-based approaches, with the advantage that no ligands have to be known in advance and no topological bias is introduced. The latter is e.g. favorable for hopping from peptide-like substrates to drug-like molecules. A homology model of the threonine aspartase taspase1 was calculated based on the crystal structures of a homologous isoaspartyl peptidase. Docking studies of the substrate with GOLD identified a binding mode where the cleaved bond was situated directly above the reactive N-terminal threonine. The predicted enzyme-substrate complex was used to derive a pharmacophore model for virtual screening for novel taspase1 inhibitors. 85 molecules were identified from virtual screening with the pharmacophore model as potential taspase1- inhibitors, however biochemical data was not available before the end of this thesis. In summary this thesis demonstrated the successful development, improvement and application of pharmacophore-based virtual screening methods for the compilation of molecule-libraries for early phase drug development. The highest potential of such methods seemed to be in scaffold hopping, the non-trivial task of finding different molecules with the same biological activity.
The Kaon-Spectrometer (KaoS) at the heavy-ion synchrotron (SIS) at the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt has been used to study production and propagation of K+ and K- mesons from Au+Au collisions at a kinetic beam energy of 1.5 AGeV. This energy for K+ mesons is close to the corresponding production threshold in binary nucleon-nucleon collisions and far below for K- mesons. The azimuthal angular distributions of particles as a function of the collision centrality and particle transverse momenta have been measured. The properties of strange mesons are expected to be modified by the in-medium meson-baryon potential. Theoretical calculations show that the superposition of the scalar and vector potentials leads to a small repulsive K+N and a strong attractive K-N potential. Additionally, the interaction of kaons and antikaons with nuclear matter is different. The strangeness conservation law inhibits the absorption probability of K+ mesons as they contain an s-quark. K- mesons, however, interact with nucleons via strangenessexchange (K- + N ->Y + pion, where Y = lambda, sigma). Moreover, the reverse process (pion + Y -> K- + N) is the dominant production mechanism of K- mesons at SIS energies. The azimuthal angular emission patterns of kaons are expected to be sensitive to the in-medium potentials. An enhanced out-of-plane emission of K+ mesons was observed in Au+Au reactions at 1.0 AGeV and 1.5 AGeV, and also in Ni+Ni at 1.93 AGeV. The out-of-plane emission of K+ mesons in Au+Au reactions at 1.0 AGeV was interpreted as a consequence of a repulsive K+N potential in the nuclear medium, however, recent transport calculations show that the emission patterns obtained in Au+Au at 1.5 AGeV and Ni+Ni at 1.93 AGeV are additionally influenced by the re-scattering of kaons. For K- mesons the calculations predict an almost isotropic emission pattern due to the attractive K-N potential which counteracts the absorption of K- mesons in the spectator fragments. In Ni+Ni collisions at 1.93 AGeV the azimuthal distribution of K- mesons has been found to be isotropic. In this case, however, the spectators are rather small and have large relative velocities. In addition, the delay of antikaon emission due to strangenessexchange reaction minimizes the interaction with the spectators. As a consequence the sensitivity of the K- meson emission pattern to the K-N in-medium potential is reduced. In Au+Au collisions we found a dependence of the K- meson azimuthal emission pattern on the transverse momentum. The antikaons registered with pt < 0.5 GeV/c are preferentially emitted in the reaction plane and the particles with pt > 0.5 GeV/c show strong out-of-plane enhancement. The emission patterns of K- can be explained in terms of two competing phenomena: one of them is indeed the influence of the attractive K-N potential, however, the second one originates from the strangeness-exchange process.
Soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) is a cytosolic enzyme producing the intracellular messenger cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) on activation with nitric oxide (NO) which leads to the activation of GMP dependent protein kinases and to vasodilation. NO signaling may be affected by altered expression of sGC subunits, as has been shown in different pathological and physiological conditions and developmental stages. The molecular mechanisms underlying altered sGC expression in these and other conditions have not yet been revealed. Gene expression can also be regulated at the level of mRNA through alterations in translational efficiency and in mRNA stability. HuR (Human R) is a ubiquitously expressed member of the embryonic lethal abnormal vision (ELAV) family of RNA-binding proteins. Among other RNAs, there has been recent evidence that the expression of sGC is subject to post-transcriptional regulation by HuR. It has been shown that chronic hypertension induces changes in HuR expression and activity, which account for decreased sGC expression and activity in the aorta of hypertensive rats. This thesis should study was performed in an effort to provide some insight to the transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of sGC expression in a mammal, the rat. We investigated rat sGC alpha-1 transcriptional regulation in rat lung fibroblast (RLF-6) cells. The 3000bp 5' upstream region of the alpha-1 sGC gene was isolated and analyzed for promoter activity by using luciferase reporter constructs- Alpha3000 (with -2794 bp), Alpha1100 (-1092 bp), Alpha350 (-346 bp) and Alpha200 (-200 bp). The promoter activity was the highest in the 200bp construct (about 6-fold higher than Alpha3000) suggesting that this fragment contains all the crucial elements necessary to support basal transcription of the alpha-1 sGC gene. Analysis of the 200 bp of the 5’ UTR of the alpha-1 gene was performed using the MATINSPECTOR V2.2 software for putative transcription factors. The constructs containing the deleted sites for NFY and Sp1 showed a significant decrease in constitutive promoter activity by almost 80% and 60% respectively, implying that these transcription factors are crucial elements in the basal expression of the of sGC alpha-1 subunit. Treatment of RLF-6 cells with genistein 50 microM and mithramycinA 100 nM, known to inhibit the NFY and Sp1 binding to DNA respectively, reflected the same effects. Furthermore the cGMP content of the cells was significantly reduced by both inhibitors, almost completely by genistein, and by about 40 % by mithramycinA. Electrophoretic mobility-shift assay (EMSA) clearly showed the formation of multiple complexes with the biotinylated ODN (decoy oligodeoxynucleotide) probes for NFY and Sp1 when incubated with RLF-6 nuclear extract. A “supershift” observed in the presence of antibodies to the individual transcription factors confirmed that these factors were present in the shifted band, indeed. NFY and Sp1 are instrumental in several physiological and pathophysiological effects mediated by several growth factors in smooth muscle cells. Thus the regulation of the promoter, in response to serum, was also analysed. 10% foetal calf serum led to decreased alpha-1 sGC level as shown by western blots performed with rat aorta. Decreased sGC alpha-1 mRNA expression was observed in RLF-6 cells and cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells incubated with FCS for 24 hours. This decrease was reflected in the promoter activity in RLF-6 cells using both Alpha3000 and Alpha200 constructs confirming that the regulation took place at promoter level. EMSA performed with nuclear extracts from FCS treated RLF-6 cells led to diminished binding to NFY, but to an enhanced binding to Sp1 site. We concluded that the factors Sp1 and NFY (the sites overlapping) compete for binding, and in the presence of FCS, it is Sp1 that binds stronger, and hence results in diminishing promoter activity. In order to delineate the post-transcriptional regulation of sGC alpha-1 subunit, studies were performed to demonstrate the regulation of expression of the mRNA stabilizing protein HuR. It has been observed that exposure of isolated rat aortic segments to the activator of adenylyl cyclase, forskolin, strongly reduced sGC alpha-1/beta-1 and HuR protein and mRNA expression in a time-dependent and actinomycin D-sensitive fashion. Transcription factor decoy approach proved that the cAMP-induced down-regulation of HuR is mediated by the activation of AP-1. It has been established that HuR stabilises the sGC alpha-1 and beta-1 mRNA. However the pathway underlying this regulation remains unknown. In order to identify the mechanism of this regulation, we looked for HuR interacting proteins employing the yeast two hybrid assay. The enzyme of the polyamine catabolic pathway spermidine/spermine N1-acetyltransferase (SSAT) was found to interact with the hinge region of HuR. This interaction was confirmed by performing immunoprecipitation and GST-pulldown experiments. A direct effect of these proteins on each other’s biological activity was not visible as tested through the SSAT activity assay and HuR gel shift. It might be possible that SSAT-mediated modulation of local polyamine concentrations enhances/reduces HuR activity and sGC expression to affect cell proliferation. In summary, this study represents an analysis of the rat sGC alpha-1 promoter regulation in rat fibroblast cells and identifies NFY and Sp1 as important factors in sGC alpha-1 expression. It also gives first evidence of sGC regulation at the transcriptional level in response to an external stimulus, and proposes the possible mechanism. It also identifies SSAT as a HuR interacting protein. These might have implications in the various pathophysiological conditions where sGC plays an important role.
Boswellia serrata gum resin extracts (frankincense) have been used for centuries in folk medicine in Asia and Africa. They have shown beneficial therapeutic effects, particularly in the treatment of chronic inflammatory diseases. Clinical studies on humans confirmed an anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer potential of Frankincense preparations. Boswellic acids (BAs) are the major ingredients, responsible for the pharmacological action of the extracts. Molecular and cellular studies with BAs revealed a number of targets including 5-lipoxygenase (LO), topoisomerases and the NF-κB pathway. Since there is little information on the modulation of cellular physiology by BAs, this work was designed to provide a detailed investigation of the cellular and molecular effects of BAs in several cell types related to inflammation. We report that 11-keto-BAs are potent activators of functional responses in human neutrophils, a type of leukocytes mediating acute inflammatory processes. Neutrophil activation by 11-keto-BAs is reflected by enhanced generation of oxygen radicals, release of arachidonic acid (AA) and the subsequent transformation of AA to pro-inflammatory eicosanoids. Investigation of the participating signalling pathways identified Ca2+, phosphoinositide-3 kinase, and members of the MAP kinase family (ERKs) as mediators. Second, we present a detailed study of the modulation of human platelet physiology and intracellular signalling events by BAs. Intriguingly, we discovered an inverse structure-activity relationship of BAs regarding platelet activation, with 11-methylene-BAs being superior over 11-keto-BAs. Thus, 11-methylene-BAs stimulated platelet Ca2+ mobilisation, MAP kinase and Akt activation, AA release, 12-LO and cyclooxygenase product formation, and thrombin generation. Novel Ca2+-independent activation pathways of platelet lipid metabolism were discovered. In contrast, 11-keto-BAs were inactive but found to inhibit platelet (p)12-LO directly. Interaction with p12-LO was confirmed in a pulldown assay using immobilised BAs as bait. Finally, BAs were shown to attenuate the activation of monocytes, a cell type responsible for the maintenance of chronic inflammatory states. Impairment of Ca2+ homeostasis is likely conferred by inhibition of Ca2+ influx channels. Taken together, our results shed light on the modulation of intracellular physiology of inflammatory cells by BAs, contributing to a better understanding of the anti-inflammatory effects exerted by frankincense preparations.
The generation of O2- by NADPH oxidaes was mainly attributed to immune cells that kill invading bacteria or cancer cells. But importantly, in the past several years, several homologs of the catalytic subunit gp91phox (Nox2) of the phagocytic NADPH oxidase have been identified in non-immune cells and tissues. Superoxide production derived from NADPH oxidaes has been shown to play a role not only in host defense but also in defined signaling cascades mediating growth and apoptosis. The aim of this work was to study the expression and the regulation of the”new” Nox isoforms in rat renal mesangial cells (MC). In particular the following results were achieved. 1) mRNA’s for both Nox1 and Nox4 were detected by RT-PCR. 2) Nox1 mRNA levels were increased upon exposure to basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) and fetal calf serum (FCS) in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Exposure of MC to bFGF and FCS increased also basal production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by MC. By contrast, Nox4 mRNA levels were not significantly affected by bFGF treatment, but were markedly down-regulated by PDGF and FCS. 3) To study the regulation of Nox1 on the protein level, an anti-Nox1 antibody was generated and characterized using affinity chromatography. Up-regulation of Nox1 expression by growth factors was confirmed also on the protein level. 4) Based on the already known cDNA sequence for Nox1, the transcriptional start site was determined by the “gene RACE” technique. 2547 bp of the genomic sequence of the 5´-flanking region of the Nox1 gene were cloned and sequenced using the „Genome-Walking“ method. To study the regulation of Nox1 transcription functional Nox1 promoter/luciferase fusions were be established. MC were transiently transfected with different promoter/luciferase constructs and stimulated with growth factors. By measuring luciferase activity it was determined that growth factors induced the Nox1 transcription and that the Nox1 core promoter is sufficient for the activation. 5) By measurement of superoxide radicals and analysis of Nox1 mRNA expression by quantitative RT-PCR (TaqMan) as well as protein level by Western blotting it could be shown that treatment of MC with NO donors inhibited the expression of Nox1 in a time- and dose-dependent manner. Moreover, using activators and inhibitors of the soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) it could be shown, that the activation of sGC mediates the effect of NO on Nox1 expression. However, NO had no inhibitory effect on Nox1 promoter activity. Experiments with the inhibitor of transcription, actinomycin D, suggest that NO-mediated regulation of Nox1 is triggered probably via post-transcriptional mechanisms. Nox4 is regulated on the mRNA levels in a similar manner as Nox1. 6) To analyze the sub-cellular localization of the Nox isoforms, coding sequences for Nox1 and Nox4 were fused together with green fluorescent protein into the pEGFP-N1 demonstrated that both isoforms are localized predominantly in the plasma membrane, but also in the perinuclear region and cytoplasm. However, the localization of Nox1 in the plasma membrane was more pronounced. 7) In addition to Nox1 and Nox4, mRNA of the newly identified NOXA1 that is a homolog of the p67phox subunit of NADPH oxidase was detected in MC by RT-PCR.
The heat stress response is characterized by the presence of heat stress transcription factors (Hsfs) which mediate transcription of heat stress genes. In tomato (Lycopersicon peruvianum) cell cultures the simultaneous expression of four Hsfs, which are either constitutively (HsfA1 and HsfA3) or heat-stress inducible (HsfA2 and HsfB1) expressed, results in a complex network with dynamically changing cellular levels, intracellular localization and functional interactions. In order to examine the relevance of their multiplicity as well as to get more insights into the complexity of the plant heat stress response, the individual tomato Hsfs were investigated with respect to their protein interactions in vitro and in vivo. To this aim, I used pull-down assays as well as yeast assays to study the following aspects: 1. Oligomeric state of Hsfs: the results show that all class A Hsfs (HsfA1, HsfA2 and HsfA3) are trimeric proteins and interact with each other via the oligomerization (HR-A/B) domain. The similarity of their HRA/B regions allows formation of homo- and heterooligomeric complexes between all class A Hsfs. This special property was investigated by mutational studies with HsfA2 indicating that the linker and the HR-B regions are the minimal part required for Hsf/Hsf interactions. The conserved hydrophobic amino acid residues of the HR-B region are most important whereas the amino acid residues of the linker may provide higher flexibility to the HR-B region. Another investigated factor was HsfB1. HsfB1 is a member of class B Hsfs, which are characterized by an oligomerization domain without the 21 amino acid residues linker inserted between the HR-A and HR-B regions. It has a low activator potential and exists exclusively as dimer. HsfB1 can not physically interact with class A Hsfs. However, HsfB1 and HsfA1, binding to adjacent HSE sites, are assumed to cause strong synergistic effects in gene activation. 2. Potential HsfB1 interacting proteins: we searched for HsfB1 interacting proteins by using recombinant His-tagged proteins with HsfB1 as baits in pull-down assays. Histones H2A, H2B and H4 were identified by means of Peptide Mass Finger Printing and N-terminal sequencing analyses. The three histones represent the major proteins in tomato whole cell extracts retrieved by HsfB1. 3. HsfA2/small heat stress proteins (sHsps) interaction: pull-down and yeast two-hybrid assays were used to study the specific interaction of HsfA2 with tomato class II sHsp. This interaction occurs via the oligomerization domain of HsfA2. Other members of the plant Hsp20 family, including class I sHsp, do not interact with HsfA2. Heterooligomers of HsfA2 with class II sHsp may represent precursor forms of the plant higher molecular weight cytoplasmic complexes of heat stress granules, which form during heat stress. The findings presented in this thesis are a contribution to support the concept of a Hsfs network via protein-protein interactions. These data, together with information obtained from other studies, are used to propose a tentative model of the complex Hsfs network controlling the plant heat stress response.
Identification and characterization of TNFalpha responsive genes in human breast cancer cells
(2006)
One of the hallmarks of cancer is the escape of the transformed cells from apoptosis. Therefore, the identification of survival genes, allowing cancer cells to circumvent programmed cell death, could provide new diagnostic markers as well as targets for therapeutic intervention. A well known transcription factor regulating the balance between pro- and anti- apoptotic factors is NF-kappaB, which is strongly induced by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha). When cells are stimulated by TNFalpha their response is biphasic with an initial NF-kappaB induction of survival genes which is overridden by the subsequent activation of initiator caspases triggering apoptosis. By combining gene trap mutagenesis with site specific recombination a strategy was developed, which enriches for genes induced by TNFalpha in the human breast cancer cell line MCF-7. The strategy relies on a one way gene expression switch based on Cre/loxP mediated recombination, which uncouples the expression of a marker gene from the trapped cellular promoter thereby enabling the recovery of genes that are only transiently induced by TNFalpha. The marker gene used in these experiments was a dominant negative variant of the TNFalpha-receptor associated protein FADD (dnFADD), which blocks the apoptotic branch of the TNFalpha induced signaling pathway. Initial experiments indicated that MCF-7 cells expressing high levels of dnFADD were insensitive to TNFalpha induced apoptosis and therefore suitable for the installment of a one way gene expression switch susceptible to Cre/loxP mediated recombination. A MCF-7 reporter clone harboring the recombinase dependent gene expression switch was infected with the gene trap retrovirus U3Cre, which inserts the Cre recombinase gene into a large collection of chromosomal sites. Insertion of Cre downstream of an active cellular promoter induces dnFADD expression from the gene expression switch enabling the cells to block TNFalpha triggered apoptosis. From a gene trap integration library containing approximately 2000000 unique proviral integrations, 69 unique TNFalpha inducible gene trap insertion sites were recovered in a two step selection procedure. Sequencing of the genomic regions adjacent to the insertion sites, which were obtained by inverse PCR (gene trap sequence tags, GTSTs), and data base analysis revealed that 42% of the GTSTs belonged to annotated genes, 13% to known cDNAs with open reading frames, 17% to Genscan predicted genes, 9% to ESTs, 9% to repetitive sequences and 10% to unannotated genomic sequence. Overall, 44% of the annotated genes recovered in this screen were directly or indirectly related to cancer, indicating that the gene trap strategy developed here is suitable for the identification of cancer relevant genes. Analysis of the expression patterns of the trapped and annotated genes in wild type cells revealed that 19 out of 24 genes were either up- or down- regulated by a factor of at least 1.45 by TNFalpha. A large fraction of the gene trap insertions were located upstream, in introns or in opposite orientation to annotated transcripts, indicating that the strategy efficiently recovers non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). While the biological significance of these transcripts still needs to be elucidated, they fall into two main categories. The first category includes gene trap insertions upstream of genes, which could either represent regulatory RNAs interacting with promoter elements or transcripts driven by bidirectional promoters. The second includes inverse orientation gene trap insertions in introns of annotated genes suggesting the presence of natural antisense transcripts (NATs). Interestingly, more than 50% of all antisense integrations are located downstream of transcription start sites predicted by different algorithms supporting the existence of RNAs transcribed from the corresponding genomic regions. Intronic integrations on the coding strand could be derived from cryptic splicing, alternative promoter usage or additional, so far uncharacterized transcripts. Preliminary functional analysis of two genes recovered in this screen encoding the transcription factor ZFP67 and the FLJ14451 protein revealed that FLJ14451 but not ZFP67 inhibited anchorage independent growth in soft agar, suggesting that FLJ14451 might have some tumor suppressor functions. In summary, besides identifying a putative tumor suppressor protein, the present experiments have shown that gene trapping is useful in identifying non-coding transcripts in living cells and may turn out to be the method of choice in characterizing these transcripts whose functions are still largely unknown.
The multidrug resistance like protein 1 (Mdl1p) belongs to the class of ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporters which comprise a large family of membrane proteins utilising ATP hydrolysis to drive up-hill transport of a wide variety of solutes across membranes. Mdl1p is a mitochondrial ABC transporter involved in the export of protein fragments derived from the proteolysis of non-assembled inner membrane proteins out of the mitochondrial matrix. Mdl1p forms a homodimeric complex consisting of two polytrophic transmembrane domains (TMDs) and two nucleotide binding domains (NBDs). The transport function and structural organisation of Mdl1p have not been elucidated yet. To characterise the ATP hydrolysis cycle of Mdl1p, the His-tagged NBD (amino acids D423-R695) was over-expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity. The isolated NBD was active in ATP binding and hydrolysis. The ATPase activity was non-linear regarding to the protein concentration, indicating that the functional state is a dimer. Dimeric catalytic transition states could be trapped and three different intermediate states were isolated, containing two ATPs, one ATP and one ADP, or two DPs, which are trapped by orthovanadate or beryllium fluoride. These experiments showed that (i) ATP binding to the NBDs induces dimerisation, (ii) in all isolated dimeric states, two nucleotides are present, (iii) phosphate can dissociate from the dimer, (iv) both nucleotides are hydrolysed, and (v) hydrolysis occurs in a sequential mode. Studies in the workgroup systematically screened for over-expression of the full-length Mdl1p and expression conditions were optimised. These studies showed that highest expression was obtained in S. cerevisiae, where the protein was over-expressed 100-fold. In this work over-expressed His-tagged protein was purified via immobilised metal-ion affinity chromatography that was active in ATP binding and hydrolysis with a turn-over of 2.5 ATP per second. N-terminal amino acid sequencing of purified Mdl1p by Edman degradation confirmed experimentally a N-terminal targeting sequence of a mitochondrial ABC transporter of S. cerevisiae for the first time. This sequence was determined to be 59 amino acids in length. Mdl1p was reconstituted into liposomes, which was confirmed by freeze fracture electron microscopy. The reconstituted protein showed ATP hydrolysis similar to the solubilised Mdl1p. However peptide translocation with radiolabelled X(8) or X(23) libraries as done for the transporter associated with antigen processing TAP could not be shown with this setup. Furthermore, structural insights of the mitochondrial transport complex and its oligomeric state were obtained via single particle electron microscopy. It was shown that Mdl1p forms a homodimer in detergent. These in vitro studies provide the basis for further detailed investigation of the mitochondrial ABC transporter Mdl1p.
The present work wishes to contribute with information on two members of the primary active transporter group, which differ both in structure and function: Wilson Disease Protein which uses the energy released by ATP hydrolysis to transport copper across cell membranes, and Proteorhodopsin, which uses the energy of light to build up a proton gradient across the bacterial cell membrane, both heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes. The surface detection experiments using HA-tagged WNDP confirm the proposed topology of WNDP. The HA-tag per se does not interfere with the function of WNDP, as shown for WNDP HA56 by ATP-dependent phosphorylation after expression in Sf9 cells. Sequence modifications within the WNDP HA56 template-construct reveal some interesting features: i) the N-terminal domain, which contains the 6 metal binding sites, is not necessary for plasma membrane targeting; ii) elevated surface expression of WNDP was observed when the carboxy terminus containing the tri-Leu motif is missing, which suggests that this motif might be involved in the retrieval of the protein from the plasma membrane; iii) the mutations TGE>AAA (proposed to lock the protein in the E1 conformation and lead to constitutive plasma membrane localisation) and D1027A (phosphorylation deficient) did not interfere with the surface localisation of the protein; iv) the mutations CPC>SPS (copper transport deficient) and H1069Q (phosphorylation deficient, most common mutation in Wilson Disease) reduced plasma membrane expression to less then 50%. Western blot analysis shows that the overall expression level of all constructs is similar to that of the reference construct WNDP HA56. These findings suggest that motifs involved in copper binding and catalytic activity do not interfere with plasma membrane targeting of WNDP in Xenopus oocytes. However, the H1069Q mutation could interfere with the distribution of WNDP protein within the cells. In the case of Proteorhodopsin, data presented in this work support earlier observations according to which proteorhodopsin can operate as an outwardly and inwardly directed light-driven ion pump. The residues proposed to play the roles of proton donor (E108) and acceptor (D97) are important for proton translocation. In the absence of an anionic residue at position 97 no outward pumping takes place, but inward charge translocation may occurs under appropriate conditions. An M-like state similar to that known from BR detectably accumulates under neutral pH conditions or under conditions where reprotonation of the Schiff base from the cytoplasmic side is slowed down, as in case of the mutants at position 108. Under acidic conditions PR pumps inwardly under the concerted action of pH and transmembrane potential. The experiments performed in parallel with PR and BR wild-types brought not only interesting information about similarities and differences between the two retinylidene ion pumps, but also led to the observation that the life-time of the M state in BR wild-type can be extended in addition to hyperpolarising transmembrane potentials also by extracellular acidic pH, when the proton gradient through the cell membrane is directed opposite to the ion transport (i.e. when the electrochemical gradient opposing the direction of proton transport increases). Direct photocurrent measurements of HA-tagged PR and BR have shown that the inserted tag may interfere with the functionality of the protein. Next to E108 and D97 in PR other residues in the vicinity of the retinal binding pocket contribute to the translocation of protons, as exemplified by the mutant L105Q: additionally to changing the absorption maximum of the protein, this mutant is a less effective proton pump than the wild type. The example of PR suggests that transduction of light energy by – and reaction mechanisms of retinylidene ion pumps have not been entirely deciphered by the extensive studies of bacteriorhodopsin.
Studies in particular of the last decade showed that active neurogenesis continuously takes place in the subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricles of the adult rodent brain. Neurogenesis in the SVZ leads to migration of neuroblasts within the rostral migratory stream (RMS) and mature neuron formation mainly in the olfactory bulb (OB). According to present understanding, glial cells with astrocytic properties represent the actual adult neural stem cells. The cell types representing the various cellular transition states leading to the formation of mature neurons as well as the mechanisms controlling adult neurogenesis and neuroblast migration are poorly understood. A previous study from this laboratory demonstrated that the ATP-hydrolyzing enzyme nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase 2 (NTPDase2) is associated with type B cells, the presumptive neural stem cells. NTPDase2 is a protein of the plasma membrane with its catalytic site facing the extracellular space. It hydrolyzes extracellular nucleoside triphosphates to their respective nucleoside diphosphates. This raises the possibility that the signaling pathway via extracellular nucleotides is involved in the control of adult neurogenesis. Neurons as well as glial cells express several subtypes of receptors (P2 receptors) that are responsive to the nucleotides ATP, ADP, UTP, or UDP. P2X receptors are ATP-gated Na+, K+ and Ca2+ permeable ion channels, P2Y receptors are coupled to trimeric G-proteins. In order to probe for a functional role of nucleotides in adult neurogenesis, the present study referred to an in vitro system (neurospheres). Neurospheres produced from isolates of the mouse SVZ and cultured in the presence of EGF and bFGF expressed the neural stem cell marker nestin and also GFAP, S100β, NTPDase2 and tissue non-specific alkaline phosphatase. Neurospheres generated from the cells of the subventricular zone were multipotenital. This was revealed by immunostaining of differentiated cells with markers for astrocytes, neurons and oligodendrocytes. The presence of ecto-nucleotidase was verified by analyzing the free phosphate released from nucleotides. The tissue non-specific form of alkaline phosphatase was the predominant enzyme. Both NTPDase2 and TNAP could be identified by immunocytochemistry and Western blotting. Hydrolysis was not observed for p-nitrophenyl thymidine monophosphate, a substrate of members of the ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/phosphodiesterase family (NPP1 to NPP3). Since ecto-nucleotidases control the availability of extracellular nucleotide agonists, neurospheres were studied for the potential expression and functional role of nucleotide receptors. Neurospheres responded to extracellular nucleotides with a transient rise in Ca2+ (ATP = ADP > UTP). The rise in Ca2+ was due to P2Y receptors. The Ca2+ response was unaltered in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ and strongly reduced by thapsigargin, a blocker of internal Ca2+ stores. The P2Y1 antagonist MRS2179 strongly reduced the ATP- or ADP-induced increase in Ca2+, suggesting the involvement of a P2Y1 receptor. In addition, suramin and PPADS, non-selective antagonists for P2 receptors, inhibited most of the Ca2+ response. The agonistic activity of UTP and the lack of response to UDP implied the additional presence of a P2Y2 and/or a P2Y4 receptors and the absence of a functional P2Y6 receptor. RT-PCR experiments demonstrated that neurospheres expressed P2Y1 and P2Y2 receptors but not P2Y4 receptor. That the majority of the Ca2+ response to ATP was mediated via P2Y1 receptors was also confirmed by analysis of P2Y1 knockout mice and by application of the P2Y1 receptor-specific antagonist MRS2179. In addition, agonists of P2Y1 and P2Y2 receptors and low concentrations of adenosine augmented cell proliferation inspite of the presence of mitogenic growth factors. Neurosphere cell proliferation was attenuated after application of MRS2179 and in neurospheres from P2Y1 receptor knockout mice. These results infer a nucleotide receptor-mediated synergism that augments growth factor-mediated cell proliferation. Taken together these results suggest that P2Y-mediated nucleotidergic signalling is involved in neurosphere function and possibly also in adult neurogenesis in situ.
Active neurogenesis continuously takes place in the dentate gyrus of the adult mammalian brain. The dentate gyrus of the adult rodent hippocampus contains an astrocytelike cell population that is regarded as residual radial glia. These cells reside with their cell bodies in the subgranular layer (SGL). Radial processes traverse the granule cell layer (GCL) and form bushy ramifications in the inner molecular layer (IML). The residual radial glial cells apparently represent neuronal progenitor cells that can give rise to functionally integrated granule cells. To date the cellular and molecular events driving a subpopulation of these cells into neurogenesis as well as the cellular transition states are poorly understood. The present study shows, that in the mouse dentate gyrus, this cell type selectively expresses surfacelocated ATPhydrolyzing activity and is immunopositive for nucleoside triphosphate diphosphohydrolase 2 (NTPDase2). NTPDase2 is an ectoenzyme and hydrolyzes extracellular nucleoside triphosphates such as ATP or UTP to their respective nucleoside diphosphates. The enzyme becomes expressed in the hippocampus during late embryogenesis from E17 onwards, and is thus not involved in early brain development. Its embryonicpattern of expression mirrors dentate migration of neuroblasts and the formation of the primary and finally the tertiary dentate matrix. NTPDase2 is also expressed by a transient population of cortical radial glia from late embryonic development until postnatal day 5. NTPDase2 can be employed as a novel markerfor defining cellular transition states along the neurogenic pathway. It is associated with subpopulations of GFAP and nestinpositive cells. These intermediate filaments are typically expressed by the progenitor cells of the dentate gyrus. In addition there is a considerable overlap with doublecortinand PSANCAM positive cells. The expression of the microtubuleassociated protein doublecortin and of PSANCAM which are expressed by migrating neuroblasts is indicative of a transition of progenitors to a neural phenotype or an immature form of granule cell. NTPDase2 is no longer associated with young neurons and with maturegranule cells, as indicated by the lack of doubleimmunostaining for III tubulin and NeuN, respectively. Furthermore, β S100positive astrocytes do not express NTPDase2 validating that NTPDase2 is also not associated with later stages of gliogenesis. Experiments with the Sphase marker bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) demonstrate that NTPDase2positive cell proliferate. Postmitotic BrdU-labeled cells preferentially acquire an NTPDase2positive phenotype. Many of these cells were also positive for GFAP. The contribution of BrdUlabeled cells positive for NTPDase2 increased with time from 2 h to 72 h, validating a strong association of NTPDase2 with proliferating cells of the dentate gyrus. The colocalization studies with various markers and the results of the experiments suggestthat NTPDase2 is associated with cell types of varying maturation states but not with mature neurons or astrocytes. Studies on the formation of neurospheres from the dentate gyrus validate previous data suggesting that the hippocampal progenitors have little capacity for self renewal in vitro. In situ hybridization results indicate the presence of one of the metabotropic purinergic receptor subtypes (the P2Y1 receptor) within the adult neurogenic regions, the dentate gyrus and the lateral walls of the lateral ventricles. A patchclamp analysis demonstrates the presence of functional ionotropic nucleotide receptor (P2X receptors) in progenitor cells expressing nestin promotordriven GFP. They suggest that the signaling pathway via extracellular nucleotides and nucleotide receptors may play a role in the control of adult hippocampal neurogenesis.
For this thesis photon and pi0 spectra in Gold-Gold-collisions at an energy of sqrt(s_NN) = 62 GeV were measured using the STAR-experiment at RHIC. Heavy ion collisions allow to study strongly interacting matter under extreme condiditons in the laborartory. Nuclear matter is strongly compressed and heated. Theories predict in a system of strongy interacting matter at high temperature and pressure a phase transition from hadronic matter, in which quarks are bound into hadrons, to a plasma of free quarks and gluons (QGP). To study the properties of this created medium, a number of different observables is available. One possibility to determine the temperature of such a system, is to measure the photon emission from the medium. The experimental difficulty is that there are more mechanisms producing photons than just the thermal production. Photons are produced in hard scattering processes or can be the result of the interaction of hard partons with the medium. According to theoretical calculations the photon yield from hard processes exceeds the thermal production for transverse momenta above 3 GeV/c. Photons from hard processes and thermal photons are referred to as direct photons, because they are produced inside of the medium. The largest part of the photons below pt=3GeV/c, however, comes from electromagnetic decays of hadrons in the final state of the collision. The largest fraction comes from the pi0- and the eta-mesons. Their contribution to the photon spectra can be determined by measuring the spectra of these decaying particles and calculating the resulting, corresponding photon spectra. The experimental difficulty is to measure these spectra to an accuracy of a few percent because the decay photons make up about 90% of all photons in the relevant phase space region. The STAR-experiment provides different detectors to measure photons and pi0-mesons. The primary detector for this kind of measurement are the electromagnetic calorimeters. However, the analysis described in this thesis uses the time projection chamber (TPC). Because photons don't carry electric charge and the TPC is only sensitive to charged particles, a conversion of the photon into an electron-positron-pair is required. This happens inside the electromagnetic fields of the nuclei and the electrons in the atomic shell of the detector material in the experimental setup of STAR. The resulting electron and positron tracks are measrued in the TPC. In chapter 3 the reconstruction of conversions from the measured tracks is described. Chapter 4 discusses the efficiency of the measurement, which is determined with a Monte-Carlo-Method, and the uncertainties of the correction. Chapter 5 presents the results of the analysis. The data set, on which the analysis is based, consists of Gold-Gold-Collisions an a center of mass energy of sqrt(s_NN)=62GeV. The selection criteria for individual events during data taking and during the analysis are explained. The data set is divided into four centrality selection classes. The first result are the transverse momentum and rapidity spectra of inclusive photons for all four centralities and the whole data set. Pi0-spectra versus transverse momentum for the four centralities and the whole data set are also shown. The pi0-spectra are compared to the spectra of pi0-mesons measured by the PHENIX-Collaboration at the same energy and with pi0-spectra measured by STAR at full RHIC energy. In addition a comparison to charged pi+- and pi--spectra is shown, which were also measured by the STAR collaboration. It is attempted to extract the fraction of direct photons by dividing the spectra of inclusive photons by the spectra of simulated decay photons. In these simulations pi0- and eta-spectra are modeled based on the pi+- and pi--spectra. Studying the uncertainties of this procedure shows that the size of the uncertainties is of the same magnitude as the signal of direct photons. Also the systematic uncertainties of the pi+- and pi--spectra are similar. Therefore the measurement of direct photon spectra is not possible. In chapter 6 possibilities are described to reduce the large systematic uncertainties. In addition it is discussed, what could be done with an already existing data set at full RHIC energy and how the addition of a dedicated converter during a future data taking period could reduce the systematic errors. The result of this thesis are inklusive photon and pi0 spectra. The systematic uncertainties were extensively studied. It is described, which enhancements are necessary to provide the perspective for measuring direct photons in the area of 1 to 3 GeV/c transverse momentum.
The substantia nigra is not the induction site in the brain of the neurodegenerative process that underlies Parkinson’s disease. Instead, the results of this semiquantitative study of 30 autopsy cases with incidental Lewy body pathology indicate that Parkinson’s disease in the brain commences with the formation of the very first immunoreactive Lewy neurites and Lewy bodies in noncatecholaminergic visceromotor neurons of the dorsal glossopharyngeusvagus complex, in projection neurons of the intermediate reticular zone, and in specific nerve cell types of the gain setting system (coeruleussubcoeruleus complex, caudal raphe nuclei, gigantocellular reticular nucleus), olfactory bulb, olfactory tract, and/or anterior olfactory nucleus in the absence of nigral involvement. The topographical parcellation of the nuclear grays described here is based upon known architectonic analyses of the human brain stem and takes into consideration the pigmentation properties of a few highly susceptible nerve cell types involved in Parkinson’s disease. In this sample and in all 58 ageand gendermatched controls, Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites do not occur in any of the known telencephalic Parkinson’s disease predilection sites (hippocampal formation, temporal mesocortex, proneocortical cingulate areas, amygdala, basal nucleus of Meynert, interstitial nucleus of the diagonal band of Broca, hypothalamic tuberomamillary nucleus).
Zwei der wichtigsten Leistungen eines sich entwickelnden Embryos sind der Aufbau des Blutkreislauf- und des Nervensystems. Beide Systeme sind hierarchisch organisierte Strukturen, deren Verzweigungen nahezu alle Teile des Körpers erreichen. Es gibt eine zunehmende Zahl von Hinweisen darauf, dass ihre Entwicklung eng miteinander verknüpft ist, nach ähnlichen Prinzipien verläuft und verwandte molekulare Mechanismen verwendet. Die Entstehung eines funktionellen vaskulären Netzwerks erfordert Signale, die Prozesse wie die Lenkung und die Verzweigung von Gefäßen in den Zielgeweben kontrollieren. Ähnliche Anforderungen werden an wachsende Axone bei der Knüpfung der Verbindungen des Nervensystems während der Embryonalentwicklung gestellt. Einige der Faktoren, die die Lenkung der Axone kontrollieren, spielen auch eine ähnliche Rolle in der vaskulären Entwicklung. Lenkungsmoleküle, die eine Richtungsinformation vermitteln, sind für die Wegfindung der Axone besonders wichtig. Die größte Familie solcher Lenkungsmoleküle wird durch die Semaphorine gebildet. Semaphorine können in acht Klassen unterteilt werden, deren gemeinsames Merkmal eine konservierte Semaphorin-Domäne ist und die unterschieden werden anhand ihrer Klassen-spezifischen carboxyterminalen Domänen. Die Semaphorin-Familie umfasst sowohl sekretierte als auch membrangebundene Proteine. Die am besten charakterisierten hiervon sind die sekretierten Klasse 3 Semaphorine. Eine Kombination von in vitro und in vivo Ansätzen zeigte, dass die Klasse 3 Semaphorine an der Steuerung der Axon- und Dendritenlenkung, der Bildung von Axonbündeln und der neuronalen Migration während der Entwicklung des Nervensystems beteiligt sind. Sie agieren hauptsächlich als repulsiv wirkende Signale, die Axone aus Regionen ausschließen, von den Geweben weg, in denen sie exprimiert sind. Diese Wirkung wird über die Semaphorin-Domäne vermittelt. Verschiedene Hinweise deuten auf eine Beteiligung von Semaphorinen an der Entwicklung des vaskulären Systems. Sowohl homozygote Sema3a- als auch Sema3c-Mausnullmutanten sterben nach der Geburt aufgrund kardiovaskulärer Defekte. Darüber hinaus binden die Rezeptoren für die Klasse 3 Semaphorine, Neuropilin-1 (Nrp-1) und –2 (Nrp-2), einige Isoformen des vaskulären endothelialen Wachstumsfaktors (Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor, VEGF). Neuropilin-1 und Neuropilin-2-defiziente Mäuse und Neuropilin-1/-2-Doppelmutanten weisen Defekte des Gefäßsystems auf, wie z.B. eine Rückbildung der neuralen Vaskularisierung und Abweichungen in der Entwicklung des Herzens und der großen Gefäße. Die membrangebundenen Semaphorine sind bisher nur wenig untersucht, da zuverlässige in vitro Assays fehlen. Somit ist ein genetischer Ansatz der beste Weg, die physiologische Funktion dieser Proteine zu untersuchen. Aus diesen Gründen war die Zielsetzung dieser Arbeit, durch homologe Rekombination in embryonalen Stammzellen eine Mauslinie herzustellen, die ein Nullallel des membrangebundenen Sema5a-Gens trägt. Für diesen Ansatz wurde ein Mitglied der Klasse 5 Semaphorine gewählt, da es nur zwei Mitglieder dieser Klasse im Mausgenom gibt, die weitgehend komplementäre Expressionsmuster aufweisen. Damit unterscheiden sie sich von den anderen Klassen der Semaphorine, deren Mitglieder stark überlappende Expressionsmuster zeigen. Dies verringert die Wahrscheinlichkeit einer gegenseitigen funktionellen Kompensation nach Mutation eines Gens. Die Klasse 5 Semaphorine sind auch deshalb besonders interessant, da sie die einzigen sind, die sowohl in Vertebraten als auch in Invertebraten vertreten sind. Sie sind gekennzeichnet durch sieben carboxyterminale Typ 1-Thrombospondinmodule (TSP) in ihrer extrazellulären Domäne. TSPs wurden ursprünglich in den Proteinen Thrombospondin 1 und 2 gefunden, in denen sie das Auswachsen von Neuriten verschiedener Nervenzelltypen fördern. Dies lässt vermuten, dass Klasse 5 Semaphorine sowohl inhibierende als auch stimulierende Effekte haben könnten, in dem sie unterschiedliche Rezeptoren mit der Semaphorin-Domäne oder der TSPs aktivieren. Das Expressionsmuster von Sema5A und die bekannte Funktion von Semaphorinen in der Ausbildung neuronaler Verbindungen lassen es sinnvoll erscheinen, bei der Untersuchung der mutanten Tiere den Schwerpunkt auf die Entwicklung des Nerven- und des Gefäßsystems zu legen. Aufgrund technischer Schwierigkeiten konnte innerhalb der Bearbeitungszeit dieser Doktorarbeit nur der Phänotyp des vaskulären Systems untersucht werden. Die Inaktivierung des Sema5a-Gens wurde durch die Verwendung eines ‚Targeting’-Vektors erreicht, welcher die Exone 4 und 5 des Sema5a-Gens durch eine Neomycin-Selektionskassette ersetzte. Aus 144 untersuchten ES-Zellklonen wurden drei ES-Zellinien mit einem rekombinierten Sema5a-Locus identifiziert. Zwei der positiven Klone wurden zur Herstellung einer chimären Maus durch die Morula-Aggregationsmethode verwendet. Mit einem der Klone konnte eine männliche Chimäre erzeugt werden, die nach Kreuzung mit NMRI-Wildtyptieren die Mutation an die Nachkommen weitergab. Der Verlust der Proteinexpression in homozygoten Sema5a-Mutanten wurde durch Westernblot-Analyse von Zellmembranpräparationen homozygoter Embryonen unter Verwendung eines Antikörpers gegen das zytoplasmatische Ende von Sema5A bestätigt. Dieses Ergebnis bestätigte, dass die Deletion des vierten und fünften Exons des Sema5a-Gens ein Nullallel hervorbringt. Nach Verpaarungen heterozygoter Mutanten konnten keine Neugeborenen identifiziert werden, die homozygot für das mutierte Allel waren. Homozygte Mutanten starben zwischen E11,5 und E12,5 der Embryonalentwicklung, der Verlust von Sema5A ist also embryonal letal. Die Morphologie der homozygoten Tiere zeigte keinen offensichtlichen Unterschied zu den heterozygoten Embryonen oder zu Wildtyp-Geschwistern auf. Frühe embryonale Musterbildungsprozesse in Sema5a-Nullmutanten sind also nicht gestört. Ein Tod bei dieser Entwicklungsstufe deutet auf einen Defekt in der Entwicklung des Blutgefäßsystems hin, da die Embryonalstadien zwischen E9 und E13 besonders wichtig für die Ausbildung dieser Gefäße sind und viele Mutationen, die Herz und Blutgefäßen beeinträchtigen, den Tod der Embryonen in diesem Stadium bewirken. Das embryonale Blutgefäßsystem in E10,5 und E11,5 Embryonen wurde durch immunhistochemische Färbungen ganzer Embryonen unter Verwendung eines spezifischen gegen das Platelet Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule (PECAM) gerichteten Antikörpers dargestellt, welches in vaskulären Endothelzellen exprimiert ist. Die allgemeine Architektur des Gefäßsystems war in homo- und heterozygoten Mutanten ähnlich und wies weder an E10,5 noch an E11,5 besondere Abweichungen auf. Es wurden bei der Lage und der Anzahl intersomitischer Gefäße, der Entwicklung der dorsalen Aorta oder der Vaskularisierung der Extremitätenanlagen keine Abweichungen festgestellt. Morphologische Defekte konnten jedoch bei E10,5 in den Verästelungen der Blutgefäße detektiert werden, die von den Hauptvenen der Cranialregion abzweigen. Die Verzweigungen waren geringer ausgeprägt als in heterozygoten oder Wildtyp-Vergleichstieren. Insbesondere zeigte sich eine Verringerung der Anzahl sekundärer und tertiärer Verzweigungen. In dem sich entwickelnden Embryo führt die wiederholte Verzweigung von Ästen der Hauptvenen zu einem hierarchisch gegliederten Netzwerk großer Gefäße in der Region des medialen Kopfes. Während die Ausbildung dieses Netzwerkes in den Sema5a-/--Tieren beeinträchtigt ist, erscheint die Organisation der kleinen Gefäße in den mehr dorsal und peripher gelegenen Regionen des Kopfes normal. In heterozygoten und homozygoten Mutanten bilden die kleineren Gefäße ein dicht verzweigtes Netzwerk. Die Verminderung der Komplexität der größeren Gefäße konnte in allen untersuchten Nullmutanten beobachtet werden. Es variierte jedoch die Penetranz des Phänotyps. In allen Fällen war die Anzahl primärer Verzweigungen unverändert, während die Anzahl der sekundären und der tertiären Verzweigungen zu unterschiedlichen Graden reduziert war. Im Gegensatz dazu zeigte sich im Verzweigungsmuster von heterozygoten Mutanten und beim Wildtyp nur eine geringe Variabilität zwischen individuellen Embryonen. Dies belegt, dass die Verminderung des Verzweigungsgrades größerer Gefäße nicht innerhalb der normalen Variabilität liegt, sondern durch die Inaktivierung des Sema5a-Gens verursacht wird. Dieser Phänotyp ist in späteren Stadien sogar deutlicher ausgeprägt. In E11,5 Embryonen waren die Stämme der großen Blutgefäße in den Nullmutanten weniger komplex und in einigen Fällen trat sogar eine Reduzierung der Anzahl primärer Verzweigungen auf. Diese spätere Verminderung der Anzahl bereits ausgebildeter primärer Verzweigungen legt nahe, dass der Phänotyp durch eine Rückbildung von Verzweigungen aufgrund möglicher Defizite in deren Reifung und/oder Stabilisierung erfolgt. Die interessanteste Besonderheit der vaskulären Defekte in den Nullmutanten liegt in ihrer regionalen Spezifität. Bis hier ist das Netzwerk großer Gefäße, welches der anterioren Hauptvene entspringt, das einzige Gefäßsystem, in dem Abweichungen entdeckt wurden. Dieses Netzwerk wird durch die strukturelle Umbildung des primären kapillaren Plexuses gebildet. Zwischen E9,5 und E12 sprießen Zweige rostral aus der Hauptvene, um ein hierarchisch organisiertes Netzwerk von Gefäßen zu bilden. Die Umbildung des primären kapillaren Plexus in den mehr rostral und ventral gelegenen Kopfregionen führt zu der Bildung eines hochverzweigten vaskulären Netzwerkes, welches jedoch bei E10,5 noch nicht hierarchisch organisiert erscheint. Die Signale, die für diesen unterschiedlichen Ablauf der Musterbildung während der Entwicklung des Gefäßsystems des Kopfes verantwortlich sind, sind noch unbekannt. Die besonderen Defekte in der stereotypischen Organisation der cranialen Gefäße in Sema5a-Mutanten legt nahe, dass Sema5A eines dieser Signale sein könnte. Es könnte Teil eines Rezeptor/Ligandenkomplexes sein, welcher positionelle Signale für das Verzweigen und das Wachstum großer Gefäße in rostraler Richtung liefert. Sema5A könnte die Bildung von Verzweigungen durch die Regulierung der Wanderung endothelialer Zellen, ihrer Proliferation oder ihrer Interaktion mit unterstützenden Zellen oder der extrazellulären Matrix kontrollieren. Sema5A könnte Teil eines neuen Signalweges sein oder als Teil eines der bekannten Signalwegs wirken, welcher die Entwicklung des Gefäßsystems reguliert. Einer der Signalwege, die essentiell für die Gefäßbildung sind, wird durch VEGF und Angiopoietin (Ang-1) reguliert. Sowohl in VEGF-, als auch in Ang-1-Mutanten ist die Gefäßumbildung im Kopf beeinträchtigt. Insbesondere erscheint das Netzwerk kleiner Gefäße in den Ang-1 Nullmutanten als nur nur teilweise restrukturiert und die großen Gefäße als weniger komplex. Das Verzweigungsmuster der großen Gefäße in den Ang-1- Nullmutanten ähnelt auffallend dem der Sema5a-Nullmutanten. Eine zweite Ähnlichkeit in den Phänotypen von Ang-1- und Sema5a-Mutanten zeigt sich in der Reduzierung der primären Verzweigungen, welche in den Sema5a-Nullmutanten bei E11,5 beobachtet wird. Hier könnte die Verminderung aus einer Rückbildung von Gefäßen resultieren, wie sie auch typischerweise in Mutanten für Ang-1 oder dessen Rezeptor auftritt. Diese Beobachtung legt nahe, dass Sema5A ein neuer Teilnehmer innerhalb des Ang-1-Signalweges ist, welcher die Auswirkung von Ang-1 auf die endothelialen Zellen der großen Gefäße entweder vermittelt oder moduliert und dadurch das spezifische Muster der Blutgefäße des Kopfes beeinflußt. Mit dieser Doktorarbeit wird zum ersten Mal eine funktionelle Untersuchung des Klasse 5 Semaphorins Sema5A vorgestellt. Die phänotypische Untersuchung von Mäusen, die Nullallele für Sema5a-Gens tragen ergab, dass dieses membrangebundene Protein essentiell für die embryonale Entwicklung ist. Es ist an der Musterbildung des Gefäßsystems beteiligt. Seine Aufgabe besteht möglicherweise darin, die Bereitstellung positioneller Signale für die Ausbildung von Gefäßverzweigungen zu gewährleisten. Einige grundlegende Fragen werden durch diesen Phänotyp aufgeworfen. Sowohl die Ursache für die embryonale Sterblichkeit als auch die zellulären Prozesse, welche in den Sema5a-Nullmutanten beeinträchtigt sind, müssen noch beschrieben werden. Unbekannt ist ebenfalls, ob zusätzlich zu der hier beschriebenen Rolle von Sema5A in der Gefäßbildung dieses an der Entwicklung des Nervensystems beteiligt ist. Die ersten Daten über die physiologische Rolle von Sema5A, welche mit dieser Arbeit vorgelegt werden, öffnen den Weg für weitergehende Untersuchungen über die Funktion des Proteins während der Embrionalentwicklung. Das hier erstmals vorgestellte Modellsystem ermöglicht es, Sema5A regulierte zelluläre Mechanismen zu untersuchen. Zusätzlich stellt es ein Werkzeug zur Verfügung, um die funktionelle Beziehung zwischen der Entwicklung des kardiovaskulären Systems und des Nervensystems zu untersuchen. Damit können die Aufgaben der Semaphorin-Proteinfamilie, die an diesen beiden wichtigen Prozessen beteiligt sind, näher charakterisiert werden.
Customer channel migration
(2006)
Customer Channel Migration deals with the active management of a customer's channel usage behavior with the aim to increase her profitability and lifetime. Hence, the dissertation answers two distict questions: on one hand, it investigates the impact of channel use on a customer's profitability and lifetime. On the other hand, it is researched how a customer's channel usage behavior can be influenced and managed. The cumulative dissertation consists of five articles: the first article describes the matching method and its application to marketing problems. The matching method is necessary to estimate the unbiased impact of channel use on a customer's profitability and lifetime. The second article describes the application of the matching method in order to determine the monetary implications of using the internet in the financial services industry. The third article investigates the impact of the internet use on a customer's lifetime. The forth and the fifth article of the dissertation both investigate the management of a customer's channel usage behavior. The forth article designs a scale to measure a customer's perceived channel value. The fifth article builds upon these findings and develops a model which explains a customer's channel usage behavior. Based on these insights this article derives some managerial implications on how to manage customers between different channels.
Nuclear matter, that takes the form of protons and neutrons under normal conditions, is subject to a phase transition at high temperatures and densities, liberating the quarks and gluons that are usually confined in nucleons and creating a medium of free partons: the Quark-Gluon-Plasma. It is generally believed that this state of matter can be created in relativistic collisions of heavy nuclei. The study of the medium created in these collisions is the subject of heavy-ion physics. One topic within this field are particles with high transverse momentum, that are created in initial hard collisions between partons of the incoming nuclei. The energetic partons lose energy due to interactions with the medium before they fragment into a jet of hadrons. Due to momentum conservation, these jets are usually created as back-to-back pairs, or less commonly as three-jet or photon-jet events, where a single jet is balanced by a hard photon. The energy loss can be measured using correlations between particles with high transverse momenta. A trigger particle is selected with very high transversemomentum and the distribution of the azimuthal angle of associated particles in the same event is studied, relative to the azimuth of the trigger particle.These azimuthal correlations show a peak for opening angles around 0 from particles selected from the same jet, and a second peak at opening angles around 180 degrees from back-to-back di-jets. Random combinations with the underlying event generate a flat background, extending over the full range of opening angles. The STAR experiment observed a modification of these correlations in central Au+Au collisions, where trigger particles with 4GeV < pT(trigger) < 6GeV and associated particles with 2GeV < pT(trigger) < 4GeV were selected. A strong suppression has been observed for away-side correlations in central Au+Au collisions, relative to p+p, d+Au and peripheral Au+Au data. This can be explained by assuming two partons going in opposite directions, where at least one has to travel a large distance through the medium, causing energy loss and effectively removing the event from the analysis. For near-side correlations, no significant modification has been observed, which can be explained by surface emission, assuming that the observed jets have travelled only a short distance in themedium, not leaving enough time for interactions with the medium. Both trigger- and associated particles in a correlation analysis with charged hadrons are subject to modifications due to the medium. This can be avoided by using photon-jet events instead of di-jets, because the photon does not interact with the medium and therefore provides the best available measure of the properties of the opposite jet in the presence of the underlying event. This thesis studies azimuthal correlations between regions of high energy deposition in the electro-magnetic calorimeter as trigger- and charged tracks as associated particles. The data sample had been enriched by online event selection, allowing for the selection of trigger particles with a transverse energy of more than 10GeV and associated particles with more than 2,3 or 4 GeV. The away-side yield per trigger particle is strongly suppressed like in correlations between charged particles. The near-side yield is also reduced by about a factor two, clearly different from charged correlations. The trigger particles are a mixture of photon pairs from the decays of neutral pions and single photons, mainly from photon-jet events, with small contributions from other hadron decays and fragmentation photons. Pythia simulations predict a ratio of neutral pions to prompt photons of 3.5:1 in p+p collisions with the same cuts as in the presented analysis. Single particle suppression further reduces this ratio in central Au_Au collisions, down to about 0.8:1, indicating that the majority of trigger particles in central Au+Au collisions are prompt photons. The increasing fraction of prompt photon triggers without an accompanying jet and therefore zero associated yield reduces the average yield per trigger particle. The magnitude of the observed effect agrees well with the expectation from Pythia simulations and the assumption of a single particle suppression by a factor 4-5. An analysis of away-side correlations is more difficult, because both photon-jet and di-jet events contribute. The aim is the separation of these two contributions. As a clear separation is not possible with the available dataset, a comparison with two different scenarios is given, where a surprisingly small suppression by only a factor of about 5 is favoured for both dijet- and photon-jet-correlations. A separate measurement of both contributions will be possible by a shower-shape analysis with the EM calorimeter or a comparison with charged correlations in the same kinematic region.
This work gives a detailed introduction into a fully new experimental method to investigate the quantum crystal behavior of solid Helium-4. It has been found that a fascinating new effect occurs in the expansion of solid Helium-4 into a vacuum through pinhole orifices with diameters between 1 and 5 µm. It is observed that the beam flux intensity shows a periodic behavior for source conditions corresponding to the solid phase of Helium-4. The period is in the range of seconds up to minutes. It shows a strong dependence on temperature and source pressure. The oscillating part of the beam flux intensity amounts several percent of the total flux. This new phenomenon has been studied for temperatures between 2.1 K and 1.3 K and pressures up to 30 bar above the melting pressure. The beam flux intensity has been recorded by the vacuum pressure in a pitot vacuum chamber. The jet velocity in the range of 200 m/sec indicates that surprisingly the beam is a liquid jet, whereas the conditions in the source correspond to the solid state. In this work mainly the behavior of the flux modulation has been studied as a function of pressure and temperature and the influence of the isotope Helium-3. Furthermore geometrical aspects such as the influence of the nozzle diameter d0 have been investigated. In order to explain this novel phenomenon a kinetic model based on the injection of excess vacancies into the solid is proposed. According to this model the vacancies are generated at a solid/liquid interface. Forced by drift and diffusion they accumulate at some distance from the orifice, leading to the collapse of the solid. With the subsequent re-injection of vacancies the effect repeats and turns out to be periodical. The reproducibility of the time dependent beam flux intensity is demonstrated for a wide range of temperatures and pressures and gives direct access to values such as the temperature and pressure dependence of the vacancy diffusion coefficient Dv in the range of 10 high -5 cm high 2/sec, the recombination time of vacancies with interstitials T r near 1-20 sec and the vacancy activation energy f near 20 K. The good agreement with former experimental results by Zuev et al. [131] confirms the applicability of the theoretical model. As a result from the kinetic model the vacancy concentration is increased above the equilibrium vacancy concentration, caused by the injection of excess vacancies. Therefore, the most important discovery is the possibility of generating a non-equilibrium quantum solid. The investigation of this non-equilibrium solid leads to the discovery of a fluid-like regime in the solid phase of Helium-4 at temperatures below T = 1.58 K. The result gives a strong indication for the supersolid state, especially because the fluid-like behavior of the solid can be eliminated with smallest concentrations of Helium-3.
The development of resistance to multiple drugs is a major problem in treatment of number of infectious diseases and cancer. The phenomenon of multidrug resistance (MDR) is based on the synergetic interplay of a number of mechanisms such as target inactivation, target alteration, prevention of drug influx as well as active extrusion of drugs from the cell. The latter is mediated by over-expression of multidrug efflux pumps. The first discovered and the best characterized until now the human MDR transporter is P-glycoprotein. It is a member of the ATP binding cassette (ABC) superfamily and acts as an active transporter for a variety of anticancer agents using the energy released by ATP hydrolysis. The closest structure and functional homologue of P-glycoprotein found in bacteria is LmrA from Lactococcus lactis. The major goals of this work are to establish the selective isotope labelling of LmrA in Lactococcus lactis, to optimize LmrA sample preparation for solid-state NMR, and finally to perform first solidstate NMR investigations on LmrA shedding light on its catalytic cycle and substrate binding. For a long time the solid-state NMR applications to biological science has been limited to investigation of small molecules mostly. Recently, the solid-state NMR methods have shown potential for structuraland non-perturbing, site directed functional studies of large membrane proteins as well as ligands bound to them. However, to our knowledge neither selective isotope amino acid labelling of any ABC transporter, nor NMR investigations on full-length ABC transporter have been reported to date. Solidstate NMR experiments on a membrane protein require reconstitution of purified proteins into a membrane environment at a high density and either isotopic enrichment of the protein or bound drugs or inhibitors. Therefore, the large quantities of LmrA reconstituted at a high density in lipid membranes, sufficient for advanced NMR studies have been produced and its functional state in reconstituted form has been assessed. In the next step, a procedure for cost effective selective amino acids isotope labelling of LmrA in Lactococcus lactis has been established. Using this protocol deuterium alanine labelled LmrA reconstituted into E. coli liposomes has been prepared. Deuterium NMR has been used extensively to assess the proteins dynamics in past. However, it has never been applied to ABC transporter. Here, we report 2H NMR on selective alanine isotope labelled LmrA which has been used to shed light on the dynamics changes in the protein occurred under AMP-PNP, non-hydrolysable ATP analogue, binding and in ATP/ADP-Vanadate trapped state. It has been found that the major conformation changes affecting the protein motional characteristics occur in the ATP binding domains but not in the transmembrane domains. Additionally, the binding of several substrates to LmrA has been studied by fluorescence spectroscopy as well as by 19F and 31P solid-state NMR. The binding constants for several LmrA substrates have been obtained by fitting the concentration dependant tryptophan intrinsic fluorescence quenching curves. Based on the fluorescence studies and solid-state NMR data, the conformation changes in LmrA under substrate binding have been discussed. In addition, the preferable location of nine LmrA and P-glycoprotein substrates within the model membrane has been studied via 1H-MAS-NOESY-NMR. The results have been interpreted with respect to LmrA and P-glycoprotein binding site accessibility from the membrane interface region.
The Na+/proline transporter of E. Coli (PutP) is responsible for the uptake of proline which is subsequently used not only as a carbon and nitrogen source and a constituent of proteins but also as a particularly effective osmoprotectant. However, for a long time there was little known about the single steps in the reaction cycle of this transporter and only few details about its structure-function relationship are available. Aim of the present work was to achieve a deeper understanding about the kinetic properties of the Na+/proline transporter and to get insights into the structure-function relationship of the substrate binding. To answer these questions different techniques were used. By using the novel SSM technique combining the preparation of PutP proteoliposomes it was possible to demonstrate for the first time the electrogenic substrate binding to PutP transporter. Due to rapid solution exchange measurements on the SSM it was additionally possible to obtain time resolved information about the kinetic details of the cytoplasmic substrate binding sites which were not available by previous steady state and equilibrium binding measurements. Pre-steady-state charge translocation was observed after rapid addition of one or both of the cosubstrates Na+ and/or proline to the PutP-WT proteoliposomes adsorbed on the SSM. Thereby it was possible to link the observed electrical signals with the binding activity of PutP. The observed Na+ and/or proline induced charge displacement were assigned to an electrogenic Na+ and/or proline binding process at the cytoplasmic face of the enzyme with a rate constant of k > 50 s-1 proceeding the rate limiting step of the reaction cycle. Furthermore, based on the kinetic analysis of the electrical signals obtained from the measurements of PutP on SSM, the following characteristics of the substrates binding in PutP were deduced: (1) both Na+ and proline can bind individually to the transporter. Under physiological conditions, an ordered binding mechanism prevails; while at sufficiently high concentrations, each substrate can bind in the absence of the other; (2) substrate binding is electrogenic not only for Na+, but also for the uncharged cosubstrate proline. The charge displacement associated with Na+ binding and proline binding is of comparable size and independent of the presence of the respective cosubstrate. In addition, it was concluded that Na+ accesses its binding site through a high-field access channel resulting in a charge translocation, whereas the binding of the electroneutral proline induces a conformation alteration involving the displacement of charged amino acid residue(s) of the protein; (3) Na+ and proline binding sites interact cooperatively with each other by increasing the affinity and/or the speed of binding of the respective cosubstrate; (4) proline binding proceeds in a two step process: low affinity (~ 0.9 mM) electroneutral substrate binding followed by a nearly irreversible electrogenic conformational transition; (5) membrane impermeable PCMBS inhibits both Na+ and proline binding to the inside-out orientated PutP transporter, indicating that rather than selectively blocking a specific binding site, PCMBS probably locks the enzyme in an inactive state. The possible targets for this SH-reagent are cysteines 281 and 344 located close to the cytoplasmic surface of the protein. Beyond it, transient electrical currents of PutP were also observed on the BLM after rapid addition of proline in the presence of Na+. This was possible by combining the conventional BLM technique with high-speed flash-photolysis of caged-proline. Indeed the signals on the BLM indicate the detection of a different underlying reaction process in comparison to the data achieved by the SSM technique. This has paved the way for supplemental information about the reaction cycle since it was possible to assign the flash-photolysis BLM signals to the proline binding step followed by the internalization of Na+ and proline into the liposome. Thereby it was found, that the presence of Na+ is indispensable and the time constant for the process is ~ 63 ms. Moreover, structure-function information about the Na+ and proline binding sites of PutP was obtained by investigating the functionally important amino acid residues Asp55, Gly63 and Asp187 with site-directed mutagenesis and the combined SSM technique. One finding is that the mutated proteins PutP-D55C and PutP-G63C showed no activity on the SSM. Therefore, it can be assumed that either both Asp55 and Gly63 are crucial for the structure of PutP protein, or they are located at or close to the Na+ and proline binding sites. Furthermore, the results obtained from PutP-D187N and PutP-D187C mutants on SSM suggest that Asp187 of PutP is likely to be involved in the Na+ binding at the cytoplasmic side of the backward running carrier. Taken together the results of the present work have substantially broadened the known picture of the Na+/proline transporter PutP thereby several steps of the reaction cycle were elucidated, and moreover, valuable insights into the structure-function relationship of the transporter have become available.
The technique of site-specific fluorescence labelling with Tetramethylrhodaminemaleimide (TMRM) in combination with two electrode voltage-clamp technique (TEVC), an approach that has been named voltage clamp fluorometry (VCF), has been used in this work to study the Na,K-ATPase. The TMRM dye has the ability to attach covalently to cysteine residues and it responds to changes in the hydrophobicity of its local environment. We exploited this property using a construct of the Na-pump in which the native, extracellularly accessible cysteines were removed and cysteine residues were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis in specific positions of the Na-pump. In this way it was possible to detect site-specific conformational rearrangements of the Na-pump in a time-resolved fashion within a native membrane environment. In particular this technique allows to resolve reactions with low electrogenicity that cannot be satisfactorily analyzed with purely electrophysiological techniques and to identify the conformations of the enzyme under specific ionic composition of the measuring buffers. We used VCF to study the influence that several cations like Na+, K+, NMG+, TEA+ and BTEA+ exert on the distribution of the Na,K-ATPase between several enzymatic intermediates and on some of the reactions related to cation transport. To this end we utilized the mutants N790C in the loop M5-M6 and the mutant E307C, T309C, L311C and E312C in the loop M3-M4. From the correspondence of the fluorescence changes with the activation and inhibition of pumping current, by K+ and ouabain respectively, and from the fact that in Na+/Na+ exchange conditions the voltage distribution of charge movement and fluorescence changes evoked by voltage jumps are in reasonable agreement we conclude that through the fluorescence signals measured from these mutants, we can indeed monitor conformational changes linked to transport activity of the enzyme. For the mutants N790 and L311, it was found that the Na+ dependence of the amplitude and kinetics of the fluorescence signal associated with the E1P-E2P transition is in agreement with the prediction of an access channel model describing the regulation of the access of extracellular Na+ to its binding site. In particular for the mutants E307 and T309 it was found that in Na+/Na+ exchange conditions, the conformational change tracked by the fluorescence was much slower than the charge relaxation at hyperpolarized potentials while the kinetics was very similar at depolarized potentials. This implies that at hyperpolarized potentials the conformational change connected to the E1P-E2P transition does not give a large contribution to the electrogenicity of the process which is also consistent with the access channel model. On the mutant N790C it was found that the external pH does not seem to have any effect on the E1P-E2P equilibrium even if it seems to modulate the fluorescence quantum yield of the dye. Fluorescence quenching experiments with iodide and D2O indicate that at hyperpolarized potentials the local environment of the mutant N790C, experiences a small change in the accessibility to water without major changes in the local electrostatic field ...
Sodium proton antiporters are ubiquitous membrane proteins found in the cytoplasmic and organelle membranes of cells of many different origins, including plants, animals and microorganisms. They are involved in cell energetics, and play primary roles in the homeostasis of intracellular pH, cellular Na+ content and cell volume. Adaptation to high salinity and/or extreme pH in plants and bacteria or in human heart muscles requires the action of such Na+/H+ antiporters. NhaA is the essential Na+/H+ antiporter for pH and Na+ homeostasis (at alkaline pH) in Escherichia coli and many other enterobacteria. NhaA is an electrogenic Na+/H+ antiporter that exchanges 2H+ for 1Na+ (or Li+). NhaA shares with many other prokaryotic and eukaryotic antiporters a very strong dependence on pH. In order to achieve three-dimensional structure of NhaA, the previously described NhaA protein preparation was modified: (i) the wild type bacterial strain (TA16) used for homologous over-expression of NhaA was replaced with a delta nhaA strain (RK20). As a result, the purity and homogeneity of the sample was significantly improved; (ii) the previously two-step purification procedure was shortened to a single step affinity chromatography purification; (iii) a wide-range screening of crystallisation conditions, more than 20,000, was performed; (iv) a Seleno-L-methionine (SeMet) NhaA derivative was produced in order to solve the phases during structure determination. In parallel, attempts of production and crystallisation of co-complexes composed of NhaA and antibody fragments have been made. Four different monoclonal antibodies were available against NhaA. Selected antibody fragments were produced and the stability of the complex analysed. Here, the crystal structure of the pH down-regulated secondary transporter NhaA of Escherichia coli is presented at 3.45 Å resolution. A negatively charged ion funnel opens to the cytoplasm and ends in the middle of the membrane at the putative ion-binding site. There, a unique assembly of two pairs of short helices connected by crossed, extended chains creates a balanced electrostatic environment. A possible mechanism is proposed: the binding of charged substrates causes electric imbalance inducing movements, which allow for a rapid alternating access mechanism. This ion exchange machinery is regulated by a conformational change elicited by a pH signal perceived at the cytoplasmic funnel entry. The structure represents a novel fold that provides two major insights: it reveals the structural basis for the mechanism of Na+/H+ exchange and its unique regulation by pH in NhaA and in many other similar antiporters. Furthermore, it is also important for the understanding of the architecture of membrane proteins in general. However, although many aspects of the ion-translocation mechanism and pH regulation are clarified by the NhaA structure, higher resolution structures with Li+ or Na+ bound are required for understanding the ligand binding and the translocation mechanism at the atomic level. The alkaline pH-induced conformation is essential to further understand the pH-control and proton access to the binding site.
In this thesis, we opened the door towards a novel estimation theory for homogeneous vectors and have taken several steps into this new and uncharted territory. Present state of the art for homogeneous estimation problems treats such vectors p 2 Pn as unit vectors embedded in Rn+1 and approximates the unit hypersphere by a tangent plane (which is a n-dimensional real space, thus having the same number of degrees of freedom as Pn). This approach allows to use known and established methods from real space (e.g. the variational approach which leads to the FNS algorithm), but it only works well for small errors and has several drawbacks: • The unit sphere is a two-sheeted covering space of the projective space. Embedding approaches cannot model this fact and therefore can cause a degradation of estimation quality. • Linearization breaks down if distributions are not highly concentrated (e.g. if data configurations approach degenerate situations). • While estimation in tangential planes is possible with little error, the characterization of uncertainties with covariance matrices is much more problematic. Covariance matrices are not suited for modelling axial uncertainties if distributions are not concentrated. Therefore, we linked approaches from directional statistics and estimation theory together. (Homogeneous) TLS estimation could be identified as central model for homogeneous estimation and links to axial statistics were established. In the first chapters, a unified estimation theory for the point data and axial data was developed. In contrast to present approaches, we identified axial data as a specific data model (and not just as directional data with symmetric probability density function); this led to the development of novel terms like axial mean vectors, axial variances and axial expectation values. Like a tunnel which is constructed from both ends simultaneously, we also drilled from the parameter estimation side towards directional/axial statistics in the second part. The presentation of parameter estimation given in this thesis deviates strongly from all known textbooks by presenting homogeneous estimation problems as a distinguished class of problems which calls for different estimation tools. Using the results from the first part, the TLS solution can be interpreted as the weighted anti-mean vector of an axial sample. This link allows to use our results from axial statistics; for instance, the certainty of the anti-mode (i.e. of the TLS solution!) can be described with a weighted Bingham distribution (see (3.91)). While present approaches are only interested in the eigenvector of the some matrix, we can now exploit the whole mean scatter matrix to describe TLS solution and its certainty. Algorithms like FNS, HEIV or renormalization were presented in a common context and linked to each other. One central result is that all iterative homogeneous estimation algorithms essentially minimize a series of evolving Rayleigh coefficients which corresponds to a series of (converging?) cost functions. Statistical optimization is only possible if we clearly identify every step as what it exactly is. For instance, the vague statement “solving Xp ... 0” means nothing but setting ˆp := arg minp pTXp pT p . We identified the most complex scenario for which closed form optimal solutions are possible (in terms of axial statistics: the type-I matrix weighted model). The IETLS approach which is developed in this thesis then solves general type-II matrix weighted problems with an iterative solution of a series of type-I matrix weighted problems. This approach also allows to built converging schemes including robust and/or constrained estimation – in contrast to other approaches which can have severe convergence problems even without such extensions if error levels are not low. Chapter 6 then is another big step forward. We presented the theoretical background of homogeneous estimation by introducing novel concepts like singular vector unbiasedness of random matrices and solved the problem of optimal estimation for correlated data. For instance, these results could be used for better estimation of local image orientation / optical flow (see section 7.2). At the end of this thesis, simulations and experiments for a few computer vision applications were presented; besides orientation estimation, especially the results for robust and constrained estimation for fundamental matrices is impressive. The novel algorithms are applicable for a lot of other applications not presented here, for instance camera calibration, factorization algorithm formulti-view structure from motion, or conic fitting. The fact that this work paved the way for a lot of further research is certainly a good sign.
The N-terminal domain (matrix protein or MA) of a retroviral Gag polyprotein precursor plays a critical role in several stages of the retrovirus life cycle. MA is involved in the effective membrane targeting, assembly and release of the immature viral particles from the infected cell. In order to understand the structural basis of these functions, the full length MA from Moloney Murine Leukemia Virus (MoMuLV) was purified and the solution structure of the MA MoMuLV was determined by means of heteronuclear high-resolution NMR spectroscopy and compared with that of the X-ray diffraction analysis as well as with the structures of several MA proteins from geterologous viruses. Structural features were also obtained from CD spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, sedimentation velocity, differential scanning calorimetry and other methods. It was found that the MA MoMuLV globular core (residues 8-98) is comprised of 7 well-defined helices (five alpha-helices and two 310 helices), with the general fold typical for MA proteins from other retroviral species. The N-terminus (residues Met1-Leu7) and the C-terminal proline-rich part (residues Pro103-Tyr131) are not structured in solution. Although MA MoMuLV has a low sequence identity compared with other matrix proteins for which the three-dimensional structure is known, it was shown that its overall topology and pattern of secondary structural units is similar to other retroviral matrix proteins. The monomeric state is observed for the correctly folded MA MoMuLV in a variety of external conditions and protein concentrations, indicating that virion assembly starts with the plasma membrane targeting of the nascent Gag precursor. The denaturation of MA MoMuLV is irreversible and is connected with protein aggregation. For Moloney Murine Leukemia Virus (MoMuLV) a proteolytic processing of the R-peptide (last 16 amino acids from the C-terminus of the Envelope protein (Env)) has been described as a second mode of fusion and activation preceding the receptor contact between the viral particle and the cellular membrane. An interaction between the R-peptide and MA MoMuLV has been proposed, since the R-peptide and MA are localized at the inner part of the membrane. Therefore the interaction between 15N labelled purified MA MoMuLV and synthesized R-peptide has been investigated using high-resolution NMR. It was found that in water solution MA MoMuLV and R-peptide do not form a tight complex, but in a mature virion in the presence of membranes or other protein factors it might be possible. In the case of HIV-1 the cytoplasmic part (EnvC) of the Env protein is much longer than in other retroviruses and again as for MoMuLV little is known about the interaction between EnvC and HIV MA. Hence, the full length HIV MA, and the last 150 amino acids from HIV Env have been subcloned with suitable expression vectors, purified and analysed by native gel electrophoresis, a pull down assay and by high resolution NMR for the purpose to detect the complex formation of EnvC and HIV MA. Finally, after all those experiments, it was found that a stable complex is not formed, but a weak interaction between the two proteins can not be excluded.
Studies and measurements of linear coupling and nonlinearities in hadron circular accelerators
(2006)
In this thesis a beam-based method has been developed to measure the strength and the polarity of corrector magnets (skew quadrupoles and sextupoles) in circular accelerators. The algorithm is based on the harmonic analysis (via FFT) of beam position monitor (BPM) data taken turn by turn from an accelerator in operation. It has been shown that, from the differences of the spectral line amplitudes between two consecutive BPMs, both the strength and the polarity of non-linear elements placed in between can be measured. The method has been successfully tested using existing BPM data from the SPS of CERN, since presently the SIS-18 is not equipped with the necessary hardware. The magnet strength of seven SPS extraction sextupoles was measured with a precision of about 10%. The polarities have been unambiguously measured. This method can be used to detect polarity errors and wrong power supply connections during machine commissioning, as well as for a continuous monitoring of the "nonlinearity budget" in superconducting machines. A second beam-based method has been studied for a fast measurement and correction of betatron coupling driven by skew quadrupole field errors and tilted focusing quadrupoles. Traditional methods usually require a time-consuming scan of the corrector magnets in order to minimize the coupling stop band |C|. In this thesis it has been shown how the same correction can be performed in a single machine cycle from the harmonic analysis of multi-BPM data. The method has been successfully applied to RHIC. It has been shown that the stop band |C| (also known in the American literature as Delta-Qmin) measured in a single machine cycle with the new algorithm is compatible with the value obtained by traditional methods. The measurement of the resonance phase Theta defines automatically the best corrector setting, which was found in agreement with the one obtained with a traditional scan. A third theoretical achievement is a new description of the betatron motion close to the difference resonance in presence of linear coupling. Compared to the matrix formalism the motion is parametrized as a function of the resonance driving term f1001 only (which is proven to be an observable), whereas making use of the matrix approach four parameters need to be measured. Formulae describing the exchange of RMS emittances when approaching the resonances have been already derived in the 70s in the smooth approximation. New formulae have been derived here making use of Lie algebra providing a better description of the emittance behavior. The emittance exchange curves are predicted by new formulae with excellent agreement with multi-particle simulations and the counter-intuitive emittance variation along the ring of the emittance is proven to be related to the variation of f1001. A new way to decouple the equations of motion and explicit expressions for the individual single particle invariants have been found. For the first time emittance exchange studies have been carried out in the SIS-18 of GSI. Transverse RMS emittances have been measured during 2005 from rest gas monitor (RGM) data. Crossing the linear coupling resonance, the transverse emittances exchange completely. It has been observed that this effect is reversible. Applications of this manipulation are: emittance equilibration under consideration for future operations of the SIS-18 as booster for the SIS-100; emittance transfer during multi-turn injection to improve the eficiency and to protect the injection septum in high intensity operations, by shifting part of the horizontal emittance into the vertical plane. The emittance exchange curves obtained experimentally have been compared with analytic formulae providing a fast measurement (in few machine cycles only) of the linear coupling stop band |C|. Technical problems prevented the use of the eight skew quadrupoles installed in the SIS-18 to compensate the linear coupling resonance. It has been observed that the emittance exchange curve is highly sensitive to the beam intensity. Multi-particle simulations with 2D PIC space-charge solver have been run to infer heuristic scaling laws able to quantify the observable stop band, to be used for the resonance compensation. The analysis of BPM and RGM data has been performed making use of new software applications developed for this purpose. The bpm2rdt code for the harmonic analysis of BPM data has been written and tested with real data. The software reads the BPM turn-by-turn data and the Twiss parameters. Then it performs the FFT of these data, finds the peaks of the Fourier spectra and infers the RDT fjklm, the strengths ^hjklm and the local terms lambda-jklm. All these observables are printed out together with the corresponding values of the model, computed from the nominal values of strengths and the Twiss parameters. From the FFT of dual-plane BPM data the linear optics (beta functions and phase advances Delta phi) at the corresponding location is also inferred. From the measurement of f1000, the linear coupling coeffcient C (amplitude and phase) is also computed. The code has been tested by using existing SPS data and new RHIC data. For the on-line analysis of RGM data the rgm2emitt code has been written. The application reads in input the raw data files from the RGM and the beam loss monitor (BLM) respectively, the latter created by the RGM on-line software itself. From the RGM data the transverse beam sizes and emittances are inferred and used together with the BLM data to compute the tune shift during the machine cycle.
Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disorder marked by progressive loss of memory and cognitive ability. The pathology of AD is characterised by the presence of amyloid plaques, intracellular neurofibrillary tangles and pronounced cell death. The aim of this thesis was to investigate pathways involved in the Aß cascade of neurodegeneration. Since novel findings indicate that already this Aß species exerts neurotoxic effects long before hyperphosphorylated tau, neurofibrillary tangles and extracellular Aß plaques appear, the investigations were accomplished with specific regard to the effects of intracellular Aß. The Swedish double mutation in the APP gene results in six- to eightfold increased Aß production of both Aß1-40 and Aß1-42 compared to human wildtype APP cells (APPwt). Data obtained from PC12 cells indicate that it is possible to specifically increase the Aß load without enhancing APP expression levels. On the basis of these findings, it seemed possible to investigate dose-dependent effects of Aß in multiple experimental designs. These assay designs were created in order to mimick different in-vivo situations that are discussed to occur in AD patients: APPsw PC12 cells exhibit low physiological concentrations of Aß within picomolar range in contrast to APPsw HEK cells, expressing Aß levels within the nanomolar range. Of note, the APPsw HEK cells showed a specific and highly significant increase in the intracellular accumulation of insoluble Aß1-42. Moreover, an intracellular accumulation of Aß and APP was found in the mitochondria of the HEK APPsw cells suggesting a direct impact on mitochondrial function on these cells. This effect might finally lead to disturbances in the energy metabolism of the cell or to increased cell death. Furthermore, baseline g- and ß-secretase activity was assessed since these enzymes represent promising therapeutic targets to slow or halt the disease process. As expected, ß-secretase activity was significantly elevated in all APPsw cell lines. This might be due to the proximity of the Swedish double mutation next to the N-terminus of the Aß sequence. Interestingly, g-secretase activity was similarly increased in PC12 APPsw cells. In addition, the toxicity of different Aß species was investigated in SY5Y and PC12 cells with regard to their effect on cellular viability mirrored by mitochondrial activity using MTT assay. Here, it turned out that not monomers, but already dimers are neurotoxic correlates. Fibrillar Aß species showed the highest toxicity. In the next step, SY5Y cells forming endogenous, dimeric APP and Aß were investigated. In accordance with previous findings, these cells showed a decreased MTT reduction potential in comparison to APPwt and control SY5Y cells reflecting a decrease of cellular viability. The impaired energy metabolism of the cells was even more drastically mirrored by reduced baseline ATP levels. In the second part of this thesis, the expression and intracellular distribution of Bcl-2 family proteins and pro-apoptotic mitochondrial factors under baseline conditions and during oxidative stress were analyzed in the APPwt and APPsw bearing cells. The most prominent finding was the reduction of expression levels of the anti-apoptotic factor Bcl-xL in the cytosolic fractions of APPwt and APPsw PC12 cells. This might indicate that a lack of anti-apoptotic factors or their altered intracellular distribution, rather than an increase in caspase-dependent pro-apoptotic factors, could be responsible for the increased vulnerability of APPwt- and APPsw-transfected PC12 cells against oxidative stress. Since total Bcl-xL expression was unaffected in PC12 cells, in contrast to APPwt and APPsw-expressing SY5Y and HEK cells revealing significantly decreased Bcl-xL expression levels. Thus, alterations in Bcl-xL distribution seem to be an early event in the disease process. Increasing Bcl-xL expression might potentially be one promising strategy for AD modification. PC12 and HEK cells bearing APPsw or APPwt were treated with the potent g-secretase inhibitor DAPT. Of note, DAPT did not only efficiently block Aß production, but additionally led to an elevation of the MTT reduction potential, reflecting an increase in cellular viability. As another disease-modifying strategy, several efforts are undertaken to ameliorate AD-relevant symptoms by the treatment with nerve growth factor (NGF). Generally, it is known that substituted pyrimidines have modest growth-promoting effects. Here, KP544, a novel substituted pyrimidine, was characterised. This drug increased MTT reduction potential in terminally differentiated and undifferentiated PC12 cells. Furthermore, treatment with KP544 led to a reduction in Aß1-40 secretion. Thus, one may conclude that the target of KP544, GSK-3ß, represents a connecting link between the two main pathological hallmarks of AD and might thus be a very promising therapeutic target for AD.
I derive a general effective theory for hot and/or dense quark matter. After introducing general projection operators for hard and soft quark and gluon degrees of freedom, I explicitly compute the functional integral for the hard quark and gluon modes in the QCD partition function. Upon appropriate choices for the projection operators one recovers various well-known effective theories such as the Hard Thermal Loop/ Hard Dense Loop Effective Theories as well as the High Density Effective Theory by Hong and Schaefer. I then apply the effective theory to cold and dense quark matter and show how it can be utilized to simplify the weak-coupling solution of the color-superconducting gap equation. In general, one considers as relevant quark degrees of freedom those within a thin layer of width 2 Lambda_q around the Fermi surface and as relevant gluon degrees of freedom those with 3-momenta less than Lambda_gl. It turns out that it is necessary to choose Lambda_q << Lambda_gl, i.e., scattering of quarks along the Fermi surface is the dominant process. Moreover, this special choice of the two cutoff parameters Lambda_q and Lambda_gl facilitates the power-counting of the numerous contributions in the gap-equation. In addition, it is demonstrated that both the energy and the momentum dependence of the gap function has to be treated self-consistently in order to determine the imaginary part of the gap function. For quarks close to the Fermi surface the imaginary part is calculated explicitly and shown to be of sub-subleading order in the gap equation.
The focus of this thesis is on quantum Heisenberg magnets in low dimensions. We modify the method of spin-wave theory in order to address two distinct issues. In the first part we develop a variant of spin-wave theory for low-dimensional systems, where thermodynamic observables are calculated from the Gibbs free energy for fixed order parameter. We are able to go beyond linear spin-wave theory and systematically calculate two-loop correction to the free energy. We use our method to determine the low-temperature physics of Heisenberg ferromagnets in one, two and three spatial dimensions. In the second part of the thesis, we treat a two-dimensional Heisenberg antiferromagnet in the presence of a uniform external magnetic field. We determine the low-temperature behavior of the magnetization curve within spin-wave theory by taking the absence of the spontaneous staggered magnetization into account. Additionally, we perform quantum Monte Carlo simulations and subsequently show that numerical findings are qualitatively comparable to spin-wave results. Finally, we apply our method to an experimentally motivated case of the distorted honeycomb lattice in order to determine the strength of the exchange interactions.
One of the central research topics in the field of biophysical chemistry is the structure and function of membrane proteins involved in energy transduction. Both, the aerobic and the anaerobic respiration include electron transfer and proton translocation across the mitochondrial and bacterial membranes. These electron transfer processes lead to changes in oxidation states of cofactors some of which are paramagnetic. Therefore, EPR spectroscopy is the method of choice to obtain electronic and structural information directly related to the function of the respiratory chain proteins. In this work, multifrequency continuous wave (CW) and pulsed EPR spectroscopy has been used to characterize the molybdenum active site of polysulfide reductase (Psr) from the anaerobic bacterium Wolinella succinogenes and the protein-protein complex between cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) and cytochrome c from the aerobic bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans. Molybdenum in Psr-Psr is an enzyme essential for the sulfur respiration of Wolinella succinogenes. Biochemical studies suggested that the active site of this enzyme contains a mononuclear Mo center, which catalyzes the reduction of the substrate polysulfide to sulfide. Until now there is no crystal structure available for Psr. Consequently, current characterizations of this enzyme have to rely on biochemical and spectroscopic investigations. Within the present work, CW and modern pulsed EPR techniques were applied to investigate its catalytically active site. In the first part of this thesis, different redox agents have been used to generate paramagnetic states of Psr. Multifrequency CW-EPR spectroscopy was applied to identify the Mo(V) states. Using simulations of the experimental spectra, three spectroscopically distinct states have been identified based on the Mo hyperfine- and g-tensor values. Comparison of their EPR parameters with those of related enzymes indicated five or six sulfur ligands at the Mo center depending on the state. The state generated by addition of polysulfide is suggested to be the catalytically active form, in which the Mo is coordinated by a sulfur of the polysulfide chain as the sixth ligand. 33S (I = 3/2) labeled polysulfide was prepared to probe the proximity of the polysulfide to the molybdenum center via its hyperfine coupling. 1D-ESEEM and 2D122 HYSCORE spectroscopy was used to detect these hyperfine and quadrupole interactions, which are too small to be observed in conventional CW EPR spectra. To date there has been only one pulsed-EPR study involving a 33S nucleus [Finazzo et.al. 2003]. The reasons are that this nucleus has a high nuclear spin of I = 3/2 and a large nuclear quadrupole moment in addition to the low Larmor frequency. All these make the detection of sulfur and the extraction of structural information demanding. However, analysis of the 2D-data led to a Mo(V) 33S distance in a range of about 2 to 2.5 Å. Mo-S distances found in molybdenum enzymes of the same family are in a range of 1.8 to 2.8 Å suggesting that the 33S is indeed the sixth ligand of the Mo(V) center and demonstrating that polysulfide is the actual substrate for this enzyme. Thus HYSCORE experiments have been proved to be a powerful technique to gain further insight into the active site structures of molybdenum enzymes and the trafficking of substrate atoms during catalysis. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations together with quantitative numerical simulations of the 2D-data will help to obtain more structural details about the molybdenum binding site in Psr. CcO:cytochrome c complex Protein-protein complex formation is an important step in energy conversion biological processes such as respiration and photosynthesis. These protein-protein complexes are involved in long range electron transfer reactions and are known to be of transient nature. Within the bacterial and mitochondrial respiratory electron transport chains such a complex is formed between CcO and cytochrome c. Upon complex formation cytochrome c donates the electrons required for the CcO catalyzed reduction of dioxygen to water. Here, the protein-protein complex formation between CcO and cytochrome c from Paracoccus denitrificans was investigated by pulsed EPR spectroscopy. The idea was to use the relaxation enhancement due to the distance and orientation dependent magnetic dipole-dipole interaction between the paramagnetic centers in the different CcO constructs and cytochromes. Two-pulse electron spin echo experiments were carried out on mixtures of the CuA containing soluble subunit II or the full size CcO with the physiological partner cytochrome c552 or horse heart cytochrome c. Significantly enhanced relaxation of CuA due to specific protein-protein complex formation has been observed in all four cases. In contrast the non-binding cytochrome c1 showed only a very weak relaxation enhancement due to unspecific protein-protein interactions. The echo decays of the slowly relaxing observer spin (CuA of CcO) measured in the absence and presence of the fast relaxing spin (Fe(III) of cytochrome c) permitted the extraction of the pure dipolar relaxation contributions for the different complexes. Measurements at different temperatures proved the dipolar nature of the relaxation enhancement. Furthermore, it was demonstrated experimentally that this approach also works for the full-size CcO, which contains four paramagnetic metal centers, in complex with cytochrome c. Quantitative simulations of the data suggest a broad distribution in distances (2 - 4 nm) and orientations between the CuA and Fe(III) in the complex between CcO and cytochrome c. High-field EPR spectroscopy will be useful to further analyze and prove these complex structures. Within the present work, it has been shown that pulsed relaxation enhancement experiments can be used to investigate the distance and relative orientation between paramagnetic metal centers. Furthermore, it has been demonstrated on a qualitative level, that this method can be used complimentary to other biophysical approaches to study transient electron transfer protein-protein complexes. Finally, within this work it has been proven that this method can be applied also to biological systems where more than two paramagnetic centers are present. This is particularly interesting for supercomplexes between membrane proteins.
Saint Clare of Assisi was born in 1194 to a family of notable social standing. Against her family’s wishes, she left home at the age of eighteen to join the Order of Saint Francis. She soon established the convent of the Poor Ladies in Assisi, which later became officially recognized as the Second Franciscan Order, and went on to govern it for 40 years. Like Saint Francis, who died in 1226 and was officially declared a saint in 1228, her canonization also took place only two years after her death in 1253, thereby demonstrating the tremendous impact she had on her contemporaries. ...
Die Autorin behandelt am Beispiel Brasilien das universelle Thema der Gewalt gegen Frauen in einem international vergleichenden und interkulturell kommunikativen Zusammenhang. Wichtiges Anliegen ihrer Fallstudie zur Gewalt gegen Frauen ist deutlich zu machen, dass die kontextbedingt aktive Bewegung der Frauen wider Gewalt in Brasilien sich nicht nur von Aktionen und Diskursen aus dem internationalen Bereich inspiriert hat, sondern einen beachtenswerten eigenen Beitrag leistet, von dem auch andere Frauenbewegungen lernen könnten. Voraussetzung hierzu ist allerdings, dass in allen diesen Gesellschaften, denen innerhalb der stratifizierten globalen Zusammenhänge unterschiedlicher Status zugewiesen wird, ein interkulturell kommunikativer Lernprozess stattfindet. In der Einleitung zu dieser Studie wird auf die spezifische Problematik des Themas hingewiesen, die Untersuchungsmethode und die eigene Argumentationsweise vorgestellt, die eng mit der Motivation zur Behandlung des Themas verwoben ist. Im ersten Kapitel wird die Gewalt gegen Frauen als zugleich universales wie auch partikulares Problem diskutiert, und dementsprechend die divergierenden Definitionen der Gewalt gegen Frauen, die vielfältigen Ansätze zum Verständnis von Frauen aus verschiedenen Gesellschaften und schließlich die Vielfalt der Erfahrungen von Frauen gegenüber Gewalt im Licht der interkulturellen Kommunikation vorgestellt und kritisch analysiert. Im zweiten Kapitel werden die diskursiv analytischen Interpretationen der Gewalt gegen Frauen im Licht der interkulturellen Kommunikation behandelt. Die Autorin knüpft an das diskursive Modell der Bedürfnisinterpretation von Nancy Fraser an und wendet es als methodischer Ansatz zur Interpretation der Gewalt gegen Frauen an. Sie weist auf die gesellschaftspolitischen und kulturellen Grenzen dieses Modells (auf die nördliche Hemisphäre beschränkt) hin und versucht es im Lichte des Ansatzes von Patrick Dias zu interkulturellem Lernen im Kontext der international ungleichen Machtstrukturen kritisch weiterzuentwickeln. Das dritte Kapitel analysiert die relevanten gesellschaftlichen Bedingungen mit ihren diskursiven Konstruktionen zum Verständnis von Frauen und deren Stellung im spezifischen Kontext Brasiliens. Das vierte Kapitel stellt die brasilianische Frauenbewegung wider Gewalt gegen Frauen in ihren historischen Zusammenhängen dar: von ihren Anfängen über deren Strategien in den Achtzigern bis im ausgehenden zwanzigsten Jahrhundert hinein; und es schließt mit den Diskussionen im 21. Jahrhundert ab, die verstärkt unter der Metapher der Cidadania (Aufbau der Zivilgesellschaft) steht. Kapitel fünf fasst die Ergebnisse der Untersuchung zusammen und führt den in der Studie angewandten diskursiv analytischen Ansatz im Rahmen der interkulturell immer noch bestehenden herrschaftlichen Kommunikationsstruktur mit einem Plädoyer für ein interkulturelles Lernen, das die globalen Ungleichheiten nicht verkennt, weiter.
The Way of the Beer analyses how Mafa re-enact their history in the ritual transfer of sorghum beer from junior to senior members of their society. Beer is the ‘Eucharist’ of Mafa religion, standing for the linkage between God, the ancestors, the fertility of the living and the agricultural land. The ritual sequences in which beer is exchanged and offered at family and community shrines are an encoding of settlement history. The CD-ROM version of the "Way of the Beer" not only contains everything found in the printed version of this work, but also a digital map (figure 8) whichis too large to be printed. The key to the digital map (figure 9) is electronically linked to the map. Please note that figure 9 is displayed when the option "key", found under each ward name (in the bookmark section of figure 8), is activated. If this is done for the first time, figure 8 needs to be brought up again in order to be tiled next to figure 9. However, the best option for exploring the map is to print out the key. Please refer to "The Way of the Beer"(pages 142-144) for further information on how the large digital map needs to be read. The text, maps and images can be viewed in Word (please install the linguistic fonts before using the Word version) or Acrobat Reader (version 4.0 has beencopied on to the CD-ROM). The CD-ROM also contains version 1.03 of the Northern Mandaras Homepage which must be viewed with Microsoft Explorer. The CD-ROM is organised in five main folders which are labelled "Text", "Figures", "Tables", "Plates" and "Homepage". Each folder contains a Word 97 as well as an Adobe Acrobat version of "The Way of the Beer". It is only the large digital map which does not exist as a Word but only as an Adobe Acrobat version. The page numbering apart from figure 8) continues through the sections, beginning with the text and ending with the plates.
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) play regulatory roles in many different physiological processes and they represent one of the most important class of drug targets. However, due to the lack of three-dimensional structures, structure based drug design has not been possible. The major bottleneck in getting three-dimensional crystal structure of GPCRs is to obtain milligram quantities of pure, homogenous and stable protein. Therefore, during my Ph.D. thesis, I focused on expression, characterization and isolation of three GPCRs namely human bradykinin receptor subtype 2 (B2R), human angiotensin II receptor subtype 1 (AT1aR), and human neuromedin U receptor subtype 2 (NmU2R). These receptors were heterologously produced in three different expression systems (i.e. Pichia pastoris, insect cells and mammalian cells), biochemically characterized and subsequently solubilized and purified for structural studies The human bradykinin receptor subtype 2 (B2R) is constitutively expressed in a variety of cells, including endothelial cells, vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiomyocytes. Activation of B2R is important in pathogenesis of inflammation, pain, tissue injury and cardioprotective mechanisms. During this study, recombinant B2R was produced in methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris (3.5 pmol/mg), insect cells (10 pmol/mg) and mammalian cells (60 pmol/mg). The recombinant receptor was characterized in terms of [3H] bradykinin binding, G protein coupling, localization, and glycosylation. Subsequently, it was solubilized and purified using affinity chromatography. Homogeneity and stability of purified B2R was monitored by gel filtration analysis. Milligram amounts of pure and stable receptor were obtained from BHK cells and Sf9 cells, which were used for three-dimensional crystallization attempts. The second receptor, which I worked on, is human angiotensin II receptor subtype 1 (AT1aR). AT1aR is distributed in smooth muscle cells, liver, kidney, heart, lung and testis. Activation of AT1aR is implicated in the regulation of blood pressure, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. Recombinant AT1aR was produced at high levels in Pichia pastoris (167 pmol/mg), while at moderate levels in insect cells (29 pmol/mg) and mammalian cells (32 pmol/mg). The recombinant receptor was characterized in terms of [3H] angiotensin II binding, localization, and glycosylation. Subsequently, the receptor was solubilized and purified using affinity chromatography. Homogeneity and stability of purified AT1aR was monitored by gel filtration analysis. Milligram amounts of pure and stable receptor were obtained from Pichia pastoris, which were used for threedimensional crystallization attempts. In addition to B2R and AT1aR, I also attempted to produce and isolate the human neuromedin U receptor subtype 2 (NmU2R), which was deorphanized recently. It is found in highest abundance in the central nervous system, particularly the medulla oblongata, spinal cord and thalamus. The distribution of this receptor suggests its regulatory role in sensory transmission and modulation. During this study, recombinant NmU2R was produced in Pichia pastoris (6 pmol/mg) and BHK cells (9 pmol/mg). Recombinant receptor was characterized with regard to [125I] NmU binding, localization and glycosylation. Subsequently, the receptor was solubilized and purified using affinity chromatography. Due to its low expression level, further expression optimization is required in order to obtain milligram amounts for structural studies. The long-term goal of this study was to obtain three-dimensional crystal structure of recombinant GPCRs. However, 3-dimensional crystallization of human recombinant membrane proteins still remains a difficult task. On the other hand, recent advances in the solid-state NMR spectroscopy offer ample opportunities to study receptor-ligand systems, provided milligram quantities of purified receptor are available. Therefore, in parallel to 3-dimensional crystallization trials, purified B2R was also used for solid-state NMR analysis in order to investigate the receptor bound conformation of bradykinin. Preliminary results are promising and indicate significant structural changes in bradykinin upon binding to B2R. Further experiments are ongoing and will hopefully result in the structure of receptor bound bradykinin. One of the challenges in GPCR crystallization is the small hydrophilic surface area that is available to make crystal contacts. One possibility to overcome this problem can be the reconstitution of a GPCR complex with an interacting protein for cocrystallization. For this purpose, I coexpressed B2R and AT1aR, which form a stable heterodimer complex, in BHK cells. I could successfully isolate the heterodimer complex by using two-step affinity purification. Unfortunately, this complex was not stable over time and disassociates within three days of purification. However, during coexpression of B2R and AT1aR in BHK cells, I observed that B2R was localized in the plasma membrane in coexpressing cells while it was retained intracellularly when expressed alone. This coexpression of AT1aR with B2R resulted in a four-fold increase in [3H] bradykinin binding sites on the cell surface. In addition, these two receptors were cointernalized in response to their individual specific ligands. Interestingly, colocalization of B2R and AT1aR was also found in human foreskin fibroblasts (which endogenously express both receptors), in line with the possibility that heterodimerization may be required for surface localization of B2R in native tissues as well. This is the first report where surface localization of a peptide GPCR is triggered by a distantly related peptide GPCR. These data support the hypothesis that heterodimerization may be a prerequisite for cell surface localization of some GPCRs. A second approach that I followed to stabilize the purified B2R was to reconstitute the B2R-β-arrestin complex. β-arrestin is a cytosolic protein that participates in agonist mediated desensitization of GPCRs and therefore dampens the cellular responses initiated by the activation of GPCRs. I tried to reconstitute B2R-β-arrestin complex in vitro by mixing purified B2R and purified β-arrestin. But, no interaction of these two proteins was observed in the pull-down assays. However, a C-terminal mutant of B2R (where a part of the C-terminus of the B2R is exchanged with that of the vasopressin receptor) was found to interact with β-arrestin in vitro as revealed by pull-down assays. In conclusion, this work establishes the production, characterization and isolation of three recombinant human GPCRs. Recombinant receptors were produced in milligram amounts and therefore, pave the way for structural analysis. The heterodimer complex of B2R-AT1aR and B2R-β-arrestin complex can be of great help during crystallization. In addition, it was also found for the first time that the surface localization of a peptide GPCR can be triggered by heterodimerization with a distantly related peptide GPCR.
In the classical Dirac equation with strong potentials, called overcritical, a bound state reaches the negative continuum. In QED the presence of a static overcritical external electric field leads to a charged vacuum and indicates spontaneous particle creation when the overcritical field is switched on. The goal of this work is to clarify whether this effect exists, i.e. if it can be uniquely defined and proved, in time-dependent physical processes. Starting from a fundamental level of the theory we check all mathematical and interpretational steps from the algebra of fields to the very effect. In the first, theoretical part of this thesis we introduce the mathematical formulation of the classical and quantized Dirac theory with their most important results. Using this language we define rigorously the notion of spontaneous particle creation in overcritical fields. First, we give a rigorous definition of resonances as poles of the resolvent or the Green's function and show how eigenvalues become resonances under Hamiltonian perturbations. In particular, we consider essential for overcritical potentials perturbation of eigenvalues at the edge of the continuous spectrum. Next, we gather various adiabatic theorems and discuss well-posedness of the scattering in the adiabatic limit. Then, we construct Fock space representations of the field algebra, study their equivalence and give a unitary implementer of all Bogoliubov transformations induced by unitary transformations of the one-particle Hilbert space as well as by the projector (or vacuum vector) changes as long as they lead to unitarily equivalent Fock representations. We implement in Fock space self-adjoint and unitary operators from the one-particle space, discussing the charge, energy, evolution and scattering operators. Then we introduce the notion of particles and several particle interpretations for time-dependent processes with a different Fock space at every instant of time. We study how the charge, energy and number of particles change in consequence of a change of representation or in implemented evolution or scattering processes, what is especially interesting in presence of overcritical potentials. Using this language we define rigorously the notion of spontaneous particle creation. Then we look for physical processes which show the effect of vacuum decay and spontaneous particle creation exclusively due to the overcriticality of the potential. We consider several processes with static as well as suddenly switched on (and off) static overcritical potentials and conclude that they are unsatisfactory for observation of the spontaneous particle creation. Next, we consider properties of general time-dependent scattering processes with continuous switch on (and off) of an overcritical potential and show that they also fail to produce stable signatures of the particle creation due to overcriticality. Further, we study and successfully define the spontaneous particle creation in adiabatic processes, where the spontaneous antiparticle is created as a result of a resonance (wave packet) decay in the negative continuum. Unfortunately, they lead to physically questionable pair production as the adiabatic limit is approached. Finally, we consider extension of these ideas to non-adiabatic processes involving overcritical potentials and argue that they are the best candidate for showing the spontaneous pair creation in physical processes. Demanding creation of the spontaneous antiparticle in the state corresponding to the overcritical resonance rather quick than slow processes should be considered, with a possibly long frozen overcritical period. In the second part of this thesis we concentrate on a class of spherically symmetric square well potentials with a time-dependent depth. First, we solve the Dirac equation and analyze the structure and behaviour of bound states and appearance of overcriticality. Then, by analytic continuation we find and discuss the behaviour of resonances in overcritical potentials. Next, we derive and solve numerically (introducing a non-uniform continuum discretization for a consistent treatment of narrow peaks) a system of differential equations (coupled channel equations) to calculate particle and antiparticle production spectra for various time-dependent processes including sudden, quick, slow switch on and off of a sub- and overcritical potentials. We discuss in detail how and under which conditions an overcritical resonance decays during the evolution giving rise to the spontaneous production of an antiparticle. We compare the antiparticle production spectrum with the shape of the resonance in the overcritical potential. We study processes, where the overcritical potentials are switched on at different speed and are possibly frozen in the overcritical phase. We prove, in agreement with conclusions of the theoretical part, that the peak (wave packet) in the negative continuum representing a dived bound state partially follows the moving resonance and partially decays at every stage of its evolution. This continuous decay is more intensive in slow processes, while in quick processes the wave packet more precisely follows the resonance. In the adiabatic limit, the whole decay occurs already at the edge of the continuum, resulting in production of antiparticles with vanishing momentum. In contrast, in quick switch on processes with delay in the overcritical phase, the spectrum of the created antiparticles agrees best with the shape of the resonance. Finally, we address the question how much information about the time-dependent potential can be reconstructed from the scattering data, represented by the particle production spectrum. We propose a simple approximation method (master equation) basing on an exponential, decoherent decay of time-dependent resonances for prediction of particle creation spectra and obtain a good agreement with the results of full numerical calculations. Additionally, we discuss various sources of errors introduced by the numerical discretization, find estimations for them and prove convergence of the numerical schemes.
This thesis is devoted to the study of Micro Structured Electrode (MSE) sustained discharges. Innovative approaches in this work are i) the implementation of MSE arrays for high-pressure plasma generation and ii) the use of diode laser atomic absorption spectroscopy for investigating sub-millimetric discharges. By means of MSE arrays the discharge gap is scaled down to the sub-millimetric range and accordingly the working pressure could be increased up to atmospheric. It should be underlined that besides the ease of use, since expensive vacuum equipment is not required, high-pressure discharges offer also a high density of active species. A MSE consists of holes, regularly distributed in a composite sheet made of two metal layers separated by an insulator. The electrodes and insulator thickness and the diameter of the holes are in the 100 micrometer range. Based on these microstructures stable non-filamentary DC discharges are generated in noble gases and gas mixtures at pressures up to 1000 mbar. The MSE sustained discharge can be considered as a normal glow discharge whereby the excitation and ionization efficiency is increased by the specific electrode configuration (hollow cathode geometry). Large area high-pressure plasma can be achieved by parallel operation of a large number of microdischarges. Parallel operation of up to 200 microdischarges without individual ballast was proven for pressures up to 300 mbar. Furthermore, arrays of resistively decoupled microdischarges were operated up to atmospheric pressure. Spectral investigations have revealed the presence of highly energetic electrons (20 eV), a large density of atoms in metastable states (1013 cm-3) and a high electron density (1015 cm-3). Although the plasma confined inside the hole of the MSE may reach gas temperatures up to 1000 K, the ambient gas temperature immediately above the microstructure exceeds only slightly the room temperature. The reactivity of the MSE sustained discharge was demonstrated in respect to waste gas decomposition and surface treatment. The MSE arrays are providing a non-equilibrium high-pressure plasma, which is very promising for surface processing, plasma chemistry and generation of UV radiation.
It is commonly agreed that cortical information processing is based on the electric discharges (spikes') of nerve cells. Evidence is accumulating which suggests that the temporal interaction among a large number of neurons can take place with high precision, indicating that the efficiency of cortical processing may depend crucially on the precise spike timing of many cells. This work focuses on two temporal properties of parallel spike trains that attracted growing interest in the recent years: In the first place, specific delays (phase offsets') between the firing times of two spike trains are investigated. In particular, it is studied whether small phase offsets can be identified with confidence between two spike trains that have the tendency to fire almost simultaneously. Second, the temporal relations between multiple spike trains are investigated on the basis of such small offsets between pairs of processes. Since the analysis of all delays among the firing activity of n neurons is extremely complex, a method is required with which this highly dimensional information can be collapsed in a straightforward manner such that the temporal interaction among a large number of neurons can be represented consistently in a single temporal map. Finally, a stochastic model is presented that provides a framework to integrate and explain the observed temporal relations that result from the previous analyses.
In the present paper we develop the essential theoretical tools for the treatment of the dynamics of High Energy Heavy Ion Collisions. We study the influence of the nuclear equation of state and discuss the new phenomena connected with phase transitions in nuclear matter (pion condensation). Furthermore we investigate the possibility of a transition from nuclear to quark matter in High Energy Heavy Ion Collisions. In this context we discuss exotic phenomena like strongly bound pionic states, limiting temperatures, and exotic nuclei.
One possible approach to study systematically the influence of the deformation regime on the geometry of geological structures like folds and boudins is analogue modelling. For a complete understanding of the resulting structures, consideration of the third dimension is required. This PhD study deals with scaled analogue modelling under constriction and plane-strain conditions to improve our knowledge of folding and boudinage of lower crustal rocks in space and time. Plasticine is an appropriate analogue material for rocks in the lower crust. Therefore, this material was used for the experiments. The macroscopic behaviour of most types of plasticine is quite similar to rocks undergoing strain-rate softening and strain hardening regardless of the different microscopic aspects of deformation. Therefore, if one is aware that the stress exponent and viscosity increase with increasing strain, the original plasticine types used with stress exponents ranging from 5.8 to 8.0 are adequate for modelling geologic structures. The same holds for plasticine/oil mixtures. Thus, plasticine and plasticine/oil mixtures can be used to model the viscous flow of different rock types in the lower crust. If climb-accommodated dislocation creep and associated steady-state flow is assumed for the natural rocks, the plasticine/oil mixtures should be used, which flow under steady-state conditions. Three different experimental studies of plane-strain coaxial deformation of stiff layers, with viscosity η2 and stress exponent n2, embedded in a weak matrix, with viscosity η1 and stress exponent n1, have been carried out. The undeformed samples (matrix plus layer) were cubes with an edge length of 12 cm. All experimental runs have been carried out at T = 25 ± 1°C and varying strain rates ė, ranging from 7.9 x 10 high -6 s high -1 to 1.7 x 10 high -2 s high -1, until a finite longitudinal strain of 30% – 40% was achieved. The first experimental study improved the understanding about the evolution of folds and boudins when the layer is oriented perpendicular to the Y-axis of the finite strain ellipsoid. The rock analogues used were Beck’s green plasticine (matrix) and Beck’s black plasticine (competent layer), both of which are strain-rate softening modelling materials with stress exponent n = ca. 8. The effective viscosity η of the matrix plasticine was changed by adding different amounts of oil to the original plasticine. At a strain rate ė of 10 high -3 s high -1 and a finite strain e of 10%, the effective viscosity of the matrix ranges from 1.2 x 10 high 6 to 7.2 x 10 high 6 Pa s. The effective viscosity of the competent layer has been determined as 4.2 x 10 high 7 Pa s. If the viscosity ratio is large (> ca. 20) and the initial thickness of the competent layer is small, both folds and boudins develop simultaneously. Although the growth rate of the folds seems to be higher than the growth rate of the boudins, the wavelength of both structures is approximately the same as is suggested by analytical solutions. A further unexpected, but characteristic, aspect of the deformed competent layer is a significant increase in thickness, which can be used to distinguish plane-strain folds and boudins from constrictional folds and boudins. In the second experimental study, the impact of varying strain rates on growing folds and boudins under plane strain have been investigated. The strain rates used range from 7.9 x 10 high -6 s high -1 to 1.7 x 10 high -2 s high -1. The stiff layer and matrix consist of non-linear viscous Kolb grey and Beck’s green plasticine, respectively, both of which are strain-rate softening modelling materials with power law exponents (n) and apparent viscosities (η) ranging from 6.5 to 7.9 and 8.5 x 10 high 6 to 7.2 x 10 high 6 Pa s, respectively. The effective viscosity (η) of the matrix plasticine was partly modified by adding oil to the original plasticine. At the strain rates used in the experiments the viscosity ratio between layer and matrix ranges between 3 and 10. Different runs have been carried out where the layer was oriented perpendicular to the principal strain axes (X>Y>Z). The results suggest a considerable influence of the strain rate on the geometry of the deformed stiff layer including its thickness. This holds for every type of layer orientation (S ┴ X, S ┴ Y, S ┴ Z). If the stiff layer is oriented perpendicular to the short axis Z of the finite strain ellipsoid, the number of the resulting boudins and the thickness of the stiff layer increase, whereas the length of boudins decreases with increasing strain rate. If the stiff layer is oriented perpendicular to the long axis, X, of the finite strain ellipsoid, enlargement of the strain rate results in increasing wavelength of folds, whereas the number of folds and the degree of thickening of the stiff layer decreased. If the stiff layer is oriented perpendicular to the intermediate Y-axis of the finite strain ellipsoid enlargement of the strain rate results in a decreasing number of boudins and folds associated with increasing wavelengths of both structures. The wavelength of folds is approximately half of the boudins wavelength. This is true for the case where folds and boudins develop simultaneously (S ┴ Y) and for cases where both structures develop independently (folds at S ┴ X and boudins at S ┴ Z). In the third experimental study, scaled analogue experiments have been carried out to demonstrate the growth of plane-strain folds and boudins through space and time. Previous 3D-studies are based only on finite deformation structures. Their results can therefore not be used to prove if both structures grew simultaneously or in sequence. Plane strain acted on a single stiff layer that was embedded in a weak matrix, with the layer oriented perpendicular to the intermediate Y-axis of the finite strain ellipsoid. Two different experimental runs have been carried out using computer tomography (CT) to analyse the results. The first run was carried out without interruption. During the second run, the deformation was stopped in each case at longitudinal strain increments of 10%. Every experiment was carried out at a temperature T of 25°C and a strain rate, ė, of ca. 4 x 10 high -3 s high -1 until a finite longitudinal strain of 40% was achieved with a viscosity contrast m of 18.6 between the non-linear viscous layer (Kolb brown plasticine) and the matrix (Beck’s green plasticine with 150 ml oil kg high -1). The apparent viscosity, η, and the stress exponent, n, for the layer at a strain rate ė = ca. 10 high -3 s high -1 and a finite strain e = 10% are 2.23 x 10 high 7 Pa s and n = 5.8 and for the matrix 1.2 x 10 high 6 Pa s and 10.5. These new data that result from incremental analogue modelling corroborate previous suggestions that folds and boudins are coeval structures in cases of plane-strain coaxial deformation with the stiff layer oriented perpendicular to the intermediate Y-axis of the finite strain ellipsoid. They will be of interest for all workers who are dealing with plane-strain boudins and folds, where the fold axes are parallel to the major axis (X) of the finite strain ellipsoid. As has been demonstrated by the first experimental study, coeval folding and boudinage under plane strain, with S ┴ Y, are associated with a significant increase in the thickness of the competent layer. The latter phenomenon does not occur in other cases of simultaneous folding and boudinage, such as bulk pure constriction. To study the impact of layer thickness on the geometry of folds and boudins under pure constriction, we carried out additional experiments using different types of plasticine for a stiff layer and a weaker matrix to model folding and boudinaging under pure constriction, with the initially planar layer oriented parallel to the Xaxis of the finite strain ellipsoid. The stiff layer and matrix consist of non-linear viscous Kolb brown and Beck’s green plasticine, respectively, both of which are strain-rate softening modelling materials. Six runs have been carried out using thicknesses of the stiff layer of 1, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 ± 0.2 mm. All experimental runs were carried out at a temperature T of 30 ± 2°C and a strain rate, ė, of ca. 1.1 x 10 high -4 s high -1 until a finite longitudinal strain of 40% was achieved with a viscosity contrast m of 3.1 between the stiff layer (Kolb brown plasticine) and the matrix (Beck’s green plasticine). The apparent viscosity, η, and the stress exponent, n, for the layer at a strain rate ė = ca. 10 high -3 s high -1 and a finite strain e = 10% are 2.23 x 10 high 7 Pa s and n = 5.8 and for the matrix 7.2 x 10 high 6 Pa s and 7.9. Our results suggest a considerable influence of the initial thickness of the stiff layer on the geometry of the deformed stiff layer. There is no evidence for folding in XY=XZ-sections if the initial thickness of the competent layer is larger than ca. 8 mm. If the initial thickness of the competent layer is set at ca. 10 ± 0.2 mm, both folds and boudins develop simultaneously. However, the growth rate of the boudins seems to be higher than the growth rate of the folds. A further expected, but characteristic, aspect of the deformed competent layer is no change in thickness of the competent layer, which can be used to distinguish plane-strain folds and boudins from constrictional folds and boudins. The model results are important for the analysis and interpretation of deformation structures in rheologically stratified rocks undergoing dislocation creep under bulk constriction. Tectonic settings where constrictional folds and boudins may develop simultaneously are stems of salt diapirs, subduction zones or thermal plumes. To make (paleo) viscosimetric statements possible, the rheological data of the different plasticine types were related to the geometrical data. When comparing the normalized dominant wavelength Wd obtained from the deformed layer of the models with the theoretical dominant wavelength (Ld) calculated using the Smith equation (1977, 1979), the latter probably also holds when folding and boudinage develop simultaneously (S ┴ Y) and when boudins develop independently (S ┴ Z), but can obviously not be applied at very low viscosity ratios as is indicated by the low-strain-rate experiments.
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is characterized by the accumulation of a large number of abnormal, immature blast cells. Recently, histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDIs) received considerable interest on the ground of their ability to overcome the differentiation block in these leukemic blasts regardless of the primary genetic alteration, an effect achieved either alone or in combination with differentiating agents, such as all-trans retinoic acid (t-RA). Valproic acid (VPA), a potent HDI, is now under clinical evaluation owing to its potent differentiation effect on transformed hematopoietic progenitor cells and leukemic blasts from AML patients. Conversely, in a clinical study by Bug et al., the favorable effects of the combination treatment with t-RA/VPA in advanced acute myeloid leukemia patients were reported to be most likely due to an enhancement of nonleukemic myelopoiesis and the suppression of malignant hematopoiesis rather than enforced differentiation of the leukemic cells. Based on the hypothesis that VPA influences normal hematopoiesis, the effect of chromatin modeling through VPA on HSCs was investigated with respect to differentiation, proliferation as well as self-renewal in the present study. It has been shown that valproic acid increases both proliferation and self-renewal of HSC. It accelerates cell cycle progression of HSC accompanied by a down-regulation of p21cip-1/waf-1. Furthermore, valproic acid inhibits GSK3B by phosphorylation on Ser9 accompanied by an activation of the Wnt signaling pathway as well as by an up-regulation of HoxB4, a target gene of Wnt signaling. Both are known to directly stimulate the proliferation of HSC and to expand the HSC pool. To sum up, valproic acid, a potent histone deacetylase inhibitor known to induce differentiation and/or apoptosis in leukemic blasts, stimulates the proliferation and self-renewal of hematopoietic stem cells. Therefore, the data reported in this study suggest to reconsider the role of histone deacetylase inhibitors from a differentiation inducer to a coadjuvant factor for increasing the response to conventional therapy in acute myeloid leukemia.
Haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are regarded as the prime target for gene therapy of inherited and acquired disorders of the blood system, e.g. X-linked chronic granulomatous disease (X-CGD). The major reason for this is that HSCs posses the ability to self renew as well as the potential to differentiate into all lineage-specific cell types. However, the need to reach and to maintain sufficient therapeutic levels of genetically modified stem cells and their progeny after gene delivery still presents major challenges for current HSC gene therapy approaches. In particular, one of the main limitations for most genetic defects is the lack of a selective growth advantage of gene-modified cells after engraftment. In vitro and in vivo methods have been developed that focus on either positive or negative selection of HSCs. An artificial selection advantage can be conferred to transduced HSCs by incorporating a selection marker in addition to the therapeutic transgene. In the present study, two novel strategies for positive selection of murine gp91phox gene-modified haematopoietic stem cells were developed and tested, bearing in mind that with selective growth advantage, the possibility of uncontrolled proliferation arises. The first strategy to be investigated was based on the homeobox transcription factor HOXB4, which plays an important role in the control of haematopoietic stem cell proliferation and differentiation. Overexpression of a retroviral bicistronic construct containing the therapeutic gene gp91phox and HOXB4 in murine primary bone marrow cells led to a significant 3–4-fold expansion of transduced cells ex vivo. The numbers of transgene-expressing cells increased 2–3-fold after 2 weeks cultivation under cytokine stimulation. Furthermore, the clonogenic progenitor cell assay (CFU assay) demonstrated that the number of colony-forming cells had increased to levels 2-fold higher than those of mock-transduced cells after 1 week of culture, thereby augmenting the presence of a significant number of stem/progenitor cells in the selected cell population. However, in our experiments, HOXB4-overexpressing murine HSCs did not show any repopulating advantage in transplanted recipient mice over control construct-transduced HSCs. These results indicate that selective expansion of gp91phox gene-modified HSCs can be induced by the HOXB4 transcription factor ex vivo but not in vivo. This is possibly dependent on HOXB4 expression levels, which are too low in vivo to achieve selection. The second strategy made use of a chemically inducible dimerizer system consisting of the therapeutic gene gp91phox and a fusion protein, containing sequences from a growth factor receptor signalling domain (epidermal growth factor receptor, EGFR, or prolactin receptor, PrlR) and the drug binding protein FKBP12, as the selection cassette. This strategy aimed to allow inducible selection that could be easily switched off. The activity of these fusion proteins is controlled through the small molecular dimerizer AP20187. Transduction of BaF/3 cells with lentiviral vectors expressing the EGFR construct induced proliferation and led to complete selection within 18 days (99%). However, removing AP20187 could not turn off proliferation. This construct is, therefore, not suitable as a selection cassette for the expansion of gene-modified HSCs due to its oncogenic potential. Transduction of the construct containing the intracellular domain of PrlR caused significant selective expansion of AP20187-treated BaF/3 cells. Following expression in cells, the fusion protein, which lacks membrane-anchoring sequences, mainly localized to the cytoplasm. Evidence was found to indicate that activated STAT5 might be responsible for this effect. Upon expression of the prolactin construct, phosphorylation of STAT5 and its DNA-binding activity to a ß-casein promoter sequence was strongly increased. Importantly, the induced proliferation was reversible after removal of AP20187. Transduced Sca1+ bone marrow cells obtained from C57BL/6-CD45.1 mice could be expanded about 20–100-fold ex vivo in the presence of AP20187 and mSCF without losing progenitor cell features and the capability to contribute to all lineages of the haematopoietic system. To exclude oncogenic outgrowth of one single clone, the polyclonality of selected cells was proven by ligation-mediated PCR (LM-PCR) analysis. In mouse transplantation experiments, ex vivo-expanded cells repopulated the bone marrow of lethally irradiated mice suggesting that the ex vivo expansion took place at the level of haematopoietic stem and/or progenitor cells. Genomic gp91phox sequences were detected in the bone marrow, spleen and peripheral blood cells of transplanted animals, indicating that gp91phox-containing cells most likely contributed to the reconstitution of haematopoiesis in these mice.
Prostaglandin E2 is the major prostaglandin involved in colorectal carcinogenesis. The biosynthesis of prostaglandin E2 is accomplished by several terminal prostaglandin E synthases through catalytical conversion of the cyclooxygenase product prostaglandin H2. Among the known terminal prostaglandin E synthases, microsomal prostaglandin E synthase type 1 and type 2 were found to be overexpressed in colorectal cancer, however the role and regulation of these enzymes in this tumor entity are yet not fully understood. Here we report that the cyclopentenone prostaglandins 15-deoxy-D12,14-prostaglandin J2 and prostaglandin A2, which have been shown to modulate cell growth and neoplasia, selectively down-regulate microsomal prostaglandin E synthase type 2 mRNA and protein expression in the human colorectal carcinoma cell lines Caco-2 and HCT 116. This effect appeared to be PPARgamma independent and was not found to require G-protein-coupled receptor activation. Instead, inhibition of microsomal prostaglandin E synthase type 2 by cyclopentenone prostaglandins may be mediated by covalent binding of the cyclopentenone ring to cysteine residues on signalling molecules or via a redox-dependent mechanism. Inhibition of microsomal prostaglandin E synthase type 2 was subsequently followed by decreased prostaglandin E synthase activity, which in turn contributed at least in part to the anti-proliferative action of cyclopentenone prostaglandins in HCT 116 cells. Collectively, these data unravel a novel mechanism for the growth-inhibitory effects of cyclopentenone prostaglandins and expose microsomal prostaglandin E synthase type 2 as a new potential target for pharmacological intervention in the treatment of colorectal cancer.